Justine Greening MP Writes To Residents | ||||
Including Brexit, South Western Railways, Aviation Strategy Green Paper and more
Dear Resident, However, there's also lots going on aside from Brexit, and I've been raising concerns about South Western Railways service over the past month which has been very unreliable for everyone depending on it. It's been great to see so many residents and community groups at their annual end of year and Christmas events and also helpful to catch up on other issues that matter to our community as well. December is always my busiest month on correspondence and I've responded to over 1400 letters and emails to constituents this month. Parliament returns in early January and I will be sure to keep you updated as we go forward. In the meantime, I hope you and your family had a lovely Christmas and I wish you a very Happy New Year in 2019. Residents' Survey I'm currently doing a residents' survey to make sure I am continuing to focus on our priorities as a community. It's very straightforward to complete, so it'd be great if you could take a minute and fill out the survey so I can make sure I keep working hard on the issues that matter to us. • Wrote over 1400 letters or emails to constituents about their concerns. • Joined local Putney Councillors and Wandsworth Economic Development Cabinet Member, Cllr Rory O'Broin, to visit local shops and hear from small business owners on Small Business Saturday. • Visited Regenerate RISE and the Platt Centre in Putney to discuss their plans for a new reablement centre they are planning for older people on discharge from hospital. • Saw first hand the hard work that goes into delivering our post during the Christmas season with a visit to our local Royal Mail delivery depot. • Met with local volunteers to support the fantastic Breast Cancer Now fundraiser in East Putney which has so far raised over £30k. • Joined Friends of Wandsworth Park at their annual Christmas meeting and party after a busy year with residents doing lots of great events in the Park, planting trees and working with the council to protect the park's environment. Working in Westminster As your local Member of Parliament, this month in Westminster I have: As you know, this month has been key for ongoing Brexit negotiations and debates in Parliament. Like many people, I am deeply frustrated that the debate on Brexit seems to be the only issue that gets any "airtime" - there are many other challenges our country faces, whether day to day local issues such as South Western Trains, or longer term national issues like social mobility or social care, and we must find the political space for them. However, as the last two and a half years has shown, Brexit seems to take all the time there is. We started five days of debate on the EU Withdrawal Agreement that were meant to lead up to a meaningful vote on the deal on Tuesday 11th December. However, a day before the vote was due to take place, the Government announced it would no longer take place, and the Prime Minister acknowledged it would have led to the Deal being voted against in Parliament. Lots of people have emailed me about their concerns on the deal and I share those concerns. I believe what's currently being proposed isn't in the best interests of the country. If Parliament just nodded it through, its huge flaws for the UK would simply become apparent later and people would then question why we allowed it to pass, plus we'd have all the problems to still sort out. I've been through the 585 page Withdrawal Agreement very carefully and also the accompanying 26 page Political Declaration because it's so crucial to understand the actual terms being proposed for MPs to vote on. A major problem is that the Withdrawal Agreement that has been agreed by Government ties Britain into complying with EU rules over which we will have no say, and for many years (whilst a free trade agreement is reached, which we have not begun negotiation on in detail yet). Consequently, as a deal, it does not ‘take back control’’, it actually gives away huge amounts of control and sovereignty over the rules that we have to follow back to the EU, which is not only wrong but will also prove to be unworkable. I see no prospect for any Parliament in the future simply accepting new EU rules if they are against the UK’s interests, and when we have had no role in shaping them. At that point we'd just be back to square one again with no agreed deal. In terms of what the Withdrawal Agreement signs up to, on state aid rules (as an example) which may change in the future in a way that is not in our interest, we can be judged as in breach by the EU, and fined with as little as 30 days notice by the EU if we are "anti-competitive". They judge if we then have complied. Any EU business rules that change may very much affect UK business but we will have to follow them even though the UK will have had no input into their design. In addition, the deal also signs us up to agreeing that the EU will represent us at many international meetings to the exclusion of the UK attending separately - should it be at any such meeting, on an exceptional basis agreed by the EU, the UK has agreed to not take a position that is contradictory to the EU line, even though we will have had no voice around the table that decided it. The deal is also not good for the political stability of the UK. It has proposals that mean that Northern Ireland will likely end up increasingly aligned to EU regulations rather than the rest of the UK, which will have a corrosive effect on our United Kingdom both in Northern Ireland and in Scotland. I am also very concerned it will also in practice undermine the Good Friday agreement which has helped bring peace and security for people in Northern Ireland and our country more broadly. In addition, the so-called Political Agreement that is intended to set out the longer term relationship between the UK and the EU gives very little meaningful level of detail as to our future relationship, has no timescales, no guarantees and is not binding on either party. In other words, we will be legally leaving the EU but with no agreed or detailed relationship set out. Again this seems to be wholly inadvisable and unacceptable as an approach for the UK. I think it's been clear for months that Parliament is in gridlock. That's why I’m campaigning very strongly with MPs from across Parliament for a second referendum to let the public have the final say, especially given that no-one seems happy with the deal as proposed. I trust my constituents to be able to make an informed decision choosing between the practical routes forward on Brexit compared to the existing deal with have with the EU, and this is a momentous step for Britain. South Western Railway Update I have already written to the Transport Secretary and to South Western Railway to press them to ensure that services are improved and also disruption from strikes is kept to a minimum. The strikes seem deliberately timed to have the maximum negative impact on passengers which is unacceptable. I'm still waiting on an update from the Transport Secretary, but South Western Railways have responded to the concerns I've raised and you can see it here: South Western Railway Strike Response. Aviation Strategy Green Paper and Consultation
The Department for Transport has launched it's Aviation 2050 Green Paper to consult on future proposals for aviation including proposals to better manage the environmental impacts of aviation growth, including carbon, air quality and noise. The Green Paper proposes to put in place a stronger and clearer framework which addresses the limitations in current noise policy and ensures industry is properly incentivised to reduce noise, or to put mitigation measures in place if reductions aren’t possible. As our community is already very effected due to the noise of the Heathrow flightpath and the resulting pollution this causes, do have a read of these future proposals and have your say on the consultation until the 11th of April. I'll certainly be putting in a submission on behalf of our community. I am also continuing to campaign with other local MPs against the third runway proposal, and the legal case that Wandsworth Council is bringing with other Councils is proceeding through the courts. In the meantime, you can read the Green Paper proposals and respond here. Many constituents will have seen the huge disruption to Gatwick airport from the drones flown overhead and seen the obvious issues for Heathrow too, not only in relation to travel but also safety issues for planes arriving and landing. This is a concern I've raised in with the DfT in the past year already - it seems a clear risk that has not been properly dealt with, as the Gatwick experience shows. I am following this up with the DfT and it is clear that action needs to be taken not only to stop disruption but more importantly to ensure passenger and community safety. I hope that this update gives you a brief snapshot of some of the things I am working on as our local Member of Parliament. As ever, if you would like to contact me or raise an issue, than please get in touch and I will do the best I can to help. You can email me on justine@justinegreening.co.uk, write to me at 3 Summerstown, SW17 0BQ or call my office on 0208 946 4557. You can also follow me on Twitter and Facebook to see all my latest updates. Best wishes, January 4, 2019 |