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- 30/08/2009: This Blog Has Moved To http://www.stevetierney.org/blog
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Archive for the Gorefield Category
Pothole Buster ™ & Recession - The Action Movie
20/06/2009 by Steve Tierney.
Pothole Buster ™
If I had to name one thing that annoys the people of the Roman Bank & Peckover Division more than any other I’m pretty sure I’d end up using the ”P” word. Potholes. Of course there are many other issues, plenty of them more serious than the rugged surface of some of our roads. But there they are every day, rattling your suspension as you bump and grind over them. If you talk to the council officers they assure you that they are doing loads of repairs - that they are out there all the time patching up the problems. If you talk to the people of the division they say they never see anybody and potholes stay untouched for months on end. Everybody understands that the last winter took its toll on the roads and that its not cheap to repair hundreds of miles of tarmac.
On reflection I really think there is truth on both sides of this. It is fair to say that the council agent’s are working hard to fix all the damage. It’s equally accurate that some places remain unrepaired for long periods. So here’s my
Pothole-Buster ™ idea. (I’m not serious about the trademark, it just makes me chuckle. Pay no attention to it.) I’d like to ask anybody who lives within my ward (Wisbech Peckover, Leverington, Newton, Gorefield, Tydd St. Giles) to report any significant pothole in their road by email or phone to me. I’ll then drive down, take a picture of it, and report it to the county agents for you. I’ll post the pothole report, the picture and the status on a webpage on this site so everybody can see what potholes have been notified to us, where they are, when the council were told about them … and hopefully when they are repaired.
Each week I’ll chase the council agents and ask about potholes which have not been fixed, pointing to the date I notified them and the evidence on the website as it accumulates. What I very much hope is that this will demonstrate just how quickly and how often repairs are done and vindicate the council a little. Of course, it may go the other way, in which case we’ll be able to keep track of the problem and make a judgement of how best to proceed.
In the end you may laugh: “What’s a website and a bunch of phone calls going to do?” And perhaps it will be a difficult task in the current climate, although I like to think otherwise. Whatever the case, it certainly can’t hurt can it?
My challenge to all readers is this: don’t just moan about a pothole and presume you can do nothing about it. Notify me and let’s get to work, together, encouraging and cooperating with the council to put our roads to rights. Pothole-Buster(tm) style!
Report Potholes to:- me@stevetierney.org or leave a text on 07831 616127
Remember to state your name and phone number, the road and area where the pothole is.
* Your right to contact the council directly is not affected by this request. This is purely my own individual idea to try and get something done in a slightly different way.
**PLEASE - Only residents of my division. I can’t do anything for people in other areas - but I’m sure your own local councillor will be pleased to help.
Recession - The Action Movie
Our country is in big trouble. Not because of the much-vaunted ‘Broken Society’. Not because of crime and antisocial behaviour. Not because of the bloated, cannibalistic public sector. Not even because of the cumbersome mass of the welfare state which successive parliaments have consistently failed to have the courage to address. It’s because of the wasted, starving economy. But wait! Before you yawn and tell me to change the channel because you’ve heard this script before - consider this:
Here’s the problem with talking about the recession right now - if you say: “There is no way we’ll see any serious recovery this year” people accuse you of talking down the economy. So all the commentators are harping on about “Green Shoots” here and “positive changes” there and even how we’re “past the worst.” The trouble is that the government has been borrowing (and printing) money like there’s no tomorrow and sooner or later that money was going to trickle into the system and result in what economists call “greater velocity of currency” and what you and I probably call “lots of shopping.” People are spending all this borrowed and freshly-minted cash and this creates the appearance of slight recovery. These green shoots are an illusion, like a bright red apple hanging from a branch but full of squirming maggots within.
