Merchant Venturers’ £46,000 Boost for Bristol Youth Project

Master of the Society of Merchant Venturers David Marsh meets with the CEO of Creative Youth Network Sandy Hore-Ruthven and memebrs of the Staion Drivers to take a look at the progress made on the Station development.

The Society of Merchant Venturers has donated £46,000 to a ground-breaking project for young people in Bristol, which will be one of the biggest and most important of its kind in the UK.

Led by the Creative Youth Network, The Station project involves transforming the derelict Old Fire Station on Bridewell Island into a creative hub for young people from across Bristol. This will comprise state of the art facilities, including music studios, a media editing suite and an all-inclusive support network, when it opens in October.

The Merchants’ grant will fund an outreach worker for two years. This role will focus on forging links between The Station and local youth clubs and schools, ensuring that young people from across Bristol can benefit from The Station’s facilities. The Station has also received funding from the National Lottery and Bristol City Council.

David Marsh, Master of the Society of Merchant Venturers said: “The Station is an enormously important project for Bristol and it will be one of the biggest and most inspiring centres of its type in the UK.  It will use creative achievement and personal involvement in the arts to increase opportunities and broaden the horizons of young people.

“Among the core objectives for the Merchant Venturers are to improve the well-being of young people in greater Bristol and to support educational and self-improvement opportunities. The Station presents an important opportunity to meet these aims.

“The Station is designed to give all young people, including those from disadvantaged backgrounds, the personal skills and confidence to realise their potential.The Station will be a focus for personal development. It is both an incredibly worthwhile initiative and one the Merchants are proud to support.”

(more…)

Post to Twitter

Gay rights are human rights says MP

The Shadow Foreign Minister for Human Rights, Kerry McCarthy MP, has spoken out against the ongoing persecution of Lesbian, Gay, Bi-Sexual and Transgendered people in Uganda.  Speaking in a Parliamentary debate on Human Rights in Uganda, Kerry McCarthy said that the abuse of gay men and women’s human rights could not be justified by people’s religious beliefs, no matter how deeply-held, and she condemned moves that  would see same-sex relationships be punished with life imprisonment or even the death penalty in the country.

Kerry, who has visited Uganda twice and recently met with Ugandan MPs during a visit to Ghana, spoke of the discussions she has had regarding the treatment of gay people in the country and explained that the ongoing persecution was being justified by religious belief. 

While Kerry understands the need for western Governments to avoid appearing once again as an old colonial power seeking to impose our values or culture on other countries, Kerry stated that “we should not accept that people’s cultural or religious beliefs allow them to persecute or discriminate against people because of their sexuality.”

In February, a Ugandan Member of Parliament, David Bahati, reintroduced the Anti-Homosexuality Bill that would criminalize the work of human rights activists and organizations in Uganda by making the “promotion of homosexuality” a criminal offence. The Ugandan Penal Code, which was introduced by the British during the 19th century, already prohibits consensual sex between individuals of the same sex.  However, the Anti Homosexuality Bill goes much further, recommending life imprisonment for people in same sex relationships and even the death penalty for the offence of “aggravated homosexuality” (A HIV+ man having intercourse with a man who is HIV-). It also punishes those who do not report violations of the Bill’s provisions within 24 hours. Sadly the Bill – which has been condemned by President Obama and the Archbishop of Canterbury – has received the support of some Churches in Uganda.

Speaking after the debate, Kerry McCarthy said: “The debate focused on a variety of important Human Rights issues that are facing Uganda today. Given the recent murder of Human Rights campaigner David Kato, who was murdered after a newspaper reported he was gay, as well as the ongoing harassment and violence gay people face, I believe it is vital that we keep treatment and persecution of gay people in Uganda at the top of the agenda.

“Sadly a lot of the persecution gay people face stems from the enforcement of the old Penal Code that Britain imposed in the 19th Century and it is further justified by people’s religious beliefs. While I respect the fact Uganda is a deeply Christian country, I do believe that old colonial laws and religious beliefs should not be used to justify the persecution of people because of their sexuality. The Ugandan Government has an obligation to protect the human rights of all its citizens.

“My message today is clear- Gay Rights are Human Rights.”

Post to Twitter

It’s Bristol vs Pirates & It’ll Be Big – In The Semis!

imageAt the end of Stage 2 in this season’s RFU Championship competition, the Cornish Pirates finished second in Pool B. They will now play Pool A winners Bristol Rugby in the two-legged semi-final.

The first ‘semi’, which is of mighty importance and is big in every way, will be played at home on Monday the 7th. May, the early May Bank Holiday, and because SKY television is covering the match it will kick-off at the rather unusual time of 1205.

Clearly a big big crowd will be present at the Mennaye Field for this match, with there a likely invasion of Bristol supporters. It is an ‘all pay’ game and the obvious advice is to purchase your tickets needs early. They are available from the club’s ticket office 01736-331961 (open Mon – Fri from 9am – 12 noon), on-line at www.cornish-pirates.com, and from various Warrens bakers shops about the county. Season tickets holders who wish to book their usual seats in the stands have until Friday midday to do so and are advised to please telephone the ticket office accordingly.

