Tuesday, 31 January 2012

Human Rights seminar in Oakham


At Voluntary Action Rutland, Oakham, this morning, delivering the second in a series of seminars on the Human Rights Act 1998.

Strictly speaking, the part on the Human Rights Act is delivered by Chino Cabon from The Race Equality Centre (TREC), while I present a Beginners Guide to REDP.

The purpose of these seminars is to help Voluntary and Community Sector (VCS) organisations appreciate the relevance of the Human Rights Act 1998 to their mission, to understand its relationship to equality and diversity issues, as well enabling them to take part in the current debate about the UK withdrawing from the European Convention on Human Rgihts and replacing it with a new UK Bill of Rights. These topics will feature prominently in REDP's next regional event, in Derby, 22 March.

Gathered in The Gower Centre (photo above) this morning are representatives of ten VCS organisations:

Monday, 30 January 2012

Big Society & Equality Conference



To London today, for the Big Society and Equality Conference, hosted by the Women's Resource Centre (WRC) at the Human Rights Action Centre, Amnesty International UK, New Inn Yard.

The first person I see when I enter the conference room is Ian Robson, Director of the Leicester LGBT Centre and a fellow Core Partner on REDP. We silently mouth "What are you doing here?" to each other as I skirt my way through the tables to find the nearest free seat. I'm here representing both Leicester Council of Faiths and REDP. Ian's here for the LGBT Centre (and has to leave before the end of the morning sessions).

Around 40 organisations (mostly from the Voluntary and Community Sector) are represented here today, including:

Introduction & welcome Vivienne Hayes, Chief Executive, Women's Resource Centre.


Overview of Big Society Sheila Battersby, Policy Manager, Local Intelligence Team, Office for Civil Society.
  • The Big Society fits in with coalition agreements around decentralisation and localism and is about changing the role of central government.
  • Nick Hurd, the Minister for Civil Society is leading on this programme of work.
  • There are three pillars to the Big Society: community empowerment, social action and opening public services.
  • This event is an opportunity for equalities organisations to feedback to Ministers on practical solutions to issues such as innovation, how to improve local democracy and so on.
  • One of the aims of this research is to provide recommendations for an Office for Civil Society (OCS) report. These recommendations will be shared with the wider Cabinet Office.

Equalities and the Big Society Natalie Ntim, Policy Officer, Women's Resource Centre.
  • Greater equalities awareness is needed amongst public bodies
  • A survey by WRC acknowledged the lack of capacity within organisations to engage with the programmes within the three pillars.
  • Case study of Equality Cumbria – a social enterprise made up of equalities networks that has supported 13 public bodies over the past three years in a variety of ways. They work in partnership but apply for contracts separately to cover their individual core costs.

Community First Grants Programme Ian Beason, Programmes Manager, Community Development Foundation.

