Two facts:
1) This is a rock solid Conservative constituency, the domain of Ian Duncan Smith
2) This constituency has the biggest concentration of people being paid under the living wage in London, at 43% the second worst such 'blackspot' for low pay in the
whole of the UK
Does that make any sense? I had to go to have a look.
A stroll around the Monkhams ward in Woodford Green left me in no doubt why this should be a rock solid Conservative seat.
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Woodford Green Broadway - in colour |
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Monkhams Avenue - a fondness for mock-tudor hereabouts |
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Whoever was in the car had their audio at full volume. They spotted me taking the picture - and immediately turned it off |
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Neat gardens on Monkhams Avenue |
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Monkhams Avenue - Mock-Tudor and grand columns clash... |
If the images look a bit Instagramish then it's because those are phone pics. Here are some proper black and white film images from my Pentax:
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Woodford Green Broadway - this time in monochrome |
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The picturesque-in-all-but-name Potato Pond |
Walking across the southerly splinter of Epping Forest that separates
Chingford from Woodford Green is like entering a different world.
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Chingford Golf Course is between Chingford and Woodford |
It
seems that Chingford is the natural home of the 'hard working family' beloved by Ian Duncan Smith.
Perhaps, just as over the years the LGBT community and assorted slackers
(like myself) have congregated in Brighton, people who want to own
their own homes and are prepared to work long hours at low wages to
achieve that end have assembled in Chingford. With Norman Tebbit as the
previous MP for Chingford and Winston Churchill as a predecessor,
perhaps an effect of having all these high profile names
as incumbent MPs has been to attract more of the 'right sort' into the area.
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Typical Chingford terrace - no doubt ex-council |
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Walking the Pomeranian |
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Typical Chingford semis |
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I am guessing that Chingford might be home to quite a few cabbies |
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No, not THE Guardian! But there was one on the shelf besides the towering Daily Mails |
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Take your shades to the Chingford United Services Club this Saturday. |
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Bread Pudding from Greggs, Station Road, Chingford |
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Spending cuts hitting hard. |
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Winston Churchill, bottom left. He was MP for Epping when Chingford was part of that constituency but will not have stepped foot in this hall. |
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End of the line - Chingford Railway Station |
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So why on earth, given these neat streets and what is a mecca for owner-occupation, does Chingford and Woodford Green pay its workers such lowly rates?
Well, many people living here clearly are very well paid. People getting on the train to their jobs in the City just half an hour away would escape local consideration contributing to the City statistic instead. I am guessing that there are a lot of self-employed in the area which would also take a lot of people out of the equation.
But for those self-employed that are themselves local employers, I suspect that many would be favourably disposed to the abolition of the minimum wage - they would laugh at the idea of paying the living wage. There may also be a tendency for the conservative elements (small c) to accept their lot and avoid organised labour, keeping local wages down.
Visiting a place like this makes me wonder whether the TUC low pay 'blackspots' have any relevance. Once they once might have, but with people living in dormitory towns to go to their well paid jobs elsewhere perhaps it is far more valid to look at such statistics on a regional basis. But the
TUC report and this Guardian article majored on the local statistics, perhaps for the very reason that they produce uncomfortable numbers.
Other curious details from my day in Chingford and Woodford Green:
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There are very few pubs - I saw two in Woodford Green |
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The second was on Mill Lane - the Rose and Crown - after walking past this I saw none at all in Chingford |
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A real Post Office in Woodford Green - the main office in Brighton is downstairs in WH Smiths... |
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On Chingford Lane in Woodford, real council housing? Unlikely, but proper clothes lines and in the front garden too.. |
Finally, to underline this is big car territory, it was very difficult to cross the road - fences in the middle and on either side of the A104, Woodford New Road meant I had to walk a large distance before eventually finding a pelican pedestrian crossing to cross this single carriageway road. Here I had the longest wait I can remember for the green man to come up. Yes, it's different in Brighton with our dirty scraggy streets, but it does not take too long to cross them to get to the inevitable choice of pubs.
Final question. Could I afford to move to Woodford Green? Fat chance. Chingford, obviously ex-council - but this looks sweet http://www.rightmove.co.uk/property-for-sale/property-43802815.html?premiumA=true
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