In a movie of the current crisis we are somewhere near the middle of the story. We’ve done the character development and had a few car chases to keep the excitement up. But the plot is getting serious now. At some point down the line - and we’re not talking about very far down the line here - the government’s desperate attempt to borrow its way out of debt is going to come to an extremely messy end. Maybe the sale of bonds will fail when international lenders refuse to buy any more until they see some chance of a return on their investment? Maybe the dollar will crash when China decides to start divesting itself of the currency and causes a run on it - with the knock-on effect of crippling the pound? Maybe money will continue to gush into the many public sector black holes while unemployment keeps spiralling up until a critical mass is reached? There are so many weak points in this particular card castle that its hard to say precisely which way it’s going to come tumbling down - but tumble down it shall. At this point in a movie you’d really hope the ‘heroes’ of the piece would be taking action, right?
What everybody should realise is that inflation is coming. Perhaps we can keep putting it off for a bit longer if Mssrs. Darling and Brown are allowed to pursue their profilgate borrow and spend policies. But do not trust the government or the media’s talk of green shoots. They want to keep the masses calm in the face of economic armageddon for as long as possible. They are, in fact, the villains of this story. The twist at the end would be a diabolical prime minister chuckling: “Yes, yes! My plan is complete!” as he contemplated the ruin of the nation.
Even at this late point it is not too late to save the day. In our action movie, when the evil mastermind’s plans have resulted in the country teetering on the brink of destruction you might expect a dashing, square-jawed musclebound hero to arrive in the nick of time. Now I’ll agree that David Cameron’s Conservatives are probably not very dashing and certainly not musclebound. But the Conservatives are the only party with the will and the experience to fix this horrific Labour mess. After all - they’ve done it before. In fact I’d guess this movie is a sequel. Let’s hope it has a happy ending. And if we get though it intact, please let’s make sure it never becomes a trilogy.
Posted in Wisbech, Gorefield, Pothole Buster (tm), Leverington, Newton, Credit Crunch, Tydd St. Giles, Conservatives | No Comments »
A New Blue Day
07/06/2009 by Steve Tierney.
A New Blue Day
Friday 5th June was ‘The Count’. The day when I would find out, one way or the other, whether the long and arduous campaign I had just fought was going send me to Shire Hall as a county councillor or to the Cupboard Under The Stairs to lick my gratuitous wounds.
I should stress that I enjoyed my campaign very much. I canvassed 90% of my division and got to meet people from every corner of it; Tydd St. Giles, Gorefield, Leverington, Wisbech, Foul Anchor, Tydd Gote, Four Gotes and Newton. I leafletted every house at least twice, some more often that that. I went to every Parish Council meeting and to a great many fetes, quiz nights, events and functions. (I intend to keep doing all these things. Some people say they usually ‘only see a politician when an election is coming’. It’s my intention to change that perception where it exists.)
The night before ‘The Count’ (each time I say that I have the urge to do a faux Dracula laugh, a la Sesame Street) I thought I would be unable to sleep, such was my nervous excitement. But sleep I did. Like the dead. I’ve always been somebody who likes to work, but this was one of the toughest, most gruelling months of my life. And the last week… that was the toughest of all. So my head hit the pillow and that was all I knew until the alarm screamed me awake and I stumbled, bleary-eyed, into the Day Of Reckoning. (You think I’m being dramatic? Try standing for council! It takes on a life of its own.)
Our ‘telling’ from the previous day suggested we were at 45% of the vote in my division. You’d think this would have helped me relax, but no. Quite the opposite. You imagine you may have gotten it wrong. That there may be some place where votes have been cast quite differently to what your canvassing suggested. Labour and the Liberal Democrats had utterly collapsed in Fenland and that had become clear to us during the campaign (despite a puzzling Cambs Times online poll that suggested Labour were doing well, much to our bemusement. Luckily that turned out to be a pretty duff poll.) It was UKIP that made me nervous. Which is a shame because (and this is a personal, not a party view) I am very much a Euro-Sceptic myself and agree that we would be Better Off Out.