The Community First Grants programme is an £80 million government-funded Big Society initiative. It aims to get people to give time, money, goods, services and facilities to improve the quality of life of local communities. The initiative replaces the last government’s Grassroots Grants programme which aimed to provide small grants for local community groups. However, rather than just awarding small grants to community projects, it requires government funding to be matched with community contributions. The programme aims to encourage community self-reliance; increase participation of all parts of the community; strengthen communities by identifying local priorities; and provide a source of grants in the future.
  • The aim of the programme is to make communities better to live in.
  • The Community First Grant is a neighbourhood level matched fund.
  • Decisions of who receives funding are made by Community First Panels. Panels are self selecting and determine their local priorities. After a year, they’ll firm these up by creating a panel plan.
  • Panels will nominate a Panel Partner- they will have to say that the panel is actually a representative group of the local population.
  • Projects are match funded 1:1 – although the organisation does not have to match the amount purely in money terms, it could also be volunteer time for example.
  • Over 250 panels have submitted applications already.
  • The programme has links with other programmes and partners e.g. Community Organisers, Business Connectors, Community Foundation Network, Asda stores, youth orgs, local authorities etc.
  • Q&A session:
  • Q: Accountability of Panels? How will CDF manage any possible conflict of interest?
  • A: Ian stressed the importance of website connection to panels, who will have to upload information about decisions made regarding funding. He said there is no specific equalities angle in this initiative and was unsure whether minutes displayed publicly will be obligatory.
  • Q: How will CDF counteract homogenous panels and encourage representation of equalities?
  • A: All local authorities have received a letter from CDF saying they should be representative. Local authorities generally haven’t sat on the panels in order to create distance between themselves and the decisions made. They don’t want to appear like they’re running the show to their own priorities. However, no equalities data is being collected on the membership of the panels.
  • Any organisation can become a panel representative and organisations don’t have to be based in the ward or even be a constituted group.
  • RECOMMENDATION: disaggregate panel membership by equalities data
  • Q: What is the process for financial accountability?
  • CDF are in charge of financial accountability. They then have to account to OCS.
  • Delegate Comments:
  • Harder and harder to get the most disadvantaged people to engage because it’s getting harder and harder to survive
  • Website accountability – disadvantaged people less likely to use the internet
  • Mistake to link equality and local level projects. Just because it’s local doesn’t mean it will be meeting equalities obligations. For example, LSPs were local and were also male dominated. Will be too late in a few years to see that all the panels are run by white men.

Local Integrated Services Victoria Westhorp, Policy Manager, Local Intelligence Team, Office for Civil Society; Martha Earley, Public Health Manager for Inequalities & Team Leader for Community Development, Royal Borough of Kingston.
Local Integrated Services is a new approach to delivering local services which brings together budgets and local assets (such as buildings) and puts communities in control of co-producing and commissioning the services that they need. It looks at ways to effectively use existing resources and explores the benefits of pooling budgets. The government supports the testing of community commissioning to see if it can produce better outcomes and create financial savings.
  • Community commissioning is statutory commissioning devolved down to community level. It’s more about communities being involved in decision making about services rather than directly handing money to communities.  
  • Past interventions (e.g. health action zones) focused on particular streets/areas of deprivation. The Marmot Review said that a universal approach benefits the poorest people more than specific interventions. So      Kingston council wrote to the Cabinet Office to propose a new approach- working with everyone in the ward. Within this approach, the council identified the need to:
    • Develop community voice.
    • Pool money and resources for a single pot of money.
    • Increase partnership work between individuals and agencies.
    • The council ask the community what to focus on, without a pre-existing agenda. They used some previous research to find out what community members had already identified. There are monthly project meetings for all partners to get around the table. They have aimed to circumnavigating the segregation model- where someone is       targeted just because they live on a particular estate - which stigmatizes people and discourages them from getting involved.

Community Organisers Programme Lawrence Walker, Programmes Officer, Locality

The Community Organisers Programme is a £15 million government-funded Big Society initiative. The programme aims to recruit and train 5,000 Community Organisers to help local communities come together to tackle social issues and develop community projects in deprived areas in England. The programme started in February 20112 and will run for the lifetime of this Parliament (until May 2015). Through the programme, government wants to strengthen community spirit; encourage participation of the local community; increase the effectiveness of existing community groups; create new community groups and social enterprises; and support communities to tackle local issues important to them.
  • Q&A/Comments:
  • What are the real costs of Community Organisers? Hosts will not be getting full cost recovery. Community development officers get paid more than the wages being paid to community organisers and they are very similar jobs.
  • Q: Can anyone become an organiser and how do you recruit them?
  • A: Yes anyone can become an organiser, follow the website and find a local host organisation to apply to.
  • Q: How are the expenses of community organisers paid?
  • A: Learning expenses are covered; the host provides liability insurance for the volunteers.
  • Q: What connections do you have with previous community organiser projects?
  • A: It refers back to previous community organiser projects, but the larger scale of the current movement means it’s an innovative new programme.
  • Group Discussion:
  • How could the Community Organisers programme benefit the groups that you work with?
  • It is another way in which our organisations can have some form of influence
  • One organisation said that they are being selective about which parts of the Big Society they engage with due to capacity and lack of finance. This organisation will not engage with community organisers as they are concerned about the legacy component- the political landscape is likely to change in 3 years’ time.
  • What is wrong with existing voluntary sector work? Fantastic organisations already do this work e.g. in Barnet.
  • Unsure as to what value the programme will bring to the sector, it seems the government are reinventing the wheel. We already know what people need, why we don’t use the money to fund what they need.
  • Community organisers should be coming to the voluntary sector first rather than us having to engage with them. They should be aware of and build upon our work. --- Locality see the community organisers programme as complementing the work of the voluntary and community sector.
  • Organisations are currently losing funding, expertise, knowledge and relationships. The organisations that would act as hosts are closing on a weekly basis. If the macro-level is taken away what use is developing the micro-level,
  • Recommendations:
  • Need to encourage those who don’t feel empowered to engage with the programme; need to support these groups to create a plan of the change they want to see.
  • The programme needs to manage financial expectations. If there is no money after the initial community organisation programme, it will be difficult to achieve any long-term positive outcomes.
  • Have organisers been CRB checked and how will you ensure they are protected if they are engaging with people in personal spaces, such as their homes?

