BBC Peterborough 18th January 2010

A summary of the Paul Stainton Breakfast Show with Andy Gall from BBC Radio Peterborough broadcast Monday 18th January 2010.

A summary of the Paul Stainton Breakfast Show with Andy Gall from BBC Radio Peterborough broadcast Monday 18th January 2010.

Topics: 
Peterborough City Council has purchased the Peterborough United FC football stadium.
Liberal Democrats assert that Council has lost £2 million in bad Icelandic investments.
Council Leader outlines his plans for the South Bank of the River Nene.
CENTRE FOR CITIES annual review shows Peterborough locals worse off than others in the recession.
Peterborough submits ten objects towards a collection of man-made historical items for a project called The History of the World.

Interviewees:
John Harrison Peterborough City Council.
Peter Lloyd Chairman PUFC Supporters Trust.
Marco Cereste Leader Peterborough City Council.
Darren Fower Peterborough LibDems.
Peter Davidson JobCentrePlus.
Kate Collino Fitzwilliam Museum.

Companies Mentioned:
Centre for Cities.

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Marco Cereste on Buying the Posh Ground

Marco Cereste Leader of Peterborough City Council discusses the completed purchase by PCC of the London Road ground, and outlines his plans for the city. Broadcast at 08:10 on Monday 18th January 2010 in the Paul Stainton Breakfast Show with Andy Gall on BBC Radio Peterborough.

Marco Cereste Leader of Peterborough City Council discusses the completed purchase by PCC of the London Road ground, and outlines his plans for the city. Broadcast at 08:10 on Monday 18th January 2010 in the Paul Stainton Breakfast Show with Andy Gall on BBC Radio Peterborough.

