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Report of the Mayor (Supplementary) [21]

  • Question by: Steve O'Connell
  • Meeting date: 28 January 2015
Steve O’Connell AM: Yes, I may. Caroline [Pidgeon] ran out of time when we were talking about the anomaly of the off-peak outer London cap. The first thing that surprised me was that actually it was not anticipated by TfL. This wind and fire and fury that you are meeting - you will hear about it later - it seems odd to me that they had not smelled out this anomaly. That is my first point.

Report of the Mayor (Supplementary) [20]

  • Question by: John Biggs
  • Meeting date: 28 January 2015
John Biggs AM: It will not surprise you that Labour members - I think the evidence is getting stronger and stronger on this - take the view that you have your eye very much off the ball and, if I could paraphrase it, that in your role as London Mayor you should worry less about Kalashnikovs and more about commuters. This is about fares again. Can you answer a simple question? Do people who live in outer London have a realistic choice about whether they use the public transport system to get to work in central London?

Report of the Mayor (Supplementary) [19]

  • Question by: Darren Johnson
  • Meeting date: 28 January 2015
Darren Johnson AM: Dangerous junctions. The original dangerous junctions programme first identified 500. That was reduced to 100, and then we just have 33 now. Even with those 33 in the dangerous junctions programme, TfL only expects to deliver ten by 2016 and will not finish all of those 33 until 2022. Is it not time to set aside a little bit more funding from your roads budget, your transport budget, to ensure that we speed up this dangerous junctions programme?

Report of the Mayor (Supplementary) [18]

  • Question by: Caroline Pidgeon
  • Meeting date: 28 January 2015
Caroline Pidgeon MBE AM: Thank you. I would like to come back to the topic of fares and the off-peak, pay-as-you-go daily cap for outer London that we discussed last week. TfL has estimated to us that the cost of reintroducing the off-peak, pay-as-you-go cap for Zones 4 to 6 would be only around £10 million, and we know from your recent answer - I think it came out yesterday to me - that 25,000 passengers in outer London are now paying more every day due to your decision to remove this off-peak daily cap for outer London. Many will...

Report of the Mayor (Supplementary) [17]

  • Question by: Richard Tracey
  • Meeting date: 28 January 2015
Richard Tracey AM: Thank you, Chairman. Mr Mayor, you have made some fine announcements about the successes and investment on Crossrail and the Tube upgrades, and can I particularly thank you for completing the Northern line upgrade just before Christmas, which was in my constituency as well as many others here? Boris Johnson (Mayor of London): And the extension coming. Richard Tracey AM: Indeed, the extension coming. We are looking forward to that, most certainly, and of course onward to Crossrail 2. Can we, from our side, just offer you a few suggestions of other savings that could be made...

Report of the Mayor (Supplementary) [16]

  • Question by: Kit Malthouse
  • Meeting date: 28 January 2015
Kit Malthouse AM: Mr Mayor, I completely agree with your strategies. You would be surprised. It is absolutely true to say that the police are less likely to take severe action on their toys, buildings and all the other bits and pieces if they are not constrained in some way as they are around numbers. While I welcome that, I wonder if there are other areas of activity in the MPS which are still a priority where you would seek through the budget to protect capacity? For instance, we do not talk very much in this horseshoe any more about...

Report of the Mayor (Supplementary) [15]

  • Question by: Gareth Bacon MP
  • Meeting date: 28 January 2015
Gareth Bacon AM: Yes, thank you, Chairman. Mr Mayor, I would like to take you back to the exchange that you had with the much-admired Member for Barnet and Camden, who would not dream of electioneering in this chamber. Mr Mayor, from the moment you became Mayor, it seemed that the Labour Party were sure that you were about to take a big axe to police numbers. I think some of the more fair-minded among us can see that you fought tooth and nail, despite, as you said earlier, the massive cuts in funding and the seven years of famine...

Report of the Mayor (Supplementary) [14]

  • Question by: Tony Arbour
  • Meeting date: 28 January 2015
Tony Arbour AM: Contrary to what you have heard, Mr Mayor, there are residents of London who think you have actually done a very good job on policing. My constituents show the highest levels of confidence in policing that there have ever been. They are grateful to the MPS for the very substantial reduction in crime that there has been and they are glad that they are able to feel so much safer. However, today we are discussing the police budget and I am concerned to know how it is that you propose in future years the budget gap is...

Report of the Mayor (Supplementary) [13]

  • Question by: Jenny Jones
  • Meeting date: 28 January 2015
Jenny Jones AM: I am starting to look like one of the more polite people around this table, I would like to point out, which has probably surprised us all. Last week I published my report into MPS surveillance practice. In it, I outlined an awful lot of stuff that they do not need to be doing because they are looking at people like environmental activists, anti-racist organisations and so on. Would you consider reviewing that particular practice? You could save a lot of money for the MPS if you just stopped them wasting time on people like me.

Report of the Mayor (Supplementary) [12]

  • Question by: Andrew Dismore
  • Meeting date: 28 January 2015
Andrew Dismore AM: Can you tell me how many police officers we have in Barnet and how many in Camden?
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