Kim differs from most of the 'councillor breed' being a successful entrepreneur....a quality sorely missed in local government.
Most entrepreneurs find trekking through the treacle of stultifying local politics too exhausting.
Kim put in his heart and soul into housing and Grenfell recovery. He would never satisfy everyone when the world and his wife wanted to make a home in the Royal Borough but he did his ultimate.
Sof McVeigh who succeeds Kim will bring the same commitment
His farewell letter is a measure of the man.
Disaster struck our community, when the worst tragedy imaginable unfolded at Grenfell Tower on the 14th June, 2017. I will never forget that day, and the days that followed. The image of the tower, destroyed, is etched into my consciousness, like it is for so many other people across Kensington, and across the country.
My memory of that morning was riding to North Kensington on my scooter and wanting to help in any way I could – as so many people did. No matter what people needed, I wanted to help them. Booking taxis on my phone, arranging hotel accommodation, handing out water, and putting my arm around people who I either knew or had never met before. It was impossible, and still is impossible, not to care about what happened, and in some way try to fix the unfixable.
I devoted the next six years trying to right a wrong. Of course, I made mistakes, personal ones, and the organisation and departments made mistakes under me – but I was always keen that we learn from them, and move forwards. By working together with residents and families, I always felt we were making things better together, even when a new strand of work or a new relationship only started because something had initially gone wrong.
The time for a change in my role has now come, and I wanted to thank every person I have met throughout my time as lead member for Housing and Grenfell and for giving me the opportunity to work alongside them, learn from them, and help me do the most important job I feel I have ever done.
I care about this borough and community, and it has been the greatest privilege of my life to serve our residents, but above all, to support and serve the families who suffered so terribly and continue to do so to this day. Nothing can ever change what happened at Grenfell Tower, but I always wanted the best for the people who lost so much, and for something positive to come out of something so awful. It is never lost on me, that I represented the Council which lost all trust and confidence, yet people gave me the space and time to work with them. Instead of slamming doors in my face, they opened doors to me and agreed to meet, and work alongside. That says everything you need to know about the community of North Kensington.
I also want to thank officers at the Council for their hard work, and my wife for her support and the time and patience she has given me to help me do what I felt was my duty.
I am proud that we brought housing back in house, and we are steadily changing the culture in the organisation, especially in our focus on safety. We have fought for, and won, investment in the Lancaster West estate and surrounding area, and we are starting to see the difference that makes to the area and to the people that live there.
We have built social homes for the first time in a generation, including Kelso Cochrane House, which is a real marker of the changes we have made.
And we listened and worked with residents to save the Sutton Estate, and make long-lasting commitments on the future of Morley College and North Ken Library.
As ever, there is more to do.
I am not going anywhere, and will take on new brief and stay as Deputy Leader. Families will always have my unwavering support for the changes they want to see nationally, and I am very much looking forward to contributing, in different ways, to the Grenfell recovery, which is a long-term challenge and one that the Council and all partners must continue to embrace.
From the bottom of my heart, to everyone I have met along the way, and to those who still doubt me and this organisation to this very day. Thank you.
Kim
New remit for the Deputy Leader, Employment, Culture, and Economy - Cllr Kim Taylor Smith
ReplyDelete* Economic development, employment, and skills
* Working in partnership with museums and galleries; public art; events and film and overseeing council cultural services.
* The council’s role in supporting Notting Hill Carnival
* Helping local people into work or better work
* Linking local businesses into supply chain opportunities.
* Library and Archive Services, including North Ken Library
* Street markets and street trading
* Sustainability of high streets and retail
* Apprenticeship within the council, local partners, and suppliers
* Alternative career pathways for residents 16+
* Further and adult education, skills, and employability
* Cllr Taylor-Smith will also oversee the Council’s role in the Grenfell restorative justice programme
All these functions are ones thatKim will bring energy and innovation to
ReplyDeleteThe Dames decribes K T-S as a breath of fresh air. That does sum him up. A shamme he's not Leader
ReplyDeleteTaylor-Smith listens and argues. He has done a hard and demanding job well
ReplyDeleteActually, he would have made a much better MP than the present lacklustre shoo in
ReplyDeleteMaybe there has been a Grenfell recovery in SW3 but not here in North Ken where it has amounted to further suffering missing millions & Jack shit for the community. What about the curve?
