Greater London Authority

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Greater London Authority GREATER LONDON AUTHORITY NOTICE OF ELECTION ELECTION OF MAYOR OF LONDON AND LONDON-WIDE MEMBERS OF THE LONDON ASSEMBLY DATE OF THE POLL 1. In the event of a contest, the date of the poll will be Thursday, 6 May 2021. NOMINATION PAPERS 2. Nomination papers to stand in the elections for the Mayor of London and the 11 London-wide Members (party list and individual) of the London Assembly may be obtained from the office of the Greater London Returning Officer, City Hall, The Queen’s Walk, More London, London SE1 2AA on working days between 9am and 4.30pm. Nomination packs can be downloaded at: https://www.londonelects.org.uk/im-candidate/nominations DELIVERY OF NOMINATION PAPERS 3. Completed nomination papers must be delivered in person and hardcopy (not by email) to the Greater London Returning Officer, Committee Room 1, Lower Ground Floor, City Hall, The Queen’s Walk, More London, London SE1 2AA, on any weekday from the date of this notice between 9am and 4.30pm, but by no later than 4pm on Tuesday 30 March 2021. PAYMENT OF DEPOSITS 4. The deposit for each Mayoral candidate is £10,000. The deposit for each party list or individual candidate in the election of London-wide Members is £5,000. Payment should be made by electronic transfer into the GLA Income Account (Royal Bank of Scotland; sort code 16-00-38; account number 00780445). Payment can also be made by cash or bankers draft (banks operating in the UK only). Cleared funds must be received by 4pm on Tuesday 30 March 2021. REGISTERING TO VOTE 5. Applications to register to vote must reach the Electoral Registration Officer in the local authority area where the elector is to be registered by Monday 19 April 2021. Applications can be made online at: https://www.gov.uk/register-to-vote . POSTAL AND PROXY VOTING 6. Applications to vote by post or to change existing postal or proxy voting arrangements must reach the Electoral Registration Officer in the local authority area where the elector is registered by 5pm on Tuesday 20 April 2021. 7. New applications to vote by proxy must reach the Electoral Registration Officer in the local authority area where the elector is registered by 5pm on Tuesday 27 April 2021. 8. Applications to vote by emergency proxy at this election on the grounds of physical incapacity or for work/service reasons must reach the relevant Electoral Registration Officer by 5pm on Thursday, 6 May 2021. The physical incapacity must have occurred after 5pm on Tuesday 27 April 2021. To apply on the grounds of work/service, the person must have become aware that they cannot go to the polling station in person after 5pm on Tuesday 27 April 2021. Constituency Members of the London Assembly 9. To become nominated as a candidate in the elections for the 14 Constituency Members of the London Assembly you are advised to contact the relevant Constituency Returning Officer (CRO) for the particular Assembly Constituency concerned. Details of the nomination process will be set out in the official notices of election published by them. Contact details of the CROs can be found at: https://londonelects.org.uk/cro Dated: Monday 22 March 2021 Mary Harpley Greater London Returning Officer Printed and published by the Greater London Returning Officer, City Hall, The Queen’s Walk, More London, London SE1 2AA [email protected] .
Recommended publications
  • 1225 LCE Pan-London Collab 5 11/9/06 14:59 Page A
    1225 LCE Pan-London Collab 5 11/9/06 14:59 Page a Transforming the Procurement of Temporary, Agency and Interim Staff: Pan London Collaboration Opportunities through efficiency Improvement www.lcpe.gov.uk 1225 LCE Pan-London Collab 5 11/9/06 14:59 Page 1 CONTENTS 1 Executive summary 3 2 Background and introduction 4 3 Current situation as of November 2005 5 4 Areas for collaboration identified for further work 6 4.1 Managed services and an electronic knowledge exchange 6 4.2 Benchmarking 7 4.3 Market intelligence 7 4.4 Trend gathering 7 4.5 Rate comparisons by role 7 4.6 Jobs portal 7 4.7 Vetting / references 8 4.8 Basic induction 8 4.9 NEMS / Slivers of Time project 8 4.10 Standardised job roles 8 4.11 Standardised testing / questions 8 4.12 Joint training and recruitment initiatives 8 4.13 Quality information on agencies 9 4.14 Agency audits (work eligibility, insurance, CRB checks) 9 4.15 Outsourcing where there is a high usage of temporary staff 9 4.16 Contracts opened to other authorities 9 4.17 London-wide pool of staff 10 4.18 Addressing skills shortages and workforce planning 10 4.19 Standardised policies 11 5 Recommendations 12 5.1 Managed services 12 5.2 Policies and guidance 12 5.3 Electronic knowledge exchange 12 5.4 Pan London collaboration priorities 12 1 1225 LCE Pan-London Collab 5 11/9/06 14:59 Page 2 6 The way forward 13 6.1 London priorities matrix 13 6.2 Risk register 13 7 Appendices 20 7.1 Pan-London snapshot - anonymised 20 7.2 Acknowledgements 28 This information is published by the London Centre of Excellence on the understanding that it will not be amended, reproduced or disclosed to other parties without the express written permission of the LCE Management Board.
