The Lights were already back on on The Belgian Cafe when I left, so while guess things in there may a little on the damp side for a while I would guess it will soon be business as usual.
From the point of view of a showman the chickens and ostriches must be a right pain as the heads and steps are separate and would all have to bolted on after the animal is hooked onto the ride.
Next comes The Great Wall of Ramsgate, Cllr Ian Driver once
lambasted for inciting the vandalism – although as it was carried out using a
paint roller – so how that worked exactly I don’t know, has done. What?
Click on this link http://thanetonline.blogspot.co.uk/search/label/The%20Great%20Wall%20of%20Ramsgate for more about The Great Wall of Ramsgate and contemplate the vandals out with their paint pot and paint roller, like so much relating to the Pleasurama site the surreal of even the outright bonkers takes over.
On to Manston Airport and my rather strange encounter with
The Save Manston Airport Group in the middle of Ramsgate town centre.
This involved a bloke with a tannoy getting his message
across very loudly, which was “Jobs for your children, save Manston Airport,
sign the new petition” anyway eventually he paused for breath and asked who the
petition was aimed at and what was its objective? Aimed at TDC and KCC
apparently. Anyway I said that I was interested in the objective before I
considered signing it, as far as I know you can only petition the council to
either make them discuss something or to make them hold a public consultation
about something, this type of thinking seemed to cause some degree of confusion
for chap with the megaphone. Then I said to him that while I was for saving the
airport I was very much against turning it into a freight hub, rather in the
same way that while I supported Ramsgate having a railway station I would be
against Ramsgate having Clapham junction. This all proved too much for the
tannoy man and he started yelling was “Jobs for your children, save Manston
Airport, sign the new petition” into his megaphone.
This encounter set me thinking as to who it is that is doing
most to damage any chances of saving the airport and just what it was that the
locals wanted with respect to the airport.
I think we all know and understand what the local
politicians want out of the airport closure and I don’t suppose I need to draw
a diagram, I know what I want which is a reasonable balance between jobs, prosperity
and environmental damage from the Manston site, preferably a strong aviation
museum and historic aircraft facility combined with passenger flights that I can
actually fly somewhere on, failing that any use for the site that produces some
jobs and prosperity without too much environmental cost.
For me as ever the sceptic this raises some
interesting questions, the key one being about their previous experience in
aviation, obviously from their submission it is now apparent that they have no
previous experience in aviation and haven’t funded or run any other airports.
Now I don’t have much of a problem with RiverOak having no
experience in aviation, but I do have a very big problem with either RiverOak
claiming to local media to have experience in aviation that they just haven’t
got or the local media suggesting that a potential airport operator has
aviation experience when it hasn’t got it.
Now when this particular foreign company appeared on
the scene the BBC ran this article http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-kent-27411419
and I have been on my guard ever since.
So anyway apart from this there is a real and substantial
update on the Manston Airport front, RiverOak have finally put their intentions
in writing and in the public domain with a new page on their website, see http://www.riveroakic.com/aviation.html
There has been a significant change in RiverOak’s position
since august 6th , see http://www.thanetgazette.co.uk/firm-pledge-stop-auction-airport-assets/story-22084937-detail/story.html
which says:
“The company [RiverOak] says it believes Manston could be
viable for air freight, aviation services including maintenance, recycling,
private charter and commercial passenger services. It claims the experience of
one of its senior team members in refinancing Alliance Fort Worth Airport in
Texas had proved the case.”
To august 20th see http://www.riveroakic.com/pdfs/DP6%20response%20-%20RiverOak%20-%207-31-14%20SENT%20COPY%20TO%20TF.pdf
which says:
“Rather they are based broadly on the model developed at
Alliance Fort Worth airport in Texas, with which we [RiverOak] are very familiar,
but tailored to reflect Manston’s unique facets and its potential strategic
role in the wider South East airport’s system.”
I guess the problem I have here is that our council have got
themselves into some deals with foreign companies, the ferry finances
and Pleasurama being examples, and this wound up costing us the council
taxpayers very dearly indeed.
Tony Freudmann was the Senior Vice President of PlaneStation
and in 2005 Infratil, the New Zealand-listed infrastructure fund agreed to take
over London Manston airport for £17m from the administrator of the bankrupt
Planestation group.
very busy today so will add to this as I can.





















