Concerns continue over Oxford Street proposal

By Local Democracy Reporting Service

20th Sep 2024 | Local News

An image of the Oxford Street concept.
An image of the Oxford Street concept.

WESTMINSTER City Council's Labour leader has spoken publicly for the first on Sadiq Khan's plans to pedestrianise Oxford Street, saying he wants questions answered 'to our satisfaction' before any further developments or decisions are made.

Cllr Adam Hug, Westminster City Council Leader, wrote to Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner and the London Mayor in an open letter yesterday (Thursday, 19 September), outlining 10 'key concerns' on Mr Khan's plans for the street.

At the Full Council meeting on Wednesday, 18 September, he said he would make the local authority's position 'very clear' on the Mayor's surprise announcement earlier this week.

Mr Khan, who has repeatedly referenced his vision of pedestrianising Oxford Street during his tenure, said he was rebooting plans to turn the world-famous shopping destination into a 'traffic-free avenue' and a 'beautiful public space'.

Westminster City Council's Labour administration has been working on its own £90 million scheme to improve Oxford Street's public realm. The Mayor however is hoping Ms Rayner, as Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government, will establish a new Mayoral Development Corporation for the area, granting Mr Khan greater planning powers and the ability to override the council.

Following the announcement, a council statement was attributed to Chief Executive Stuart Love rather than Cllr Hug. This was due to yesterday's two by-elections (Thursday, September 19), one of which was for a West End ward seat in which Oxford Street is located. The seat was won by Conservative candidate Tim Barnes.

Local authority guidelines around what councillors can talk about in the lead-up to an election meant the topic should have been avoided at last night's meeting.

Opposition leader Cllr Paul Swaddle however used one of his three questions to Cllr Hug to raise the 'extraordinary announcement from the Mayor', which he claimed would 'remove vital access for the disabled and elderly, riding roughshod over [Cllr Hug's] commitment not to do so'.

After asking Cllr Hug directly when the local Labour group was told of Mr Khan's plans, Lord Mayor Cllr Robert Rigby declared he would allow one question on the topic, though no further discussion.

Cllr Hug told the chamber: "As Cllr Swaddle is probably aware from the Chief Executive's statement earlier this week this is a situation we found out about on Thursday afternoon. We have made very clear since then our concerns about that process, and we have made clear our position of principle support of the work that we have been doing up to now to deliver at pace our Oxford Street programme, which in two years had got almost ready to be on the streets after many years of delay."

Cllr Hug continued to reference his letter to the Deputy Prime Minister and Mr Khan listing key concerns, which the Labour group wants answered 'to our satisfaction' before any further developments take place.

Cllr Swaddle suggested Mr Khan's move indicated Westminster Labour 'have no influence on national policy or London Labour policy', and asked whether Cllr Hug would join him in launching a judicial review against any potential decision if required.

Describing Cllr Swaddle's request as 'premature' given no decision has been made, Cllr Hug said he will make it 'very clear' to Ms Rayner and Mr Khan the position of the council.

"We are going to work closely and efficiently to try and put forward our position to those other partners, and we will look at what those responses are and we will respond in the appropriate way to safeguard our residents and our businesses and all of those users of Oxford Street," he said.

Among the concerns raised in Westminster Labour's letter are how any proposed pedestrianisation scheme could be implemented without increasing congestion, and how it will protect access for older people, people with disabilities and families with young children.

Asked on Tuesday whether the move was healthy for local democracy, Mr Khan said: "We'll work with the council; it's not an issue of bypassing the council. We're working with the council.

"But you've got a street here that contributes £22 billion towards the local economy, the national economy, the city's economy, 500,000 visitors a day. So we've got to make sure we work with the council, with the Government, with businesses to get the best possible deal we can for this street.

"I don't believe anybody can sensibly be happy with the status quo. I wasn't a fan of the Marble Arch Mound. I'm not sure anyone else was."

     

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