SOS Leith – read about sewage in the Water of Leith

At the recent February meeting of the Leith Links Community Council, we had an excellent guest speaker; Jim Jarvie of Save Our Shore (SOS) Leith. He explained in full detail the appalling situation about raw sewage being emptied regularly into the Water of Leith, and remaining there, trapped in the deep silt (as the river is no longer tidal). SOS Leith is campaigning to get Scottish Government, SEPA and Scottish Water to address this situation responsibly.

You can view the presentation here: Jim Jarvie SOS Leith talk

Leith Links Community Council is committed to supporting the work of SOS Leith in any way possible.

       

REMINDER – Leith Links Community Council meets LIVE, in-person today, Monday 27 February 2023, 6:30 pm.Duncan Place

The next meeting of the Leith Links Community Council will be held LIVE, in-person today, Monday 27 February 2023, at 6:30 pm.

We will meet in Duncan Place, at No. 4 Duncan Place, beside the Links.

As always, this meeting is open to interested members of the public. If you intend to come along in person or remotely, please email contact@leithlinkscc.org.uk to let us know. If you wish to try and join remotely, also please email to let us know, and we will send out a link between 2 and 6pm today.

Agenda for 27 February 2023 is here. We are looking forward to a presentation from Jim Jarvie of the Friends of the Water of Leith Basin (FOWL.b)

Last month’s Minutes are here: Minutes of the Leith Links Community Council meeting 30 January 2023. Also the presentation by Scottish Water & Veolia re Seafield sewage plant.

Next Meeting of Leith Links Community Council, IN-PERSON, 27th February, 6:30pm at Duncan Place

The next meeting of the Leith Links Community Council will be held on Monday 27 February 2023, at 6:30 pm.

Please note that this meeting will be LIVE and in-person, for the first time for a very long time. Hurrah! We will meet in Duncan Place, at No. 4 Duncan Place, beside the Links.

Agenda for 27 February 2023 is here. We are looking forward to a presentation from Jim Jarvie of the Friends of the Water of Leith Basin (FOWL.b)

Last month’s Minutes are here: Minutes of the Leith Links Community Council meeting 30 January 2023. Also the presentation by Scottish Water & Veolia re Seafield sewage plant.

As always, this meeting is open to interested members of the public. If you intend to come along in person, please email contact@leithlinkscc.org.uk so that we have an idea of numbers, for room booking purposes. If you wish to try and join remotely, also please email to let us know, and we will send out a link nearer the time.

Please note however that we do not have proper ‘broadcasting’ facilities, so we will be depending on a ‘swivelling laptop’ and possibly poor quality audio. This attempt at a ‘hybrid’ meeting is still somewhat at the experimental stage. If anyone has special knowledge of running such meetings, or has any relevant trechnical equipment to lend for this purpose, we’d like to hear from you, please!

If you have any items you wish to raise in discussion, please email these in in advance if possible.

Next Meeting of Leith Links Community Council, 30 January, 6:30pm online

The next meeting of the Leith Links Community Council will be held on Monday 30 January 2023, at 6:30 pm, online, via MS Teams.

Agenda for 30 January 2023 is here. We are experimenting with a new format whereby elected representatives and local residents can raise issues earlier in the meeting.

Last month’s Minutes are here: Minutes of the Leith Links Community Council meeting 28 November 2022

As always, this meeting is open to interested members of the public. If you wish to attend, please email contact@leithlinkscc.org.uk and you will be sent a link for the meeting (nearer the time). If you have any items you wish to raise, please email these in in advance if possible.

 

Communal Bin Hubs – have your say!

Communal Bin changes – tell the Council what you think by 18 December, via https://bit.ly/bin-hubs-survey

Do you use communal bins?  Have you noticed the changes the Council has made recently to your bins? The Council has been creating ‘bin hubs’ providing new bins, more bins, some different bins and – they say – more frequent collections. In some places they have moved the location of the bins. The overall aim is to improve the amount of waste which can be recycled, though it is also expected to improve street cleanliness if bins are emptied more regularly, and overflow less.

The Council now wants to know what you think about these changes, and whether your recycling habits have been affected. A short online survey has been set up by the charity Changeworks (posters about it have been placed on the inside stairwell doors of over 500 buildings across 96 streets in the Leith area). Residents can access the survey by scanning the QR code on the poster or typing the web address (https://bit.ly/bin-hubs-survey) into a browser. (Anybody can participate and input their views, you don’t necessarily have to have a poster.)

Please use this chance to have your say – the deadline has been extended to 18th December

Survey questions cover communications about the changes and whether you think things like street cleanliness have improved as a result of the new bin hubs. The survey does not ask directly if you are happy with the location of the new communal bin hubs, but there is a ‘comments’ box that you can use to say what you think about where the Council chose to locate the bin hub. Is it in a sensible place that you can access easily? Is it too close to windows or doorways? Are there problems with noise, or smells, or parking? The Council did not consult people prior to installing them in Leith. If you are unhappy with the location of your bin hub, write the details into that comments box AND don’t hesitate to contact one of your Councillors and the local Community Council and we will see how we can help.

Tell your Councillors

If you miss completing this survey, or find it inaccessible, you could also contact any of your local Councillors about this issue and/or let the Community Council know your views – we would all love to know what you think about the changes. Contact details:

Elected City Councillors:

Cllr Chas Booth – chas.booth@edinburgh.gov.uk

Cllr Katrina Faccenda – Cllr.Katrina.Faccenda@edinburgh.gov.uk

Cllr Adam McVey – adam.mcvey@edinburgh.gov.uk

Leith Links Community Council – contact@leithlinkscc.org.uk

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The Council say they will share the findings of the Survey with us in the New Year. The Community Council also monitors the state of communal bins and suggest improvements. Any additional information or views from local residents is really helpful for us, to be able to represent your views and experiences of this important local service, so please don’t hesitate to get in touch.

Next Meeting of Leith Links Community Council, 28 November, 6:30pm online

The next meeting of the Leith Links Community Council will be held on Monday 28 November 2022, at 6:30 pm, online, via MS Teams.

We were hoping to have a speaker from the City of Edinburgh Council to talk about the approaching Leith Controlled Parking Zone, but that will not happen this month, although they have promised to send us a ‘Briefing’ about the CPZ as soon as possible, which can be used to share information and raise questions and discussion, prior to a fuller  discussion about it with a Council Officer at a future CC meeting. It remains to be seen whether this Briefing will arrive in time for our meeting next week

The Agenda for 28 November 2022 is here.

Last month’s Minutes are here: Minutes of the Leith Links Community Council meeting 31 October 2022

As always, this meeting is open to interested members of the public. If you wish to attend, please email contact@leithlinkscc.org.uk and you will be sent a link for the meeting (nearer the time).

Trees in Pots, the latest instalment….

Following the dry spell in the spring / summer when they all nearly died, some of the trees in pots at the foot of Easter Road / Academy Lofts / Leith Links have now been offered a new life. Four of them have now gone to live on a farm (sorry – in a park) liberated from their pots and free to wiggle their roots, grow, express their authentic selves, and live their lives out – hopefully – in peace and harmony.

The Parks Dept. have now taken them away from the Academy Lofts entrance to Leith Links. The big, rusty, graffitied iron pots are gone.

The trees will be relocated into the ground somewhere – either elsewhere on Leith Links (we hope) or in another park.

Overall, this is probably a good thing. We wish them ‘Bon Voyage’ and ‘Have a happy life!’

That leaves 9 other trees in pots still in the area – one outside the Persevere (dead), which we’ll keep trying to get removed, and (living) 3 outside Tesco’s car park on Easter Road, 4 outside the front of Academy Lofts on Duke Street and one on Duncan Place opposite Academy Lofts. Please can we as a local community continue to keep an eye out for them and water them next spring as and when they look like they need it? (It was amazing earlier this year how they all arose from the apparently dead and perked up,  as soon as they got watered and rained on!)