ReplyDeleteWho authorised the 400K golden handshake for the awful Faiiman?
As Dizzy Lizzy's right hand man KTS was & is v much part of all that failure. A nice letter isn't going to airbrush it out or make people forget.
That is not the letter was doing: it was saying a lot went wrong. I suspect whatever he did you would never be satisfied
Delete"Missing millions?"
DeleteI would like to know how the donations made by members of the pubic, amounting to millions of pounds "evaporated" and never found its way to the pockets of the survivors of Grenfell Tower.
The sums donated, on various on-line platforms, lumped together would have provided enough money to pay each of the surviving households at Grenfell Tower around half a million pounds.
DeleteAs no individual tenant received a payment of anything like half a million pounds, why haven't those who collected these funds from well intentioned members of the public, including the Royal Family, produced a full account showing how the money was doled out.
As Councillor Kim Taylor Smith is a former chartered accountant, his view of this situation would be enlightening.
The public and press were excluded from discussions on Grenfell expenditure at the audit and transparency committee. Not very transparent.
DeleteI do not doubt that public money may have gone adrift. BUT what about a proper police investigation in to the way that donations made by the public were spent. We need accountability and transparency over the way donations were disbursed.
DeleteBoth should be investigated.
DeleteMoney donated by members of the public to Grenfell survivors vaporised.
DeleteIf a few fans of RBKC wish to use the charity donations issue as a handy diversion away from the activities of the Leadership and their friends, the two aren't entirely unconnected. Have a read of this
Deletehttps://urbandandylondon.com/2023/03/29/hargreavescharity/
I can assure you that I am no fan of RBKC and its housing practices.
DeleteThe article isn't about housing practices
DeleteCharlie Brown's link is a red herring. The link refers to Enquiries made by the Charity Commission in to a charity writing off, and failing to collect, £9,000 owing to it.
DeleteAll of this has nothing to do with donations made by members of the public on various online platforms to help Grenfell Survivors. We need transparency and accountability as to how the millions donated by the public were disbursed to those who lost their homes.
Al Manar were one of the charitable organisations people made donations to
DeleteCome on Taylor Smith, a right thinking Councillor and Accountant should report the matter of Grenfell donations going adrift to the Metropolitan Police Commissioner - It is worse than the SNP's half a million pounds going in to the ether or cyberspace.
DeleteThe money rolled in and it rolled out.
DeleteIf Dent Coad was truly on the side of Grenfell people, she would have brought to the attention of the police, the absence of any accounts, from various online platforms, as how the millions of pounds of charitable donations collected were dished out; or not dished out.
DeleteThe gauntlet has been laid down for Councillor Taylor-Smith and Councillor Dent-Coad to ask the Police to investigate how all the funds donated to Grenfell, by the public, were doled out.
DeleteWhy won't they do this-?
A lot did go wrong and is still going wrong 23.11.
ReplyDeleteWould you feel at all 'satisfied' having to live like this?
https://www.bigissue.com/news/housing/six-years-on-from-grenfell-this-is-life-in-the-shadow-of-the-tower/
Kudos to KTS though for keeping the awful Campbell in her leader position and managing to persuade others elsewhere into believing the lies that my community has completely recovered and we're a bunch of ungrateful moaners who are never content with anything. The facts speak a different story.
It is not 'Your Community: it is Our Community" Taylor-Smith can only work with the tools he has. There will always be people like you who think they deserve more. Get real. Life is hard. Stop playing the victim.
DeleteIt is not moaning or demanding more, we've had less.
DeleteThe reality is that the Lancaster West estate's residents are stil traumatised by the fire and it's aftermath and have been living in a building site for 6 years. The refurbishment has yet to start or a decision about what to do with the Tower.
Even the most thoughtful Labour Councillors ( especially the retired ones who were there at the time ) give TaylorSmith credit for what he did to move the Council on & save the borough from the disaster bequeathed by Cockell, Fielding Mellon & those others who unnecessarily inflicted austerity on the richest local authority in Europe.
ReplyDelete