December 2024

Features

On the same team

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Acting Inspector Reshma Sher shares how local Safer Neighbourhoods Teams are addressing Wanstead’s crime issues and encourages residents to help make a difference

Hello everyone. My name is Reshma Sher and I am currently the Acting Inspector for the Safer Neighbourhoods Teams (SNT). I cover North Redbridge. I am based at Barkingside Police Station, where I oversee neighbourhood policing for Wanstead Village, Wanstead Park and nine other surrounding wards. Prior to this, I was a sergeant on SNT covering the same area, so I have a good understanding of neighbourhood policing and this is something that is so important to me.

I have been a resident in Redbridge for my whole life and I have seen and experienced issues as a resident of Redbridge as well as a police officer. I joined the Met in 2014 and I have served on a variety of teams within the East Area Command Unit.

The community is important to me and my teams. We want everyone to feel safe where they live, work, go to school, college or when they are out and socialise with friends and family. Your neighbourhood teams complete reassurance patrols, community engagement events, weapon sweeps, execute warrants, tackle antisocial behaviour and take positive action in relation to any criminal incidents.

We aim to prioritise the community’s needs in all we do. I am aware concerns have been raised about motor vehicle crime and robberies taking place in Wanstead. We are carrying out plain-clothes, proactive patrols as well as providing a uniformed presence during the various times of day the crimes are being committed. The local policing team is working in partnership with other neighbourhood teams, as well as British Transport Police, Safer Transport Teams and the local authority to tackle the incidents as best as we can. 

The local team will be arranging crime prevention stalls to provide advice on stopping the theft of motor vehicles, such as using steering wheel locks combined with signal-blocking pouches. They will give advice on keeping your mobile phones safe and some tips, such as making a note of the IMEI number. They will be publishing dates soon on social media and the Redbridge WhatsApp channel. The local teams will also be putting their contact details in your local shops.

We also hold quarterly ward panel meetings. If you are a resident or work in the area, why not come along? You can really make a difference and have a say in what you feel should be the ward priorities to help us with our community crime fighting. Please contact your local SNT if you would like to be a part of this.


To contact Wanstead Village SNT, email SNTJI-Wanstead-park@met.police.uk
or call 07766 247 245

To contact Wanstead Park SNT, email SNTJI-Wanstead-village@met.police.uk
or call 07769 498 676 

To join the Redbridge Whatsapp channel, visit wnstd.com/rwa

Features

Data dilemma

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Jo Cullen from local solicitors Edwards Duthie Shamash takes a look at the steps you should take if your sensitive personal data is compromised by your employer

Has your employer disclosed personal data without your consent or as a result of a systems hack? There are breaking news stories around personal data breaches that will inevitably cause significant concern to those affected. Personal data is any information that can identify you directly (or in combination with other information) such as your name, address or telephone number.

Sensitive personal data might also include details an employer holds on you about your health, trade union membership, as well as your political or religious beliefs. A loss of personal data can result in information being used by criminals in identity theft crimes or those affected might suffer financial losses or health issues as a result of the breach.

What should an employee do if they discover their personal data has been released or their employer’s systems have been hacked?

If you discover a breach, you should inform your employer immediately about the incident and ask for full details of what has been released or taken, and how and why this has happened without your consent. If your employer becomes aware of a breach of your personal data before you, they should notify you without delay and they should make you aware of the steps they are taking to remedy the breach.

You should keep a record of all correspondence with your employer regarding the data breach and keep a chronology of events. You may need this at a later date if you need to escalate matters by making a complaint to the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) or to make a claim for damages against your employer.

It will be important to understand what data has been released as you may need to monitor your bank accounts, credit reports and any other sensitive information for unauthorised or unusual activity. If you notice any suspicious transactions or activities on your bank accounts you should report these to your bank urgently.

Your employer should have a data protection policy and privacy notice which sets out details of what information they hold on you and how this data is processed. You should familiarise yourself with these documents as this will help you understand your rights and the obligations your employer has in protecting your personal data. 

