Twelfth Night:
ws j Stellar acting let down by someW u ww confused direction w
→ Part 2, p.6–7
www.tcs.cam.ac.uk
Bid to keep streets lit with council funding County council agrees to keep lights on until 2am
A
Talks Top of the Pops, motown, and Jacque Brel
What Britain can learn
→ Comment, p.9
→Part 2, p.2
The
14 January 2016 Vol. 17 Lent Issue 1
Sherilyn Chew News Editor Cambridgeshire county council meeting this week narrowly rejected a proposal to dispense with the county-wide streetlight switch-off. The county council instead agreed to channel almost £100,000 extra to keep the streetlights around Cambridgeshire on until 2am, rather than midnight, as originally planned. The announcement comes after the Cambridge city council released its Budget Setting Report (BSR) 2016-17 last week, offering a bid of £45,500 to keep the streetlights in Cambridge on. The city council proposes to fund the period between 2am and 6am in the city if the county council will fund the period from midnight to 2am. The proposal is on the basis that “lights in the city centre and University areas, including immediate walk/ cycle to home routes, and from other key locations, will be kept on with a maximum of 20% dimming, and will be funded by the county.” However, “all other lights in streets currently proposed for switch off in the city...[will] be kept on with a maximum dimming of 50%.” Commenting on the city council’s bid, Charlotte Chorley, Women’s Officer for CUSU, said: “The city council’s bid to keep the streetlights on, especially in areas densely populated by students, is an encouraging and positive step.” “Following on from a strong campaign by students, the bid is testament to their action and determination, and I stand in
Alastair Campbell
US college fees:
solidarity with those campaigning for student safety.” The Leader of the Cambridge city council, Councillor Lewis Herbert, has commented: “The county proposal is to cut street lighting irrespective of need - whether it is Romsey or Ramsey, or an isolated rural cottage in the middle of nowhere.” “The public safety case for lighting Cambridge streets throughout the night is overwhelming for people whatever the time...and we think people should be safe in the knowledge that the lights will stay on.” Commenting to The Cambridge Student, Lynda Kilkelly, Safer Communities Manager for the Cambridge city council, said the bid was motivated by concerns about “the safety of the public if the original proposal went ahead”. These include “the large student and young population living in the city centre who walk and cycle home late at night”, and the “use of green spaces as walking and cycling routes at night”. She also cited the need for community safety hotspot areas and CCTV areas to be well lit, and the need to consider “the range of workers who travel to and from work in the hours between midnight and 6 am.” “However, it may be that in quiet suburban residential streets that the dimming of lights may have less of an impact and this will be considered within the negotiations.” The proposals will be considered by a full council meeting in February.
Editorial Comment page 15 →
Cambridge Student
University to fund planning officers Bea Lundy Deputy News Editor Cambridge University is set to pay the Cambridge city council £204,000 a year to fund new posts in the planning department, to enable the University’s real estate developments to be sped up. The University’s contribution will pay for five new posts – an environmental health officer, a conservation officer, an urban design officer, and two planning officers. The University has said that it hopes that the new posts will allow for new projects to receive council attention more quickly than before. However, some have questioned the the officers having such close links to the University, with Liberal Democrat planning spokesperson Councillor Catherine Smart saying “Planning applications and preapplication discussions when it’s a big development do cost the applicants, and in a sense this is not all that different, in some ways. “However, I will certainly be wanting to have reassurance that there’s no question of a conflict of interest.” A University spokesman rejected concerns over the conflict, saying “it is common practice for developers to enter into planning performance agreements with councils to fund staff resources for individual projects.” The city council’s planning department has seen the number of applications for permission increase by 50% since 2012, while the number of planning officers has not grown. The University is planning a number of major projects, including plans for the 3,000-home North West Cambridge site, and the creation of 1,000 extra jobs in West Cambridge, over the next three to five years. Many of these are likely to need “support and analysis from planning officers”, according to Cambridge News.
Blue sky heralds in the New Year in the centre of Cambridge, promising a bright, if chilly, beginning to Lent Term, 2016 Image: Sophie Buck Editorial Comment page 15 →