Councillor Katrina Faccenda speaks up for Leith

Leith Ward Councillor Katrina Faccenda spoke up last week in the Council Transport and Environment Committee about the awfulness of life in Leith in recent years / months / weeks, due to the Tramworks. Her words were polite, but her message was frank and very clear. As a result, she has been invited to attend the Tram All Party Oversight Group (APOG) (a role usually not open to Ward Councillors).

Her words are below. If you want to be sure that she is aware of issues that affect you, when she attends the Tram APOG meetings, you should contact her at cllr.katrina.faccenda@edinburgh.gov.uk

My statement to the Transport and Environment Committee on the Trams to Newhaven Update

Councillor Katrina Faccenda

I want to congratulate the team – lessons have been learned from Phase 1 and to see that the project remains on schedule and within budget is a remarkable achievement

However, I am concerned that we underestimate the impact that the ongoing works have on the residents of my Ward.

As a city we recognise the importance well-maintained public spaces, this committee spent the whole morning discussing one street in the new town where very few people live permanently.

and the importance of the lived environment for people’s well-being – yet residents in Leith have for years had to live in building site

Building sites which are not always kept as clean and tidy as they should be – which become litter traps and are used as yards for long-term storage

Many businesses have asked me why the street in front of their business a storage yard for materials is which will not be need for many months – surely there are alternatives to this.

I have also had many letters regarding the steepness of the dropped pavements at junctions like Constitution St/Bernard St and the mismatching/confusing nature of the tactile paving which are meant to help the visually impaired – I do hope that these as well as some of the poorly laid and cut paving will be made safer, but it would be better for this not to happen in the first place.

The now infamous new crossings like the one at Brunswick Street are out of my ward but due to bus issues more Leithers than ever are walking up Leith walk to get into town.

I appreciate that the Trams team are responsible for delivering a project and it falls on other parts of the council such as Lothian buses to deal with many of the other inconveniences.

I am not sure that anyone who does not regularly travel to and from Leith can appreciate the level of stress that people are enduring daily – and negotiating public transport has become almost impossible if you do not have access to a smartphone and the bus App but even that is of limited use as it doesn’t keep pace with diversions.

Buses are changing route on an hourly basis, changes in bus stops being serviced and we are now going into the winter without bus shelters at many bus stops and ironically lovely shelters at tram stops on Leith Walk

Leith lost the 22 service – a lifeline service for many and one of the reasons is reported to be reduced use – we know that many of those who are able to walk, or wheel have stopped using buses due to unreliability caused by traffic and diversion – and those who still need buses struggle to find one.

Lastly, the Support for Business package has been welcomed by many businesses but hasn’t been enough for others – well established businesses are closing and only last week another business, a bar on Bernard St announced its closure – cash flow is vital to small businesses and an evening of customers paying by voucher is not ideal.

I appreciate that the pandemic and lockdown make measuring business impact difficult, but I do hope this will be looked at in planning future large scale infrastructure interventions across the city.

Summing up – everyone appreciates that life in a city will involve road works and occasional disruption but for one part of the city to have to put up with so much for so long has become intolerable for many – and please do not forget that many of the future beneficiaries of the trams are not those putting up with this – they are still to move to Leith into new housing accessible by tram.

I think the council must acknowledge the level of disruption and stress the people of Leith have endured and to publicly thank them for persevering and recognising that our strategic plans for the city should be balanced with the wellbeing of our citizens

 

Next LLCC Meeting, Monday 31 October, 6:30pm online

The next meeting of the Leith Links Community Council will be held on Monday 31 October 2022, at 6:30 pm, online, via MS Teams.

We were hoping to have a speaker from the City of Edinburgh Council to talk about the proposed Leith Controlled Parking Zone, but our invitations have so far not been successful.

Last months Minutes are here Minutes of the Leith Links Community Council meeting held on 26th September 2022 

The Agenda for the 31st October meeting is here.

As always, this meeting is open to interested members of the public. If you wish to attend, please email contact@leithlinkscc.org.uk and you will be sent a link for the meeting (nearer the time).

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