March 2009 Archives

Chip shop wins top award

Posted by David Tilley on Mar 19, 09 02:40 PM in

It is great news for a Kenton chip shop that took a top Sea Fish Industries prize.

Belmont Bay Fish and Chips in Kenton Lane won the award for best fish and chip dinner in Greater London, Middlesex and Essex.

The competition, held annually by Sea Fish Industries, a Government body that promotes good quality and sustainable seafood, is contested by chip shops across Britain.

This is the second time Belmont Bay has won since it started four and a half years ago.

Owner John Ioannou puts the shop's success down to "lots of hard work and the use of the best-quality ingredients money can buy - fish and potatoes".

He said: "Sea Fish likes when people try new things and care about sustainability, which is why we have got in pollock and coley, which are of the cod family but more abundant.

"They taste as good as cod and are as just good quality, but are half the price so are good for us and our customers."

The 35-year-old set up his first fish and chip shop in Kilburn High Street 10 years ago and has been in the batter business ever since.

He told the Observer: "When I got married and had kids I decided Harrow was a more family-orientated area, so set up here."

The entrepreneur was coy about revealing his secret batter recipe but said he used only 100 per cent pure vegetable oil, rather than the nut oil that some fish and chips shops use, which can produce allergic reactions.

In light of the recent success and the current economic climate, Mr Ioannou added: "We want to give something back to the local community so we are offering a 15 per cent discount to all senior citizens every Tuesday."

Parking measures will be imposed on the streets of Harrow's County Roads estate, Harrow Council has controversially decided.

Councillor Susan Hall (Conservative), portfolio holder for environment and community safety, provisionally signed off the plan on Thursday, March 12 despite residents earlier handing in several petitions against the idea.

The original postal consultation, held in September last year, showed that in the County Roads area 50 residents supported the idea of a controlled parking zone (CPZ) - but 89 did not, with 11 having no opinion.

The CPZ will be introduced to the whole of Devonshire Road, Dorset Road and Oxford Road, the eastern sections of Pinner Road and Sussex Road, the southern sections of Rutland Road, Bedford Road and Pinner View and part of Neptune Road.

It will mean that drivers must display a permit to be able to park their vehicle within the CPZ between 11am and 12 noon on weekdays or risk attracting a parking ticket.

Extra short-term pay-and-display parking bays will be created at the southern ends of Devonshire Road, Oxford Road, Rutland Road, Bedford Road and Pinner Road.

In addition, certain junction throughout Headstone South ward will be painted with double-yellow lines as part of the scheme.

Ms Hall was recommended to approve the plan by the council's Traffic and Road Safety Advisory Panel which met to consider the issue on November 26.

Traffic officers at Harrow Council will now publish the legal notices required to confirm the introduction of the CPZ and, if there are no legal objections, the measures will come into force.

Six months after implementation, further consultation will be held to see if residents support an extension of the area covered by the residents-only parking.

Win designer glasses with Specsavers

Posted by David Tilley on Mar 16, 09 04:42 PM in

To celebrate the opening of its new Harlesden store, Specsavers has teamed up with the Observer to offer four lucky readers the chance to each win £150 worth of eyecare.

The competition is part of the store's two-week celebration to mark its launch.

Each prize includes a free eye examination and a pair of designer specs up to the value of £125.

The four winners can chose from well-known brands including Jasper Conran, Quiksilver, Red or Dead, Missoni and Specsavers' own best selling range of designer glasses - Osiris. A trained store stylist will be on hand to advise on the best frame style and shape to suit their face.

To enter email your name, address, and daytime telephone number to or on a postcard to Specsavers competition, Gazette House, 28 Bakers Road, Uxbridge, Middlesex, UB8 1RG.

The closing date is March 27.

A gap year student is set to go to the Arctic as she takes part in an expedition conducting climate change research, writes Sabrina Kernbichler.