By this stage in the proceedings there’s a negative atmosphere; a palpable air of anger, anxiety, depression, disappointment, disbelief, fear – I could go on. Suffice to say, a black cloud has been forming over the room, although it doesn’t seem to be overshadowing those on the platform or podium. The fellow sitting next to me has been responding to each new PowerPoint slide with a muttered, “Oh, for God’s sake!” After a while, I ask him if he’s aware he’s doing that, or if he thinks he’s just thinking it. Those taking advantage of the opportunities to ask questions and make comments become fewer and fewer. More people are just staring at their shoes or at the table tops; some have their heads in their hands.

I feel moved to comment at the end of this session (on the Community Organisers Programme). Bearing in mind the primacy of courtesy, and taking care to avoid giving the impression that this is any kind of ad hominem attack, I feel I have to take a few minutes to articulate what I believe most people in the room are thinking.

Addressing a group of patients who are struggling with a terminal illness and telling them that on top of that, they’re now expected to take on fostering duties.

Many of the people here today – and more people whom we know back in our communities and organisations – have worked over years (over decades in many cases) to develop a level of compassion, confidence, cooperation, courage, diplomacy, expertise, judgement, knowledge, rapport, sensitivity, sympathy, trust. Why should we be glad, grateful or thankful that the Coalition sees fit to jettison so many of these people and the organisations for which they work and that it offers something (in the form of the Community Organisers programme) that is a poor shadow of what we’ve spent all this time and effort developing? The creation of a stratum of Community Organisers as has been described today would be welcome if the sector as a whole is facing a collective death sentence.

I end by saying to the speaker that I don’t envy his position. I have no desire to “shoot the messenger” but I have to say that I wouldn’t be doing his job for all the tea in China.

As I'm leaving the venue at the end of the conference, one of the delegates wishes me farewell and hails me as the "William Wallace of the equalities world". I know that she's latching on to my Scottishness and my outspokenness but I can't help but be flattered by that - until I remember that William Wallace gets disembowelled at the end of Braveheart!

This event has vexed me for some time now. That’s partly why it took me ages to write this blog post. The reason why I found it so disturbing only became clear after I attended another national conference on Big Society a month later, in Bradford. This event today was a showcase for those organisations which have won contracts to deliver Big Society initiatives; the Bradford conference was quite the opposite in tone.

The word "equality" is used often at this conference and in the material that accompanies it. But actions speak louder than words. It seems to me (and, from a straw poll of other attendees) that equality is conspicuous by its absence from the initiatives and programmes described here. It's well known that the Coalition has shifted government support from equality to "fairness". the latter could be said to be subjective. It's not enshrined in or protected by legislation, nor is it measurable - which makes it difficult, if not impossible, to see or state whether or not it's changing for better or worse. It could be said that from this side of the fence, there is no equalities agenda in Big Society (whatever that is, since by the end of today, we're none the wiser except to say that what we do see of it, we don't much like).

