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State of the Area Breakdown 2009

See The Green Light: It's 10:10 For Tameside

Council Leader Cllr Roy Oldham, Cllr Catherine Piddington and Cllr Barrie HollandThis year’s State of the Area Address delivered by the Executive Leader, Cllr Roy Oldham, has moved on from previous years to become more connected to reducing our carbon footprint and linked with the people’s priorities.

We see this as an invitation to the people of Tameside to participate in order to save on two fronts – the environment and finance. We have called it 10:10 because the council has signed up, on behalf of businesses and the community, to cut our carbon emissions by 10 per cent in 2010: an exercise we can all take part in.

Each of our existing council priorities can be linked or aligned to finance and the environment:

  • learning and recreational streets
  • safe streets
  • clean streets
  • prosperous streets
  • attractive streets.

In the current economic climate, as a council, we promise to:

  • maintain a strong financial position
  • plan a reasonable and affordable council tax level
  • generate efficiency savings in line with agreed targets
  • focus expenditure on council and community priorities.

And what’s on the stocks for the coming year? Well the overarching policy will be to look into every activity throughout the borough, a reduction in carbon emissions to save waste, pollution and finance. This will involve membership of various organisations and the embracing of the community.

Although it is by no means a definitive list, some of the highlights are listed below:

Safe Streets

  • Image of a Patroller and a child in a childrens playgroundAll crime down by 10.1 per cent (955 fewer victims)
  • Burglary down by 8.6 per cent (183 fewer victims)
  • Vehicle theft down by 19.7 per cent (79 fewer victims)
  • Robbery (property) down by 17.5 per cent (28 fewer victims)
  • Violent crime down by 1.8 per cent (2 fewer victims)
  • Serious sex offences down by 8.8 per cent (7 fewer victims)
  • Criminal damage (including arson) down by 15.7 per cent (328 fewer victims)
  • Anti-social behaviour reports to police down 20 per cent
  • Total Acceptable Behaviour Contracts: 277
  • Total number of Anti-social Behaviour Orders: 154 .

Clean Streets

  • Image of Tameside's fleet of street cleaning vehicles
  • The 28,000 highway lighting columns are being fitted out with energy-saving ballast devices
  • The council’s vehicular fleet is being ‘greened’ via the use of efficient fuels
  • Schools have ‘green travel’ plans and parents need to consider how they and their children get to and from school
  • The council has adopted 10:10 which is the reduction in 2010 of 10 per cent of its carbon emissions
  • The council has reduced its business miles of travel
  • Tameside has also driven an insulation programme for domestic dwellings, 10,000 homes in three years at a cost of £2.3M
  • The council also has a partnership with British Gas which provides a council tax rebate for insulation
  • The managed collection domestic waste operation is saving on landfill, nearly 40 per cent of our waste of now recycled
  • New dog control orders banning dogs from fenced play areas and sports pitches have been introduced
  • A vehicle carrying a heat seeking camera will patrol the streets, recording heart loss. This will them be followed up with help and advice on how best to reduce waste and save money
  • A new residential design guidance has been produced which highlights all the building regulations changes with the aim for al new housing to be carbon neutral by 2016.

Prosperous Streets

  • Image of Ashton Market and Ashton Market Hall by nightThe Working Neighbourhood Fund is now up and running with £3M which will support 3,100 workless residents over 18 months
  • The Fund is also helping with credit via Tameside Cash Box and Money Spinner
  • The borough has been given £5m which will pay the wages of people from unemployed hotspots
  • Tameside Works First has awarded £7.1M in contracts to date from a budget of £14M
  • Large scale contractors working in Tameside and being encouraged to buy their goods and supplies or to sub-contract within the borough
  • An apprentices company, established by the council, has attracted 500 young people through the door
  • An impressive 100 traders are on the Buy With Confidence scheme
  • Local people are now employed in construction work at: Metrolink (Manchester to Droylsden), Droylsden Marina and St Petersfield.

