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Readers respond: Uxbridge citizens must come together to tackle poverty!

Readers respond: Uxbridge citizens must come together to tackle poverty!At the corner of every street in Uxbridge, poverty is present. How often do you come across a homeless person begging for a morsel of your income? Now, ask yourselves ‘how often do I give to the poor?’ I’ve been an Uxbridge resident for a year now, and I have learnt that Uxbridge citizens are the future generations' next politicians and activists. At the heart of the Uxbridge pavilion centre, residents are spreading messages of peace and harmony and donating to the needy, but we must do more when it comes to seeing people on the floor in the wider economy, especially during this cold time. Around the globe more than 1 billion people are living on $1.25. And contrary to the common myth that foreign aid consumes high percentages of the UK’s GDP, the reality of this statistic sits at a mere 0.7% of budgetary spending.   Volunteering at The Borgen Project has been life changing. I have been able to regularly meet with Members of Parliament to build support for life-saving legislation and effective poverty-reduction programmes. Knowing how much my community likes to give back, I know you would be of great help when ending poverty. So what does The Borgen Project do in particular? It is a non-profit that operates to make global poverty a focus of UK foreign policy. The NGO serves to educate, mobilise and advocate important legislation to be passed through Parliament such as the Official Development Assistance (ODA) in order to improve living conditions for people in poor countries. Legislation like this is crucial not only to raise the standards of life for those most in need, but equally, because they can have beneficial, localised effects within the UK through diplomacy, development and defence, such as the generation of new jobs and markets, or the strengthening of national security via political stability abroad. Ultimately, foreign aid can be viewed like an investment of some sort, into a country or place of need, with the prospect of lucrative long-term return investments and well-fortified rapports. In this respect, relating to our current economic downturn in the UK, we can see the mutual benefit of helping people abroad in order to generate prosperity and wealth on both ends. It is important for us here in the UK to look outwardly and uphold our moral duty to take care of fellow human beings around the world. As a Borgen Project ambassador, I am trying to do right by others and assert my moral responsibility for other human life in even the smallest of ways to make a change, such as by contacting my local MP to support acts such as ODA. I hope you will consider all of the above and do your part also to look after the fellow man.Zanobiya Ahmad, Uxbridge Borgen Project Ambassador

Zanobiya Ahmad ● 41d0 Comments ● 41d

Ealing Council Wall of Silence and Transparency

For the past 4 months, I and other residents have been asking Ealing Council, our Northfield Councillors and even our MP some very basic questions on the proposed Elthorne Park High School Street proposal and Consolidation Order. Where are the full details of the Elthorne Park School Street Order? Why can’t we see the “independent” HUP Initiatives consultant report? Why were ANPR cameras installed before the consultation closed? Was the June 2025 Consolidation Order, which revoked 35 School Street schemes in one sweep, even lawful? Why are FOI requests and Regulation 21 information requests being ignored or withheld? Yet no one will replyThe Wall of Silence after 4 months of chasing: 1)The Council won’t disclose FOI ignored and withheld. After a formal complaint to the ICO they are in contact with Ealing Council to ensure that they comply with their legal obligations. This would not be happening if the Council had been transparent and had followed the law.  2)Councillors won’t engageNot one reply from our three Northfield Councillors, or from Cabinet Members, or from the Council Leader Peter Mason.3)The MP won’t intervene with the governance and transparency issues, saying they are “for the Council to answer"This wall of silence undermines democracy in Ealing. If you share these concerns about transparency and accountability, please add your voice. Silence should never be the Council’s default response to constituents.✍️ Please sign and share the petition: https://chng.it/zgxxtHG8mc to demand Fair School Streets in Ealing – Demand Data, Consultation, Accountability and Transparency. This petition is for all Ealing residents — whether you support or oppose School Streets — who believe public policy must be:TransparentEvidence-basedLawfulOpen to challenge and scrutinyWe all want safe streets for children. But these schemes must follow due process, statutory consultation rules, and legal accountability standards — and right now, there is credible concern those standards are not being met, especially when ANPR cameras are installed before the consultation even closed!Thank you in anticipation of your support.

Mary Mulvey ● 120d138 Comments ● 73d