If you believe your employer’s negligence has caused harm, or they have failed to take appropriate steps to deal with a breach, you should take legal advice on your position and the options available to you.


Edwards Duthie Shamash is located at 149 High Street, Wanstead, E11 2RL. For more information, call 020 8514 9000 or visit edwardsduthieshamash.co.uk

News

Wanstead’s streets to welcome Santa for annual pre-Christmas tour

santafloat©Geoff Wilkinson

Wanstead will welcome Santa early this month as he embarks on a pre-Christmas tour of local streets on 19 December from 4pm.

“You can’t beat how much children enjoy seeing Santa. It’s a fun community event that injects extra magic into Christmas. Please have some change ready for the elves’ collection buckets in aid of local schools,” said Amy Moore. In what is now an annual Wanstead tradition, Santa will pass through the streets aboard Elf Steve Hayden’s Parker Dairies milk float.

To view the route, visit wnstd.com/santatour

News

Consultation on sustainable transport strategy for Redbridge

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Redbridge Council has launched a public consultation on its first sustainable transport strategy.

“By 2041, travel in Redbridge will be safer, healthier, greener and more inclusive… Our ambition is to create seamless and safe connections between the bus, underground and rail networks, and an extensive network of zero-emission vehicle charging points that support the borough’s carbon neutral ambition. We really value your input and feedback,” said a spokesperson.

The survey is open until 5 January.

Visit wnstd.com/sts

Features

Currents of Change

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With otters recently spotted on a local stretch of the River Roding, Paul Powlesland – who founded the River Roding Trust five years ago – is looking for Wanstead residents to become guardians of the river 

When I moved to the River Roding in Barking on my boat in 2017, I perhaps naively assumed there were professionals and government officials looking after the river. After all, the Roding – flowing over 40 miles from its source in Molehill Green in Essex to its confluence with the Thames in Barking – is London’s third-largest river and crucial to the lives of the hundreds of thousands of people in its catchment, as well as the nature that relies on it.

Having lived on and grown to know the river over the past seven years, I came to understand the awful truth that no one was truly acting and speaking in the river’s interests and preventing damage and destruction to the river; as a result, the lower river in particular was in serious trouble. 

I therefore set up the Friends of the River Roding group on Facebook to start gathering other volunteers. This project became the River Roding Trust in 2019 and since then our volunteers have undertaken a growing range of activities to care for the river: water quality testing, continuing litter picks (removing up to 400 bags in a single weekend!), planting trees, opening riverside paths, removing invasive species, ensuring riverside developments benefit the river, restoring the Roding’s lost riverside meadows and marshes wherever possible, and many more.

Our approach as a charity has been very much a grassroots one and we continue to be run solely by volunteers. We are also very locally run, with volunteers getting to know a particular part of the river and then seeking to protect and restore it in whatever ways we can. Although we have sought to protect all of the river, much of our effort so far has been in Barking and in Ilford, where many of our volunteers live. We are now looking to set up volunteer groups further along the river, including in Wanstead and Woodford, and give them the equipment, training, knowledge, advice and social media and organisational connections they need to act as guardians on their part of the river.

The Roding is an incredible river, which along with its valley and catchment could be one of the wildest, most beautiful and ecology-rich urban rivers in the country. But its fate very much hangs in the balance, with bad news about continued ecological and water quality degradation contrasting with positive news like the recent discovery of otters living in the river in Redbridge.

Each one of us who lives in the catchment can make a big difference for our river, so if you love and care for the Roding and would like to get involved in any capacity as a guardian of the river, please do get in touch.


For more information and to get involved, email river.roding@gmail.com or visit wnstd.com/rodingfriends

News

Help bring Christmas cheer to local homeless shelter

courtnerDonations made to the shelter last year

A festive appeal has been launched for the residents of the Courtney Hotel, an emergency housing hostel for homeless people located in Aldersbrook.

