Building a better London for everyone: a safer, fairer, greener and more prosperous city for all Londoners

Building a better London for everyone: a safer, fairer, greener and more prosperous city for all Londoners

In advance of delivering a keynote speech at our Urban Recovery Plans event with the Greater London Authority and the London Research and Policy Partnership (LRaPP) on 7 June at 3 pm BST, Dr Debbie Weekes-Bernard, London’s Deputy Mayor for Communities and Social Justice, writes for IPPO Cities.

Dr Debbie Weekes-Bernard

The context for London’s recovery is extremely challenging, with growing pressures on the cost of living for many Londoners, especially those on the lowest incomes. This crisis has exposed long-standing inequalities in our society; disproportionately affecting Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic communities. The opportunities and challenges of the pandemic are of a scale not seen since the second world war.

Yet, in the face of such adversity, London has really come together to meet this challenge head on. I’ve been inspired by the true partnership-based approach, described as the blueprint for how London government might look in the future. What’s more, leaders such as Lord Simon Woolley who helped to shape City Hall’s recovery plans regularly and rightly described equalities, diversity and inclusion as part of the DNA of London’s recovery.

In October 2020, the Mayor declared City Hall as an anti-racist organisation. Just two months later, I chaired an international event exploring practical interventions being undertaken by cities to combat racism.  It was inspiring to hear how Deputy Mayors and policy makers from Toronto, Chicago and Rotterdam to name but a few were seizing the opportunities of the crisis while future proofing their cities for the next set of challenges.

We are using our recovery from COVID-19 to reimagine our city as a place with a better long-term future for Londoners. One which is safer, fairer, greener and more resilient than it was before.

London’s business and community groups have come together with the Mayor and leaders of London Councils to formulate nine ‘missions’ for all of London to work towards to achieve the change we’d like to see. In addition, London’s largest organisations have signed the London Anchor Institutions Charter, pledging to leverage their procurement budgets, recruitment resources and estate management capacity to support Londoners most impacted by covid-19 and the growing cost of living crisis.

I hope you can join us to learn from other cities of what has worked and practical ways to navigate out of this crisis towards cities that are more equal, feel safer and are more prosperous for all.

Dr Debbie Weekes-Bernard, London’s Deputy Mayor for Communities and Social Justice, will deliver a keynote speech at our virtual event on 7 June 2022 at 3 pm BST.