Category Archives: activism

Roundabout way to regeneration? Fears that Hackney’s Tech City will become a ghost town

Written for the Hackney Citizen and first published here.

And so it goes — the tides of regeneration have turned again. This time, it’s members of East London’s bustling tech community fighting the developers.

Members of the More Light, More Power campaign group have spoken out against an £800m development of six tower blocks in the derelict Bishopsgate Goods Yard between Shoreditch and Spitalfields, claiming it will turn Tech City into a ghost town.

More Light, More Power, which brings together tenants and traders’ associations in Hackney and Tower Hamlets, forecasts that the development’s 600 luxury flats will be snapped up by a force for change more powerful even than the global technology industry: overseas investors looking to buy properties in East London.

While attempts to balance out the benefits of resources from high-skilled Tech City with its deprived surroundings has already proved challenging, that hasn’t stopped the tech hub’s advocates from feeling betrayed by a potential assault on their plans for growth.

What is Tech City?

The heart of Tech City lies in Shoreditch, but the cluster extends into something of a no-man’s land, sprawling out into Tower Hamlets, Islington and the City, with further hubs reaching as far as Stratford to the East and Croydon in the South.

Look no further than your own backyard for the creators of everything from the personalised music service Songkick to the Moshi Monsters kids’ game series from Mind Candy, plus the London HQ of US home rental firm Airbnb and the corporate chat platform Yammer. Hackney is now home to a growing number of the world’s most recognisable technology brands, consulting firms and even financial services companies.

The so-called Tech City project is being led from central government by the Tech City Investment Organisation (TCIO), part of UK Trade and Investment (UKTI).

Jobs and Skills

According to Hackney Council’s Tech City Overview report, up to 2012 the borough has welcomed some 30,000 highly-qualified residents between the ages of 25 and 35 to work technology jobs. These businesses were found to represent 37 per cent of all employment in the borough, with computer programming, consultancy and telecoms making up three-quarters of those jobs.

A booming hospitality industry now supports these tech workers, representing 22 per cent of all work in Hackney, and is considered a ‘vital gateway’ for longer-term residents who are out of work, totalling around 28,000 people this year.

Hackney Council acknowledges in its Tech City report the need for “intensive assistance” for the borough’s young people to break into the tech community. In some wards, those not in education, employment or training touches 40 per cent, but those achieving 5 A* to C grades has drastically improved in the past decade and now exceeds the national average.

Although Hackney Community College worked with industry to open the borough’s first tech-dedicated school just two years ago, Hackney University Technical College, where all its pupils learn programming, the facility is already set to close due to low applicant numbers. A lot of training activity is “decentralised”, the council says, which means it is actually being led and run by a burgeoning ‘edtech’ sector, with the likes of Decoded and TechCityStars offering their unique brand of ‘upskilling’ today’s youth.

The council’s own research in 2012 found a quarter of Hackney residents had never even used the internet, let alone headed down to Tech City to knock at Google’s door. Digital poverty, unsurprisingly, affects older people, the disabled, those on low incomes, on benefits or in
social housing.

Although a Freedom of Information request to establish what was being done to address this was turned down by the Department for Business Innovation and Skills, the Tech City Overview document offers its own remedy, stating: “The same innovation, collaboration, creativity and dedication that propels Tech City will need to be applied in encouraging spill-over of opportunity to local, unemployed residents and their families.”

A proposed civic space in Tech City that City Hall had secured £50m to build and was going offer public education and attempt to get 10,000 coding, was also scrapped last month.

High-tech investment

Hackney Council has played a huge role in courting business, it explains, with a dedicated Invest in Hackney team running tours for developers and investors in order to sell the hip, warehouse-working dream.

Hackney is now home to three projects run by the world’s most sophisticated tax avoiders: the Google Campus free coworking space, Microsoft Ventures London Accelerator program, based at Coworking, and IDEA London, which is part-backed by Cisco.

Some say these global companies don’t play by the rules by using the dubious legislative status being innovative allows. But while Tech City’s big names might not operate in the legitimate way, they are contributing cash to support the thriving tech community.

The council says it has twisted the arm of potential investors by ensuring ‘concessions deals’, which include a commitment to offer open work space in to “help maintain access to the cluster for a new population of young, innovative firms”.  But even these young high-tech innovators are now struggling to pay commercial land rates. From a peak in 2008 of around £25 per square metre, space can now reach more than double that.

The average cost of a home in Hackney, meanwhile, reached half a million pounds last December, no doubt receiving added pressure from this incoming tech workforce. At a debate in March entitled ‘Can Tech City Expand Indefinitely?’, Juliette Morgan, Head of Property at Tech City Investment Organisation, made it clear it is “outside of our remit” to have a strategy on residential property. In the next one to two years 222 towers are expected to be built across London to cope with demand for residential and commercial property, many of which are heading to Hackney to accommodate Tech City workers.