“I am collecting food and gift donations to bring some holiday cheer to those less fortunate. At the time of writing, there are 19 women, 26 men, 14 girls and 16 boys living at the Courtney. This number changes weekly but gives an indication of how many we are trying to help. If you would like to contribute, please let me know,” said Glynis Ford.

Visit wnstd.com/courtney 

Features

Reverend Reflections

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In the 10th of a series of articles, Revd James Gilder of Wanstead Parish considers the importance of singing during the festive season and invites one and all to join a High Street community carolling session

What’s your favourite Christmas song or carol? Let’s face it, there are more than a few to choose from, and each year radio stations such as Classic FM run a poll to see which is the nation’s favourite. Last year, it was O Holy Night, one that has grown on me recently.

With the demise of – well – lots of things really (and yes, I know that makes me sound old and curmudgeonly), lots of people are perhaps a little less familiar with traditional carols these days. Asked to name a classic Christmas song, many might suggest Mariah Carey’s All I want for Christmas is You. JS Bach is no doubt slowly turning in his grave at the thought.

Of course, there are lots of lovely modern Christmas songs that we all enjoy, but there is something extremely evocative about traditional Christmas carols being sung, or even perhaps played, by a Salvation Army band. I was talking to one of the local bandmasters recently, and he told me every year, his band plays for 12 hours straight on a day running up to Christmas at Liverpool Street Station, raising £10,000 for the vital work the Salvation Army does with the homeless. He said last year, one commuter, who was about to get on her homeward-bound train, stopped to listen for so long she missed nine trains to her destination.

In comparison with our Scottish and Welsh cousins, we English tend to have a very poor folk memory of the traditional songs that make up our history. This seems a great shame to me, for soon they will be gone forever. And many of our Christmas carols are in fact set to tunes that are more ancient than the words. Those who wrote the words often fitted them to folk tunes people would already know. Others are themselves ancient, Good King Wenceslas, for example, dates from before 1582. Carols even survived the Puritans, who tried their best to take the fun out of everything after beheading Charles I. But it was the Victorians – and particularly one Arthur Sullivan (of Gilbert and Sullivan fame) – who really went to town on Christmas carolling, and this is the time from which many of the carols we know and love stem.

Singing is an important part of Christmas for many. The great thing about carolling is that you don’t even have to be very good at singing. The earliest carols would have probably been sung in hostelries, not in churches, and by local people rather than cathedral choirs. Singing is good for the soul, so why not try some this Christmas? You will be very welcome at any of the parish services or at our community carols on the High Street.

Wishing you all a very happy and blessed Christmas, whatever hymn sheet you happen to sing from!


A community carolling session will take place at the war memorial on Wanstead High Street on 11 December from 7pm. To contact Reverend James Gilder, email wansteadparishadmin@uwclub.net

News

Give a gift to children spending Christmas in Whipps Cross Hospital

IMG_4567Frank delivering presents to the hospital last Christmas

Wanstead resident Frank Charles BEM is collecting gifts for his annual appeal.

“This will be my 21st anniversary of delivering Christmas presents to children on Acorn Ward at Whipps Cross Hospital who are too sick to go home over the festive period. As usual, I welcome your support with donations of new toys, books or games suitable for newborns and for ages up to 16 years,” said Frank.

Unwrapped donations for the Frank Charles Give A Gift Appeal can be left at Wanstead Pharmacy (75–77 High Street) until noon on 14 December.

Features

The new intake

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Councillor Emma Shepherd-Mallinson (Labour) was elected to represent Wanstead Park ward in last month’s by-election. Transport, crime and school admissions are among the issues she is keen to address

Thank you for electing me as one of your councillors for Wanstead Park ward. I am delighted to have the widespread support of my neighbours and to join Councillor Sheila Bain in being a strong voice for our community. It is one of the proudest moments of my life. 

There is a lot to do and I am excited about what we can achieve with a Labour council. I will be ready to listen and help where I can. You might need advice, your views shared with decision-makers, or action to make things happen. That’s my role.

