MP visits Stonecot Hill

Paul Burstow MP visits Stonecot Hill, 19 October 2007

Paul Burstow visited Stonecot Hill on Friday (19 October) to talk with local traders and residents about parking facilities and improving the area.

Sutton and Cheam’s Liberal Democrat MP walked the length of Stonecot Hill’s shopping parade to assess the difficulties caused by current parking regulations and the state of the street scene generally.

Mr Burstow will be writing to Transport for London to clarify the parking consultation process which will start in November, following a petition from 2000 local people. He will also encourage progress on various street maintenance issues.

Paul Burstow MP to visit Stonecot Hill

Paul Burstow MP

Paul Burstow MP will be visiting Stonecot Hill at 10am on Friday 19th October 2007 to discuss parking arrangements with local traders and residents.

Mr Burstow will be spending approximately one hour in the area to see for himself how local parking can be improved and how he may be able to help local people’s campaign for a better deal on the Red Route from Transport for London.

If you would like to speak to Mr Burstow on the day, please contact Adrian Short on 020 8286 6696 to be added to the schedule.

In August, local people collected 2004 signatures on a petition to mayor Ken Livingstone and Transport for London asking for a full public consultation on Stonecot Hill’s parking. There has been no official response as yet.

Mr Burstow has been member of parliament for Sutton and Cheam since 1997.

Download the A5 flyer for this event

Photo copyright (c) Paul Burstow.

Parking petition story in today’s Sutton Guardian

Sutton Guardian parking petition article

The Sutton Guardian have run an article about the Stonecot Hill parking petition on page four of today’s edition.

I do not and cannot speak for everyone that lives, works and visits Stonecot Hill. That is why the parking petition simply calls for a full consultation of everyone concerned about the issue. However, TfL’s spokesman entirely misunderstands many shopkeepers’ points of view and so I have written this response:

It is unsurprising that parking on Stonecot Hill’s Red Route (A24) is so difficult as Transport for London (TfL) seem to have no idea what local people’s concerns are nor what they are asking for.

TfL’s spokesman is entirely right in saying that extending parking times might damage local businesses. Some people might park for very long periods and prevent passing motorists from stopping to shop. That is why local shopkeepers are calling for more short-term parking and less long-term parking. Shopkeepers would also like to see some of the 20-minute loading bays turned into 20-minute parking bays to enable more people to stop, shop quickly and leave without risking a fine.

Over 2000 people signed the Stonecot Hill parking petition because their concerns and complaints about the way TfL are managing this area have been ignored. We look forward to TfL announcing a definite date for a public consultation to ensure that all local residents, businesses and shoppers are heard at last. We are still waiting.

Parking petition closes with 2004 signatures

The Stonecot Hill parking petition has closed with 2004 signatures. It was run for an extra week to bring the total above the 2000 point.

The petition calls on mayor Ken Livingstone and Transport for London to review parking arrangements on Stonecot Hill due to widespread dissatisfaction with the current regulations and the way they are enforced.

Local politicians are backing the petition. Liberal Democrat councillors Tony Brett Young and Abigail Lock visited Stonecot Hill recently to talk to shopkeepers and local residents about the issue. For the Conservatives, council candidate Ray Hilldrup has been helping to collect signatures locally.

The mayor’s office has not yet responded to a request on 1 August to make arrangements to receive a delegation to deliver the petition to City Hall.

1891 people sign Stonecot Hill parking petition

Shopkeepers with parking petition

1891 shoppers, traders and residents have backed a petition asking mayor Ken Livingstone and Transport for London to review parking facilities on Stonecot Hill’s Red Route.

The petition states that the lack of well-planned and managed parking on Stonecot Hill causes shoppers travelling by car to go elsewhere and threatens traders’ livelihoods. It also calls attention to the apparent contradiction between environmental and economic policies that aim to support local shopping and small business and the current situation on Stonecot Hill.

Edward Luckhurst, partner of Plumb Crazy, said, “The current parking arrangements have been in place for years and they haven’t worked. This petition is the end of a two-year campaign to have local people listened to. We want to see a fairer system that balances people’s need to stop and park to shop with the need to keep traffic moving through the area. The current situation benefits no-one.”

The petition will be presented to Ken Livingstone at City Hall next week.