As the tech crowd joins the latest round of calls to halt development at all costs – whether a high profile will lend more lobbying power remains to be seen. Are Hackney Council, TCIO and City Hall  selling out to the highest bidder, rather than ensuring jobs and homes are available to all residents? Maybe. But as the balance of power to influence development shifts ever faster, perhaps one lesson learned is that in East London’s crowded market, influence is fleeting.

Q&A with comedian Chris Coltrane for Let’s Be Brief

Chris Coltrane is a stand-up comedian by night, a writer by day and “a thorn in politician’s arses whenever the opportunity arises”. He recently appeared in No More Page 3 and Everyday Sexism’s Stand Up to Sexism, and yes it was funny, as well as at the People’s Assembly where he talked about his activism with UK Uncut. This included setting up a library in an unscrupulous bank with a load of school children, with of course, comical results. He also runs Lolitics – a comedy night in north London.

Q) Why and how did you get involved with political activism?
I used to watch a lot of activism on TV when I was younger. You had shows like Monty Python’s Flying Neoliberalism, or Jasper Carrott’s Capitalism Smackdown, and I used to watch them on repeat, memorising all the chants. Then as I got older and moved to London, I heard about all these open-mic activist nights around town, where anyone could get on stage and protest for 5 minutes. So I made a few calls and booked some in, and of course you’d get ever so nervous before the gig, but as I did more my five minutes moved to 10, and before long I was taking an entire occupation up to the Edinburgh festival. I took over a branch of Gregg’s in the town, which Chortle gave a lovely 4-star review to. I’ve never looked back, really.

Q) Is it easy to do comedy about such serious topics?
Yeah, it is for me, because I come from a long line of satirists. My great great grandfather, Dicky “The Dick” Coltrane, was one of the old music-hall satirists in the East End. One of his sketches about Archduke Ferdinand was so powerful that he ended up stalling World War I by an entire month. Sobering to think how many lives were saved, thanks to one simple sketch about a world leader, a bag of feathers, and a giant magnet…

Q) What project have you done that you are most proud of and why?
Probably the time I temporarily changed my name to Edward Snowden, had massive facial re-constructive surgery, leaked the biggest intelligence story in history, and then had all the surgery reversed to escape detection. At the time of writing they think I’m on a plane to Bolivia. Ha! Idiots.

Q) Are there any drawbacks with being politically active?
Not really. I mean, there is the fact that the police are more likely to beat you up, or that the police are more likely to knock on your door to suggest you don’t go to a certain protest, or that the police are more likely to monitor your phone calls, or that the police are more likely to lie to try to get you in trouble. But other than that, it’s a pretty sweet life.

Q) How important is independent thinking and doing and where do you get it from?
Independent thinking is important, but sometimes I think it’s gone too far the other way. For example, did you know that there are men called Keith who are allowed to vote? I’m not sure what I think about that. Can you think of a single trustworthy Keith? Keith Chegwin, Keith Sweat, Keith Floyd… no no, it simply won’t do.

Q) What is the key issue for you right now?
A lot of my friends are very passionate about a woman’s right to chews. Can you believe that in the 21st century women aren’t even allowed to buy sweets? It’s stupid. I can see why my friends campaign so hard to fight it. As far as I’m concerned, women should be allowed whatever confectionery they want – Chewits, pancakes, even popping candy (I’m a member of the radical-left, and I make no apologies for it.)

Q) What’s next?
Bargain Hunt is coming up on BBC1, and BBC2 has Wimbledon coverage… but I expect that’ll probably be out of date by the time this goes to print, so I can’t help you with that one. Sorry.

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Chris Coltrane’s Q&A is part of the State of Independence series
State of Independence Pop-up Island | 22-28th July 2013
Unit 17 | Boxpark Shoreditch | 2-4 Bethnal Green Rd | London | E1 6GY

Spotlight: Mobile Activism with Qwanz App

It’s not often that the word ‘revolutionary’ is heard in mobile without someone thinking, ‘yeah, that’s what they all say’, but Qwanz has been created with the potential to help people change the world.

The poll booth for the mobile age enables Qwanz app users on iOS and Android to vote in polls on their favourite topics, share the question with friends on social networks and even create a poll to add weight to their own cause. The polling app enables its users to quickly download for free and sign in with Facebook. I created a poll in minutes.

Become an opinion leader


Its competitors, which include Survey Monkey and Polldaddy, don’t offer the same range of functionality, including the ability to forward the results to the right decision-makers and an unlimited number of responses per poll. Users can earn badges for their participation and even become a Qwanz world opinion leader.

Like a good dating app, developers of something like this almost certainly need a critical and diverse mass in order to ensure the polling has impact. Qwanz says it is an independent platform without ties to any political, religious or ideological organisations. Its founder, Pierre Sernet, started the fine arts database Artnet.com, and doesn’t appear to have any sinister motives.

Qwanz also says it has a network of more than 20,000 journalists watching the results – although it is not clear how this has been achieved – but it certainly appears to be a good tool for hacks in a hurry. Is this more armchair activism or can it really make a difference?

Written for Mobile Marketing Magazine and published here: http://www.mobilemarketingmagazine.com/content/spotlight-mobile-activism-qwanz-app