Ruislip & Eastcote & Northwood Gazette

Mayfair is unfair – no corner shop and unfilled schools

FEAR EMPTY MANSIONS AND ‘DIRTY MONEY’ ARE PRICING OUT FAMILIES

- By HANNAH NEARY Local Democracy Reporter @hannahnear­y16

SCHOOLS and small businesses are struggling to survive in one of London’s most expensive postcodes as residents are being priced out by mansion owners with “dirty money”, a councillor has warned.

The number of empty and second homes in Mayfair is leaving the area half-empty as Londoners can’t afford to live there, Labour councillor Jessica Toale said.

She said the posh neighbourh­ood in the heart of Westminste­r is losing its “vitality” as independen­t businesses and young families are priced out. She blamed super-rich buying properties that are left empty for the sharp spike in rents.

Speaking to the Local Democracy Reporting Service, Cllr Toale said: “If you walk around at night you see hardly any lights on. It’s a stark indication of how many empty properties there are, particular­ly Park Lane, which has been a residentia­l hub in the area.

“Schools are struggling to get enough pupils, the library footfall is down. Commercial rents are going up, which means it’s difficult for the companies to pay rent.”

Westminste­r has seen a 1,200 per cent rise in the number of property

AND SMALL BUSINESSES

owners registered to Russia and a 300 per cent rise in owners registered in Jersey since 2010, according to the Centre for Public Data.

Westminste­r City Council has launched a new campaign against dirty money in the borough, pledging to make sure businesses pay their fair share of tax and stop foreign property owners from using local properties as a hub for illicit business.

The council is already investigat­ing 30 American-themed stores in the West End for alleged business rates evasion of £7.9 million.

Cllr Toale said: “There’s nothing wrong with buying property to invest in and having second homes but there’s clearly property that has been bought with illicit money.

“Lots of them are in Mayfair, Westminste­r and Kensington and Chelsea. What the council has been talking about doing is looking at ways to potentiall­y compulsory purchase these properties in extreme cases.

“I don’t want the council to lose focus on this. The amount of empty properties just means that it’s putting prices up all over but making it more difficult to live in the area.”

Cllr Toale said one school in her ward has had to combine year groups as it’s struggling to fill places due to the lack of young families living in the area.

She added: “Mayfair has lost its corner shop and in its place, there are these high-end shops. There are people who have lived there 30 or 40 years who don’t feel the same.

“There has been obvious population decline over the past ten to twenty years. There’s nowhere to go shopping or get a pint of milk. It sucks the vitality out of the area.”

A study carried out by council officers in 2020 found Westminste­r’s state primary schools were more than 20 per cent down on pupil figures.

The report said: “Surplus primary school capacity remains a significan­t issue in Westminste­r. Spare capacity now stands at 22 per cent, and this is having an impact on school budgets and resources some schools have available to them.”

Labour councillor Tim Roca said at a meeting in February: “We’re not building enough family homes that are genuinely affordable and people are being priced out. Many of our families born and raised in Westminste­r are sometimes being sent out of London altogether in temporary accommodat­ion.”

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