Attractive Streets

  • Image of a girl swimming
  • Stamford Park is to have £4M spent on refurbishment
  • This summer the council has gained 11 Green Flags for park quality and four Green Pennants for public open spaces and a Green Heritage Award for Denton Park
  • New sporting facilities have either been built or are under way, these include:
    • New gymnastics centre of excellence at Longdendale Recreation area
    • A £8M refurbishment of Copley, Ashton and Hyde pools
    • A £3M sports centre in Hattersley 
    • Sports coaching is being provided at primary schools for 8,000 youngsters a week
    • The refurbishment of Portland Basin Visitors Centre
    • An Olympic Legacy action plan has been launched
    • A £600,000 closed loop cycle track at Richmond Street, Ashton has been introduced

Learning Streets

  • Image of a School Building siteWe will continue with our programme of new build for education. Over the last 10 years over £40M has been spent on 14 new primary schools
  • The £80M programme to build new schools at Mossley Hollins, St Damian’s, New Charter Academy and Samuel Laycock should be finished by 2011
  • Planning approval has been grants for a £70M project for Hyde Technology School, Dale Grove, Denton Community College and the Key Stage 3 and 4 learning centres
  • The £28M Droylsden Academy will be the next project
  • A bid for another £110M has been submitted for investment in the remaining seven Tameside schools

Supportive Streets

  • Image of staff at the Park CafeAn impressive £5.8M of benefits have been secured for older people by the Welfare Rights Service
  • New facilities such as a Dementia Day Service, an Extra Care Housing scheme and an Active Aging Centre have been introduced
  • The council has launched a number of initiatives to help those with learning difficulties, eg. Bayley Hall Skills and Enterprise
  • The Topaz Café is successfully promoting mental health and well being services
  • Somerset House has opened offering individual tenancies for people with learning difficulties, giving them independence

What the Future Holds

  • Tameside MBC Council Offices in Ashton under LyneThe council will defend the people’s services and priorities against government if need be
  • Tameside Works First will be expanded in an attempt to engage 200 firms
  • The new high schools under construction will be designed to reduce energy by generating 70 per cent of their need from renewable sources, rather than fossil fuels
  • Anti-social behaviour will be further reduced through extra security in public places, intensified surveillance and special, innovative schemes 
  • The council will honour the service people who have given their lives since 1945 by erecting a new memorial which will be ready by 2010 and continue with extra housing/council tax benefits for war widows

Healthy Streets

  • Tameside has continued to strengthen its approach to tackling health improvement in partnership by building upon key joint appointments and the creation of a joint health improvement delivery team. 
  • We have been listening to our communities to effectively understand how best to target our resources. We have developed effective campaigns as a result – our stop smoking campaign led to a 200 per cent increase in smoking quits and we supported over 1800 people to quit.
  • We have a new Smokefree Tameside Alliance which is working hard to oversee and provide advice on the development of the tobacco control and smoking prevention activities. These include illegal sales of tobacco and tobacco control, promoting smoke free places, smoking cessation and healthy lifestyles.
  • The adult Health Trainer programme has supported 739 people in really practical ways to make positive changes to their health this year
  • Adult Participation in Sport & Active Recreation has increased to 18.8 per cent - 7,700 adults are now more active as a result of specific new interventions using delivered in Tameside, in total there are 27,266 more children and adults active in Tameside.
  • This year has seen a review and development of the Tameside multi-agency alcohol strategy. Key priorities are to reduce alcohol related crime, disorder and anti-social behaviour to reduce the impact of alcohol on health, to improve health and treatment services, to reduce alcohol related harm to children and young people, to reduce alcohol related accidents and to reduce the detrimental impact of alcohol on the local economy.
  • Tameside now has in place an Affordable Warmth Strategy to identify those at most risk of suffering fuel poverty and provide appropriate solutions. This multi agency intervention will help to reduce health inequalities by giving advice and practical support around keeping warm, cutting fuel bills, home repairs, fire safety or money and benefits.

News in Brief

It Works

The total investment in Tameside Works First has increased to £14.5M. So far £7.2M has been allocated on over 850 contracts.

Independent Polls

The Ipsos Mori Link to External Website polls taken in Tameside show that a vast majority of people are satisfied with the services provided by the council.

Simply the Best

Tameside is the best performing council in the north west measured by independent assessors.

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Page last updated: 15 December 2009