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Rubbish! – Angry Greens accuse Labour of broken pledge on bins

Labour administration has overseen failure of City Clean and broken pledge on bins say Green Councillors on Brighton and Hove City Council.

ACCORDING to a new report to the Environment, Transport & Sustainability Committee, Greens say Labour has broken its contract with residents over bin collections, and residents could wait two years before seeing any improvements to City Clean services.

At a meeting of the Environment, Transport and Sustainability Committee on Tuesday (October 9) Councillors heard a review of plans to improve the City Clean service. The report listed a damning series of failures, causing missed collections and overflowing bins.

Staff reductions, failure to recruit and poorly-managed rounds were cited as key factors in the poor performance of the service, with the report stating that “a culture of continuous improvement has not been encouraged in City Environment for a number of years.”

Referring to the growing number of complaints about overflowing bins, street litter and inaccessible customer service, Green Councillors slammed the Labour administration for City Clean’s failings, pointing to a Labour group pledge drawn up in 2015 stating that “the leader and senior councillors will directly oversee work to improve the service.”

Cllr Leo Littman
Cllr Leo Littman

Councillor Leo Littman, Green spokesperson for Environment, Transport and Sustainability said: “Four years ago, when trying to persuade the residents of Brighton and Hove that they could competently run the council, Labour laid out a 10-point contract with the city.

Point 1, the most important of them all, read: ‘We will make collecting refuse, increasing recycling and cleaning the streets a top priority. The leader and senior councillors will directly oversee work to improve the service.’

“The failings of City Clean speak for themselves. Labour Councillors have failed to oversee the service, shown no leadership and have proven their incompetence at delivering even their own pledge.”  

He added: “Council leaders of all colours have had issues with refuse collections during periods of industrial action, but we are currently in the unique position of having missed collections, unanswered complaints, and residents and visitors having to navigate their way around rubbish-strewn streets, at a time when there is no industrial action.

“As Councillor West made clear in committee, the outgoing Green Council handed over a whole raft of measures to Labour, aiming to improve the situation: communal waste collection, garden waste collection, recycling wheelie-bins and commercial collection. All started under the Greens, all bungled by Labour. Labour cut funding to City Clean, meaning that, unlike elsewhere in the country, our streets are often filthy and our refuse and recycling often goes uncollected. Three and a half years after Labour’s pledge, City Clean is now effectively in special measures, and we hear it will take two years to fix this. Is this really what Labour meant when they promised to ‘Get the Basics Right’?”

Responding for Labour, a spokesperson said: “The Labour Council inherited a service in very poor shape following a prolonged and damaging strike under the Greens.  We are working with the staff and unions to modernise and improve the service at a number of levels, but most importantly to stabilise the bin collection rounds.”

Warwick Rowers celebrate ten years challenging homophobia

Warwick Rowers continue their quest to challenge homophobia in sport with a brand new calendar for 2019.

KNOWN for baring (almost) all, year after year in tasteful and tantalising snapshots, the 2019 edition not only features the University of Warwick’s Boat Club, but also includes 2017 World Rowing Cup champion Robbie Manson all beautifully photographed by photographer Angus Malcom who created the project.

The Warwick Rowers project is a gay/straight alliance that dates back to 2009, when their first calendar was launched. Producer Angus Malcolm and generations of male rowers at the University of Warwick Boat Club have since achieved global recognition through a fundraising initiative and public awareness campaign that delivers a range of merchandise and products to around 80 countries every year and reaches more than 140 countries through its viral messaging.
The team has won a large number of awards for excellence, innovation and social impact, including twice being voted the UK Charity Calendar of the Year.
Their aim is to achieve three objectives: 
  • Promote positive, inclusive and respectful attitudes towards people of all genders and sexualities through the content that they create.
  • Fund university rowing and particularly to make rowing more accessible to a wider number of students
  • Fund the foundation Sport Allies, a registered charity group with a mission to promote sport, and particularly team sport, as an inclusive and supportive route to personal growth for everyone of all sexual orientations

The rowers, who happen to be mostly heterosexual males, donate the proceeds from their calendar and other merchandise to Sport Allies, an organisation championing sport as inclusive and diverse, while combating homophobia and gender bias.

To date, the Rowers have raised over $1 million in sales for both the Sport Allies foundation and the rowing program at Warwick University in the UK.

To order a copy online of the 2019 calendar, click here:

Council spends £1.2m buying back property they originally sold for £190k

As Brighton & Hove City Council spends £1.2m to buy back property they sold for £190k – Greens say flogging off housing wastes public money.

Green councillors are calling for lessons to be learned on future sales of council housing stock as the Labour Council prepares to buy back a property it previously sold for £190k at a cost of £1.2m in order to meet housing demand.

The property in Queens Park ward was sold by the Council in 1999, under a set of restrictions that ensured accommodation within the buildings would be let at affordable ‘social rent’ levels.

A report to the councils Housing and New Homes Committee (Wednesday 14) revealed that the current housing association owners now wished to sell the property on the open market.

In a move to protect the supply of affordable housing in the city, the committee approved a recommendation that the Council buy the property back at a cost of £1.2m.

Demand in Brighton & Hove for social housing is high, with over 17,000 people currently on the waiting list for council homes.

Greens stress that previous decisions to sell old council properties to companies like Seaside Homes have reduced the amount of available social rented housing and have also voiced concerns over plans to increase the rent levels for the property, which make it less affordable for those on low incomes.

Cllr David Gibson
Cllr David Gibson

David Gibson, Green Councillor and Housing Spokesperson, said: “Here in Brighton and Hove we are drastically short of providing the amount of truly affordable rents and social housing the city needs. Instead of keeping existing homes and building more, Labour and Conservative governments sold off homes through the disastrous ‘right to buy’ scheme for years – over 2,000 were lost to our city this way. In 2006 Labour even tried to transfer all our council housing to a housing association.

“The Labour Council is now in a position of having to spend £1.2m buying back a property it originally sold off for £190k. But the loss made on buying back this home shows the flaws in flogging off our housing stock.

“With house prices so high and still rising, Greens say the council should be buying more housing, not selling it off. Greens support bringing housing back into council ownership but it should never have been sold in the first place. We continue to push the Labour Council to bring emergency and temporary accommodation in-house, instead of forking out millions of pounds in public money to private landlords.

“Greens will hold the council to account over the increased costs of rent planned for these new properties. We want to see the cost of rent set at ‘living rent’ levels – to ensure any new accommodation is genuinely affordable to those on low incomes. We must secure a better deal for our tenants. In the end, it’s clear that they are the ones who lose out when the council sells off properties the city desperately needs.”

Green councillors have campaigned for more genuinely affordable housing for the city and were successful in pushing the council to lower rents on new housing schemes, including the ‘Joint Venture’ with Hyde Homes. Greens have also pushed the council to double the budget available to reclaim properties sold under the ‘right to buy’ scheme.

Greens call for Government to ring fence funding for women’s refuges

Green Party accuses Government of “placing women’s lives in danger” with its plans to change funding for refuges.

Amelia Womack, deputy leader of the Green Party, calls on the Government to ring-fence funding for refuges and other forms of short-term supported housing in the welfare system.

She was speaking at the Green Party Spring Conference in Bournemouth today, after first speaking out about her own experiences of domestic abuse in June last year.

In little-publicised proposals, the Conservative government plans to remove refuges and other forms of short-term supported housing from the welfare system meaning the most vulnerable women fleeing abusive partners will not be able to pay for their accommodation using housing benefit, the last guaranteed source of income available to refuges. On average, housing benefit makes up 53% of refuge funding.

Amelia Womack, told conference: “This Government claims to care about women – yet it’s placing their lives in danger with plans to remove refuges from the welfare system. Removing women’s final safety net when they are in their hour of greatest need.

“This is a matter of life and death. The Government must prove it is serious about women’s safety and ring-fence funding for refuges.”

At Autumn Conference in October last year Womack launched the Green Party’s campaign to make misogyny a hate crime, which has since gathered cross-party support.

She said: “When I shared my experience of domestic violence for the first time last year, I never imagined I’d be part of starting what quickly became such a defining and extraordinary moment in the story of women.

“From MeToo to TimesUp, it feels like we’re hitting a tipping point that none of us saw coming this time last year. I’m so proud to have played a small part in giving other women the confidence to come forward and speak out about their experiences of misogyny.

“From the sweeping red walkways of Hollywood premieres to the corridors of the House of Commons, the carpets things have been swept under are now well and truly being shaken out.”

NHS Digital defies Health Committee

NHS Digital defies Health Committee call to stop sharing patient data with immigration enforcement.

NHS Digital has today defied the Health and Social Care Committee’s call to suspend its practice of providing patients’ addresses to the Home Office for immigration tracing purposes.

 

NAT (National AIDS Trust) has been campaigning for an end to this practice since it came to light in 2014.

