Jump to content

Dulwich Net Zero Sept 23 7pm at ORU Lordship Lane


andrewc

Recommended Posts

Do come to this open meeting of Dulwich Net Zero on Sept 23 2020 at 7pm at ORU 22 Lordship Lane SE22 8HN


Green Homes Grant.


The government is providing home energy grants on this link https://www.grantscheme.uk

Register your entitlement to a grant worth between ?5000 to ?10,000. It is not a loan and is not means tested on the first ?5000.


We will discuss the grant at this meeting. Come with your questions or come to listen or come with your suggestions.

I'm looking forward to our first real life meeting, in the lovely studio space on the ground floor of Oru. You walk through the cafe and it is down the left hand door, behind the seating. It's a lovely newly refub space, light and airy. We are hoping the Oru manager Paul will join us. See you there.
Well that is a good point. Some would say that this is educational, therefor ok, some would say there is no actual legal basis for any rules such as these. So maybe we are playing it by ear for now. There is a lot of pushback on the madness by MPs, lawyers and pressure groups. It may get it all reversed, fingers crossed...

Based on the numbers in London going up and the rule of 6 firmly in place and the potential for London to go into another level of controlled restrictions, would it not be safer to hold this meeting as a virtual one rather than risk being fined for breaking the rules ?


I saw your earlier message and it's not really going to fall into education (schools and universities)


All the information can easily be shared via zoom or meetings in this instance and better to do that than risk a potential spreading point.

Well the debate is tricky, but can I suggest you contact Andrew direct - who is the main founder, and has the most interest in home energy and the new gov scheme. I will probably be absent from this Weds event, sadly. Good luck with your enquiry and the outcome. M
According to Andrew and the venue, the meeting is going ahead - only a small group is expected. If you are uncomfortable for whatever reason, then simply ask for feedback after the meeting. It is all within the new "rules" and perfectly safe. London has virtually zero "cases", whatever that means :-) Hope this helps you.

PlantPower Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> London has virtually zero "cases", whatever that

> means :-) Hope this helps you.



I almost spat my covid vaccine out reading this


Someone better tell the mayor who is saying the opposite regarding numbers.


What happens if more than 6 people turn up ?

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Latest Discussions

    • It’s the impact the festival has on the community, the people living next door to the park who have to endure the thumping music and worse. Then there’s the park and the state it’s left in and the wildlife, especially nesting birds. All the roads going down Denmark Hill towards the park were closed off and roads off half moon lane and going up towards West Norwood closed off with wardens at each end, who were paid by Lambeth Council to stand there for the 4 days.  The festival made the news channels and interviews suggested most of the people attending weren’t fron the local area but places like Ireland and Scotland.  I live a 20 minute walk from the park and could hear the thumping music all day and night. Also the wind certainly carried the smell of drugs to my garden! For 4 days I couldn’t believe how strong it was. 
    • Emirates Stadium is  >60,00 but they tend to be very quiet 🙂 Jokes aside though, it's a case in point. Highbury was <40,000 and was 300M up the road, so there are definitely Islington residents who used to live half a mile from a fairly big football stadium, and now live right by a massive one. One that holds rock/pop concerts too accomodating 70,000 fans whether they like ot or not.   40% of Islington households are in social housing so regardless of when they moved their current homes, they may have had little say in exactly where they are housed.   
    • St Christopher's only take books in perfect condition. 
    • This is where I sit too. A two day event is bearable. Three tests my tolerance. Finding the right balance on size, noise and impact is where I contribute to the consultation process. BUT, as I wrote elsewhere, every year the GALA organisers ask/ push for more, and deals have already been done with the council before it gets to public consultation stage. It is also worth pointing out that when a licence was first granted, the orgnaisation was different (We Are the Fair), one of the company directors lived literally next to the park (she left when it became GALA) and the current form bears no resemblance to original ethos/ vision sold to the council and licensing committee. This needs to be pointed out and I am fairly confident local councillors would also support a pushback on any further expansion. We have local elections next year, so councillors ears will be open.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...