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Council keeps Weatherley 50m pool vision alive

Mike Weatherley
Mike Weatherley with Mark Cannon and his children

Plans to rule out a 50m pool on the King Alfred site on Hove seafront have been modified following a plea from Mike Weatherley, the Conservative MP for Hove and Portslade to Brighton & Hove Council’s Policy & Resources Committee.

Mike urged councillors to research further the topic of pool sizes before dismissing his proposal for a 50m pool. He was backed in the chamber by Mark Cannon, Chairman of the highly successful Shiverers swimming club which meets regularly at the King Alfred.

Mike’s deputation follows the release of a cross-party Project Board which recommended that only a 25m pool should be built. Mike pointed out to councillors that a flexible 50m pool costs approximately the same and takes up the same amount of space as a series of smaller pools, and that it is far more flexible.

Mike said:

“I am delighted that Councillors of all parties on the Policy & Resources Committee supported my plea to keep the 50m pool option alive. My own Conservative colleagues, Greens and Labour all saw fit to properly consider the evidence by listening to residents and swimmers. Nobody can quite believe that Brighton & Hove was going to rule out a decent pool, when Crawley and other smaller places have one. A 50m pool is the right approach.”

Conservatives call for more action on dog fouling

Cllr Graham Cox
Cllr Graham Cox

Conservatives have called for greater priority to be given to pursuing dog owners who fail to clean up after their pets as figures revealed that just one resident was prosecuted for dog fouling in the whole of Brighton & Hove last year.

The information came to light in response to a question by Conservative Spokesman on the Environment, Transport & Sustainability Committee – Cllr. Graham Cox.

Cllr Cox said:

“Dog fouling is invariably one of the top 3 of issues that local residents in my ward contact me about and I’m sure that the same is true across much of the rest of the city. For this reason, the Council should be giving greater priority to pursuing the small minority of irresponsible owners who persist with their anti-social behaviour. I appreciate that it can be difficult to catch people in such a large area but all I got in response to my question was a long list of excuses for not doing anything. This is not what residents want to hear. I suggest that a campaign targeting the worst affected areas is launched as a matter of priority. There are an awful lot of people out there who could act as the Council’s ‘eyes and ears’ – park rangers, PCSOs, seafront officers, animal welfare officers, traffic wardens and even residents’ and Friends of Park groups. The only way we will get offenders to change their ways is by increasing the likelihood that they will get caught. At the moment, as the answer to my question reveals, they know that they will almost certainly get away with it.”

 

Message from Stonewall

Ben Summerskill
Ben Summerskill

Following the Marriage (Same Sex Couples) Bill completing it’s House of Lords Stage, Ben Summerskill, CEO of Stonewall the LGB Equality Charity sent the following message to their supporters.

The message reads:

“We wanted you to know that moments ago the Marriage (Same Sex Couples) Bill completed its House of Lords Report Stage. Despite peers tabling 136 amendments – many of them clearly intended to wreck the Bill – the proposals remain intact and on track.

“It was particularly saddening to see Lord Dear at Report Stage introduce a ‘Son of Section 28’, designed to ‘protect’ teachers from ‘promoting’ same-sex marriage. Thankfully, this amendment was defeated on Monday evening by 163 votes to 32.

“There’s now just one stage left in the Lords. On Monday, July 15, the proposals will have their third – and final – Reading. We know that opponents of equality, having repeatedly kept peers up well past midnight in recent weeks, will see this as one more opportunity to wreck and delay the Bill.

“We can’t let that happen. That’s why we’ll work relentlessly over the next five days to get marriage equality on to the statute book.

“Stonewall supporters will also be outside of the House of Lords from 3pm on Monday. Do come along to make your voice heard and to make sure peers know that now is the time to make history. If you’re not able to join us we will, as always, be covering the debate live via Twitter and Facebook.

“When I joined Stonewall a decade ago we estimated that it would take 20 years to secure complete legal equality for lesbian, gay and bisexual people in Britain. We never take anything for granted, but, thanks to your help, this last piece of the legislative jigsaw is now so tantalisingly within our reach.”

Lord Dear was the former chief constable of the West Midlands.

For more information about Stonewall, CLICK HERE: 

 

The Martlets Hospice secure grant from NHS England

Martlets Hospice

The Martlets Hospice has secured an award of £367,860 from NHS England to implement The Renaissance Project designed to improve its facilities.  NHS England awarded 176 grants to hospices across England to improve the physical environments in which they provide care.