On January 31, the Health and Social Care Committee (a cross-party group of MPs) concluded from the evidence it had heard that NHS Digital had not consulted properly before adopting this practice, and that is risked damaging trust and confidence in the health system.

The committee called for the practice to be stopped at once pending further investigation.

Today NHS Digital, supported by Ministers from Department of Health and the Home Office, have announced their intention to disregard this recommendation.

Deborah Gold
Deborah Gold

Deborah Gold, chief executive of NAT (National AIDS Trust), said: “I am dismayed to learn that in spite of the Health Committee’s recommendation, NHS Digital will continue this practice.

“Patient confidentiality must be protected. We believe that sharing data with the Home Office for immigration purposes scares people away from healthcare. As well as jeopardising the lives of individuals, this endangers public health as those with infectious conditions avoid diagnosis and treatment and therefore remain contagious.

“NHS Digital ought to be a safe haven for the vast quantities of patient information it receives. None of our data is safe if NHS Digital can secretly decide to single out individuals and share their data irrespective of the high standard of confidentiality used by the rest of the NHS.

“Having been instrumental in getting the Health Select committee to investigate against this practice, we are determined to fight this shamefully irresponsible decision.”

Brighton & Hove shows it is ready for more community-led housing

Around 200 people filled the Brighthelm Centre in Brighton on Wednesday, February 21 for the launch of the Brighton & Hove Community-Led Housing Programme.

With support from Brighton & Hove City Council (BHCC), Brighton & Hove Community Land Trust (BHCLT) is supporting local people who want to start their own community-led housing projects, including co-operatives, cohousing and self-build.

Community-led housing allows local people to take control of their housing and create alternatives to the limited choices offered by the current housing market.

The new Brighton & Hove Community-Led Housing Programme supports groups of people to come together and organise, or build, their own affordable homes. Applications are open for financial support and free advice to help make people’s ideas a reality.

BHCLT Community-led Housing Programme includes:

Housing Ourselves: Financial support through loans or grants to housing groups.
♦ Discovering suitable land and properties and helping groups acquire them for housing projects.
♦ Connecting local people who want to start their own housing projects and providing them with expertise and support.
♦ Raising awareness and building knowledge about housing with local people, the council and others who work in housing.

The event included the opportunity for people involved in community-led housing groups to share their experiences and learn from each other.

Councillor Anne Meadows, Chair of the Housing & New Homes Committee and a Labour & Co-operative representative for Moulsecoomb and Bevendean, paid tribute to city’s history of community-led housing:

She said: “In some respects I feel it’s national thinking that has caught up with Brighton & Hove,’ she said. ‘We have had an innovative and active community-led housing sector for many, many years and the provision of this funding through the DCLG has brought about the creation of this programme, through which we hope that more of the aspirations of this sector can be realised and more housing provided.”

Also speaking at the event was Stephen Hill, Director at C2O futureplanners and a key player in community-led housing nationally. “Communities are spending huge amounts of their time trying to put together housing projects that nobody else will,” he said. “The fact that people like you are here today is some kind of witness to the fact that policy and the market has failed so many people.”

The audience also heard from someone involved in a local success story, Martyn Holmes of Bunker Self-Build Housing Co-op. He told the story of Bunker’s beginnings – two neighbours chatting over the garden fence, both living in private rented housing that they were struggling to afford and fed up with their housing situation. Along with their families, they are soon to start work on two modular houses in Brighton, making use of a small and difficult site that a big developer wouldn’t be attracted to.

For Bunker, part of the reason for choosing a self-build project was the money they would save. Martyn explained that group self-build schemes can result in cost savings of up to 40% or more.

Community-led housing is good for Brighton & Hove because:

♦ It provides additional affordable and stable housing to those in need.
♦ It creates and demonstrates alternative ways of living which have a positive impact on wellbeing.
♦ It helps local people develop new skills as they make their projects a reality.
♦ It encourages collaboration and co-operative between local people and involves them in decisions about new housing.
♦ People have more say in how their homes are developed and managed.
♦ It creates an opportunity to make use of empty buildings and vacant land, revitalising communities.

BHCLT is working with Co-operative Housing in Brighton & Hove (CHIBAH) and Mutual Aid In Sussex (MAIS) to deliver the Community-Led Housing Programme.

Council prepared for frost, ice and snow

With temperatures plummeting and forecasts of more cold and freezing weather, Brighton & Hove City Council’s winter service team is preparing for frost, ice and snow.

