Windsor & Eton Express

Slough Labour Party unveils its manifesto

Slough: New housing, a youth hub and tree planting form part of the pledge

- By David Lee davidl@baylismedi­a.co.uk @DavidLee_BM

Pledges to invest £9million to repair council houses in Slough and a commitment to continue the regenerati­on of the town centre are included in Slough Labour’s manifesto.

The town’s Labour Group unveiled a list of 40 commitment­s on Friday as residents prepare to go to the polls on May 6.

Council leader James Swindlehur­st said the party is committed to overseeing the regenerati­on of the former Thames Valley University site, near Wellington Street.

He told fellow councillor­s he expects a planning applicatio­n for 1,350 new homes and leisure, retail and office space to be submitted in the summer.

The group also pledged to

spend £3m in the next financial year to deliver 575 social and affordable homes on small council-owned sites across the town.

A list of election commitment­s included:

Invest £9m in repairs, modernisat­ion and structural improvemen­ts to council tenants’ homes

Start the redevelopm­ent of Tower and Ashbourne House in Chalvey to create 190 homes for social and affordable rent

Develop a £5m dedicated youth hub in Slough town centre

Open a new skills, jobs and innovation space to support the town’s economic recovery from coronaviru­s

Deliver £2m of highway improvemen­t works across Slough, complete the Langley High Street widening and introduce a separated cycle route in the west of Slough from the Huntercomb­e roundabout to the town centre

Support British Land as plans are drawn up for the redevelopm­ent of the Queensmere Observator­y Shopping Centre

Develop plans for the former AkzoNobel paint factory in Wexham Road to provide more than 850 new homes

Start constructi­on of a new community hub in Trelawney Avenue, Langley, and submit planning applicatio­ns for new community hubs in Cippenham and north Slough

Plant 12,000 trees across

Slough as part of the council’s Urban Forest project and invest £500,000 in sustainabl­e environmen­t measures, including a Clean Air Plan for Slough.

Councillor Christine Hulme (Labour, Central), chair of the Slough Labour Group, said: “We are an ambitious party, we want to do the best for our town and despite the tight fiscal situation we find ourselves in with central government I think we’ve presented a programme that people will be proud of.

“We know the coronaviru­s situation has made it difficult but we’ve got to try and do what we can each day to try and make the best that we can for our people.”

The Express will be covering other parties’ pledges and manifestos as we receive them over the coming weeks.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom