Category Archives: update

News from Focus E15 Campaign

Come to the campaign meeting this Saturday to make plans for 2019.
Saturday 8 December 2.30-4.30pm
Sylvia’s Corner, 97 Aldworth Road, London E15 4DN
Hear about the effects of poor housing and insecure conditions on children and young people. A young speaker, who has recently been supported by our campaign will talk about her experience of standing up for her right to be housed near to her school. A speaker from Housing and Mental Health Network provides the bigger context, and also hear report of research on anger and how this affects us in housing.
Plus more on the Labour council, the Carpenters Estate and plans for 2019….

RESIDENTS FROM BRIMSTONE HOUSE STAND TOGETHER

Residents of Brimstone House have maintained pressure on John Gray, Newham’s Cabinet representative for Housing, to hold him to his word that the conservatory within the building will be cleared out and returned to a children’s play area, and the locked park outside the building will finally be opened up for the children to play in.

It is grotesque to think of the unsuitable and cramped conditions that families with young children are being forced into in Brimstone House while the play areas are kept locked up.

Therefore, on 1 December, residents of Brimstone House and Focus E15 campaign entered the opened park and the children played. Then we went to visist the conservatory in the building….. it was cleared out, but still boarded up and locked…. the next day however, the boarding had been taken down….this is a step forward and now it must stay  open and be filled  with toys and fun activities for the children.

Remember that Brimstone House is formerly Focus E15 hostel/foyer where the campaign started five years ago, when young mothers and pregnant women refused to be moved out of London.

Five years on, with a change in council and mayor, that fight is still going on, as families who refuse out of area housing are outrageously labelled intentionally homeless and face the real possibility of the council discharging their duty to house them, this is in the context of Newham as one of the poorest boroughs in London with worsening homelessness, overcrowding and social cleansing.

Read about this struggle here:
https://focuse15.org/2018/12/03/stuck-in-limbo-at-brimstone-house-newham/

And put it in the context of the ongoing revelations of financial mismanagement of immense proportions in the borough. Expose this rotten system….
https://www.newhamrecorder.co.uk/council-investment-properties-1-5804846

It is clear that unless we fight back and resist, more and more people will be forced into unsafe, overcrowded, slum accommodation or made homeless.
We must fight for a world where land is held as a common good and housing as a human right. Which is also why we are campaigning for every new home on the Carpenters Estate to be a council home at council rent.

Capitalism is theft!
Stand with Focus E15 campaign on the streets, in action and at the meeting this Saturday and join the resistance!

 

A day in the life of Focus E15 housing campaign 

Focus E15 campaign split forces on the morning of Saturday 14 July. Our street stall was set up on Stratford Broadway by some, whilst others went to meet Newham’s new Mayor, Roksana Fiaz, at her surgery in East Ham library. Our determined group comprised of campaigners and residents from the hostel Brimstone House in Stratford, residents from the tower block Ferrier Point in Canning Town as well as local families facing eviction, all coming together to raise concerns.

We bartered a collective meeting with Roksana Fiaz and she listened to everyone’s concerns in turn which meant the meeting lasted over 1 hour. This was quite a difference from the Robin Wales experience we had been use to, where young mothers were treated with utter contempt and disdain.

Roksana Fiaz and the councillor Susan Masters who was also present were both updated about the dehumanising and prison-like security at Brimstone House, the ongoing battle against intentional homelessness, the fight against poor housing conditions and the horror of bailiffs, the inadequate housing provision for people with disabilities and children, and the way in which people are treated in the council housing offices. The message was clear, that people want permanent and appropriate housing in their communities. Roksana Fiaz instructed her staff about the issues that need following up urgently and said that her officers and the councillors need to meet with residents to hear these problems first hand. Focus E15 campaigners also raised the issue of the empty homes on Carpenters estate and she said that in the Autumn she will meet with Carpenters residents and others with updates and plans.

Focus E15 campaign will be following up all these pledges and promises.
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Meanwhile, at our stall we were joined by a very worried resident of Ebury Bridge Estate in Pimlico as Westminster Council has just voted to demolish their estate. We discussed our experience of campaigning and suggested the next steps and tactics – watch this space for an upcoming meeting in Pimlico which everyone is welcome to support!

