• The People's Manifesto for Mayor

  • Time Out Editors and Readers


  • Welfare
    Paradoxically London is both a wealthy and an impoverished city. To his credit the Mayor has attempted to address this but measures such as affordable housing have targeted the low paid rather than the impoverished. And while he maintains such an expensive fare policy on public transport systems poor Londoners are stuck, both figuratively and literally, in their pockets of poverty.

    Until we address this disparity between rich and poor Londoners this situation will not change, which is why Time Out is calling for a London-wide local income tax that shifts wealth from the richest areas to fund resources, opportunities and decent accommodation in the poorest.

    More action to help young Londoners, saddled by student debt and in low-income graduate jobs, get on to the housing ladder.

    Bring in free wi-fi across London. The internet is the greatest tool of knowledge – it should be free for everyone, not just coffee shop-dwellers.

    What do you think? Give us your feedback
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28 comments

  1. Posted by Paul on 09 May 2008 08:09

    Totally agree about the dog shit. I also live in N1 and you don't so much step in it as surf along on a tide of it. I use Shoreditch Park quite a lot which has the only beach volley ball court in London. Fantastic you would think, what a great facility for an inner city area. A slice of Venice Beach right here in the middle of London. Wrong wrong wrong. I was actually working out in the sand today when some grinning idiot''s dog came and pooped right next to me. I mean, for god's sake, what the f*** is going on these peoples' minds? The new mayor needs to do something.

  2. Posted by JCT on 29 Apr 2008 10:02

    At the risk of sounding like my mother, bring back bus conductors, at least on troublesome routes. Brian Paddick's notion that bus drivers should sort out trouble among their passengers as well as safely navigating London traffic shows he's never tried to drive a car with two squabbling kids in the back. Plus it would give TV producers scope for an updated comeback for 'On the Busses'.

  3. Posted by Jon on 24 Apr 2008 23:53

    The deadline for signatures to support the Early Day Motion on cutting the deposit and signature requirement for the London Mayoral Election has passed. I can't find the EDM on the parliamentary lists though. Can you give us more information?

  4. Posted by Alex Hayes on 19 Mar 2008 01:51

    Something has to be done about the amount of free papers in London. Firstly each one is exactly the same and offer no choice to those choosing to read one. The most irritating aspect of them is the 'paper boys / girls' who shove them into your face every 5 mins while walking down Oxford St. If we must have them then at least leave them for people to choose to take one if they wish like the Metro. They also create an massive amount of waste and create a mess of the tube stations. Surely this goes against London's campaign to become a greener city.

  5. Posted by Andy GM Wood on 13 Mar 2008 17:24

    Congestion Charge:
    Rather than trying to stop everyone driving in every day, why not try and make people drive in less often :-
    Change the cost of driving in for each consecutive day - based around the average price for the vehicle ... eg for the current £8 per day vehicles ...
    Day 1 : £0
    Day 2 : £4
    Day 3 : £8
    Day 4 : £12
    Day 5 : £16
    You still raise the £40 per week if they drive every day, but my bet is they'd leave the car at home a couple of times a week!
    Depends what you are trying to do of course, raise revenue or reduce congestion!
    Regards
    Andy

  6. Posted by Mr. Pavement on 13 Mar 2008 09:29

    I just have two small things to throw in:
    1. Pedestrianisation: I applaud what we've seen, but would like to see considerably more pedestrianisation in the city centre (though this needs to be supported by better and cheaper public transport).
    2. Rant: I'll be honest, this is a moan, but I'd really like someone to re-look at TicketMaster. How their virtual monopoly on ticket distribution can be allowed to continue is beyond me. I'd favour Mayoral regulation of ticket distribution - ripping off locals and tourists is surely not a good thing.

  7. Posted by Kerry Andrew on 05 Mar 2008 16:42

    Oyster card machines on south London trains NOW. Especially as the East London line is now down. I am offended at how much I have to pay to cross the river.
    Pubs/bars in Soho open after 11pm so we're not wandering around considering paying £6 to get into some stinking salsa dive. This is LONDON for goodness sakes, it's embarrassing for us as a tourist magnet.
    Public bins that are divided into recycled and non-recycles materials, like they do in cities in Germany.