On the day of ‘The Count’ (Bwah-ha-ha-ha-ha-haaaa) I stood at the table with my Wife (Marie Tierney), My Mum (Brenda Barber) and one of my Best Friends (Samantha Hoy) watching the drama unfold. As far as I could see, in the entire building there were only two Labour people: the Prospective Parliamentary Candidate (whose ‘prospects’ are so limited I can’t even remember his name) and another man in a red tie who looked very grumpy indeed. Looking around the hall, there weren’t a whole lot of Lib Dems either. But the Schooling Brothers showed up for UKIP (and they were very nice guys.) Andrew Hunt showed up for the Libertarian Party (and despite our differences, he was a really great guy too.) Even independents like Mark Archer (who was trounced soundly by Geoff Harper, proving that the world is a just place after all, in my humble opinion) managed to get there. Perhaps a message for the ‘opposition’ has been sent by impressive smaller parties and independents : “Do some work, show some interest, or you’ll wither away.”
The final result was that every single seat in Fenland was won by a Conservative. The whole area has remained that same wonderful blue and this is great news. It’s great for Fenland because decent, hard-working honest councillors have been returned to continue doing their vital jobs. It’s great for politics because it shows that even in the face of public scandal from high above and assault from opportunistic other interests all around the public here remain strongly conservative in heart and soul. And it’s great for me because I have experienced colleagues to go to for advice and guidance as I begin my own new position as a County Councillor.
Oh yeah… I won, by the way. Fifty-three percent of those who voted ticked the box next to ‘Steve Tierney’ on their ballot paper. It’s a truly humbling experience and a great honour. I’ve said it before. I’ll say it again. I won’t let you down.
Thank you, everybody.
Thanks
I have so many people to thank who were part of my team and who worked feverishly on my behalf and for the Conservative party. I’ll get around to thanking them all properly, but in brief:-
Bonnie Drewry and Ann Balls plus their entire wonderful Tydd St Giles team.
Rosemary Peggs, Rachel Tranter, David Humphrey and the entire Gorefield Conservative branch and friends.
Gavin, Paul, Adam, Laura, Tom, Saluwedin and the brilliant gang at Fens Conservative Future.
Gary Tibbs, Lynny, Peter Tibbs and Jamie Edwards, who got involved purely because they are amazing friends and worked as hard as anyone (particularly Gary).
My Dad, John Tierney, who drove up from Hemel Hempstead to canvas with me.
Steve Barclay PPC, Cllr Nick Meekins, Lucy Heighton, Janet Stott, John Lewis and the many other Leverington and Peckover tellers.
My stepdad Tony Barber (and the whole Leverington team), who delivered more leaflets, canvassed more houses and walked more streets than I could have ever hoped for.
Cllr Simon King for getting me involved in all this in the first place and for being the font of all knowledge and sage advice whenever I have needed it.
My wife Marie Tierney for putting up with my barely being in the house for a month and managing all the usual things we do together, plus taking great care of our Son while I was seldom around, with good humour and grace.
And most of all:-
Debbie Clark, almost certainly the most wonderful Organising Secretary any Conservative area could ever hope to have.
Samantha Hoy - My Right Hand Girl. Who worked every bit as hard as I did and without whom I would have been lost.
Steve Brunton - Who put in so many hours of help I lost count and who deserves a medal for his dedication.
Brenda Barber - My Mum, who was the lynchpin of the entire campaign and who offered support, encouragement and almost all her free time in the same way she always has whenever i’ve needed her.
My victory belongs to all these people as much as, or more than, it does to me.
You guys were absolutely, mind-blowingly, awesome. Thank you so much for everything.
Posted in Cambs. County Council, Family, Election, Victory, Gorefield, Wisbech, Tydd St. Giles, Newton, Leverington, Conservatives | No Comments »
We Won!
06/06/2009 by Steve Tierney.
Cynical local newspapers, ‘Independent’ troublemakers and Massive upper Government scandals notwithstanding…
We won!
The whole of Fenland remained entirely Conservative and I won my seat with a very humbling majority.
Thank you so much for your overwhelming confidence and support, people of Wisbech Peckover, Leverington, Gorefield, Newton and Tydd St. Giles. I will not let you down.
I’ll blog more after the weekend. Now… I need a celebration drink (or two.)
