As part of the St George’s Art’s Festival, Cleo Laine and Friends will be performing at 8pm on Friday 18 May 2012 at St George’s Church.
For more information and to buy tickets please visit www.stgeorgesartsfestival.com
Two residents' associations working together across Beckenham on your behalf
As part of the St George’s Art’s Festival, Cleo Laine and Friends will be performing at 8pm on Friday 18 May 2012 at St George’s Church.
For more information and to buy tickets please visit www.stgeorgesartsfestival.com
Met Police Copers Cope Safer Neighbourhoods team, in consultation with local groups, have set Beckenham’s policing priorities for summer:
1) Tackling residential burglaries
2) Tackling town centre anti-social behaviour
Check out the Police’s May newsletter update.
Check out Bromley Young Carers newsletter.
Newsletter
8 pm on Saturday 12 May at St George’s Church, Beckenham
Beckenham’s professional orchestra present:
St George’s Arts Festival SGCO Baroque Concert
Please see the flyer below for further information.
St George’s Arts Festival SGCO Baroque Concert May 2012
The St. George’s Chamber Orchestra (SGCO) was founded in 2004 as the new professional orchestra for the South East, established in order to give local music lovers the opportunity to hear orchestral concerts of the highest standard on their doorstep. All the SGCO’s members play regularly with the famous London orchestras such as the London Symphony, Philharmonia, BBC Symphony Orchestra, London Philharmonic and Royal Philharmonic Orchestras. Further information can be found on their website:
Nicola Musto, Beckenham’s Town Centre Manager for the past 7 years, has moved on from the role to another in the Council. We wish Nicola well.
Beckenham will not have a dedicated Town Centre Manager for a number of weeks until the position becomes formally vacant and a replacement Town Centre Manager is recruited. In the interim Martin Pinnell, Head of Town Centre Management & Business Support, is our contact in regard to town centre issues.
We hope that the Council will ensure that Beckenham continues to be resourced for a dedicated Town Centre Manager. We will keep you posted.
Check out Bromley Carers newsletter.
Newsletter
Friday 20th April 2012 – Ride starts at 7.00 pm at Beckenham Green, Near St Georges Church.
Ride Safe, Ride Bright is a 5 mile cycling event to make people more aware of safety issues of Cycling at night, in particular encouraging all cyclists to be more contrastingly luminous and with good working and bright flashing lights on their bikes.
We hope you can join us on the ride.
Bromley-based international journalist and local community activist Nick Carter has died at his home in Beckenham, aged 83.

Born Anthony Carter, in London, he worked on the Daily Sketch and provincial newspapers including The Northern Echo and the Sheffield Telegraph & Star before returning to London to join Reuters, the international news agency, in 1953 and live at Hayes.
There he served Reuters World Services as Manager and Deputy Editor, in a career that also included reporter, sub-editor, Audio Editor, Production Editor, South East Asia Deputy Manager, Operations Manager and News Products Manager. He also spent five years as a BBC World Service editor and producer of Radio Newsreel.
Trained as a radar engineer during National Service in the RAF, he played a major role in the introduction of computers into Reuters news services, including the use of linked computers in London and Hong Kong so the two centres could take it in turns to control the news flow. On his return from three years in Asia he moved from Hayes to Dulwich and then in 1980 to Rectory Road in Beckenham.
After an intensive bout of world travel following his retirement from Reuters in 1987 he joined the Copers Cope Area Residents’ Association Executive Committee in July 1988, later becoming editor of its widely-read newsletter The Express and, from 1994 to 2002, its Secretary.
In this role he represented it in a number of campaigns, like those to save and revive Beckenham Hospital as a modern medical centre with a Minor Injuries Unit and range of diagnostic facilities, though to his regret intermediate care beds were never set up in the top floor space originally urged for them.
He was also involved in CCARA campaigns to establish a Town Manager, restrain the granting of overnight alcohol licences, set up the Friends of Kelsey Park, instal Kent County Cricket Club on a threatened site in Copers Cope Road, and to renovate and put a Millenium plaque on the Victorian waterspout on the High Street atKelsey Square.
Retiring as Secretary and Editor, he served as vice-chairman till the age of 76, but returned for two years in his early 80s as honorary vice-President, to organise special meetings to find new volunteers to revive the association after a period of reduced activities.
He was married to Daphne, a former classmate at grammar school, with whom he celebrated their Diamond Wedding and 80th birthdays in 2008. She survives him, together with their daughters Cheryl and Beverley and five adult grandchildren.
Nick’s funeral will be held on Tuesday, 24th April at 3.00 pm at Beckenham Crematorium, Elmers End Road.
Burglars are very active in Bromley at this time. Please be aware of crime prevention measures you can take to secure your property. If you see anything suspicious in your neighbourhood inform the police.
1. PVC and aluminium doors should have multi-locking systems which must be activated by lifting the handle and then locking with a key. It is not secure if you only lift the handle.
2. Always engage your mortice lock on wooden doors. It is not secure if you only activate a yale lock.
3. Do not leave any windows open either on the ground or upper floors.
4. Most burglars are looking for opportunities so lock gates to your garden and do not leave garages or sheds open.
Bromley Borough Police
Friday 20th April 2012 – Ride starts at 7.00 pm at Beckenham Green, Near St Georges Church.
Ride Safe, Ride Bright is a 5 mile cycling event to make people more aware of safety issues of Cycling at night, in particular encouraging all cyclists to be more contrastingly luminous and with good working and bright flashing lights on their bikes. For more information please see the flyer below.
Cyclists are all too frequently seen at night without lights or any form of luminicity about them. Organiser, Chris Hermon, lost is friend Gary Mason (the famous boxer and Djembe Drummer instructor) earlier this year. Sadly, Mr Mason was was killed in an early morning cycling accident, he was wearing dark clothes and had no lights on his bike!