Although the forecast is for settled conditions with bitter winds, there is a possibility of snow locally and the council will be monitoring the weather and road conditions 24/7.

They use the latest weather technology, using specific local forecasts that are updated three times over a 24 hour period so that they can make the most appropriate decisions when treating the highway network needed to keep the city moving and connected.

Almost 50% of all roads will be treated including all A and B roads, every bus route and access areas to emergency centres such as hospitals, ensuring they are safe and passable during adverse weather conditions.

Cllr Gill Mitchell
Cllr Gill Mitchell

Councillor Gill Mitchell, chair of the environment, transport and sustainability committee, said: “Our staff are ready with salt, grit and vehicles to respond to this next spell of cold weather. Our gritters are going out overnight to pre-treat the roads in advance but we are also ready to react to more severe weather conditions should they develop.”

The gritting team pre-salts the roads to prevent ice or frost forming. The movement of traffic mixes the salt into any surface water to help prevent freezing.

In snow conditions salt will only melt a very thin layer of snow or ice. When this happens the team try to reclaim the roads as soon as possible.

At extremely low temperatures salt has very little effect and deep snow is cleared by ploughing.

During the winter months the city council operates a seven-day, 24 hour winter weather service with staff from highways and Cityclean.

The council has seven gritters, seven ploughs, six hand spreaders, one pavement gritter, three tractors and JCBs and 1,500 tonnes of salt for use during severe weather.

To see how the council prepare for winter, click here:

Top tips to prepare for colder weather 

♦ Look out for friends and family who may be vulnerable to the cold and ensure they have access to warm food and drinks and are managing to heat their homes adequately.

♦ Try to maintain indoor temperatures to at least 18C, particularly if you are not mobile, have long-term illness or are 65 or over.

♦ Stay tuned for weather forecasts, ensure you are stocked with food and medications in advance, have deliveries or ask a friend to help.

♦ Take weather into account when planning your activity over the following days.

♦ If eligible seek entitlements and benefits such as Winter Fuel Payments and Cold Weather Payments, which are available to some.

♦ If you meet the criteria register for priority service with your energy and water suppliers.

♦ Avoid exposing yourself to cold or icy outdoor conditions if you are at a higher risk of cold related illness or falls

♦ Discuss with friends and neighbours about clearing snow and ice from in front of your house and public walkways nearby.

Find out about how you can help in severe weather and what the council do:

Keep warm, keep well 

Cold weather can affect your health. Find out how to keep yourself well and your home warm during a cold snap: 

♦ If you are concerned about your health or that of a loved one or neighbour call 111 for medical advice.

Celebrate with your Valentine high in the sky at British Airways i360

Love is in the air, with breath-taking views by day, big-sky sunsets and a carpet of twinkling lights below after dark, a flight on the British Airways i360 pod with the one you love is a moving experience.

Valentine’s Day Flights:
Wed, February 14, flights depart 6.30pm/7pm/7.30pm, £30 per person
Share a magical moment with the one you love at 450ft, looking out at the twinkling lights of Brighton and the south coast below. Price includes a glass of rosé Nyetimber sparkling wine per person from the Sky Bar on board the pod and a box of chocolates per couple.

Dave Lynn
Dave Lynn

Drag me up! Valentine’s Day Drag Queen Flight:
Wed, February 14, 8.30pm, £30 per person
Enjoy a fun and raucous alternative Valentine’s celebration with the renowned cabaret artist Dave Lynn, during an extended 45-minute pod flight. Price includes a glass of award-winning Nyetimber sparkling wine per person.

Marry Me Proposal Package:
Available year-round: £150 per couple.
Start your future together looking out at the distant horizon from 450ft, across the sea, the South Downs National Park and the beautiful Sussex coastline. The Marry Me proposal package includes two flights on the British Airways i360 pod at a time of your choosing, a bottle of local award-winning Nyetimber sparkling wine, half a dozen red roses and some chocolates.

To book any Valentine package, click here:  or tel 03337 720360.

Alternatively, you can upgrade to a more private experience by booking the pod for your exclusive use – price available on application, email: events@britishairwaysi360.com

 

Homophobic terminology and religious profanity commonly appears online

New research reveals religious profanity and homophobic terminology among most common swearwords used online.

Religious swearwords and homophobic phrases are among the most common profanity used in online blogs, new research suggests.

Researchers Dr Andrew Kehoe, Deputy Head of Birmingham City University’s School of English, and Dr Ursula Lutzky, Assistant Professor at Vienna University of Economics and Business, searched through more than 180 million words online to find out more about people’s patterns of swearing and which words are most commonly used.

