Want to be a Friend of Drylaw Park?

Drylaw Telford Community Council, Easter Drylaw Residents Association and Drylaw Neighbourhood Centre have joined forces to support the formation of a new Friends of Drylaw Park Group – and they need YOU!

Easter Drylaw Park

FRIENDS OF DRYLAW PARK

Would you be interested in helping to start up a Friends Group for Drylaw Park ?

What is a Friends of Parks Group?

Friends of Parks groups play a vital role in protecting and enhancing local parks, woodlands and green spaces owned by City of Edinburgh Council. Working in partnership with the Council, they give residents a greater say in what goes on in their local park.

What do they do?

The groups volunteer their time and energy to get involved with a huge range of different projects including;

• Fundraising for improvements and events in the park
• Enhancing biodiversity (e.g. creation of wildflower meadows, installing bird and bat boxes)
• Practical tasks like clean-ups, tree planting and improving access
• Contributing to the planning and management of the park
• Leading walks and talks
• Gardening
• Producing leaflets and other educational material

It is entirely up to the group what level of activity they undertake. Some may operate at a low level simply distributing information regarding the park, whilst others can be more active, raising funds and organising events.

 

If you are interested in becoming a member please contact Drylaw Telford Community Council’s Secretary at  secretary@drylawtelfordcc.co.uk  or pop into Drylaw Neighbourhood Centre and leave your details there.

If you’d like more information on Friends groups visit the City of Edinburgh Council website  www.edinburgh.gov.uk   and use search for Friends of Parks or contact them at  parks@edinburgh.gov.uk

May 4 meeting for EDRA

DrylawParishChurchThe next meeting of Easter Drylaw Residents Association (EDRA) will take place on Monday 4 May from 7-9pm at Drylaw Parish Church, Groathill Road North.

Council Tenants, Home Owners & Private Let Tenants currently living in the area are all welcome to attend.

Topics for discussion include street lighting, dog fouling, vandalism and crime.

EDRA to dish the dirt at AGM

ponyDisgusting, isn’t it? Dog dirt was a common theme of Easter Drylaw Residents Association (EDRA) meetings over the last year, and the topic is sure to figure prominently once again when the residents’ group hold their annual general meeting next week.

EDRA joined with Drylaw Telford Community Council to highlight the issue of irresponsible dog owners in their major campaign of the year. EDRA also continued to raise awareness of speeding motorists on the area’s residential roads with their ‘Twenty’s Plenty’ initiative.

To find out more about what EDRA has been doing, their plans for the year ahead and how you can get involved why not go along to their AGM?

EDRA’s annual general meeting will be held on

Monday 18 November at 7pm

in Drylaw Parish Church, Groathill Road North

All welcome

Work has started on fencing at the foot of Easter Drylaw Bank to prevent the grass area being used as a dog’s toilet. EDRA supported an application for funding from Inverleith Neighbourhood Partnership’s Neighbourhood Environment Programme (NEP) to allow the project to go ahead.

EDRA action to target Drylaw dog fouling

EDRA (Easter Drylaw Residents Association) members, supported by Environmental Wardens, are planning two Days of Action to tackle dog fouling in our local area. We will be handing out leaflets and speaking to as many people as possible.

Anyone who would like to come along & support this initiative are very welcome – see details below:

Friday 23 August:

10am – Noon: In & around Drylaw Shopping Centre; meet at 10am outside the Key Store.

2pm – 4pm: In and around the Green Space at ED Gardens.

Monday 26 August:

10am-Noon: Morning Walkabout – meet at 10am Easter Drylaw Way/Bank.

2pm – 4pm: In and around Easter Drylaw Park. Meet beside the CEC notice board at the Park/Easter Drylaw Drive.

Mhairi Curran, Easter Drylaw Residents Association

ED Park

Dogs, drivers and daiquiris dominate Drylaw meeting

Cars speeding on residential streets, irresponsible dog owners and the run-down state of Drylaw Shopping Centre have featured prominently on local community meeting agendas for a long time now, and it was no surprise when all three issues were discussed at length at Easter Drylaw Residents Association’s (EDRA’s) annual general meeting held in Drylaw Parish Church last night.

The meeting was well attended despite the rotten weather, and there was a particularly good turnout of local politicians. All four Inverleith councillors – Nigel Bagshaw, Gavin Barrie, Lesley Hinds and Iain Whyte – were present alongside Edinburgh Western MSP Colin Keir and Lothians list MSP Sarah Boyack, and the meeting was chaired by Easter Drylaw resident and Forth councillor Cammy Day.

EDRA chairperson Eileen Brash reported on another busy year for the organisation, and thanked committee members, local politicians and staff from the North Local Office for their support over the course of a year that has given EDRA no shortage of issues to tackle. Parking on pavements, the state of Groathill Road North roundabout, potholes and overgrown hedges have all received attention – some reported to EDRA and some coming to light through regular ‘walkabouts’ with NELO staff.