A word on the idea of "replicating innovative projects", a phrase that is used often today. Some of us support the notion that this is akin to being a butterfly collector: spotting something attractive and different in the wild, netting it, gassing it and pinning its dead body to a board for display behind glass.

Friday, 27 January 2012

Homophobia is just like racism and other bigotry

This letter appears in today's Derby Telegraph:
Homophobia is just like racism and other bigotry
I HAVE been criticised for comparing gay rights with the 1960s civil rights movement in the USA.
Accordingly, I was delighted to read the words of Coretta King: "Dr Martin Luther King would be a champion of gay rights if he were alive. Gays and lesbians stood up for civil rights in Montgomery, Selma, in Albany, Georgia, and St Augustine, Florida, and in many other campaigns. Many of these courageous men and women were fighting for my freedom at a time when they could find few voices for their own. I salute their contribution.
"Homophobia is like racism, anti-Semitism and other forms of bigotry, in that it seeks to dehumanise a large group of people, to deny their humanity, their dignity and personhood. This sets the stage for further repression and violence that spread all too easily to victimise the next minority group."
After Derby Crown Court last week sent a powerful message to homophobes who threaten violence against the gay community, I am proud to have made a decision to major in African American History at Eastern Michigan University at a time when the Detroit race riots were tearing that city apart.
I thank Coretta King for her encouraging words.
Narvel Annable
Belper

Friday, 20 January 2012

Where in the world?


Occasional update showing where in the world our blog has been read in the past week. Here's the top ten countries for pageviews.
  1. Russia 38
  2. USA 26
  3. Germany 21
  4. UK 14
  5. Portugal 6
  6. Ukraine 5
  7. South Korea 1

This week's total: 111 (last week: 215). The world map at the top of this post is the graphic that I see on the stats page. The darker the green, the more pageviews from that country. I can see different versions of that map for "now" (i.e. in the last two hours), "today", "this week", "this month" and "all time".

Friday, 13 January 2012

Where in the world?


Occasional update showing where in the world our blog has been read in the past week. Here's the top ten countries for pageviews.
  1. UK 125
  2. USA 58
  3. France 8
  4. Japan 8
  5. Russia 6
  6. Germany 4
  7. Hong Kong 2
  8. Netherlands 2
  9. Brazil 1
  10. India 1

This week's total: 215 (last week: 68). These are aggregates of figures from the top ten countries only. Blogger's stats software doesn't show me numbers of pageviews below the tenth-ranking country.

The world map at the top of this post is the graphic that I see on the stats page. The darker the green, the more pageviews from that country. I can see different versions of that map for "now" (i.e. in the last two hours), "today", "this week", "this month" and "all time".