    [Show full text]
  • Accepted Manuscript
    *** This is the authors’ version – the final version is available via the journal website https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0040162519312314 *** An orchestration approach to smart city data ecosystems Panos Frances Bowen Anushri Gupta Panagiotopoulos University of East Queen Mary University of Queen Mary University Anglia London of London Abstract Research on smart cities has illustrated the use of data analytics, open data, smart sensors and other data-intensive applications that have significant potential to transform urban environments. As the complexity and intensity of these projects has increased, there is a need to understand smart city data ecosystems as an integrated view of data applications by the various city entities that operate within an institutional environment. This paper examines how authorities involved in such ecosystems coordinate data initiatives from an orchestration perspective. A case study of London’s city data initiatives highlights the challenges faced in complex city data environments and the importance of an integrated view. Three elements of orchestration in smart city data ecosystems – namely openness, diffusion and shared vision– are identified as the main enablers of city data initiatives within London’s local government authorities. The study contributes to our theoretical understanding of orchestration within data ecosystems, as well as the social and technological impacts of city data. Keywords: smart cities; data ecosystems; orchestration; local government; London city data 1. Introduction
    [Show full text]
  • Statement of Persons Nominated
    Greater London Authority Election of London Members of the London Assembly Thursday 6 May 2021 STATEMENT OF PARTIES AND INDIVIDUAL CANDIDATES NOMINATED Here follows the registered parties which remain nominated, together with the list of persons who stand as candidates for those parties; the persons who remain nominated as individual candidates; and any other persons who have been nominated, together with the reasons why they no longer stand nominated. Party Candidates T Any other persons who have been nominated and the reason why they no longer stand nominated Party Candidates’ Names and Addresses Animal Welfare HUDSON VANESSA MORLAND SAM BOURKE ALEX AMIN FEMY Party - People, HELEN Address in the Kensington Address in the Hackney Address in the Wycombe Animals, Address in the Tower and Chelsea electoral area electoral area electoral area Environment Hamlets electoral area SCOTT MARK WEISMAN JULIAN 41B HAROLDSTONE Address in the Brent ROAD, WALTHAMSTOW, electoral area LONDON , E17 7AN Christian Peoples MARTIN MAUREEN MAUD SPIBY-VANN HELEN DICKENSON ASHLEY VALINEJAD CAROL Alliance Address in the Lewisham Address in the Haringey KEITH Address in the Bexley electoral area electoral area Address in the Sutton electoral area electoral area ODESANMI EUNICE HORTENSE KATHERINE COKE DESMOND AKHIGBE DONALD ORUYINKA ADE SUSAN Address in the Merton Address in the Redbridge Address in the Greenwich Address in the Lewisham electoral area electoral area electoral area electoral area Communist Party TALBOT ROBIN CAZORLA RODENAS BRAND PHILIP ALLMAN AKIRA
    [Show full text]
  • Transport for London Invitation to Tender Issued on Behalf of The
    Invitation to Tender National Sports Centre – Sporting Facility Assessment Transport for London Invitation to Tender Issued on behalf of The Greater London Authority ITT Title: Sports Facility Assessment Reference Number: GLA NSC SFA 2017 Copyright on the whole and every part of this document is owned by Transport for London. No reproduction of the whole or any part of this document is to be made without the authority of Transport for London. This document is confidential to Transport for London. No part of this document or information contained in this document may be disclosed to any party without the prior consent of Transport for London. - 'Protect-Commercial'- Page 1 of 42 Invitation to Tender National Sports Centre – Sporting Facility Assessment Table of Contents Part 1 1 Introduction ...................................................................................................... 4 1.1 Overview ............................................................................................................. 4 1.2 Document Structure ............................................................................................ 4 2 Background ...................................................................................................... 5 2.1 Introduction ......................................................................................................... 5 2.2 Transport for London – Overview ........................................................................ 5 2.3 Further Information ............................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Greater London Authority