Thank you again.- Cllr. Steve Tierney, Roman Bank & Peckover. Conservative.
Posted in Cambs. County Council, My Campaign, Election, Gorefield, Wisbech, Newton, Leverington, Tydd St. Giles | 1 Comment »
The Expenses Witchhunt, Visiting Sutton & Out n’ About
10/05/2009 by Steve Tierney.
The Expenses Witchhunt
Doesn’t watching the news just get you down, lately? Every day a new sleaze allegation, a new misuse of office, a new expenses scandal. MP after MP, night after night, is being brought low by the terrible might of the Daily Telegraph (and whatever mole made a fortune leaking the list to them.) I know it’s not going to be popular, but I’d like to make a plea for calm. Before I do, I suppose a few clarifications need be made to prevent being hauled into the stocks and having fruit hurled at me.
Clarifications: I’m as outraged by the misuse of MP expenses as the rest of you. It’s wrong, they shouldn’t have done it, and the rules need to be changed right away.
Okay, with that out of the way, I’d like to make the case for some old-fashioned reason instead of all the frothing and shouting that the press are urging so fervently.
This is what has happened (in a nutshell). MP’s represent huge bodies of people and in public life somebody with that level of responsibility and duty would be paid very highly indeed. MPs earn a perfectly healthy wage (most of us would love to earn that much), but compared to the private sector wages for a similar job they earn very little. On top of that, those who live a fair way from London and have to work there several days a week must have somewhere to stay while doing their job. It’s no good telling them they ‘earn enough’ to pay for it themselves. They mostly don’t (unless we only want millionaires in parliament…) Hotels in London are expensive and staying in one several nights a week would be just as expensive as a second home.
Over many years MPs have shied away from giving themselves any significant pay rise, but the costs of living and staying in London keep getting higher. Let’s face it, the reason they didn’t give themselves a pay rise is because there’s no nice way that story will ever play in a newspaper.
So a culture has built up between MPs that instead of taking a pay rise, they will use their second homes allowance instead. Please note: I’m not saying this was right. It certainly wasn’t clever. But nor is it ‘evil’. If anything it was cowardly, or just a bit dumb.
Instead of shrinking back in horror as it becomes clearer by the day that: “they are all at it” we could choose to take some solace in that. Surely only the most paranoid anarchist actually believes that ‘every MP’ is crooked? It’s so obviously not true. What they are is human. They used a scheme rather than take a payrise (stupidly) and presumed it would never get looked at too closely (also stupidly) and because they were all doing it they talked themselves into believing it was right and proper (most stupidly of all.)
We know it was wrong. They know it was wrong. Yet still the public bay like a pack of starving wolves, circling the increasingly wide-eyed and frightened members of parliament with the scent of blood in their nostrils. The media are stoking the fire with furious glee. After all, every new secret brought to light is a new headline, a new expose, and a hundred thousand papers sold.
The damage being done here is immense. The public are losing all faith in their politicians. Our whole system of democracy is being undermined. The story is now feeding itself and getting hungrier. Some sanity needs to be restored.
All MPs, or even most MPs, are not crooked. You may not like the rules (I certainly don’t) but they were within them. It was a ridiculous, flawed system. But it has now been uncovered. The thing to do here, the sensible, calm, rationale thing is to change the rules. Do away with the loopholes and all non-business expenses. Demand all receipts. Publish the full list every year. And that, my friends, will be the end of that. As for second homes, I personally think they are fine, but that they should belong to the taxpayer. When an MP finishes their time in parliament the house they bought is sold and the money (and profit) is put back into the taxation pot. Voila! (Excuse my French) No more expenses problems ever again.
As for getting the police involved. Sure - if they have actually broken the law. A very few may have done so. Let’s just try not to tar them all with the same brush. It’s certainly a good story to see that an MP bought nappies on his parliamentary expenses, or a plug, or a couple of toilet seats, but it’s not the same as, say, cash for honours. If the police think there’s a case, let them make an arrest. That is, after all, their job.
