First Published: Friday 04 April 2008, 15:17

Green Party Mayoral candidate Sian Berry has been meeting with shoppers and traders in Newham's Queen's Market this afternoon as part of her campaign to highlight the risks local traders and smaller retailers face from shopping developments and supermarkets.
Echoing the current template for increasing levels of affordable housing in the capital Ms Berry has pledged to require all new developments to make at least half their floor space available to small businesses at affordable rents if she's elected in May.
Speaking earlier today Ms Berry said "It is not surprising London has lost more than 7,000 individual or family owned shops in the past six years when 51 new supermarkets and shopping centres have been approved by the Mayor. Unless the Mayor and local authorities recognize fully the value of keeping independent shops and local services on high streets, they will continue to disappear and be replaced by supermarket chains, estate agents, phone and pound shops"
The party argues that preserving local shopping facilities is a key component to creating a greener city where people have less need to travel. Ms Berry "Once the small independent shops and local services disappear from our high streets, local residents often have to travel further to shopping malls, putting further strain on public transport and over-congested roads".
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1. at 15:02 on Tuesday 8th April 2008, Damian Hockney AM wrote:
Unfortunately the real reason why small shops go out of business is not the approval by authorities of Tesco (a convenient scapegoat) but the piling on of laws, rules and regulations (huge numbers of which come from the EU) which drive the small ones out of business. These rules, often in the name of health and safety, create bureaucracies and enforcement regimes which make life difficult for small companies out of all proportion to the potential benefits for consumers. When I hear politicians of the left acting as champions for small businesses, I look in vain to see them come up with a list of measures they will scrap. All they want to do is attack large successful businesses like Tesco, which bring cheap food to people. As a small businesman by background myself I know that all politicians (left and right) love regulations...they give them greater powerbases and more money to play with. As a candidate for the London Assembly for the One London Party, my group alone at the London Assembly has called for less regulation and greater understanding of how the groaning weight of money-extorting rules and laws affects business, and therefore - ultimately - consumers.