    GREATER LONDON AUTHORITY NOTICE OF ELECTION ELECTION OF MAYOR OF LONDON AND LONDON-WIDE MEMBERS OF THE LONDON ASSEMBLY DATE OF THE POLL 1. In the event of a contest, the date of the poll will be Thursday, 6 May 2021. NOMINATION PAPERS 2. Nomination papers to stand in the elections for the Mayor of London and the 11 London-wide Members (party list and individual) of the London Assembly may be obtained from the office of the Greater London Returning Officer, City Hall, The Queen’s Walk, More London, London SE1 2AA on working days between 9am and 4.30pm. Nomination packs can be downloaded at: https://www.londonelects.org.uk/im-candidate/nominations DELIVERY OF NOMINATION PAPERS 3. Completed nomination papers must be delivered in person and hardcopy (not by email) to the Greater London Returning Officer, Committee Room 1, Lower Ground Floor, City Hall, The Queen’s Walk, More London, London SE1 2AA, on any weekday from the date of this notice between 9am and 4.30pm, but by no later than 4pm on Tuesday 30 March 2021. PAYMENT OF DEPOSITS 4. The deposit for each Mayoral candidate is £10,000. The deposit for each party list or individual candidate in the election of London-wide Members is £5,000. Payment should be made by electronic transfer into the GLA Income Account (Royal Bank of Scotland; sort code 16-00-38; account number 00780445). Payment can also be made by cash or bankers draft (banks operating in the UK only). Cleared funds must be received by 4pm on Tuesday 30 March 2021.
    [Show full text]
  • A Mayor and Assembly for London: 10 Years On
    2 July 2010 A Mayor and Assembly for London: 10 years on Tony Travers and Christine Whitehead A brief history… It is 10 years since the Greater London Authority was created as a metropolitan or regional tier of government for London. There have been five different arrangements of ‘upper tier’ government in the capital since the Metropolitan Board of Works (MBW) was created in 1855 to build infrastructure. The MBW was succeeded by the London County Council (LCC), a powerful authority for the inner part of the contemporary city. Within this area 28 metropolitan boroughs and the City of London delivered ‘local’ services. Two factors were particularly important in influencing the progress of London’s government. First, the physical expansion of the city created demands for provision across a wider area than the City of London’s original and long-evolved ‘square mile’. The Metropolitan Police Service was created by the government in 1829 to meet the law and order requirements of a fast-growing city. The squalor and chaos of the London of the 1850s prompted Parliament to legislate for London’s first-ever metropolitan government, an indirectly-elected entity. Further physical expansion between the end of the 19 th century and 1939 generated a debate about the need for a ‘Greater London’ government 1. The second important factor in determining the kinds of institutions that emerged was the local power and parochialism of both the City of London and the parish-based or ad hoc bodies that developed to deliver services in the absence of a city-wide government.
    [Show full text]
  • London Councils' Response to the Mayor's Draft London Housing
    London Councils’ response to the Mayor’s draft London Housing Strategy London Councils is committed to fighting for more resources for the capital and getting the best possible deal for London’s 33 local authorities. We lobby key stakeholders, develop policy and do all we can to help our boroughs improve the services they deliver. We also run a range of services ourselves, all designed to make life better for Londoners. London Councils’ Members sit on the Homes and Communities Agency London Board overseeing the Homes and Communities Agency’s investment strategy in London and the delivery of some aspects of the Mayor’s Housing Strategy. Summary Following discussion at London Councils’ Executive, Housing Forum and London Councils’ Housing Directors Group the following paper sets out our response to the Mayor’s draft London Housing Strategy. For ease of reference, we have focused our response on three areas: delivery, devolution and design. Our key proposals on each are as follows: Delivery • A short review of the current effectiveness of the Homes and Communities Agency London Board; • The Mayor commits to a review of London borough affordable housing targets as delivery becomes apparent; • That the Greater London Authority works with us to develop a coherent plan of action so as to encourage the growth of institutional investment in London and to make best use of work already being undertaken by the Homes and Communities Agency; • The Greater London Authority works with London Councils to develop a pan-London shared-equity scheme, to sit along side other elements of the Mayor’s First Steps programme; • The Greater London Authority works with London Councils and London boroughs to oversee and manage the rollout of the London Development Agency’s proposed London-wide Housing Company.