We hope you can join us on the ride.
The Governor of Belmarsh Prison gave an enlightening address at Beckenham Halls, Bromley Road to the AGM of the Copers Cope Area Residents’ Association and other members of the general public, and stimulated interesting and thoughtful exchanges both during and after his talk.
Belmarsh deals with a wide cross-section of the criminal fraternity of about 925 prisoners of whom fluctuating numbers are the most serious Category “A”. To look after them requires about 1000 staff and costs the taxpayer an average of around £45,000 per annum per prisoner. Readers may not know that Belmarsh is the remand prison for the Old Bailey, many high profile case in England and Wales goes through their gates (either before court, on remand or after court if they are sentenced).
The Governor put into perspective how destabilising the prison experience is, the loss of all the norms of everyday living that the public take for granted which the prisoner suffers as soon as he enters the establishment. He will often lose his job, his home and even his wife and family – those ingredients that identify him as a member of the community and have the potential to anchor him on release. If the prisoner lives in Housing Association accommodation, it is inevitable he will lose it as well as any possessions he had left there. Therefore, a prisoner coming out of prison after just three months may find he has no home, all of his possessions are gone, he has no job, and perhaps is estranged from his family. “They should have thought about that before” people will say. That may be true, but equally, that former prisoner after losing everything may find himself on the path to reoffending.
Phil Wragg talked about work undertaken towards the prevention of offending and the training of prisoners with worthwhile activity so that they had something tangible to offer the community on release. Family Man Courses lasting 12 weeks go some way to eliminating selfishness and establishing a more rational and balanced outlook on life that will hopefully deter the criminal from reoffending. Emphasis is given to teach a trade and to injecting some learning into the prisoners’ lives to increase levels of literacy and numeracy, which better prepares them for life on the outside on release. He also referred to the mentoring and tracking of prisoners’ lives after release extending to two years, some of which involves prison officers not in uniform within the community working to help former prisoners become better citizens and to forego their former criminogenic behaviour.
Dispelling a well-established myth held by public opinion and regularly publicised in the media that drug taking is rife in Belmarsh the Governor explained that less than 5% of prisoners sampled test positive to drugs from the regular mandatory testing – remarkable considering that over 85% of new inmates are drug users on arrival.
The turnover of prisoners at Belmarsh is high, up to 85 prisoners a day. Regardless of when they arrive each new arrival goes through the same regime; a search, health check, and risk assessment. Currently England and Wales has the largest prison population in its history. Capacity problems are a constant headache and more accommodation needs to be built to cope with current demand. That is why reducing reoffending is such an important issue.
The Chairman of the Association thanked Mr Wragg for the time that he had sacrificed out of his busy schedule to address the meeting and for producing such a thought provoking and interesting talk.
7.30pm on Saturday 21st April at St George’s Church, Beckenham
St George’s Chamber Orchestra are holding a concert celebrating the wealth of English music in advance of St George’s day and the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee.
Please see the flyer below for further information.
21 April St George’s Chamber Orchestra Concert
The St. George’s Chamber Orchestra (SGCO) was founded in 2004 as the new professional orchestra for the South East, established in order to give local music lovers the opportunity to hear orchestral concerts of the highest standard on their doorstep. All the SGCO’s members play regularly with the famous London orchestras such as the London Symphony, Philharmonia, BBC Symphony Orchestra, London Philharmonic and Royal Philharmonic Orchestras. Further information can be found on their website:
Bromley Council are inviting couples celebrating their diamond anniversary this year and businesses celebrating 60 years of trading in the borough to join in the official celebrations on May 15 2012.
Any couples or businesses can contact Kay Coulton, Cultural Business Development Officer on 020 8461 7539 or email kay.coulton@bromley.gov.uk for further information.
Recently Hachette Publishing announced that Enid Blyton’s well loved books are to be updated, re-illustrated and digitised, for a new generation of children. This news has led some to ponder why Enid’s literary contribution has not been celebrated by a statue.
Should the children’s author have a statue where she spent her own childhood, in Beckenham?
You can vote in the Newsshopper Poll, please see the link below.
http://www.newsshopper.co.uk/news/9617664.Calls_for_Enid_Blyton_statue_in_Beckenham/
Planning consent was refused last night for an extension to the Barclays Bank building just before you get to the Beckenham roundabout. The proposal for a four storey building to provide 8 two bedroom apartments was rejected on the grounds of lack of privacy to neighouring properties. The bank will remain operational.
Bromley residents have until Wednesday 18 April 2012 to ensure they are registered to vote. If you are new to the area or have recently turned 18 and not registered yet you should contact Bromley Councils Electoral Services asap.
http://www.bromley.gov.uk/info/364/elections-electoral_register/223/registering_to_vote
The Police Borough Commander noted at the Safer Bromley Partnership Strategic Group in March that “work continued on the investigation launched following the public disorder on 8thAugust 2011. 91 people had now been convicted and 29 had been convicted and sentenced. “
Regular Monday afternoon (term time only) meetings for adults starting 16th April 2-2.30pm at Shortlands Library, 110 Shortlands Road, Shortlands BR2 0JP Tel 020 8460 9692
Get to know your neighbours over a cup of tea. We aim to offer a varied programme of talks and group discussions. Please contact the library for details.
A Walk through Dickens’ London
With Ian Porter
Don’t miss Ian Porter, novelist and historian, as he talks about Dickens’ life, takes you around the streets of the London of Dickens’ stories, and shows us the Kent of Great Expectations
Beckenham Library – Wednesday18 April 6:30 pm
Central Library – Saturday 21 April 10:30 am
Tickets £2.50