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Protecting London's Green Spaces (Supplementary) [3]

  • Question by: Thomas Turrell
  • Meeting date: 22 May 2025
Thomas Turrell AM: Thank you, Chair. Mr Mayor, last year you told this Assembly that London’s Green Belt is as important today as it always has been. All that has changed since then is that Labour is now in Government, so Londoners are left wondering: are you a liar or a lapdog?

Protecting London's Green Spaces (Supplementary) [2]

  • Question by: James Small-Edwards
  • Meeting date: 22 May 2025
James Small-Edwards AM: Thank you, Chair. I think it is just worth reiterating in this debate that only 13 per cent of the Green Belt is green space that is accessible to Londoners and nowhere in the Towards a New London Plan consultation does it talk about building on that green space. When it does talk about building on the Green Belt, it sets out clear stipulations around affordable housing, around infrastructure and around new or additional green space. What I am taking away from it is more housing that is affordable, greater infrastructure connectivity, increased biodiversity and more or...

Protecting London's Green Spaces (Supplementary) [1]

  • Question by: Alessandro Georgiou
  • Meeting date: 22 May 2025
Alessandro Georgiou AM: Thank you, Mr Chair. Mr Mayor, I hope you and your family are keeping well. Mr Mayor, does low quality Green Belt include parks and MOL?

Tree Protection (Supplementary) [2]

  • Question by: Joanne McCartney
  • Meeting date: 22 May 2025
Joanne McCartney AM: Yes, thank you. Following on from that, it is a very emotional and emotive subject, and I was very surprised to see that TPOs are not placed on most heritage trees. In fact, most heritage trees do not have protection. At a recent [London Assembly] Environment Committee [meeting, on 14 May 2025], we heard that in actual fact local authorities only tend to protect when they are aware of an imminent danger to a particular tree, which there did not seem to be that imminent danger. But there are some different regimes across the world, such as...

Tree Protection (Supplementary) [1]

  • Question by: Alessandro Georgiou
  • Meeting date: 22 May 2025
Alessandro Georgiou AM: Thank you, Chair. Mr Mayor, I used to play under that 500-year-old oak tree when I was a child, having been born and raised in Enfield. Yes, not 500 years ago, mind you, but still I had the beard then. I would ask: would you join with me in asking councils to be proactive with these heritage assets, particularly trees, in issuing TPOs? I know it is not generally done but given what we have experienced to stop these crooks cutting down our valuable heritage assets, such as these trees.

Supporting Londoners to use the powers in the Renters Rights Bill (Supplementary) [1]

  • Question by: Andrew Boff
  • Meeting date: 22 May 2025
Andrew Boff AM (Deputy Chair): Mr Mayor, I am quite grateful to the ACORN Campaign for Renters Rights who met with Assembly Members before this meeting today and gave their view very strongly and assertively. Do you think that renters should have the right to know who their managing agents of their landlords are?

Listening to Londoners (Supplementary) [7]

  • Question by: Bassam Mahfouz
  • Meeting date: 22 May 2025
Bassam Mahfouz AM: Thank you, Chair, and if I could welcome Stanhope Primary School, I know in fact they are used to far more mature debate in their own school, great to have you here. Mr Mayor, I just want to correct you to start off with, you celebrated Crystal Palace, you celebrated Tottenham Hotspur, but Chelsea Women’s team made it a treble on Sunday [18 May 2025] as well and in fact beating another Manchester team on Sunday, therefore another thing to celebrate, west is best on that front too. Very quickly, we did have a question from Assembly...

Listening to Londoners (Supplementary) [6]

  • Question by: Leonie Cooper
  • Meeting date: 22 May 2025
Léonie Cooper AM: Thank you very much, Chair. Mr Mayor, the original question, although we seem to have got lost in everyone else’s questions that they are bringing up from the end of the Order Paper of questions, is about your manifesto commitments. Just to help you, because we seem to have a problem, I wonder if you would like me to remind you of when the Conservative Peer, Assembly Member Lord Bailey, has broken ranks to call for new housing to be built all over the protected Green Belt, “There is a housing crisis in London”, he said, “someone...

Listening to Londoners (Supplementary) [5]

  • Question by: Neil Garratt
  • Meeting date: 22 May 2025
Neil Garratt AM: Morning. Nationally, [The Rt Hon] Ed Miliband [Secretary of State for Energy Security and Net Zero] is obviously aiming to achieve net zero over 25 years and there has been some debate about the cost of achieving that. In your manifesto, you set out to make London a net zero carbon city, not in 25 years, but in five years. Do you think you have been clear with Londoners that the cost of achieving your ambition is about £5,700 per London household per year?

Listening to Londoners (Supplementary) [4]

  • Question by: Keith Prince
  • Meeting date: 22 May 2025
Keith Prince AM: Good morning, Mr Mayor. Congratulations, Chair. Nice to see that most teams in Lancashire are being beaten by London! Unfortunately, as you well know, one of them particularly successful. Anyway, would you agree, Mr Mayor, that in your manifesto you pledged to unleash a public transport revolution in outer London. How do you square that with TfL’s discriminatory and divisive changes to the W12, 13, 14 and 549 bus routes, which have had severe negative consequences for my constituency in Redbridge since they were imposed on 7 September [2024]. Unfortunately, you will not have a briefing on...
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