Councillor’s Colwyn Bay fearsJul 14 2011
by Ian Hughes, North Wales Weekly News
A COLWYN Bay councillor has declared he no longer feels safe walking through the town in the daytime.
Bob Squire, who serves Old Colwyn, made the controversial comments at a full county council meeting last week.
“It is a troubling image,” he said. “
I visited Lloyd’s Bank in the town and staff there told me that people no longer feel safe in the town during the day.
“
As I walked to the bank I saw one couple having a set-to in the street.
“
Just a little while down the road I saw another couple arguing. One man was talking to his boy, who asked something along the lines of ‘what is that?’, to which the man replied: ‘I don’t know and I don’t f****** care’. And this was just in a ten minute walk.
“People are afraid to walk through Colwyn Bay,” – before adding that he felt much the same way.
The statement was met with general disapproval from the rest of the council.
“You saw it but what did you do?” questioned Llandudno councillor Ronnie Hughes. “When you come out with statements like that, you are bringing down the rest of the authority.”
Chair of the council Brenda Taylor then stated: “I request that this conversation be continued outside the chamber.”
This is not the first time Cllr Squire has made controversial comments about the town he represents.
In January he claimed Colwyn Bay is being dragged down by “undesirables” moving from Rhyl.
He said the regeneration of Rhyl and the demolition of bedsit flats on the town’s seafront has caused a population shift, an in-migration of problem tenants which has boosted the demand for such accommodation in Colwyn Bay.
He also blamed the town’s drug problems on “outsiders” following a police raid in 2009.
Cllr Squire said at the time: “It doesn’t surprise me to find a drug factory anywhere in the Colwyn Bay area.
“We know there is quite an industry for drug dealing in this area. You only have to look around to notice individuals who are new to the area.”
He later voiced fears that seaside resorts are in danger of being turned into drug ghettos by organised criminals.
Cllr Squire levelled criticism at the way the grand old hotels and luxury houses of the past were turned over to multiple occupancy.
Bob Squire became a councillor in November 2003, having stood as an independent on a mandate to tackle crime and anti-social behaviour.
He says: “The aim was to address the area’s many problems regarding houses with multiple occupants.”
http://www.northwalesweeklynews.co.uk/conwy-county-news/local-conwy-news/2011/07/14/councillor-s-colwyn-bay-fears-55243-29047626/Cllr Squire is absolutely right - I see similar things on a regular basis in Colwyn Bay.

For councillors like Ronnie Hughes to just pretend the problem doesn't exist is ridiculous - he probably hasn't set foot in Colwyn Bay in years.