The Martlets will use its grant to create the Martlets Therapeutic Suite including a lounge, activity room, garden room and a cafe to accommodate its growing community services.  A Welcome Suite will also be built to improve the Hospice main entrance enabling ambulances to park more easily and safely whilst providing better shelter and easier access for patients and their visitors.

This capital grant programme is being delivered by NHS England and administered by Help the Hospices, the leading charity supporting hospice care throughout the UK.

Welcoming the announcement, Caroline Lower, Martlets Hospice Chief Executive Officer, said:

“We are absolutely delighted to have been awarded this grant, which will help us to better support people with terminal illness in Brighton & Hove together with their families. The two suites will deliver improved access to better quality services and facilities. The Therapeutic Suite will support more people living in the community, and the Welcome Suite will provide safer access into our main entrance for everyone.”  

Together, hospices in the UK care for 360,000 people each year, including patients and their families and carers. The majority of this care is provided in peoples’ own homes, but people can also access day care, in-patient care and outpatient services within hospice buildings.

Hospices are reliant on voluntary donations to run their vital services and collectively have to raise more than £1.5 million every single day from their local community.

For more information about the Martlets, CLICK HERE:

 

THE LADYKILLERS: The Vaudeville Theatre in London: Review

Lady Killers

It was always going to be difficult to reimagine one of the best loved British comedy films of all time, but Father Ted creator Graham Linehan made an excellent fist of it when his Ladykillers emerged for the first time on the London stage in 2011.

Now, two years later the revival, complete with brand new cast, satisfies the old comedy appetite admirably. Lineham’s trademark absurdity abounds, as do his killer one liners. The piece does have its niggling problems but nothing that will spoil the enjoyment of a laughter-filled night out at the theatre.

Mrs Wilberforce (Angela Thorne), a widow who lives alone in a large and rickety old house next to the railway line at King’s Cross, puts an advert up to take in lodgers. What seems to be the perfect hide-out for a gang of robbers intent on a large rail heist, turns out to be a more complicated set-up than they imagined.

Fooling the old lady into thinking they’re musicians, things start to go downhill straight after the heist when they start squabbling amongst themselves and when Mrs W discovers their real purpose.

The ingenious revolving set is really the star of this show, showing us the inside and outside of the house (with a surprise pulled off at the end), and split vertically into Mrs W’s downstairs domain and the boys’ upstairs room. Looking like it might fall to rubble at any minute so wonky are the angles and rickety the stairs, the house seems to have a personality of its own and its heights reach right up to the top of the Vaudeville stage as it peters out in a structure that reminds one of an elaborate birdcage. Pots and pans rattle and shake as the trains run past and the lights flicker on and off as Mrs W clonks the pipes forcefully for no good reason.

Undoubtedly it’s John Gordon Sinclair who has the biggest boots to fill – Alec Guinness’s no less – as head heistman, the wily and refined Professor Marcus, but once you’ve put aside comparisons his subtle and understated performance shines through and anchors the piece well.

The rest of the gang are a bit more patchy. Ralph Little as wide boy Harry is a chronic pill-popper with an OCD cleaning mania. Channelling Carry On’s Alf Ippititimus, he spasms and twitches his way through the first half and should either tone it down or ditch it completely as there’s enough nicely played physical humour from the ensemble and his hamming it up just distracts.

Louis, played by Con O’Neill, is a Romanian hard man in menacing pinstripes who hates “little oiled ladies”, while Chris McCalphy as the dim and dozy One-Round is the nearest in voice and presence to his filmic counterpart.

Simon Day (him off The Fast Show) is a revelation, bringing fantastic comedy timing to his cowardly Major Courtney. As the only character with more than one dimension (he has one and a half), Day sketches him well, especially when it comes to his penchant for a nice lilac dress. He’s the con man you find your heart reaching out to.

An unseen presence is Mrs W’s parrot General Gordon who sits in a cage at the side of the stage. We hear him, we see his tablecloth-covering move and we get fantastic descriptions of him (“It looked like a starving baby in a sock” and “He looks like a diseased washing up glove”) but see him we don’t.

