Roger Gough

Saturday, 27 February 2021

Crowdfunding Kent: KCC supports community-led recovery

As part of our commitment to supporting communities and Kent’s recovery from the pandemic, KCC has launched Crowdfund Kent with crowdfunding platform Spacehive. Crowdfund Kent will support community groups and projects that aid recovery from the Covid crisis, such as improvements to community facilities or initiatives that address financial distress or social isolation. KCC is contributing £500,000 in total and will allocate up to £20,000 or 50% of the project cost (more in exceptional circumstances in deprived areas) to individual schemes. 

I will be taking part in a webinar launch of the initiative on 17 March (details in the KCC media hub press release) and there will be further workshops to help develop schemes in March and April. The deadline for submitting schemes in this funding round is 28 April.

Tuesday, 23 February 2021

First steps on the road to recovery

The national road map to easing and ultimately ending Covid restrictions is very welcome. The pace may be cautious, but steady progress is surely preferable to measures that raise expectations but then have to take a step back or even be reversed. And all the while, the vaccination programme is making rapid progress.

I commented about the four key actions which we’ve tried to focus on in Kent - following the guidelines, symptom free testing (315,000 tests carried out in Kent, more than 2,000 symptom-free people tested positive and so able to self-isolate), contact tracing and enforcement. We’ll continue these actions in the weeks to come. Kent has come a very long way since New Year: from a 7 day figure of 900 cases per 100,000 and a high national outlier to 66.6 per 100,000 and just over half the national average. It’s a huge tribute to what people and communities across Kent have done; if we sustain that, we will stay on the road to recovery.

You can find the KCC press release here.

Friday, 19 February 2021

Anti-social parking near Knole: restrictions renewed

Kent County Council has issued an Order for no waiting at any time, to be applied to a number of roads that have been affected by inconsiderate (and in a number of places potentially dangerous) parking by visitors to Knole Park. This renews the order first issued last year, and then renewed in the run up to Christmas (and which was due to expire at the end of the month). 

The issue affects residents in Seal Parish in my Division, as well as those in neighbouring areas (including those represented by my County colleagues Margaret Crabtree and Peter Lake). A longer-term solution needs to be developed and I recently held a very useful meeting with those concerned with the issue, including local representatives, County and District representatives (both councillors and officers), Seal Parish Council and others. This will continue as we seek to develop solutions; in the meantime, continuation of the restrictions is essential.

The roads affected are:

A225 Tonbridge Road – both sides for the full length of the road

 

The Rise – both sides for the full length of the road

 

St Julian’s Road, Underriver – both sides for the full length of the road

 

Fawke Wood Road, Seal – both sides for the full length of the road

 

Weald Road – both sides for the full length of the road

 

Turners Gardens – both sides for the full length of the road

 

Shenden Way - both sides for the full length of the road

 

White Hart Close - both sides for the full length of the road

 

Road Connecting St Julian’s Road With Park Lane - both sides for the full length of the road

Thursday, 18 February 2021

Council tax - Helping Hands for hard-pressed residents

KCC has today confirmed a programme of help for hard-pressed residents with their council tax set out in last week’s 2020-21 budget.

Under the scheme, funded by some £6 million of the support that KCC has received from the government’s Emergency Covid-19 Grant, all those already under the Council Tax Reduction Scheme (CTRS), which provides discounts to those on the lowest incomes, will receive a rebate of £50 on their council tax bills. This will also help those who join the Scheme during the financial year, perhaps because of a sudden change in their circumstances such as redundancy. 

In addition, KCC is providing supplementary funding to District and Borough Councils to extend their existing Council Tax Hardship Fund schemes. These schemes are intended to help those who are - or were prior to the pandemic - ‘just about managing’ but above the income levels that would make them eligible for the CTRS. In this case too, the policy aims to help those who have been affected by the pandemic and its economic consequences. 

This announcement follows last week’s launch of the £10 million Helping Hands scheme by the council, providing support to businesses, households in financial distress, the voluntary sector and those in need of help in securing access to the digital technology that we all increasingly rely on. This too is funded by the Covid Emergency Grant; in both cases this is one-off funding that we as a council have decided to use to support those most impacted by Covid and its economic and social consequences. 

Last week’s KCC budget was aimed at protecting our services - especially those, such as adults’ and children’s social services that are likely to see a sharp increase in need and in more complex cases as we come out of lockdown. It also aimed to secure the long-term financial stability of the council - a council that is strong enough to be able to help when it is needed. The consequence of that, though reluctantly on the part of the administration, was a 2% increase in general council tax levels and a 3% increase in the adult social care precept. We were determined to ensure that the most hard-pressed households were relieved of the pressures of a council tax increase, and that is what these measures aim to do.