The research showed that the most frequently used words were phrases of religious profanity such as God, Jesus, Christ and hell, which made up four of the top five most frequent potential swearwords.

The academics also looked into which words most often accompanied swearwords, to reveal the most common phrases used in the 9,000 blogs, more than 220,000 blog posts and over 2.2 million comments they trawled.

Among the findings the study showed that people online are more likely to call each other a “sick ba***rd” than an “evil ba***rd’’ and more likely to be considered a “poor ba***rd’’ than a “lucky ba***rd.”

Potentially homophobic terminology was also ranked among the most regularly used words– appearing almost twice as frequently as the word idiot .

Swearing was also found to be used more often when referring to men than women.

Dr Andrew Kehoe
Dr Andrew Kehoe

Dr Andrew Kehoe, Deputy Head of Birmingham City University’s School of English, said: “This was the first large-scale study of online swearing to consider the context in which the words are used. This allowed us to go beyond simple lists of ‘banned words’ typically used in profanity filters and offer a more comprehensive approach.”

The findings have been published in a paper titled Your blog is (the) sh*t, with the academics explaining how the same swearwords can often have completely different connotations in different contexts, with some being positive (as in ‘the sh*t’), some negative (as in ‘sh*t’) and some neutral (as in ‘get my sh*t together’).

The work also identified a group of core swearwords which are regularly used in close proximity to each other, including f**k, sh*t, and crap.

Dr Ursula Lutzky
Dr Ursula Lutzky

Dr Ursula Lutzky, Assistant Professor at Vienna University of Economics and Business, added: “Our study provides new insights into the swearing behaviour of bloggers. By studying potential swearwords with the help of computer-assisted methodologies, our research offers a deeper understanding of online interactions. This could ultimately lead to the enhancement of profanity filters and could reduce exposure to potentially offensive language online.”

To read the report, click here:

Rose Tremain’s ‘Sacred Country’ selected as City Reads 2018

Rose Tremain’s Sacred Country has been chosen as this year’s City Read across Brighton & Hove and beyond.

The concept of City Reads is simple: one book, by one author, is selected for the whole city to read, explore, discuss and creatively engage with.

Standing in a cold Suffolk field with her family, in 1952, six-year-old Mary Ward has a revelation: I am not Mary. That is a mistake. I am not a girl. I’m a boy…

So begins Mary’s heroic struggle to change gender. Moving from the claustrophobic rural community of the 1950s to London in the swinging Sixties and beyond to the glitter of America in the Seventies, Sacred Country is the story of a journey to find a place of safety and fulfilment in a savage and confusing world.

“Rose Tremain is one of the very finest British novelists”…… Salman Rushdie

Rose Tremain was one of only five women writers to be included in Granta’s original list of 20 Best of Young British Novelists in 1983, and was made a CBE in 2007. Her award-winning novels and short stories have been published worldwide in 27 countries.

Sacred Country won both the James Tait Black Memorial Prize and Prix Femina Etranger. It has oft been compared to Virginia Woolf’s iconic novel Orlando through its reconsideration of the essence of gender. Apart from its undoubted literary merits, Sacred Country is a non-sensationalist reflection of the tribulations faced by trans individuals.

Written a quarter of a century ago it still feels fresh and important which is why it was the perfect choice for 2018.  Beginning in a Suffolk village in the early 1950s and moving through three decades, we come to know not only our central character Mary/Martin born as a girl into the wrong body, but also the family and characters within that small community; those who find happiness and their place in the world and those who struggle to do so.

Rose said: “I’m delighted that Sacred Country has been chosen for Brighton City Reads.  It seems to me that this city, with its long tradition of tolerance and its talent for celebration is a place where Mary/Martin could have found happiness.  To make this book live again for Brighton readers will be an honour.”  

Fox Fisher
Fox Fisher

Fox Fisher, film maker, trans campaigner and artist, said: “As a trans person myself, I never saw trans characters in books (or in ‘real life’, for that matter) growing up. Although Sacred Country is written by an author that isn’t trans, I was utterly gripped with the storyline and characters. The audiobook is read by a trans man which adds to the authenticity and is an example of the level of care and consideration when creating this book. As a film-maker, I could really visualise how well this would translate to a feature-length fiction. And when the time comes, I hope the person to make the film is me!”  

The full City Reads programme will be announced on Thursday, February 15, 2018

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