We do, surprisingly, get to see the heist itself, albeit played out with toy trains and cars on the side of the house. An ingenious idea, it doesn’t quite work in practice being a bit on the clunky side but perhaps it’ll get slicker as the production continues.

The most glorious scene overlaps the interval and involves a gaggle of Mrs W’s old lady mates who’ve turned up to tea to hear the gang’s special recital. I say old ladies, but there are a couple of Pepperpots not-so-hidden amongst them, and I’m sure I heard half the audience mutter to ther other half “Is that David Walliams? It can’t be!” and it wasn’t, but one Pepperpot, sitting on stage with a gleeful smile and ear trumpet, was the Little Britain’s spit.

Mrs W’s posse sit ‘oohing’ and ‘aahing’ and bursting into sharp little glove-muffled bouts of clapping while listening to what Marcus describes as ‘an experimental piece’ (“Being fooled by art is one of the primary pleasures afforded the middle class,” deadpans Marcus, a remark which went down very well on press night).

After the interval, the serious business of killing begins when the gang turn on each other as they decide who’s going to do away with “the little oiled lady”. Some of this comedy violence works well, but some (impalement by bannister anyone?) seems to be there just to show they can do it.

As the death count grows, the darkness descends until the stage is in virtual blackout and we hear Marcus taunting Louis (the only two still alive) about his childish fears before dispatching him in a very nasty way. But even then Sinclair plays it for laughs, giving the audience a knowing look as he slips the body out of the window as if it’s as light as a feather (which, of course, it is, being a prop).

Although not quite matching the calibre of cast this play was afforded on its first London run, this revival makes for an enjoyable and smile-filled night out. In my eyes, Graham Linehan can do very little wrong (I loved Count Arthur the other night and if you didn’t then there’s something wrong with you!) and in tackling such an iconic British film and coming up smelling of roses, he proves once again that he’s a writer who can both invent and reinvent marvellously.

What: The Ladykillers

 

Where: Vaudeville Theatre, The Strand, London

When: various times, see website

Tickets: £20-£85

For more information: CLICK HERE:

Would I see it again?: YES

Four stars

 

 

A very special Grrrl’s Night

Greymatter
Greymatter

The Women’s Performance Tent at Pride organisers are staging a benefit at the Prince Albert Pub on Sunday, July 14 at 8pm to help cover the cost of having the Women’s Performance Tent on Preston Park this year.

The evening features three awesome grrrl bands: Danni Nicholls – stylish americana: Kenelis – grrrl punk/grunge and Greymatter – Indie-folk-rock.

Event: Grrrl’s Night

Where: Prince Albert Pub, 48 Trafalgar St, Brighton, East Sussex BN1 4ED

When: Sunday, July 14

Time: 8-11pm

Tickets: £5 before 8.30pm/ £7 after

For more information about the Women’s Performance Tent, CLICK HERE: 

Women's Performance Tent

Equal marriage set for historic final vote in Lords on Monday

The new Marriage (Same Sex Couples) Bill will now progress to its Third – and final – Reading in the House of Lords after Peers backed the proposals during last nights Report Stage.

Despite attempts by opponents to attach ‘wrecking’ amendments to the Bill – including a ‘son of Section 28’ clause which would have ‘protected’ teachers from ‘promoting’ equal marriage,  the Bill now heads for its crucial Third Reading next Monday, July 15.

Ben Summerskill
Ben Summerskill

Stonewall Chief Executive Ben Summerskill, said: 

“We’re close to making history. It’s a promising sign of progress that peers from all parties and the crossbenches have refused to let the Bill be derailed by Lord Dear’s ‘Son of Section 28’ amendment and others.Stonewall’s hardest ever work now lies in the five days ahead as we make the final push for equal marriage.”

Stonewall supporters will be outside the House of Lords for a public rally in support of equal marriage as peers debate the Bill on Monday from 3pm. All supporters of equal marriage are welcome to attend.

Lord Dear
Lord Dear

The Bill passed its Second Reading in the House of Lords on June 4, by 390 to 148 votes, a majority of 242, surviving a fatal motion moved by Lord Dear – former Chief Constable of the West Midlands – designed to stop its progress.

The Bill passed its Third Reading in the House of Commons with a majority of 205 on 21 May. The Bill’s Second Reading in the House of Commons on 5 February passed by 400 to 175 votes.

For more information about Stonewall’s campaign for equal marriage, CLICK HERE:

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