AG: So the future of London Road’s been secured. Peterborough City Council have bought the London Road ground for around eight million pounds. The deal’s supposed to not only secure the future of football in the city, but develop the riverside area. And PISA Chairman Ady Mowles we spoke to earlier about that, and now we do have Marco Cereste. So you announced the news ahead of Saturday’s game. You must be relieved that the deal is finally done?
MC: Yes I’m very pleased. We can now get on with the complete regeneration of the whole of the South Bank, which is something really important I think for the city.
AG: And when you say the development of that, is that .. because when we looked at the plans that you had, the aspirational plans for the city, there was talk of .. it was mooted that there might be the whole sporting complex, or the sporting aspect of the city would be to the north, rather than the south.
MC: Yes but looking at it properly it doesn’t work with the north. But if you think about it, on the south, already having the stadium on the south part of the South Bank, and you’ve already got the wonderful international rowing lake up at Longthorpe, if you think about it you could develop the whole of the river embankment from the South Bank all the way along the edge out to Longthorpe. At the moment it’s just basically abandoned land. And we could turn that into probably one of the finest sports villages in the country, if not the world.
AG: Is there any immediate short-term plans that fans will notice almost within the blinking of an eye, changes, or will it take .. ?
MC: Well we are doing the scoping right now. It would have been really difficult to have done anything, we wouldn’t have wanted to spend a lot of money on it without actually knowing that we’d secured the stadium. So we are beginning work on it straight away. A bit has been done. It seems to be something that’s very feasible. So, you wouldn’t want us to spend money unnecessarily.
AG: No.
MC: No. Absolutely not. So now we will do the work properly, and we’ll try and attract the right businesses. Obviously it can’t just be sport. You’re going to need hotels. We’d like to put the university in there, because that way the university can offer sport as part of its curriculum and use the stadium as well.
AG: A lot of fans are saying the stadium in its current incarnation isn’t actually up to the job.
MC: Absolutely right. I completely agree. And of course one of the things we’re going to have to .. we’re going to need to do as a council is we’re going to have to take down the individual stands to make it .. to bring it up to scratch. And the project for the first removal of the first stand will be to a: rebuild it and bring it up to standard, but b: to provide ..
AG: Rebuilding it in its current location?
MC: No no no. probably not quite in its current position and probably not quite in its current .. well definitely not in its current size.
AG: Where would it go then Marco?
MC: It will go at the north end of the football ground, but it will probably be moved back, you know, if not the width of the carpark behind it, something like it. Because we’d want to create a concert venue there as well. So you’ll have a skills and enterprise .. a skills and education training centre underneath. You’ll have a stand which works as a stand during the football matches. And then you’ll have already the beginnings of a concert centre above it.
AG: Marco, this sounds great, and this .. I love talking to you, because the future’s bright when I hear Marco, but how are you going to fund it?
MC: Well we’ve already got eight and a half million pounds that’s been given to us from the Government to provide a skills and training centre. And so it’s just a question of finding a little bit more ..
AG: Finding it from where though, especially in the current climate? There’s not much money.
MC: Well I agree with you. But believe it or not there are people that want to bring concerts into this city, and one of the ways to do it is to .. if you like .. pre-sell the concert venue to a concert organiser.
AG: Hmm. OK.
MC: And that way they pre-book it, they pre-sell it, the city doesn’t take the risk, the Posh doesn’t take the risk, and we’ve already got, we already know that once a fortnight there’ll be a concert in Peterborough that’s somebody worth seeing.
AG: It’s a bit like the O2 Arena.
MC: Yes. But we .. the O2 Arena is a bit bigger than London Road. (laughs).
AG: Ok so that’s what you’re looking at doing in the long term.
MC: Yes that’s right. And then each .. as we develop each stand .. one stand you may have a health facility. One of the things which we have seen which is really fabulous is in another football ground, I think it was at Preston, part of the ground is actually a hotel.
AG: This is starting to sound a little bit like Chelsea Village, isn’t it? You’re going to have like a shopping centre and everything in there. And I suppose there’s a danger then that people start to panic that it’s .. that the football is becoming a little bit overshadowed by everything else.
MC: No no no no no. The football the football has a lease, to the football ground will use, you know the football club will use it, and no threat to the football. The whole point was to secure the future of the football club.
AG: Indeed and that’s it. there has been a sigh of relief there because you know it’s gone on for a long time politically sort of ebbing and flowing about what the Council are going to do with that. So you have aquired the ground. And let’s see from there where it moves on. But for the time being we can celebrate that. But we’ll look to the future as well with a jeweller’s eye. Just before you do disappear, on the text it says:” Marco must be a pipe, dresing gown and slippers man. Great news that the Council have the ground and the land.” So Marco, we are asking about dressing gowns today. Do you have a dressing gown?
MC: I do, yes I do yes. I don’t smoke a pipe.
AG: You don’t smoke a pipe then. Is it just one dressing gown or do you have more?
MC: I’ve got two.
AG: Two. The decadence of the man. Oh yes. Adrian in Dogsthorpe says: “They’re all talk Andy. Peterborough City Council just talk.” What do you make of that.
MC: Well you know it’s just cost me eight point six five million pounds. If he thinks that’s talk you know what I mean. (laughs). I’d like to be talk like that that way when it’s for me personally as well.
AG: You do sound like there’s some biscuits on the gravy train. And Marco, thank you for talking to us this morning.
MC: Thank you. So Marco Cereste take care there, Leader of Peterborough City Council.

BBC Peterborough January 15th 2010

A summary of the Paul Stainton Breakfast Show from BBC Radio Peterborough broadcast Friday 15th January 2010.

A summary of the Paul Stainton Breakfast Show from BBC Radio Peterborough broadcast Friday 15th January 2010.

Topics: 
Widespread concerns expressed at the proposed new location for a drugs advice centre.
£10 million earmarked for road network improvements.
Winter accident litigation: there has been a dramatic increase in enquiries.
Care International make an appeal for the victims of the Haiti earthquake.
Fifty new jobs could be created at a proposed residential children’s home in Crowland.
George Osbourne Shadow Chancellor announces plans for immediate spending cuts if they get in.
BBC Cambs Big Skill event: local man gets his new PSV skill but finds no job as yet.
The Whittlesea Straw Bear festival is about to launch.
Local theatre man gives advice on how to write a political musical.

