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  • TfL (Supplementary) [3]

    • Question by: Roger Evans
    • Meeting date: 06 April 2005
    I was talking about the work on the Routemasters rather than the hydrogen buses, which cost over £0.5 million each.
  • TfL (Supplementary) [4]

    • Question by: Jenny Jones
    • Meeting date: 06 April 2005
    Do you regret the decision to spend millions of pounds cleaning up the pollution from Routemaster buses now that you decided to scrap them just a couple of years later?
  • PPP (Supplementary) [1]

    • Question by: John Biggs
    • Meeting date: 06 April 2005
    With these debates about the Congestion Charge, PPP and so on, there is a danger of having a lot of heat and not much light. The existing transport strategy, the one that was consulted on several years ago, puts forward a strategy as an alternative for the PPP. Time has now passed and the PPP is now in operation, but I think we recognise that it has flaws and that it may not actually reach the end of its 30-year life. Is it not time for TfL in a cool and considered way to start to develop an alternative strategy...
  • PPP (Supplementary) [2]

    • Question by: Lynne Featherstone
    • Meeting date: 06 April 2005
    £1.6 million in external legal costs is the cost that has come from the Freedom of Information Act request that the Liberal Democrats put to you. These are the legal costs for fighting the PPP originally. I was shoulder to shoulder with the Mayor and you and we were all against the PPP as being unworkable, but this reference by Roger Evans is the first peep, quite frankly, out of the Mayor towards his now chums in the Labour Party that there is anything amiss. Do you really think it is worth waiting until the end of the year? It...
  • Serious failures in enforcement of Congestion Charge (Supplementary) [1]

    • Question by: Lynne Featherstone
    • Meeting date: 06 April 2005
    I think it is so serious when bailiffs arrive that actually if you get letters from people saying, `But I never got the notices' and have business accounts departments that would normally handle them, you really have to do something about the system right now and say that any of these cases are to be an exception and should go to some sort of forum where they are looked at. To have bailiffs arrive is really unacceptable when the fault may be TfL's.
  • Serious failures in enforcement of Congestion Charge (Supplementary) [2]

    • Question by: Lynne Featherstone
    • Meeting date: 06 April 2005
    I just want to support Elizabeth (Howlett) because I had not realised there were other cases of bailiffs arriving. I have just written to TfL about several where no previous notice has been received. TfL writes to these people and says that penalty notices, etc., were issued, but they were not. You have to take this really seriously because some people are not able to go to court; they are vulnerable and scared and may not have the money. This is terrifying people. They are individual cases, not hundreds of them, but I do want your double assurance that you...
  • Serious failures in enforcement of Congestion Charge (Supplementary) [3]

    • Question by: Elizabeth Howlett
    • Meeting date: 06 April 2005
    We were told first of all by the Mayor that this would prevent congestion, it would also improve air quality, but you do not care about that now and neither does the Mayor - it is only an income raiser.
  • Serious failures in enforcement of Congestion Charge (Supplementary) [4]

    • Question by: Elizabeth Howlett
    • Meeting date: 06 April 2005
    Mr Kiley, recently a constituent of mine had her car removed from her driveway in the middle of the night by bailiffs for non-payment of the Congestion Charge. Only through her own quick thinking, was she able to obtain a court injunction to stop the car being sold within two days. She then had to pay excessive fees, to both bailiff company and auctioneer, to recover her car. That her car was taken came as a surprise as, although TfL's bailiffs were able to locate her address to take the car, they were unable to send a penalty charge notice...
  • Appointment of Tfl Directors (Supplementary) [1]

    • Question by: John Biggs
    • Meeting date: 06 April 2005
    I am interested in pursuing this a little more constructively, Chair, because clearly there is an election happening and people might be keen to cast aspersions, where in reality they are just misrepresenting the position. Is it not the reality that there has to be a creative relationship between you, as chief executive, the Mayor as chairman, and the board of TfL, which undoubtedly will require people to work confidentially to develop trust between themselves? I assume that is the relationship that exists.
  • Appointment of Tfl Directors (Supplementary) [2]

    • Question by: John Biggs
    • Meeting date: 06 April 2005
    I think where the argument in this question heads towards is a position that says that your board are a bunch of parrots, if you like, or `yes- people who take their allowances and play no active role. Can you tell us more about the grit that exists within the machine of TfL that means the board adds value to the way in which the organisation works?