Wednesday, 11 January 2012

Five accused of stirring up hate against homosexuals

This article is published in today's Derby Telegraph:
Five accused of stirring up hate against homosexuals
Five men are on trial accused of stirring up hatred against homosexuals by distributing a "threatening, offensive and frightening" leaflet in Derby.
The flyer was part of a protest mounted by a group of Muslim men against the annual Gay Pride parade in the city.The leaflet contained quotations from the Koran and a picture of a mannequin hanging from a noose with the words Death Penalty? boldly set out.
A gay man, who had this and another leaflet posted through his letterbox, told the jury at Derby Crown Court: "They made me feel terrorised in my own home.Another homosexual man who received the flyers said he feared his home would be fire-bombed.
Ihjaz Ali, 42, Razwan Javed, 28, Kabir Ahmed, 28, Mehboob Hussain, 45, and Umer Javed, 38, all of Derby, admit playing a part in distributing the leaflet.
But the men deny it was "threatening" or was intended to stir up hatred against homosexuals.
It is the first prosecution of its kind since legislation came into force in March 2010.The court was told that three leaflets were produced as part of the campaign, although the men are only charged over the final one distributed, which was the Death Penalty flyer.
This one included the text: "If the people of a town indulge in illegal sexual intercourse and practise usury of all kinds, Allah promotes its destruction."
The court heard that the leaflet said the death penalty had already been passed on every homosexual and, said prosecutor Bobbie Cheema, it was clear the only dispute was the method by which it should be done – being burnt, flung (from a building or mountain) or stoned.
Another leaflet was entitled Burn or Turn and had an image of a person burning in a lake of fire. It stated that homosexuality was the root cause of all problems. The third leaflet said "Gay – God Abhors You" and stated that Allah was severe in punishment.
Miss Cheema said the men were accused of a "hate crime".
She said: "These five defendants were part of a small group of men who distributed horrible, threatening literature, with quotations from religious sources and pictures which were designed to stir up hatred, hostility, against homosexual people.
"The leaflets you will see are not simply educational or informative. They are threatening offensive, frightening and nasty."
The court heard the leaflets were handed out near Jamia Mosque, in Rosehill Street, and posted through letterboxes in Normanton, in June and July 2010.
The Death Penalty? leaflet was handed out to people outside the Jamia Mosque after Friday prayers on July 2, 2010.
Miss Cheema said a police officer near the mosque at the time was handed a copy by Razwan Javed, who is brother to Umar Javed, and was then given a second leaflet by Ahmed in nearby Madeley Street. On July 3 and 4, 2010, this leaflet was posted through people's letterboxes in the area.
Miss Cheema said this came after the Burn or Turn and GAY leaflets had been distributed to the people of Derby, in the streets and through their doors.
Miss Cheema said Ali first approached police a few weeks before the planned Gay Pride parade, on July 10, 2010, to talk about a counter-protest by members of the Muslim community and was advised that any placards, signs, flyers or speeches that were made should be carefully worded so as not to commit any criminal offences.
The request for the procession was refused by the council because Ali, of Fairfax Road, Derby, had not submitted the application in time.
Many members of the public complained about the first two leaflets and, on July 1, Ali met with police again and told them his group had been giving them out. He was advised that officers were investigating the leaflets to see if any criminal offences had been committed.
Ali also showed police an A4 page of slogans intended for use on placards. Some had been crossed out by his solicitor, he said, and he asked police to check out the remaining ones.
Miss Cheema said they contained such things as "Stay gay and you will pay" and "Allah created Adam and Eve, not Adam and Steve".
Miss Cheema told jurors that Ali was charged with all four counts on the indictment because the prosecution claims he was the person responsible for organising the distribution of the leaflets.
The jury heard that the charges levelled against the five men involved offences said to have taken place on July 2 and July 4, 2010.
They are all charged with distributing threatening written material intending to stir up hatred on the grounds of sexual orientation contrary to Section 29C (1) of the Public Order Act 1986.
Ali faces four charges, while Hussain, of Rosehill Street, Normanton, and Umar Javed, of Whitaker Street, Derby, are charged with two counts each. Razwan Javed, of Wilfred Street, Derby, and Kabir Ahmed, of Madeley Street, Normanton, are charged with one count each.
Concluding her opening speech, Miss Cheema said the case was not about interfering with the defendants' freedom to express their religious views in an attempt to educate or inform.
She added: "The vast majority of Muslims and indeed other religious people or people with no religion who have firm views about homosexuality are able to express their views, if they wish, in a critical but lawful, moderate and self-controlled way."The Death Penalty leaflet goes beyond well beyond any such temperate discussion."
The trial is expected to last for two to three weeks.