Interviewees:
Stewart Jackson MP.
Jeffrey Dennis Care International.
Roger Stansfield What Car.
Steven Goldspink Peterborough City Councillor.
Roger Terrell Solicitor.
Pete Williams Straw Bear Organiser.
Michael Cross Key Theatre.

Companies Mentioned:
East of England Development Agency.
Peterborough Primary Care Trust.
Apex.
Care International.
Key Theatre.
Roger Terrell Solicitors.

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Marco Cereste on the prospects for 2010

Marco Cereste outlines progess made in 2009 and his outlook for 2010 in the city. Broadcast at 08:15 on January 4th 2010 in Paul Stainton’s Breeakfast Show on BBC Radio Peterborough.

Marco Cereste outlines progess made in 2009 and his outlook for 2010 in the city. Broadcast at 08:10 on January 4th 2010 in Paul Stainton’s Breakfast Show on BBC Radio Peterborough.

PS: Peterborough City Council Leader Marco Cereste has admitted his biggest challenge this year will be to steer Peterborough out of the recession. The Leader also wants to ensure the city is in the best possible position to capitalise on the economic recovery whenever it takes place. And as we heard earlier this morning that might not be this year. Councillor Cereste is with us this morning. Good morning Marco.
MC: Good morning Paul. Happy New Year to you.
PS: Same to you. Same to you. Hopefully nobody asked you about Shaking Stevens over the Christmas.
MC: No they didn’t. (chuckles)
PS: (giggles) My wife, I’m sure she’s smelling some serious salt. (icw previous item.) But I mean you know this promises to be a very very challenging year in lots of different ways for Peterborough, doesn’t it?
MC: Yeah it does. But I mean I still believe that Peterborough is well placed to meet the challenge. I have every confidence in the city, I really do I mean I think Peterborough is a fabulous place. It’s strategically placed within the UK, and it’s got lots and lots of things going for it that other cities don’t. And our job as politicians and your job as a radio presenter and the people of this city is to make sure that we capitalise on the assets that we really do have.
PS: And what are our aims for 2010 as a city? What have we got to try to do?
MC: Well for me as you know there’s been a lot of publicity about the purchase of the football ground. We want to complete that purchase. We want to complete the Bridge Street, which will mean finding hopefully finally having a tenant for the Woolworths building, and making sure that the last letting, there’s one shop left, is let. And also opening the Women’s Innovation Centre Enterprise Centre, and that, hopefully that’ll all happen within by the time this financial year finishes at the end of March. And the Council will be able to close with a good financial year. We’ve put already things in place to start the South Bank redevelopment scheme, so within the next six months we should be in a position to announce how it’s going to work, and what will happen. I can tell you now on the radio that within a couple of years you’ll see work going on down there. Because you know I’m fed up of it just being a derelict site really, and it’s time we got on with it.
PS: Yeah we’ve written down the date you said by the way.
MC: Yeah.
PS: Oh yeah yeah.
MC: You call me back and you hold me to account. I’m sure you will. (laughs)
PS: Of course I would. Can you help in any way as a council, whether it’s you, or though Opportunity Peterborough, can you help kick start the city’s economy, can we do anything until the country recovers? Is there anything we can do?
MC: Well there are certain sectors that are still operational. It’s not every business not every sector economically is doing badly. So the job of the Council really through our new investment team at Opportunity Peterborough and through the new relationship management teams that we put in place, is to attract businesses and people into the city that still have .. businesses that are doing well, and are looking to expand, and looking somewhere new to go, for when the economy turns round. Now we can do that and then by doing that we can really begin to put Peterborough on the map, and earlier than one would normally expect. And that’s what we will be ..that’s what we will be trying to do.
PS: Do we have any potential new businesses been attracted to Peterborough? Hmm?