  8. Posted by Kerry Andrew on 05 Mar 2008 16:36

    Please turn the office lights off when you lock up! The whole of the City is ablaze with lights at all hours, and turning them off would probably improve the carbon footprint, non? I understand that the Gherkin and sim. could be partly lit from the inside to show it off but turn everything else OFF you wasteful fools!

  9. Posted by Simon M on 03 Mar 2008 10:26

    Hodges for Mayor? The idiot who hates cyclists? Not for me thanks - saddens me to say this, but I'd rather have Boris, who's arguably a bit less boorish and more sensible.
    Noticeably, the twonk hasn't got anything in his manifesto about cycling - because obviously he doesn't care.
    So, just in case he does end up Mayor (shudder), here's my suggestions: sign up to the LCC manifesto for London; make it an assumption for all incidents in Greater London involving a cyclist that the cyclist is not at fault (as it is in most of Europe, for instance); make default speed 20mph on nearly all streets; give police clear priority and enforcement powers to deal with dangerous drivers; scrap segregated cycle lanes; make all road planners cycle the schemes they're working on and cycle to work!

  10. Posted by A.D. on 01 Mar 2008 17:20

    All of this car-hating really annoys me..If TfL had better alternatives for the routes I take I wouldn't mind so much.
    Public transport is over-priced -When I lived at London Bridge last year I had to pay £16 a week (discounted rate) just to make a five-seven minute train journey four days a week. Oyster cards were not accepted on the route. I'm now living in zone 4/5 and it's extremely difficult to get to uni without a car, particularly as I don't live near any underground stations. Furthermore, if I did choose to get a train, the closure of the East London Line means that the journey I make would be even more time consuming than before.
    I do as much for the environment as can be reasonably expected of me, but I refuse to agree that public transport is suitable for everybody in London.

  11. Posted by Kitten on 28 Feb 2008 18:08

    The idea od taxing richer areas to fund services in poorer areas of London seems poorly thought-out. Most areas of London contain a mix of rich and poor and social housing is often found next door to expensive private properties. Much of Covent Garden and Islington consists of social housing: to tax people living in council or housing trust homes in these areas extra would be unfair. Council tax already takes a disproportionate amount from people in council homes who are often on lower incomes as it does not discriminate by income but by area. My home belongs to a housing trust and can (rightfully) never be bought under right-to-buy, yet my council tax is the same as private properties worth £800,000 nearby. Surely redistribution of taxes based on income rather than where someone happens to have been born and bred would be fairer?

  12. Posted by Fumer on 28 Feb 2008 17:47

    Something has to be done about the horrific pollution from transport in London. Most Londoners I know would not drive even if they could afford to because they are considerate people who do not want to add to the illnesses and deaths caused by transport emissions and road accidents, nor to contribute further to global warming, but the smell, noise and congestion on our streets continues. We need an affordable tube service (£2 for one stop!!!), low-emission buses, much, much higher congestion charges (perhaps with grants for people who need their cars/vans for business to switch to LPG vehicles), and a change in attitude so that people no longer think it is acceptable to drive to London to do their shopping or theatre visits.

  13. Posted by katie ingham on 28 Feb 2008 14:21

    We need to do more to preserve famous london shopping streets and areas, to prevent them from being cloned by westernised capitalist retailers....kings road for example used to be great now it's full of the same crap shops u find everywhere....starbucks, boots, pret, marks and spencer, bla bla bla. As soon as the cool people find somewhere new to hang out they move in...look what they did to spitalfields market...it's nice but it isn't what it was. how long b4 they move in to brick lane...

  14. Posted by katie ingham on 28 Feb 2008 14:18

    Councils must empty recyling stations more often. they are overspilling in hackney. more cycle lanes are needed and then they can launch a bike hire service like in barcelona & paris etc.

  15. Posted by katie ingham on 28 Feb 2008 14:15

    I agree with the dog mess thing...i live in N1 and there is dog crap everywhere it's a joke. If people have dogs they should pick up after them. otherwise why don't they just crap on the streets themselves if it's okay!
    Also, please ban cyclists from the canals and do more to prevent traffic (particularly buses) from stopping on pedestrian crossings.

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