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ROB (or
BOB) STEEL, 31/01/55 – 11/08/20 |
Although this is an
obituary for Rob, it is written for local Green Party members and
from the standpoint of Rob’s place in the party. To a certain
extent it therefore reads like a history of the party and its
constituent members over the years. However, I hope that readers
feel that this approach adds to Rob’s story with the Green Party
and helps us appreciate some of the contexts in which Rob spent so
much time and energy.
In 1979, Rob, as a
young local Geography teacher in his mid-twenties, joined a handful
of local visionaries to found the Sutton Ecology Party, as the Green
Party was called at the time. As ever, the party comprised a small
number of dedicated and radical individuals who had a wide and
lasting influence in the local community. Amongst the number was a
Quaker man in his 70s called Richard Allen whom Rob greatly admired
for his clarity of thinking and dynamism. Rob himself threw himself
into his new-found political party immediately and stood for election
for both the borough council and for parliament as soon as the
opportunities arose. As a result of the local Ecology Party
campaigning for the 1983 General Election, there was an upsurge in
membership in the area and I was present at a stimulating follow-up
meeting of about 30 people in the upstairs room at the Sun pub,
Carshalton, where we met Rob and many others who were to become
ardent members of this still minor political party. For me it was
the start of many years of working closely with Rob and the others,
acting as their local election agent as well as being involved in
much other general party activity.
Rob was already a key
figure in the party in the early 80s. He had endless energy to put
his increasing understanding of environmental politics into action in
the fledgling political party. One lasting amusing memory in the
early days was the regular waste newspaper collection which the local
group carried out every 2 weeks around a set of a few streets in
Wallington. It involved a leaflet drop a couple of days prior to the
collection, two people to drive up to Dulwich to pick up the “Eco
Van”, about the size of an old Post Office van, and whoever was
available to go round on foot picking up the piles of papers left on
doorsteps for us and chucking them in the van. A brave volunteer
would get up at 6 the next morning to drive this ramshackle van to a
recycling site in Croydon and hopefully receive about £30 for it
after it had been weighed. They would then have to drive the van
back to its home in Dulwich. As this was before the days of any
paper recycling by the council, this was quite a revolutionary action
on our part – fulfilling our environmental concerns, as well as
bringing us some well-needed cash for our funds. Rob always worked
flat out at this, but his enthusiasm persuaded many of us to join in
the mad venture! Some of the stalwarts at this time were Graham
Garner, James Deane (not an American actor!), George Dow and Nick
Greaves, whose mammoth ancient photocopier churned out endless
members newsletters, along with the ones that would inevitably catch
fire in the process! (Remember all those envelopes and stamps too?)
The Council Elections
rolled by over the years, with the local Liberal Democrats gaining an
ever stronger hold on the local council and claiming to be the
greenest London council (they had now started their own newspaper
recycling!). This was welcomed by some local environmentalists and
members of Friends of the Earth, including those working for the
fledgling Centre for Environmental Initiatives, set up by Vera
Elliott and later to be called Ecolocal, but Rob kept the Ecology
Party members well informed, so that we consistently challenged the
Lib Dem environmental claims. He delighted in quoting the
considerable number of examples of anti-environment and contradictory
actions and policies by various Lib Dem authorities, as well as on
the part of the almost permanent Lib Dem MP in Carshalton and
Wallington, Tom Brake. However, even Rob struggled to convince some
of our members, like Phil Mouncey!
Among the party members
by this time were the charismatic Silvia Scaffardi (co-founder of
NCCL, now Liberty), Peter and Josie Hickson, Karin Andrews and Sue
Riddlestone, Director of the new local organisation, Bioregional. At
one of the local meetings we had a persuasive speaker from the Vegan
Society, which prompted at least Jim Duffy to switch to a vegan
lifestyle, now so common with environmentalists. Neil Hornsby brought
his civil servant expertise and successfully persuaded London
Transport to adopt his idea of “jogging tickets” for commuters
under another name. Heather Jarrett and her partner Bruce gave
stalwart service locally, and by now some of Rob’s ex-students from
Wallington Boys School were joining the cause, as did Simon Dixon,
proof that Rob had been spreading his views in the classroom!