As we ate some lunch after the street stall and the meeting, we were found by a group of housing activists from Denmark who had come to make links with Focus E15 campaign. They are part of an important new housing campaign in Copenhagen, fighting against the ‘Ghetto List’ – part of a shocking new Danish policy whereby areas are becoming known as ghettos, rights are being denied to those living in those areas – the people who live there are predominately non-western European and working class. Under the new law, children will be forced to attend day-care centres to learn ‘Danish values’, residents can receive lower welfare benefits than elsewhere, and punishments for crimes committed in the area could potentially be given double the amount of a normal sentence. Our new Danish friends said that they would be writing a blog for our website addressing their struggle, but in the meantime, see an article about this issue here: http://www.middleeasteye.net/news/isolation-not-integration-minorities-targeted-danish-ghetto-policy-denmark-1826345568
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We finished our Saturday marching for Grenfell – the most shocking symbol of all the struggles in the housing crisis. We will stand with the Grenfell community until there is justice.
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Please join our housing campaign on the streets next Saturday – and remember there is a place for everyone!

The privatisation of housing means misery for European working class

Last month, a member of Focus E15 campaign and the Radical Housing Network went to Belgrade in Serbia to join the European Action Coalition For the Right to Housing and to the City. The coalition is a group of housing activists from all over Europe and beyond who regularly meet with the intention of unifying housing struggles and strengthening demands.

The main topic on the agenda was the international day of action taking place in October and how to raise awareness of the ‘financialisation’ of housing. ‘Financialisation’ is the transformation of housing into a commodity, not only on the real estate markets, but on financial markets, as housing is regarded as a way to make money and not an essential social need or a basic human right.

Over a period of a few days, the coalition held talks and discussions about occupations and eviction resistance and explored how to build grassroots activism from a need or a struggle in the community. There were groups much like Focus E15 campaign, who are working closely with their local communities, some of whom are disproportionately affected by housing issues, such as the Roma community in Romania and Portugal. Some housing groups, in France and Germany  for example, were campaigning about similar issues to us, such as diminishing social housing and forced relocation. On the other side of the spectrum, progressive housing movements in countries such as Greece and Cyprus spoke about their struggles in a brutal system which has no social housing whatsoever and explained about their daily fight against dispossession and evictions in the aftermath of the financial crisis.

Our host group in Belgrade, ‘Ne da (vi) mo Beograd’, is a strong and well-known campaign opposing a huge and lucrative sell-off of public land at the city’s waterfront. The name in Serbian is an untranslatable play on words. The brackets suggest two sentences, one meaning ‘We’re not giving Belgrade away’ and the other ‘Do not sink Belgrade’.

We were taken on a guided tour and we were able to witness the shocking disparity between the luxury developments along the waterfront on the one hand and the working class communities under constant threat of eviction, left to languish in slum housing, on the other. We also visited a housing estate in a working class district that was built during the former socialist Yugoslavia era. Here we were introduced to older citizens and families living in a housing complex that was originally socially-owned housing, but is now in private hands.  This is due to a series of catastrophic changes to housing law which were introduced by the government after the collapse of former Yugoslavia in the early 1990s.

Housing cooperatives were originally owned by the people of Yugoslavia, meaning that everyone had a ‘share’ in them, and those who lived there worked for the upkeep of the housing in return for nominal rent and amenities. When Yugoslavia was destroyed, housing was taken over by the government, and eventually a principle similar to Right To Buy was introduced until most of the housing stock was sold off to the private sector. 98% of housing in Serbia is now privately owned, whereas previously around 50% of housing was socially owned.

Unsurprisingly, the cooperative that we visited has fallen into the hands of dodgy private owners. The landlord had raised rents until they became unaffordable for tenants and as a result, the community has been left to fend for themselves. The government is attempting to evict them all and will not support or re-house them. The people have nowhere else to go, and as they told us, many are too ill or too old to go out to work in order to pay the high rents in the private sector.  Yet at the same time, the government is spending millions on a huge private venture, building luxury apartments, hotels, malls and tower blocks. Outrageously the government is building over a useful railway track and demolishing the municipal housing of railway workers who had lived there for years.

Such contempt and disregard for the needs of the community is something very familiar to us in Newham, East London, where the Focus E15 campaign is based. You only have to walk a few metres out of Stratford station to see the luxury monstrosities growing across the skyline scattered amongst the Olympic Park. And right beside it, Carpenters Estate, where three huge tower blocks of social housing lie empty, save for a few sparse lit up windows, highlighting the residents who Newham council has been unable to evict. The skyline is visually emblematic of the social cleansing going on here and throughout London. Meanwhile, Newham is the worst borough for homelessness in London, and you can see more and more rough sleepers in the shopping centre, or huddled on the few green spaces left around the area, and this doesn’t even account for the high numbers of invisible homeless that we know are living in sub-standard temporary accommodation or sleeping on the floors and couches of friends.

