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Supporting Victims of Hate Crime (Supplementary) [1]

  • Question by: Fiona Twycross
  • Meeting date: 20 June 2019
Fiona Twycross AM: Thank you. There has been a rise in hate crimes, as has already been noted, since the EU referendum, and there have been particularly bad spikes in the aftermath of some of the major events we have seen in our city, such as the London Bridge terror attack in 2017. What role do you think the re‑emergence of the far right has had to play in this, and what measures are you taking to protect the diverse communities in London and prove that London really is open?

Knife Crime (Supplementary) [1]

  • Question by: Florence Eshalomi MP
  • Meeting date: 20 June 2019
Florence Eshalomi AM: Just on the stop and search, Mr Mayor, which sometimes is a contentious issue, especially in the two boroughs I represent where a disproportionate amount of young black men are stopped and searched inappropriately, but we know that stop-and-search, when intelligence-led, does work. I have a group of students from St Michael’s sixth form in Bermondsey, and a big issue for them is around knife crime. Can you talk about some of the other initiatives to help reduce knife crime about getting our young people engaged in positive activities from a younger age?

Oral Update to the Mayor's Report (Supplementary) [1]

  • Question by: Andrew Boff
  • Meeting date: 16 May 2019
Andrew Boff AM: Mr Mayor, you have restated what was in your press release, that more homes were started at social rent levels than ever before. How do your 3,991 compare to the 11,329 that were started in 2010/11, the 10,663 homes that were started in 2009/10, and the 7,439 that were started in 2008/09?

Children's Future Food Inquiry (Supplementary) [1]

  • Question by: Florence Eshalomi MP
  • Meeting date: 16 May 2019
Florence Eshalomi AM: Mr Mayor, just following on from that, you may be aware of the Pecan food bank in Peckham. On 1 May [2019] the Bishop of Southwark opened the first of its kind, Peckham Pantry, in London. This is based on a membership scheme where local residents and families can pay £15 and can come to that pantry and buy a lot more than £15 worth of food shopping, going a long way to help address the issues around food poverty and the number of families relying on the food banks. I very much appreciate that your diary...

Social mobility (Supplementary) [1]

  • Question by: Joanne McCartney
  • Meeting date: 16 May 2019
Joanne McCarthy AM: Mr Mayor, poverty is a major barrier to social mobility and I am sure you were as shocked as I was this week when the London Child Poverty Alliance announced the new figures for poverty not only across the country but in London. It is increasing. If I can give you an example in my own boroughs of Enfield and Haringey, in Tottenham and Edmonton, nearly 49% of our children are living in poverty. This is after housing costs. Across my two boroughs, that means 66,000 children are living in poverty. You have already made some progress...

Demands on the Police (Supplementary) [2]

  • Question by: Susan Hall
  • Meeting date: 16 May 2019
Susan Hall AM: Thank you. Mr Mayor, it was with great distress that I read about the plight of Police Constable (PC) [Edwin] Sutton, who was forced to face a misconduct hearing by the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) for knocking a suspect ‘moped mugger’, who incidentally had no licence or insurance, off his bike. What conversations have you had with the IOPC regarding the pursuit of police officers doing their jobs, and what representations have you made to reverse this trend? Also, have you spoken to the Commissioner [of Police of the Metropolis, Cressida Dick CBE QPM], asking...

Demands on the Police (Supplementary) [1]

  • Question by: Caroline Pidgeon
  • Meeting date: 16 May 2019
Caroline Pidgeon MBE AM: The recent Her Majesty’s Inspectors (HMI) report into child protection in the MPS was a really worrying read. HMI added in a new recommendation regarding online child protection and highlighted serious limitations with digital forensics, particularly it hindering police being able to secure prosecutions. What are you doing to help police officers with this need for new technology and access to digital forensics to help them secure more prosecutions and help stop these horrendous crimes against children?

Brexit (Supplementary) [2]

  • Question by: Andrew Dismore
  • Meeting date: 16 May 2019
Andrew Dismore AM: What do you consider the priorities for Brexit now to be, after the extension, for Londoners of EU origin during this longer period of uncertainty?

Brexit (Supplementary) [1]

  • Question by: Joanne McCartney
  • Meeting date: 16 May 2019
Joanne McCartney AM: Mr Mayor, I want to ask you about EU students following Brexit. If they are treated as international students they will be only entitled to stay and work for four months. Do you agree that they should be able to stay for at least two years, preferably longer?

Resolving London's Teaching Challenges (Supplementary) [1]

  • Question by: Len Duvall OBE
  • Meeting date: 16 May 2019
Len Duvall AM: One of the important things in the devolution asks surely over the coming years ‑ it will not happen overnight ‑ is that we in London take more control working within the national setting around Ofsted and planning for school provisions. I do not think there is one London borough that is happy with the present relationships with the different czars and the competing and sometimes incoherent approaches that they take. Would it be better to bring it back to strategic London as well as working more collaboratively with the boroughs?
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