    [Show full text]
  • Assessing City Governance for Low-Carbon Mobility in London
    sustainability Article Assessing City Governance for Low-Carbon Mobility in London Paul Drummond UCL Institute for Sustainable Resources, Central House, London WC1H 0NN, UK; [email protected] Abstract: City-level decisions are crucial for delivering a low carbon transition, particularly as urban population dynamics and environments change in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Ensuring appropriate governance structures, mechanisms and resources to facilitate these decisions is therefore essential. Based on a systematic literature review by van der Heijden (2019), this paper develops a simple framework to assess the state of ten enabling factors for effective urban climate governance, and applies it to low-carbon passenger mobility in London. Drawing on documentary evidence and a series of semi-structured expert interviews, it finds that London’s city authorities have a strong capacity for autonomy, stakeholder participation, local leadership and coordination on climate action and mobility, of which they make extensive use. The national legal and political framework remains broadly supportive following the UK’s departure from the EU, but multi-level co-ordination is thin, and funding issues have intensified conflict over political jurisdiction since the pandemic began. Spatial variation in urban form and infrastructure, coupled with dual-layer city administration, complicate the socio-political landscape and drive for climate action in mobility. Keywords: climate change; local government; climate governance; urban transport 1. Introduction Citation: Drummond, P. Assessing Following existing nationally determined contributions (NDCs) under the Paris Agree- City Governance for Low-Carbon ment, warming is projected to reach 2.6 ◦C by the end of the century, with a lack of practical Mobility in London.
    [Show full text]
  • Bibliography Retrofittingsoho
    BIBLIOGRAPHY RETROFITTINGSOHO Bibliography (Note: All websites viewed between 1 October and 24 November 2008) AEA Energy & Environment. 2008. Review of the Carbon Limited. Carbon Trust micro CHP report is finally Potential Impact on Air Quality from Increased Wood out. <carbonlimited.org/2007/11/27/carbon-trust-micro- Fuelled Biomass Use in London. London: London chp-interim-report-finally-out/>. Councils Transport & Environment Committee. Available Carlsen. J. 2008. Sustainable design and construction from: UK city update – London. 29 April 2008, Presentation. <www.londoncouncils.gov.uk/London%20Councils/Tran sport/Transport%20Publications/Item18ThePotentialImp Chamra, L.M. 2007. Propane-Fuelled Combined Heat actonAirQualityfromIncreased.doc>. and Power (CHP) Systems for Residential Applications, Mississippi State University. Available from: ARUP. Geotechnics- Embodied Energy and Embodied <www.propane.tx.gov/research/documents/06ChamraR Carbon. esidentialCHPSystems.pdf>. <www.arup.com/geotechnics/feature.cfm?pageid=1092 9>. Chazan, D. 2008. ‘Office block warmed by body heat’. BBC News, 7 February. BCIS. 2006. How long do building components last? <news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/7233123.stm>; New report provides answers to the most difficult <www.jernhusen.se/templates/Page.aspx?id=944>. question in whole life costing, Press release 19 October. Available from: CityWest Homes. The History of PDHU. <www.bcis.co.uk/NR/rdonlyres/42D4A542-83B9-4A70- <www.cwh.org.uk/main.asp?page=494>. 90D0-DA57A077190B/0/LifeExpectancyPR2006.doc>. Clark, P. 2007. Beyond Ground source Heat Pumps. BERR. Low Carbon Buildings Programme, Department Building, 9 October. for Business Enterprise & Regulatory Reform. <http://www.building.co.uk/sustain_story.asp?sectionco <www.lowcarbonbuildings.org.uk/>. de=747&storycode=3097129&c=3>.
