Tottenham Hale resident: January 2015 and the loss of so much of Tottenham's heritage.
Tottenham Hale resident: June 2015 and a consultation event in the community room on Tottenham Hale Village
Tottenham Hale resident: The nudge consultations
Tottenham Hale resident: 18th September 2015 and the Cabinet Signing on the IN Haringey brand by Joe Goldberg
Tottenham Hale resident: October 2015 and residents doing for themselves as the council retreats.
Tottenham Hale resident: Lots of the vision thing IN Kober Haringey October 2015
Tottenham Hale resident: 19th October 2015 and the posturing against the reality of potholes
Tottenham Hale resident: The IN Haringey London logo intended to project a better image of the council
Tottenham Hale resident: Having to work hard to keep the council to a promise such as Holcombe Market
Tottenham Hale resident: 17th November 2015 and technical nonsense from Haringey documents
Tottenham Hale resident: November 2015 and the alignment of council business with developer interests
Tottenham Hale resident: It was all about empowering people to make decisions?
Tottenham Hale resident: The IN brand from Joe Goldberg
Tottenham Hale resident: Partnership with academia that involved Haringey Council paying tens of thousands £s for activities.
Tottenham Hale resident: Consultation meetings were often not at times convenient for residents and traders to get involved. January 206 and the meetings for the Local Plan.
Tottenham Hale resident: 21st January 2016 and the relentless public consultations to make policies more developer friendly. This was at Wood Green library and part of the process for a new Local Plan.
Tottenham Hale resident: Ali Demirci performing badly at a meeting to explain the Local Plan on 16th February 2916
Tottenham Hale resident: 13th February 2016 and the consultation events for the Local Plan that not one was held after 7pm
Tottenham Hale resident: Consultation document were made available ... on window ledges in well visited buildings.
Tottenham Hale resident: Not mangling decline says Kober