The biggest issue of the year for EDRA has been the ‘Twenty’s Plenty’ road safety campaign to raise awareness of speeding in the residential area, and Eileen said that the campaign will continue. “We ran the campaign over three months to make drivers aware of the dangers, but despite our efforts there was a serious accident on Groathill Road North when a child was knocked down near Ferryhill School. More safety measures have been introduced as a result but we will keep campaigning to ensure drivers drive with care and consideration and stick to speed limits. We plan to work with the school and the police to keep up the pressure.”

Guest speaker was Mark Bannon (pictured), who heads up the North Environmental team. Mark’s team of six Environmental Wardens has a huge geographical area to cover and he understands the frustration of local people when they see littering and dog fouling but are unable to do anything about it. The feeling at the meeting is that dog fouling is on the increase in Easter Drylaw, particularly around the Easter Drylaw Gardens area. One man, who has lived in the area for 25 years, said he no longer walks his dogs locally. “I was having to clean the dogs when I got them home after walking in the Gardens, so I now take them to Silverknowes. The state of our streets is as bad as they’ve been all the time I’ve lived here”, he said.

Mark Bannon accepted that resources were stretched – it’s a small team and there is no local warden service after 7pm at night. “We’re now an enforcement service and we aim to deal with problems at source – the days of educating people are gone. When we patrol we are high-visibilty, and of course that can create problems for us. I would like to see us adopt plain clothes patrols on occasion – that’s something we can’t do currently but something I’m pushing for and hope members of the public would support. I’m convinced it would make a difference, but in the meantime I urge you to be our eyes and ears. We can’t be everywhere so keep us informed – if there’s a problem we want to know about it, then we can target resources where possible. Resources are tight, but we do the best we can with the size of team we’ve got. It’s a constant grind and I do understand your frustration.”

While Mark Bannon was the main speaker attendees were spoiled for choice – NELO’s Jennifer Lavery, PC Dixon of the Safer Neighbourhood Team both gave verbal reports, and all six politicians were allocated two minutes each to say their piece – which to be fair they nearly managed!

While the dog debate was the dominant issue at the meeting, there was also a healthy debate over the state of Drylaw Shopping Centre – both the run-down appearance and the ongoing problem of antisocial behaviour, particularly in the vicinity of the chemist. One resident described the scene in the vennel outside the chemist as ‘people milling around like they’re at a cocktail party!’

Politicians, police and council officers expressed a unanimity to address both these issues – working together with others to resolve problems; basically what EDRA is all about.

Twenty’s plenty for Drylaw residents

Easter Drylaw Residents Association (EDRA) launched their local road safety campaign at Drylaw Parish Church earlier this week. The group plans to raise awareness of speed limits in the area hopes to encourage drivers to act more responsibly.

EDRA chair Eileen Brash explained: “Parking and traffic matters are regularly discussed at our meetings, and the issue most frequently raised by residents concerns the speed many vehicles drive at within our area. In response we are launching an Awareness Campaign which will highlight the speed limit in this area – 20mph.”

She continued: “We are liaising with the police, councillors, local council staff and Ferryhill Primary School and we have applied for funding which would enable 20mph road markings to be installed at all entrances leading to and from Groathill Road North. We believe these measures will complement the 20mph signs already erected on Ferry Road and at the top and bottom of Groathill Road North, and make it clearer to motorists that they are travelling in a 20mph zone”.

EDRA will be raising the issue in a number of ways over the coming weeks – through schoolbag leaflet drops, posters, banners, flyers and a series of ‘awareness days’.

EDRA would be delighted to see more local residents getting involved to support the campaign. The group meets on the third Monday of the month from 7.30 – 9pm in Drylaw Parish Church; to find out more, or to discuss other issues of concern, why not attend their next meeting?

Twenty's plenty for Drylaw residents

Easter Drylaw Residents Association (EDRA) launched their local road safety campaign at Drylaw Parish Church earlier this week. The group plans to raise awareness of speed limits in the area hopes to encourage drivers to act more responsibly.

EDRA chair Eileen Brash explained: “Parking and traffic matters are regularly discussed at our meetings, and the issue most frequently raised by residents concerns the speed many vehicles drive at within our area. In response we are launching an Awareness Campaign which will highlight the speed limit in this area – 20mph.”

She continued: “We are liaising with the police, councillors, local council staff and Ferryhill Primary School and we have applied for funding which would enable 20mph road markings to be installed at all entrances leading to and from Groathill Road North. We believe these measures will complement the 20mph signs already erected on Ferry Road and at the top and bottom of Groathill Road North, and make it clearer to motorists that they are travelling in a 20mph zone”.

EDRA will be raising the issue in a number of ways over the coming weeks – through schoolbag leaflet drops, posters, banners, flyers and a series of ‘awareness days’.

EDRA would be delighted to see more local residents getting involved to support the campaign. The group meets on the third Monday of the month from 7.30 – 9pm in Drylaw Parish Church; to find out more, or to discuss other issues of concern, why not attend their next meeting?