And all the while,
Thatcher and her successors would come back into power at every
General Election and there would be wailing and gnashing of teeth
amongst our little party (as well as amongst many others of course!)
and Rob would sift through the details of the Green Party results
here and all around the country, declaring that there was no hope for
this country and we should all go round to his house and have lots of
ale!
In the early 1990s we
had a young television journalist by the name of John Cornford join
us. His experience and skills with the media of the time were a
great boost to the local party, as exemplified by our campaign
against a British Rail tree cutting extravaganza in Carshalton in
1992. John and Rob led some of the party to trespass peacefully onto
the railway line from a garden in Denmark Road and most importantly
got the London television news reporters to film the event and
interview John and Rob for us to proudly watch at home that night!
By the turn of the
millennium the Sutton Party was reaching out to Croydon Green Party
members who had no active party, and we attracted a small but
powerful core of members, including Bernice Golberg, Shasha Khan and
Martyn Post (the latter of mass leafletting fame!), who went on to
get the Croydon Party properly established. While there were a lot of
separate issues for the Croydon and Sutton Parties, we were soon
collaborating again, because our councils, together with Merton and
Kingston, had announced in 2008 that they were forming a waste
partnership. “No, they weren’t going to build an incinerator;
they were going to consider various options, one of which may be a
pyrolysis waste processor”, we were told. The rest of the story is
more or less history, as the saying goes. Rob managed to play an
active part in the anti-incinerator campaign, in spite of taking on
some long term supply teaching posts in various parts of the country.
He worked with Dr Stan Prokop, who first informed us of the issue,
with his own ex-student Peter Alfrey who had specialist knowledge of
birds and the ecology of the Beddington Farmlands and with several
others of our own highly motivated party members. Rob, as ever,
threw himself into writing well researched and detailed submissions
for the Green Party against the council planning application.
While Rob often gave
solid and comprehensive presentations at many election hustings
alongside his opponents, his forte definitely lay with his writing.
First there was his letter-writing on behalf of the party, whether to
local newspapers (of which there were up to 3 at one point!) or
national. For many years this involved writing very quickly and then
of course getting the letter into an envelope to post it in time to
catch the appropriate editorial deadline. He had a bulging file of
cuttings of letters which had been printed in various papers. Then
there was his leaflet-writing for the numerous election campaigns run
by the local party. Hardly had an election been called than Rob had
composed a first draft for a leaflet and usually the first discussion
of his drafts would involve asking him to “tone it down a bit”!
But he usually managed a great balance between getting serious
information across and appealing to “the masses” in the Sutton
wards and constituencies. Then, after the party had carefully
calculated what our funds (and leafletters) would enable us to
produce, Rob would wave opposition leaflets at us and insist that we
needed to put out another leaflet to put the voters right on this or
that issue and he would “lob in some dosh” for it. So just when
we thought we had done all our leafletting, he was lining up the next
lot of boxes!
When Rob got married
and moved to his new home in Wiltshire about 6 years ago, it was a
dramatic change for the local Green Party. He had been so central to
its functioning for almost 40 years! By keeping on his lovely quirky
Tower Cottage in Carshalton and lured back by his longstanding
connections to The Hope real ale pub, as well as with the aid of IT
and electronic communication, Rob managed to keep up to a certain
extent with the activities of the local party. Any good organisation
tries not to get into a situation where any of their members become
indispensable, and both Sutton and Croydon parties are continually
moving forward with new blood, but that is not to deny the absolutely
vital part Rob played in the party for all those years and the huge
gap he now leaves. Whether we knew Rob since his early days in the
party or just met him more recently on a brief visit back to the
area, or some time in between, our parties collectively mourn the
sad, sad loss of such a dynamic and influential party member. May we
all learn something from and be inspired by his enormous contribution
to the party.
Our
heartfelt condolences go to Rob’s wife, Jacqui.
By Gay McDonagh, Sutton
Green Party member, September 2020