During the campaign, I spoke to residents on their doorsteps about what is important to them. It’s clear we need better from TfL about plans to change bus routes. Crime and antisocial behaviour are a big concern for many, too, and I will be working with our local police Safer Neighbourhoods Team.

Many know I am an active Labour Party member and have worked closely with our new MP, Calvin Bailey. However, it was my experience as a parent and local resident that encouraged me to run for council. I want to do something for my community. 

I am passionate about school admissions and provision. In recent years, I have supported local families to navigate the admissions process. I am now working with our new council leader, Councillor Kam Rai, and the cabinet lead for Children’s Services, Councillor Lloyd Duddridge, to make sure everyone has the knowledge they need. This is something that will remain a focus for me as a councillor. 

We live in a beautiful part of London, surrounded by large, open green spaces. Wanstead Park is a hidden gem which we need to protect. However, the lakes and pathways are in a poor state. I am working with the cabinet lead, Councillor Jo Blackman, to put pressure on Thames Water and the City of London Corporation (which owns and maintains the park) to make the necessary improvements.

I know there is a big in tray to get through. The morning after the election I was looking into issues with parking on the school run in Aldersbrook. My children attend this school and I am very familiar with the views of local residents, the school and busy families navigating drop-off times.

As a newly elected councillor, I am in the process of setting up regular surgeries, so you can speak to me face-to-face. In the meantime, you can contact me via email. I would love to hear from residents and community organisations so we can start working together. 

Thank you again. I am looking forward to meeting you and getting things done.


To contact Councillor Emma Shepherd-Mallinson, or other local councillors, see page 84 or visit wnstd.com/councillors

News

Snaresbrook station development still in ‘enabling works’ phase

pl-1Artist’s impression of the five- and six-storey flats

The company behind the redevelopment of Snaresbrook Station car park – which closed in March – has issued an update.

“The car park closed to allow for the construction of much-needed affordable homes. We are currently undertaking enabling works to prepare for construction… We expect the development to be completed by the end of 2026. When the car park reopens, 22 spaces will be available, including four Blue Badge parking spaces,” said a spokesperson for Pocket Living, which is building two blocks of flats on the site.

Features

Festive flying start

cmykfestive_flamingo_-flying_gifts© Jeanette Cole

Enjoy Art Group Wanstead’s current selling display in Wanstead Library’s lobby. It may even inspire you to add art materials to your gift wishlist this year, says group founder Donna Mizzi

Whether your favourite Christmas images include flying reindeer, chirpy robins, turkeys, partridges in pear trees or angels and Christmas tree fairies, they all have a feature in common. And so, Winged Wonders is the theme chosen by Art Group Wanstead members for its Christmas display at Wanstead Library, which runs until Saturday 21 December.

Artists enjoy having a theme to follow – and then creatively breaking the constraints. So, prepare for some left-field ideas. For example, a Robin in Wanstead may well be accompanied by Batman; Star Trek fans can enjoy some enterprising delights (did you know the Klingon’s battleship is called a Bird of Prey?), while keen birdwatchers can marvel at the natural beauty of our feathered friends.

Artwork and cards will be available to purchase, with contact details available. At the appropriately named Christmas ‘Flamingo Fair’ on Saturday 7 December, the showcase in the library’s lobby will be open for sales from 11am to 4pm. 

The Stow Brothers estate agent supports shows by our local artists and is also showing a range of work by Art Group Wanstead member Nataly Kenny until 8 January. Just pop into the estate agent’s office at 117A Wanstead High Street to enjoy this artist’s work.

Art Group Wanstead is open to keen local amateurs, through to professionals. Our members include adults with a wide range of ages, backgrounds and nationalities, all with a connection to the area. In these difficult economic times, the group helps lift people’s spirits and confidence. And we avoid charging membership fees by asking everyone to get involved in helping the group in some way.


For more information on the work of Art Group Wanstead, visit wnstd.com/art