Visiting Sutton
I’ve been canvassing in Sutton (Ely) today on behalf of Cllr. Philip Read. Why am I campaigning for somebody else and not my own seat? That’s easy - because I’m part of a team. Cambridgeshire Conservatives don’t operate in little isolated pockets, we work together and help one another. An impressive team it was too, since it included (but was not limited to) our organising secretary Debbie Clark, the leader of the county council Cllr. Jill Tuck and the Prospective Parliamentary Candidate Steve Barclay.
Highlights of the day included a very interesting debate about Europe with a gentleman who wanted to know what the Conservative position on it was. The fantastic views of rolling countryside and fertile fields that can be seen from most of Sutton and is particularly easy to appreciate on such a clear and sunny day. And being chased by a dog (who caught me and proceeded to drool all over me.) Please note: nobody set the dog on me. I wasn’t canvassing for Labour. ![]()
Councillor Read is an experienced, dedicated local politician, councillor and gentleman. The people of Sutton clearly know that already, since many of them knew him personally when I knocked on their doors and had nothing but good things to say about him and his work. He also has a donkey, which is kinda neat in my humble opinion. How many people have a donkey in their backyard?
So, if you live in Sutton, maybe we met today! If so, maybe you were one of the many people who told me on the doorstep how tired you were of Labour and how unenthused you were by the Lib Dem’s unlikely affectations and grandiose promises. I couldn’t agree with you more.
Out n’ About
My own Campaign begins officially tomorrow. Obviously I’ve been doing preparation and all sorts for quite some time. But tomorrow is my first day of actual canvassing and leafletting. The Conservative Office have done a great job of my literature and I’m really pleased with it. Over the next month I’ll be in Wisbech Peckover, Leverington, Gorefield, Tydd St. Giles and Newton. It is my intention to get around as much of the division as is humanly possible. If I can do every house, I’ll consider that perfect. That’s the target I’m aiming for. If you live there and you see me, please say: “Hi!”. And please remember to vote Conservative on June 4th. Every vote counts.
If you have any questions for me please don’t hesitate to;
phone (07831 616127)
Email me@stevetierney.org
or write : Steve Tierney, 6 Alexandra Road, Wisbech. PE13 1HQ.
The Small Print (legally required during election campaigns.)
Published by Mrs D N Clark on behalf of Steve Tierney both of 111 High Street, March, Cambs PE15 9LH.
Posted in Gorefield, Cambs. County Council, My Campaign, Wisbech, Leverington, Tydd St. Giles, Newton, Conservatives | No Comments »
A Tax On Oxygen & Campaign Launch
05/03/2009 by Steve Tierney.
A Tax On Oxygen
I’m sitting here reading the news that the Bank Of England has, today, begun its ‘Quantitative Easing’ (Printing Money.) We’ve all known it was coming. I’ve personally dreaded it because its a short-sighted and exceptionally dangerous thing to do. Trying to explain to people who aren’t interested in economics why money-printing is bad news is difficult because its easy to get bogged down in ‘clever’ terminology and mathematics. But everybody instinctively understands that you can’t conjure money from thin air. Not without serious consequences, anyway. If you could, we all would.
The real truth about Quantitative Easing, as I’ve said before, is that it is a stealth tax. Every pound ‘printed’ devalues every other pound in the world. The more you print, the less the existing pounds are worth. So every time the government ‘invents’ another lot of cash, they are stealing directly from your pockets and from your bank accounts and from your future earnings. If you have UK Pounds stirling there is no way to avoid this stealth tax and since the Bank Of England has expressed their intention to continue printing each month this is an ongoing cumulative tax on us all. No specific one activity is being taxed, you can’t escape it and it’s not targeted at a specific industry or goods. Consequently, the best way to view it is as a tax on the air we breathe. That too would be inescapable and ongoing in the same way. I wonder if the government would get away with it if people made that comparison more often?
