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#121
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In message , at 17:16:11 on Wed, 11 Sep
2019, tim... remarked: County Councils provide the street lighting. not where I live they don't :-) Unitary Authority? or London Borough, City of London or Westminster, If those are equivalent in the distribution of civic responsibilities to a unitary authority, then they come into the same basket. weird isn't it London Boroughs are technically different to Unitaries but actually identical I suppose more things have been given to the Mayor to look after, but I don't think that was the case when they were first set up I remember the LCC (London County Council) which was a precursor to the GLA. Perhaps they did education - like other real counties, whereas now the Boroughs do? -- Roland Perry |
#122
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On 11/09/2019 17:16, tim... wrote:
"Roland Perry" wrote in message ... In message , at 14:11:32 on Wed, 11 Sep 2019, Robin remarked: On 11/09/2019 13:51, Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 12:22:29 on Wed, 11 Sep 2019, tim... remarked: There are lots of people who can't easily have an electric car, they include my parents who live in a street of Victorian terraces with narrow pavement. However I think more than half the population could charge at home. So what do the other half do..? Something else. There doesn't need to be one solution for everyone. but the solution isn't in the hands of individual - I can't just decide to have a charge point connected to the local street lamppost No-one can because the street lights are on circuits not much bigger thanÂ* a 13A ring main, Separate from the supply to premises. Unless the premisesÂ* supply is on overhead wires (typically rural areas), when there's a wholeÂ* other set of constraints in the overall amperage. HMG has to facilitate it (even if they don't directly provide it) County Councils provide the street lighting. not where I live they don't :-) Â*Unitary Authority? or London Borough, City of London or Westminster, If those are equivalent in the distribution of civic responsibilities to a unitary authority, then they come into the same basket. weird isn't it London Boroughs are technically different to Unitaries but actually identical yes - and um, well, it all depends ![]() the problem is that "unitary authority" doesn't have a single, canonical meaning[1] I suppose more things have been given to the Mayor to look after, but I don't think that was the case when they were first set up IIRC there were some pan-London bodies from the outset , but yes it was the creation of the GLA that took away strategic functions like planning and transport. [1] Hence eg the Crossrail Act needed to define “unitary authority” means— (a) the council of any county so far as it is the council for an area for which there are no district councils; (b) the council of any district comprised in an area for which there is no county council; (c) the council of a London borough; (d) the Common Council of the City of London. -- Robin reply-to address is (intended to be) valid |
#123
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![]() "Roland Perry" wrote in message ... In message , at 17:16:11 on Wed, 11 Sep 2019, tim... remarked: County Councils provide the street lighting. not where I live they don't :-) Unitary Authority? or London Borough, City of London or Westminster, If those are equivalent in the distribution of civic responsibilities to a unitary authority, then they come into the same basket. weird isn't it London Boroughs are technically different to Unitaries but actually identical I suppose more things have been given to the Mayor to look after, but I don't think that was the case when they were first set up I remember the LCC (London County Council) how far back are you going? I lived there through my childhood and it predates my remembering The (current) boroughs were created in 1965 (I can't remember that either) and at (more or less) the same date the GLC was created. Inner London borough education was under the auspices of ILEA, outer boroughs certainly had control of education in 71 when I got ****ed by the system. GLC was abolished in 86 when (presumably) the functions (except inner London education and transport) moved down to the boroughs. Bus/underground must have remained being controlled by a now autonomous London Transport (certainly the daily bus pass worked within the whole "GLC" area). I don't think that there was a strategy London Roads Authority (perhaps it was still DpT responsibility). ILEA was abolished in 1990 when inner boroughs took over in their area. The London assembly and (new) Mayor were created in 2000 when strategic items all moved back again Education remaining with the boroughs. So (apart from busses/underground) London Boroughs looked like any other Unitary Authority from 1986 to 2000. HTH tim which was a precursor to the GLA. Perhaps they did education - like other real counties, whereas now the Boroughs do? -- Roland Perry |
#124
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Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 17:16:11 on Wed, 11 Sep 2019, tim... remarked: County Councils provide the street lighting. not where I live they don't :-) Unitary Authority? or London Borough, City of London or Westminster, If those are equivalent in the distribution of civic responsibilities to a unitary authority, then they come into the same basket. weird isn't it London Boroughs are technically different to Unitaries but actually identical I suppose more things have been given to the Mayor to look after, but I don't think that was the case when they were first set up I remember the LCC (London County Council) which was a precursor to the GLA. Perhaps they did education - Well the white china plates at my first primary school in Chiswick had LCC marked on the underside if that is any indication. Was a while back mind, they marched us over the park to the edge of the Great West Road to watch President Eisenhower pass by . GH |