    [Show full text]
  • Greater London Authority Acts 1999 and 2007; Town & Country P
    Sarah Whitnall Our ref: GLA/4870/02 Area Planning Officer – North Planning Team Your ref: 19/04487/FULL Westminster City Council Date: 27 April 2020 Westminster City Hall 64 Victoria Street London, SW1E 6QP Dear Sarah, Town & Country Planning Act 1990 (as amended); Greater London Authority Acts 1999 and 2007; Town & Country Planning (Mayor of London) Order 2008 LTDA – Taxi House, 11 Woodfield Road Local planning authority reference: 19/04487/FULL I refer to your correspondence of 14 April 2020 informing the Mayor that the local planning authority is minded to approve planning permission for the above planning application. I refer you also to the notice that was dated 14 April 2020 under the provisions of article 5(1)(b)(i) of the above Order. The Mayor has delegated his planning powers to me. Having now considered a report on this case (GLA ref: 4870, copy enclosed), I am content to allow the local planning authority to determine the case itself, subject to any action that the Secretary of State may take, and do not therefore wish to direct refusal or to take over the application for my own determination. Yours sincerely, Jules Pipe CBE Deputy Mayor for Planning, Regeneration and Skills Cc: Tony Devenish, London Assembly Constituency Member Andrew Boff, Chair of London Assembly Planning Committee National Planning Casework Unit, DCLG Lucinda Turner, TfL Agent: Peter Twemlow, DP9 Ltd, 100 Pall Mall, London SW1Y 5NQ City Hall, The Queen’s Walk, London, SE1 2AA ♦ [email protected] ♦ london.gov.uk ♦ 020 7983 4000 planning report GLA/4870/02 27 April 2020 LTDA – Taxi House, Woodfield Road in the City of Westminster planning application no.
    [Show full text]
  • Greater London Authority Act 1999
    The Rt Hon S Khan Department for Education Mayor of London Sanctuary Buildings City Hall Great Smith Street The Queen’s Walk London London SW1P 3BT SE1 2AA Tel: 0370 000 2288 www.gov.uk/dfe Date: 15 April 2020 Dear Mayor Khan, Grant Determination Letter for Devolution of the Adult Education Budget for Academic Year 2020/21: DfE reference number GRx152 This Determination is made between: (1) The Secretary of State for Education and (2) The Mayor of London This letter sets out your delegated Adult Education Budget (AEB) for Academic Year (AY) 2020/21 to support devolution of adult education functions and associated AEB across the Greater London area. In addition, the letter confirms the amount of devolved AEB you will receive in the financial year 2020-21 (1 April 2020 to 31 March 2021). Your delegated AEB for AY 2020/2021 will be transferred in accordance with Section 39A of the Greater London Authority Act 1999. The delegated AEB will be provided to the Greater London Authority on your behalf. Amount and purpose of the grant Your delegated AEB for AY 2020/21 is £318,580,139 and has been allocated to you for the provision of relevant adult education functions in the Greater London Authority area for the period 1 August 2020 to 31 July 2021. Payment arrangements The AY 2020/21 spans two financial years. Therefore, £199,048,871 will be paid in April 2020 for the period 1 August 2020 to March 2021 and £119,531,268 will be paid in April 2021 for the period 1 April 2021 to July 31 2021.
    [Show full text]
  • Of Greater London's Clean Air Zone
    Examining the ‘reach’ of Greater London’s Clean Air Zone Summary New data analysis from Environmental Defense Fund Europe reveals how the true ‘reach’ of Clean Air Zones goes far beyond their boundary, likely bringing air quality benefits to millions of people across the country. A sample week of vehicle journeys shows that heavy duty vehicles crossing through Greater London’s Clean Air Zone were driven on average twice as far outside the Zone than within and passed through nearly 95% of major towns and cities in England and Wales, with the potential to reduce harmful emissions for up to 18 million more people. Diesel pollution and freight Air pollution across the UK is damaging people’s health. An estimated 28,000 – 36,000 deaths were attributable to toxic air in 20191, and many more people continue to suffer from daily health impacts, such as lung and heart disease. Research has shown that reducing this health burden could provide £1.6 billion for the UK economy each year2. Diesel vehicles are a major cause of dirty air. Diesel is carcinogenic and a source in towns and cities of nitrogen oxides (NOx) pollution, which includes lung- and heart-damaging nitrogen dioxide (NO2). EDF Europe analysis has also shown how marginalised communities bear the greatest burden from air 3 pollution . The most deprived Londoners are six times more likely to live in areas with higher NO2 pollution than the least deprived. Levels of NO2 in areas where people of Black, Asian or minority ethnic backgrounds are most likely to live are on average 24-31% higher than areas where white people are most likely to live.
    [Show full text]