Campaign Launch
I’m presently working on the wording and photographs for my forthcoming campaign as County Councillor for the Roman Bank And Peckover Ward. I’m standing (as you might guess) as a candidate for the Conservatives. If anybody who reads this blog is interested in volunteering to help with the campaign; deliver leaflets, canvassing and other assistance, I’d gratefully welcome your help! Give me a call on 07831 616127, or email me on me@stevetierney.org
The areas my ward includes are Wisbech North, Leverington, Gorefield, Newton and Tydd St. Giles, all in Cambridgeshire.
Posted in Gorefield, My Campaign, Wisbech, Leverington, Tydd St. Giles, Newton, Credit Crunch | No Comments »
The Recession, The Banks and Gorefield Conservative Association AGM.
23/01/2009 by Steve Tierney.
The Recession Is Here
Is there anybody who didn’t already know this? The official figures have finally forced the government to admit what everybody has been more than aware of for the last few months. We are officially in recession. People who have read my blog (and moreso if they’ve seen my comments on the FensCF bulletin board) will know I’ve been making economic predictions for several months now, only to see them come true one after another. I find it absolutely terrifying that the self-styled Economic Guru that is our Prime Minister actually seems to have no understanding of economics whatsoever. You cannot cure a debt-bubble by accumulating more debt. You cannot compete with unregulated countries in an international free market if you over-regulate and over-tax your own companies. You cannot (the words of ancient economist John Maynard-Keynes nothwithstanding) create wealth through government spending. Governments do not create wealth. They only redistribute it. You have to have some to redistribute in the first place!
Gordon Brown needs to stop wishing on a star and start taking urgent action. If he does not, Britain will be bankrupt. The IMF will be called in (and even they may not have enough money to bail us out this time). I just hope that the people of Britain will choose wisely next time and elect a Government that understands that money cannot be magicked into existence. If Gordon Brown decides to try and solve his woes by turning on the printing presses and churning out money then all bets are off! Hyper-Inflation here we come! Just In Case, I’d recommend stocking up on canned goods and candles. With this madman in charge it could still get much, much worse.
The Banks
I’m not going to get into the blame game right now. Anybody who thinks: “All this is the banks fault,” is dangerously oversimplifying. The banks have done some really stupid things, but the Banking Crisis is not the disease. It is just a symptom of the disease. The real ailment is a simple one: too much borrowing. You, me, the government, the banks, the world. Too much borrowing, too much debt, too much risk. We have all (by which I mean a large section of the Western World) chosen to live beyond our means and financed that with a decade of finance. Now, our government’s solution is to punish the few people who have done the sensible thing (avoided borrowing and saved) by crippling their savings and borrowing against their future.
The UK is like a teenager who leaves school and accepts three credit cards. For a while, the teenager looks wealthy and successful, buying anything that is required with a swipe. But when the cards hit their limits and the bills come due, the truth comes out. That’s where we are. The sad thing about the banks is that they are mostly structurally bankrupt. And they know it, which is why they can’t lend, and why they wont lend to each other. They must be allowed to rebuild, which cannot be achieved by forcing them to make even more risky loans. And certainly can’t be achieved by putting moronic government ministers in charge of their business plans.
Gorefield Conservative Branch
It was a pleasure last night to attend the Annual General Meeting of the North-East Cambs Conservative Association - Gorefield Branch. First and foremost, its quite unusual for a pleasant little village like Gorefield to even have its own association! But then when you see how hard they work and how much they achieve you have got to admire them! I watched the AGM and then the Committee Meeting thereafter with much appreciation. They put forwards fund-raising ideas and planned events. They all offered to pitch in and do the work required (not a single one of them was anything less then dedicated, as far as I could see). This is the sort of community- and activist-minded group that we need much, much more of. But best of all, they all seemed to be enjoying it and having a great time! A wonderfully positive attitude!
The current Chairman of the NE Cambs Conservative Association Pam Potts addressed the AGM eloquently with her own frank admiration for the work they have done and continue to do. Debbie Clark (Organising Secretary) was no less grateful.
Posted in Recession, Gorefield, Credit Crunch | No Comments »