#125
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In message , at 19:13:28 on Wed, 11 Sep
2019, tim... remarked: I remember the LCC (London County Council) how far back are you going? I was born in London, and went to Primary School there. Left in the early 60's. -- Roland Perry |
#126
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On Wed, 11 Sep 2019 12:41:59 +0100, Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 12:06:22 on Wed, This is nothing to do with electric cars as such - these houses are not designed for cars at all (even if they claim otherwise). The claim we need to be interested in is that 40% of houses have garages, and are therefore suitable for hosting chargers and electric cars. The 40% figure ignores the fact that $foo% of those "garages" are entirely unsuitable for that task. My claim was about half of homes could have an electric charger based on 40% having a garage and 26% having other off street parking. 3 million of those homes might be unsuitable for installing an electric charger and we still get to my about half. I've been unable to find better figures, perhaps someone else can? More of the 'you can't stick anything on the front of your house and the door has to be grey' kind of covenants. I've seen door colour restrictions in conservation areas, but nothing as generic as "anything on front". I lived in a 2001 build house which didn't allow a change in front door colour. Street View shows my old door has been replaced and is now a different colour but the developer has long gone so I expect the covenant isn't enforceable. |
#127
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In message , at 10:58:27 on
Thu, 12 Sep 2019, David Walters remarked: On Wed, 11 Sep 2019 12:41:59 +0100, Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 12:06:22 on Wed, This is nothing to do with electric cars as such - these houses are not designed for cars at all (even if they claim otherwise). The claim we need to be interested in is that 40% of houses have garages, and are therefore suitable for hosting chargers and electric cars. The 40% figure ignores the fact that $foo% of those "garages" are entirely unsuitable for that task. My claim was about half of homes could have an electric charger based on 40% having a garage and 26% having other off street parking. 3 million of those homes might be unsuitable for installing an electric charger and we still get to my about half. I've been unable to find better figures, perhaps someone else can? I think there are unlikely to be any official figures, because they won't be compiling stats for whether the garages are integral/attached to the house (and therefore potentially suitable), too narrow (and therefore unsuitable again), or disjoint from the house (in a block, at the end of the garden etc) and again unsuitable. [I'm ignoring the garages that would be suitable, if they weren't full of junk and households where the number of cars exceeds the garages]. The same (apart from the width and the junk) is also true of off-street parking. More of the 'you can't stick anything on the front of your house and the door has to be grey' kind of covenants. I've seen door colour restrictions in conservation areas, but nothing as generic as "anything on front". I lived in a 2001 build house which didn't allow a change in front door colour. Was it in a conservation area, or on a development with private roads and a management company? Street View shows my old door has been replaced and is now a different colour but the developer has long gone so I expect the covenant isn't enforceable. What about covenants for "things on the front", other than satellite dishes? -- Roland Perry |
#128
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On 12/09/2019 14:16, Roland Perry wrote:
What about covenants for "things on the front", other than satellite dishes? When my family and I moved into a new house in the Midlands in 1972 there was a covenant you couldn't install a TV aerial on the front of the house. Plenty of satellite dishes there now, though, looking on street view. -- Ria in Aberdeen [Send address is invalid, use sipsoup at gmail dot com to reply direct] |
#129
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In message , at 17:31:29 on Thu, 12
Sep 2019, MissRiaElaine remarked: What about covenants for "things on the front", other than satellite dishes? When my family and I moved into a new house in the Midlands in 1972 there was a covenant you couldn't install a TV aerial on the front of the house. Plenty of satellite dishes there now, though, looking on street view. My last house had a covenant of "no aerials attached to the chimney" but luckily the height and orientation meant it was OK to stick one in the loft. TV aerials on the front of houses aren't that common, but I thought I'd cite some anyway: https://goo.gl/maps/VF4bAofQzBGnh9rZ6 -- Roland Perry |
#130
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On Thu, 12 Sep 2019 14:16:50 +0100, Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 10:58:27 on Thu, 12 Sep 2019, David Walters remarked: On Wed, 11 Sep 2019 12:41:59 +0100, Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 12:06:22 on Wed, More of the 'you can't stick anything on the front of your house and the door has to be grey' kind of covenants. I've seen door colour restrictions in conservation areas, but nothing as generic as "anything on front". I lived in a 2001 build house which didn't allow a change in front door colour. Was it in a conservation area, No. or on a development with private roads and a management company? No. Street View shows my old door has been replaced and is now a different colour but the developer has long gone so I expect the covenant isn't enforceable. What about covenants for "things on the front", other than satellite dishes? Sort of, caravans were banned for example. It was one house of four. The developer didn't want someone to do something ugly until they were all sold. After that they weren't very interested. |
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