Times of Tonbridge 20th February 2019

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Local, National and International

OF TONBRIDGE

BUSINESS AS USUAL College students not affected by disarray at Hadlow Group Page 2

YOUNG AT HEART Primary school pupils spend a year visiting Barnes Lodge care home Page 11

RETAIL THERAPY

Town gets ready to celebrate first Fairtrade Fortnight with music, dance and art Page 20

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Wednesday February 20 | 2019

ANGELS’ DELIGHT New striker inspires club to climb table in bid to reach play-offs Page 63

Environmental award for Danny and JoJo – the ‘Litter Kickers’

LEARN THE LESSONS Children demonstrate outside Sussex Road Primary School as part of the Climate Change Strike campaign, led by Danny Eisawy

Teen and Twenty Club was sold at half-price but NHS rent is doubled By Andy Tong andy@timesoftonbridge.co.uk THE site of the Teen and Twenty Club was sold to the developers of the new Tonbridge Medical Centre for almost half of its market value by the council. And the NHS will have to pay more than twice as much rent to run the new facility as it had done in occupying the two surgeries the centre is set to replace – without ever owning the premises. A Freedom of Information [FOI] request by Green Party campaigners has shown that Tonbridge & Malling Borough Council sold the former community centre on River Lawn Road to Assura for £750,000 – with a covenant that it can only be used as a surgery. The council-owned asset was valued

by property consultants Hartnell Taylor Cook at £1,435,000 in January 2017 if there was no restriction on use – for example, to be developed as residential accommodation. Assura will own the site and lease it to Tonbridge Medical Group, which will use it to replace two surgeries on Higham Lane and Pembury Road which have been deemed unfit for purpose. Meanwhile the NHS will have to pay annual rent of £245,450 to run the medical centre – an increase of £180,440 including VAT on the current rent of £114,100 for the two existing surgeries. Tonbridge & Malling Green Party cochair Mark Hood, who made the FOI request, said: “There is a legal requirement for councils to maximise the return on the sale of assets unless there is a significant benefit to the community.

“While we welcome the provision of a new medical centre, this project will see the closure of two surgeries, one of which serves an aging population in Higham Wood. “It is hard to see how the wider community will benefit by having to travel much further when they once had a surgery on their doorsteps.

‘This is a bad deal for Tonbridge taxpayers and for the NHS’ “The only people winning in this saga are the developers, Assura, and the owners of the three surgeries which have been or will be sold.” He added: ““Our MP, Tom Tugendhat,

TWO young brothers received Environmental Champion awards from Tonbridge & Malling Borough Council [TMBC] last week for their dedicated litter-picking. Danny Eisawy, 10, and eightyear-old JoJo, aka the ‘Litter Kickers’, have been spending several hours a week collecting rubbish strewn around town. They have decided to match the amount of time they spend playing football with carrying out their environmental duties – they call it the ‘litter-picking law’. The brothers attend Sussex Road Primary School and last Friday they staged a ‘climate change strike’ outside the gates before lessons began, in solidarity with fellow students and pupils all over Europe.

Vigil

tells us that he doesn’t support PFI [Private Finance Initiative] projects yet he has claimed credit for setting up this deal which is much worse than PFI. “Tonbridge Medical Group will never own the property and the NHS will pay double the rent previously paid for the original surgeries. This deal is bad for Tonbridge taxpayers and for the NHS.” Mr Hood also chairs the Keep River Lawn Green protest group which is trying to stop the council from selling the half-acre plot of public space next to the medical centre. He believes the council is selling off publicly owned assets in order to balance its books after recording a budget deficit of £1.6million in the last financial year.

The litter-picking exploits began after they supported the weeklong vigil on River Lawn to save a mature horse chestnut tree from being felled by developers. The tree, which suffers from bleeding canker, was on the boundary of the land where the new Tonbridge Medical Centre is being built. Before Christmas protesters gathered at the tree – and in its branches – 24 hours a day to stop Assura from taking the tree down, and they succeeded in saving it. The siblings’ mother, Charlotte Raveney, says: “They have been with the River Lawn campaign from the start but it all really began with the tree.

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