Herpreet Bhamra, 18, will leave her home in Kenton, Harrow, on April 2 to embark on a three-month Arctic expedition organised by the British Schools Exploring Society.

Herpreet will join a team of 13 young people and 6 leaders in their quest to explore Svalbard, just 600 miles from the North Pole with a crueling climate of -25C.

The 18-year-old said: "I am excited to see the Arctic with its mountains, polarbears and other wildlife as well as conducting research that matters."

The youngters will sleep in small tents for the whole time and will travel by ski.

Herpreet added: "I am also a little scared as spending three month in a tent can be quite claustrophopic."

Many other challenges will await the team once they reach the Arctic wilderness.

The team will have no supply of water and will need to melt snow to drink and cook army-rationed meals.

They will also spend the quarter of a year without a shower.

Herpreet added: "We have to wear five layers of clothes and pull our own pulks packed with equipment. The morning routine alone will take up to two hours."

Activities will also include ice climbing and mountaineering as the team will measure glaciers in the region.

Herpreet who will start a course in physics at London's Imperial College at the end of this year, said: "I haven't done things like this before but we were given training in Scotland a few weeks ago.

"It was tough and scary but also exciting."

The teenager has taken a part-time job to finance the expedition which will cost 8,000 to £9,000.

She said: "After all, not many people have the opportunity to do this."

The British Schools Exploring Society is a youth development charity which offers young people between 18 and 23 the opportunity to challenge themselves in remote environments while developing more confidence plus teamwork and leadership skills.

The research data from Herpreet's and other expedition will be used by other academic institutions as part of long-term scientific projects to develop a better understanding of climate change.

Police hunt armed rapist

Posted by David Tilley on Mar 4, 09 03:13 PM in Crime

A year after a 51-year-old woman was raped at knifepoint in Kenton, police are still desperately trying to hunt her attacker.

On February 26, last year, the victim was assaulted in broad daylight on the railway footbridge leading to Kenton Recreation Ground.

The attacker, believed to be between 20 and 30 years old, is said to have struck between noon and 12.30pm but a helicopter pursuit at the time was unable to locate him.

Now, 12 months on, police have revisited the site in the hope that they can encourage any new witnesses to come forward and solve the crime.

A month after the incident police released CCTV stills to the Observer of a black man they wanted to contact in connection with the attack.

The man, who can be seen in the pictures wearing a beige hat and wheeling a woman's light coloured bike through Kenton Station, is thought to have caught a southbound Bakerloo Line train before getting off at North Wembley.

The footage shows him at the station roughly 90 minutes after the attack.

Anyone with any information can call Harrow Police on 020 8733 4340 or Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.

Addicts in desperate need of treatment may revert to crime if health bosses carry out plans to hand responsibility for drug treatment programmes to private firms.

That is according to a senior source at Harrow Primary Care Trust (PCT), who says plans are in the pipeline to commission out the services in a bid to cut costs - raising fears the quality of the provision will be compromised.

The whistleblower approached the Observer because of growing concerns that drug users will no longer get the attention they desperately need and that drug-related crime could rise as a result.

The source said: "If all the services are put out for tender it is likely that voluntary groups will run substance misuse programmes for a lot less money.

"These services do offer decent treatment, of course, but they have a history of having lower standards because they don't have to meet the same government criteria.

"Because of this they are not required to hire staff with greater qualifications and are therefore, comparatively, less qualified to deal with these vulnerable patients."

If these plans do go ahead, the doctor says staff who currently work within the service will be moved or redeployed, not necessarily within the same field, and crucial relationships with users will be lost.

They added: "Statistics show that the best kind of treatment for drug users comes when they deal with the same person on a regular basis.

"If staff are moved around, this rapport will be lost and, therefore, so will the effectiveness of the treatment.

"If this happens then more drug users face failing to deal with their problems and potentially there will be higher levels of crime in the area."

The medic added that at present there are seven programmes set to go out to tender, used by 642 people, according to the latest figures - many of them for the use of drugs like heroin and crack cocaine.

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