To return to Belgrade, what is heartening about the community that we met there is that they have not given up and continue to resist evictions by joining ‘Don’t Sink Belgrade’ on their demonstrations against the privatisation of the waterfront, helping to mobilise thousands of protesters in the streets. They are a real inspiration and show us what community organising can achieve. The whole of Europe is in the grip of a capitalist crisis, a neo-liberal disaster and we must ensure that we continue to fight for our human right to have decent homes!

Latest News from Focus E15 Campaign

Focus E15 campaign on the streets every Saturday
join us on the stall 12-2pm outside Wilko’s on the Broadway, Stratford E15

Saturday 27 February – campaign meeting 2.30-4.30pm
Bryant Street Methodist Church, Bryant Street, E15 4RU

Street homelessness on the increase…
Last week on the stall we met Charlie who is 20 years old and has been homeless for two years.
Read about him on our blog.
https://focuse15.org/2016/02/21/rough-sleeper-found-in-doorway-of-newhams-housing-office/

This article was published in the Guardian today
http://www.theguardian.com/society/2016/feb/25/homeless-number-people-sleeping-rough-england-rises-almost-a-third-in-a-year
The number of people sleeping rough in England on any one night has doubled since 2010 and increased by 30% in the last year, with an estimated 3,569 people now sleeping on the streets across England, according to new government figures.

Social cleansing – fight for decent housing for those sent to Boundary House in Welwyn Garden City
Newham has sent families with young children to appalling overcrowded bedsits in Welwyn Garden City – read this piece by Kate Belgrave and come and support Elina, one of the last residents in Boundary House, fighting for her and her children’s right to decent accommodation near her support networks. Don’t let these families fight alone, make our disgust public.
http://www.katebelgrave.com/2016/02/the-one-where-the-council-officer-hangs-up-the-phone-on-a-homeless-woman/

Brimstone House / Focus E15 hostel, where Focus E15 campaign originated with the collective strength of the single mothers facing social cleansing, has East Thames Housing Association residents who were placed there originally by Newham Council as vulnerable young adults in need of supported living. Those remaining have now received threatening High Court letters about bailiffs. Newham cannot wash their hands of these young people and must house them locally. Join Focus E15 campaign to give them support and make our outrage known.

Cuts budget unanimously approved by Labour councillors
Having thought about all that – think of Robin Wales, mayor of Newham and his cuts budget.
On 22 February Newham Labour council met with a full public gallery of…16 people. After the handpicked 16 had entered the public gallery, the rest were put in the Lister Room with a screen to see the procedings. Very distorted sound meant difficulty understanding all the contributions. If it wasn’t for Councillor Clark who spoke of the housing crisis with rising temporary accommodation, unsutainable cost of temporary accommodation and the people moved out of borough and out of London, then housing would hardly have been mentioned by Labour Mayor Robin Wales. He spoke of his new proposal of ‘Fairer Rent’ due to come in, blamed the problems on the asuterity programme from our Tory government and promised that there would be no cuts in meaningful services, lots of money for improving roads, pavements and lighting and patted himself on the back saying he was ‘proud of this outstanding budget’. It was agreed unanimously by all the councillors present. Somehow they have reduced a £54m cuts to £37m cuts and all seemed happy with the plan to cut the back services without affecting frontline services (how?) and that Robin Wales will review anything that is brought to him.

Well we have to bring things to Robin Wales’ attention – the homelessness, those being sent out of Newham away from family, friends, schools and support networks, the vicious Housing Bill and the Immigration Bill and the 400 empty homes on the Carpenters Estate that must be used immediately to house people in need.

In Neighbouring Walthamstow, 63 properties from Butterfields estate, recently bought by property company Butterfields E17, are being advertised for sale as empty properties while tenants are still there, some who have lived there for decades.
http://www.guardian-series.co.uk/news/14283428.Protests_over_evictions_from_housing_estate_after_charity_sells_on_to_developers/

Come to our stalls and meetings, add your ideas for action, support those struggling for housing in your area and let’s get together, solidarity is strength.

Mum and her baby allowed to stay on in B&B

The young woman and baby who was threatened with eviction from her B&B when she refused to be moved to the outskirts of Basildon (due to racist abuse) is no longer being evicted tomorrow, Tuesday 7 July.

Her case has been highlighted by Focus E15 campaign and other eviction resistance housing activists.

Today Newham council phoned her up to say that they will continue payment for the B&B until there is a decision from her appeal.

She will keep us updated on her housing situation.
She and her baby still need to be housed in a decent long term affordable stable home.

Onwards!
Keep up the pressure!
Social Housing! Not Social Cleansing!