The return semi at the Memorial Ground, Bristol, is to be played on Sunday 13th May (ko 1245), and the two-legged finals are scheduled to take place on Wednesday the 23rd and 30th May.

Post to Twitter

Double dip recession: no-one else to blame, George

recession_thumb2

As Britain spirals into the first double-dip recession since Ted Heath was Prime Minister, the British public will be asking itself a question this morning: “However did we allow this gang of posh boys to convince us they knew what they were doing?”

The news came early this morning that Britain’s output had contracted by just under a quarter of a percent in the last three months, making it two quarters in a row output has fallen. That, added to the previous flat quarters, reveals a very worrying picture as Britain is officially back in recession.

Comparing 2012 Q1 with 2011 Q3

GDP down 0.5%

Manufacturing down 0.8%

Construction down 3.2

Services up 0.1%

Government services up 0.6%

Distribution down 0.4%

Transport down 0.1%

Business down 0.1%

First quarter construction output was down 3%, the largest fall since 2009, a massive increase on the already steady decline shown by the drop of 0.2% of the previous quarter.

The figures are, however, only preliminary numbers based upon 42% of total output and may well be revised upwards or downwards when the final figures come in. The bad news is that in recent years it has nearly always been downwards.

The most revealing statistic however, is not the plunge into recession, but the comparison between what George Osborne said would happen and what has actually happened. In June 2010 the Chancellor’s deficit reduction plan predicted that the economy would grow by 4.3% in the two years since he arrived at the Treasury. In fact is has grown by a total of just 0.4% and has been falling for the last six months.

By any measure, this is indicative of a failing plan. George Osborne’s plans are in complete disarray. Or as the Institute for Public Policy Research says: “This is a further blow for the government’s reputation for economic competency.”

The City economists who are natural supporters of the Chancellor and his party were completely wrong-footed by this announcement – many were confidently predicting a growth figure of between 0.1% and 0.2%, despite virtually every independent economic forum saying otherwise.

The basis for their confidence lies more in their ideological commitment to a party that has visited terrible hardship on the ordinary people of Britain while the champagne continues to wash down the canapés in the square mile. In fact, since the recession caused by the American Banking crisis in 2008-2009, recovery has been incredibly slow as result of the Government’s hard-line insistence on cutbacks. As the Guardian puts it: “recovery has been slow – the weakest in 100 years, weaker than after the Great Depression, the 70s oil shock or the recessions of the 80s and 90s”.

The Government is trying to blame everyone but themselves for the collapse in the economy – the latest is “it’s the Eurozone crisis”.

However, Tim Leunig, chief economist at Centre Forum says: “The construction industry is not a Eurozone issue.”

He goes on to point out: “It’s important to remember that the initial British GDP quarterly figures are hopelessly unreliable, they are quick, and they involve guesswork. The Bank of England is very sceptical. Whether it’s plus 0.1 or minus 0.1 the economy is in the doldrums. Since the start of the recession Canada has got back to its previous peak so has Germany and the US. They are all richer than they were. France is back to where it was. Japan’s is closer. Only Italy is worse. Within the G7 only Italy is doing worse than us.”

Paul Kenny GMB General Secretary said "The Tory/Lib Dem government ignored warnings that austerity would drag uk economy back into unnecessary double dip recession.

The Lib Dems ignored their own warnings to the electorate when they signed up to spending cut backs that sent us back into recession. Labour Chancellor Alistair Darling was following the right policies to support the economy and he should be given credit for this.

Tory MP Nadine Dorries is right to accuse Mr Cameron and Chancellor George Osborne of being "arrogant posh boys" with no understanding of ordinary voters. She missed Nick Clegg another arrogant posh boy who joined them to recklessly abort the economic recovery underway in the UK in 2010.

Job creation now underway in the US economy would also be well underway in the UK too were it not for this deliberate act of government policy.

The electorate on May 3rd must deliver a clear message to Tories and Lib Dems that we want them to follow the proven Obama route to economic recovery and that mass unemployment is not a price worth paying."

Inevitably, the Treasury predictably says the problems lie with the Eurozone saying of a recession: "it would be hard for the UK to avoid one".

Cameron and Osborne can’t avoid one salient fact – the only country in the G7 doing worse than us is Italy. This crash must be laid firmly at their door and the British public must repay this at the ballot box.

Post to Twitter

Tags

Related Posts

Share This

Free Schools are Disproportionately Benefiting Better off Families

imageFigures from the Department for Education this week reveal that free schools are disproportionately benefiting better off families, despite government claims.

The data deposited in the House of Common library shows that 11.3% of children at free schools are registered for Free School Meals – in comparison with 16.7% of children nationally who are entitled to claim free school meals because their household income is below £16,000.