MC: Yeah we do actually? We’ve got .. believe it or not we’ve got two Chinese delegations coming from two different regions in China. And remember a region in China is bigger than the whole of the United Kingdom. They’re bringing investors, they’re bringing people with them who want to come and invest. I mean there’s even a possibility of four hundred new jobs with one of them. So you know we are doing our work, and I’m happy to come back to you and talk to you about it as things begin to become positive and they get firmed up. But we are working very very hard to try and put this city on the world map. Because the one thing this city has don’t forget it’s got its badge. It wants to be the environment capital. And you’d be surprised how much pull the fact that we’ve got nearly four hundred environment businesses in this city has. Even in the entire world economy. These two Chinese regions they want to come here because they’re interested in our environmental services.
PS: It’s quite surprising as well because you hear every day that things are cheaper to make, and cheaper to produce in China.
MC: Yeah but don’t forget we have the technology. I know it’s a ridiculous face to use, phrase to use, but we have the technology. we have the advanced technology that the Chinese want. And that’s why they want to come and work with us.
PS: In this environment though, is it possible to spend the money required to be the city’s the UK’s environment capital?
MC: Well we can do what we can do. I mean I can tell you now that we’re negotiating now with a local organisation in the city to go over and have a look at ten thousand to go through ten thousand houses, to find the money to bring them up to standard, and investment in the city of anything up to five or six million pounds, which is coming from elsewhere. Our job is not necessarily to find city money. You’ve probably noticed I’ve been pretty succesful at this, our job is to find money from other places, that we can spend in the city. And that’s the secret at the moment, because we can’t go putting people’s rates up, we don’t have spare cash laying around. So we have to use what we’ve got wisely. And we have to be able to use our intelligence and bring money in from outside to be spent in our city.
PS: Because there’s less money, isn’t there. And that’s a fact. And we can expect more job cuts perhaps, in the New Year as well?
MC: I hope not. I hope not. No I mean you know just let’s it’s not something that we that we want to do. But you know, if it happens it happens. But it won’t be many if there are anyway.
PS: Yeah. And just on the subject of the Posh ground, I mean that needs to be approved by the valuer, doesn’t it? When’s that likely to happen do you know?
MC: Well I would hope to be able to make an announcement within the next ten days.
PS: Good stuff. And the Woolworths building, the old chestnut, it’s been rumbling on and on, when do you expect that to be finalised?
MC: Well honestly I was hoping it was all going to be finalised before Christmas, and for all I know it might have been finalised during the Christmas period. I’ve got a meeting this morning with what we call the Leader’s Meeting at the Council. We did get a briefing on everything that’s gone on over the last few days, and I’ll get an update this morning. I suspect that had it been finalised during the Christmas period someone would have phoned me.
PS: (laughs)
MC: (laughs)
PS: Yeah we would have phoned you.
MC: Exactly.
PS: Marco, let’s look forward to a positive and inspiring New Year for Peterborough.
MC: Yep yep yep. I think the city’s got lots of things to offer. Let’s just make sure that we can make it a successful city and a successful year for everybody. And a Happy New Year to all of your readers all of your listeners. Sorry.
PS: Well they read as well.
MC: Readers as well. Facebook and all the rest of it.
PS: Good stuff. Council Leader Marco Cereste.

BBC Peterborough January 4th 2010

A summary of the Paul Stainton Breakfast Show from BBC Radio Peterborough broadcast Monday 4th January 2010.

A summary of the Paul Stainton Breakfast Show from BBC Radio Peterborough broadcast Monday 4th January 2010.

Topics:
A computer fault is mooted as the cause of an MOD Chinook crash.
Police issue Cambridgeshire drink-driving statistics.
Peterborough City Council Leader outlines his priorities.
A local independent financial adviser offers a financial forecast for the year ahead.
US airline security. a list of rogue nations is offered up.
Yemeni embassies have been closed over security fears.
A mystery explosion damages a flat in Shrewsbury.
Popular 2009 baby names discussed.
Locals are urged to recycle their Christmas trees at Notcutts.

Interviewees:
Joe Jennings Independent Financial Adviser Ashley Law.
David Moxon Health Psychologist.
Tony Barris Police.
Nyree Ambarchian Peterborough Environment City Trust.
Marco Cereste Leader Peterborough City Council.

Companies Mentioned:
Notcutts.
Perkins.
Hotpoint.
Ashley Law.
Poundshop.
SONY (PS3).
Sainsburys.
Sue Ryder.
Opportunity Peterborough.

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