In all but 4 of the 24 free schools opened last year, the percentage of children claiming FSMs is below that of the local authority in which they are situated. Three-quarters of free schools have lower proportion of children eligible for free school meals than average in local authority For example, Bristol Free School has 8.8% of children on its roll claiming FSMs; the figure for Bristol as a whole is 22.5% of pupils.

This undermines claims made by the Education Secretary, Michael Gove, and the Prime Minister, that free schools would give the poorest children the opportunity to receive “the kind of education only the rich can afford”. As David Cameron said last year:

“for too long in our country, exercising choice to escape poor schools has been available to the richest, who could just opt out and go private, or to the middle classes who could move house to a better area, but the poorest had to take what they were given. Not any more.”(http://www.number10.gov.uk/news/prime-ministers-speech-on-modern-public-service).

This data has finally been supplied by the Department for Education in response to a Parliamentary Question submitted by Kerry McCarthy MP back in October, which has needed regular and constant chasing.

Kerry McCarthy said:”This data gives the lie to Michael Gove’s claim that free schools target disadvantage. In future, we will have to be careful when assessing the performance of free schools, as they have a higher proportion of children from wealthier backgrounds.

“I am also concerned that they are not only failing to target resources effectively, but are actually diverting funds from where they are most needed. In Bristol’s case, at a time when there is an overwhelming need to provide additional primary school places, a free school was opened even though there is a surplus of secondary school places, especially in surrounding schools – a surplus which is reducing their budgets, staff and even the range of opportunities they can provide their students”.

Post to Twitter

Team news: Bristol Rugby vs Doncaster

imageLiam Middleton shuffles his pack ahead of Bristol’s final Pool A fixture with Doncaster Knights at the Memorial Stadium on Saturday (3pm KO).

The Head Coach makes eight changes from the side that secured a spot in the semi-finals with a 26-20 win over London Welsh last weekend.

George Watkins returns to the starting line up for his first appearance since the 65-3 victory over Brett Davey’s men on the opening day of the play-off campaign.

Jon Goodridge returns in place of Sean Marsden at full-back, while Tom Slater forms a half-back partnership with Matthew Jones.

In the pack, Mark Lilley comes in for his first start in Bristol colours alongside Jason Harris-Wright and Wayne Thompson.

Ben Glynn is named in the second row alongside former Knight Glen Townson, while James Merriman recovers from injury sustained against Nottingham to line up on the flank.

Middleton names a strong replacements bench, with Louis Silver and Will Davis included in the 22-man squad.

Bristol Rugby team to face Doncaster Knights at the Memorial Stadium on Saturday, 21 April (3pm KO):

Jon Goodridge; George Watkins, Fautua Otto, Luke Eves, Will Helu; Matthew Jones, Tom Slater; Mark Lilley, Jason Harris-Wright, Wayne Thompson, Ben Glynn, Glen Townson, Iain Grieve (c), James Merriman, Dan Montagu.
Replacements: Rhys Lawrence, Will Davis, Mariano Sambucetti, Henry Vanderglas, Redford Pennycook, Louis Silver, Matty James.

Post to Twitter

MP Calls on Government to Vote to Keep Legal Aid for Voiceless

imageThe MP for Bristol East, Kerry McCarthy, has today called on the Government to accept the decisions of the House of Lords to protect disabled people, children, domestic violence victims and sufferers of industrial diseases like asbestos-induced cancer. Applying pressure on the Government to do the right thing, Kerry is urging Liberal Democrats who have repeatedly said they want to protect frontline advice centres need to act with their votes, not just with their words.

Today the House of Commons will debate the Lord’s amendments to the Legal Aid Bill which has been defeated a historic 11 times in the House of Lords, making it the most controversial legislation of its type since at least 1979. Under the guise of reforming Legal Aid, the Government plans to leave untouched the £1.2 billion criminal legal aid fund and instead put a stop to advice on common social welfare issues. This kind of advice, given by a mix of volunteers and legal experts, is delivered primarily through Citizens Advice Bureaux and neighbourhood law centres.

Kerry said: “Legal Aid provides a crucial safety net to those in our community who need support and advice in resolving complex and serious issues and do not have the means to pay for expensive legal costs. I have received a large number of letters and emails from my constituents, who are rightly concerned that these cuts will have a profound effect on peoples’ ability to access the legal advice they often desperately need.

“From talking to charities and organisations, it is clear that disabled people, children, domestic violence victims and sufferers of industrial disease that single parents will be among the hardest hit by these cuts and I fear that the Government’s Legal aid Bill will have profound social consequences, leaving many people unable to challenge the injustices they face. This is unacceptable and unfair, the Government should support the amendments the House of Lords have made and consider the damage it is about to inflict on our legal system.

“Today I am appealing to Liberal Democrat MPs to do the right thing, and vote with Labour in support of the Lords amendments which will help ensure that ordinary people can access the advice they need. If we really are all in it together, then part of that means ensuring the most vulnerable are protected when things go horribly wrong in their lives. I would strongly urge Liberal Democrat MPs to accept the ruling of the House of Lords and not start a battle between the Houses by following the Government whip which will only deny many people access to justice. ”

Post to Twitter