Police investigate chanting at Forest game

This article is published in today's Nottingham Post:
Police investigate chanting at Forest game
Police are treating a report of racist chanting by Nottingham Forest fans during the club's FA Cup derby with Leicester City as a "hate crime".
The force has launched an investigation after a member of the public complained about footage posted on the YouTube website which was recorded by a spectator at last Saturday's match at The City Ground.
The 53-second clip, posted online by user RedAndWhiteDogs, shows a handful of fans in the Main Stand directing chants at Leicester fans in the Bridgford Stand.
The fans are first heard chanting 'England, England, England' before shouting 'You're not anymore, you're not anymore, you used to be English, you're not anymore'.
The clip had last night been viewed more than 2,500 times.
Superintendent Mark Holland, who led the police operation at the match, said: "The incident is being treated as a hate crime and we are reviewing CCTV footage and following up on a number of lines of inquiry.
"We take all reports of racism very seriously and work extremely closely with the football clubs in a bid to kick racism out of the game."
A Nottingham Forest spokesman said: "Nottingham Forest have a zero tolerance attitude towards any inappropriate language at The City Ground.
"Any incidents of racial or abusive language reported to us during the game against Leicester City were dealt with immediately and appropriate action was taken.
"The club are continuing to assist the police with their investigation into this matter."
It is unclear whether the chants referred to Leicester City having Thai owners or the large Asian community in the city.
Having watched the footage Dr Kevin Harvey, a lecturer on sociolinguistics at the University of Nottingham, said: "The context is important in this case. Who or what are the fans directing their abuse at? Is it the owners of Leicester City or the Leicester people?
"Leicester is an ethnically diverse area so if they are aiming their aggression at that target it seems to me there's a prima facie case of racism.
"A lot of commentators argue in football matches you expect this and it's par for the course, but the question is when does it become abusive?"
Keith Mather, chairman of Nottingham Forest Supporters' Club, who went to the match, said: "I didn't hear the chants, but it is wrong and shouldn't be happening.
"In the 40 years I've been following Forest there's never been that underlying racial tension."

CCTV viewed in racist football chant probe

This article is published in today's Leicester Mercury:
CCTV viewed in racist football chant probe
Police investigating alleged racist chants aimed at Leicester's Asian community at an FA Cup tie between Leicester and Nottingham Forest on Saturday are treating the incident as a hate crime.
Video clips posted on YouTube show a group of home fans aiming insults at Leicester City supporters inside and outside Forest's City Ground.
Two Forest fans, who could face lifetime bans, were thrown out after stewards intervened and alerted the police but they were not arrested.
Police said none of the 11 people arrested at the match were detained for alleged racist remarks but stressed investigations were continuing.
Superintendent Mark Holland of Nottinghamshire police said: "The incident is being treated as a hate crime and we are reviewing CCTV footage and following up on a number of lines of inquiry.
"We take all reports of racism very seriously."
The chanting has sparked a heated debate on fans forums which largely condemn those responsible.
Prith Singh, a City season ticket holder born in Leicester and who grew up in the shadow of Filbert Street, started one thread on the Foxes Talk forum.
He said: "I heard the racist chants in the City ground and I was subjected to abuse outside the ground when I was leaving."
He said: "We all like a bit of banter, but racist and homophobic chanting is derogatory and should not be allowed in 2012. Firm action must be taken."
Fellow City fan Kevin Coe, 44, from St Andrew's, Leicester, said: "It was disgusting and must be stamped out. I hope those responsible are banned. I was with my mate who is Asian and he and his son were visibly upset."
Leicester author and keen Liverpool supporter Bali Rai joined the debate on Twitter and said: "Racist issues in football are receiving high profile in the media at the moment. I have no time for racist chants."
Editor of The Fox Fanzine Gary Silke, who has followed City for 37 years, was at the game but did not hear the chants.
He said: "Racist chants are totally unacceptable but there are always a few idiots who make them. You try to ignore it but it is still bubbling underneath. However, it is a thousand times better than it used to be."
A Forest spokesman said: "Nottingham Forest have zero tolerance attitude towards any inappropriate language at The City Ground.
"Any incidents of racial or abusive language reported to us during the game against Leicester City were dealt with immediately and the necessary action was taken."The club will work with the police and continue to investigate any incidents reported. We support all police prosecutions where alleged racism is involved."
He said: "Our stewards identified two men who were allegedly making racist chants and they were removed."
The third round match ended in a 0-0 draw and the replay will be at the King Power Stadium on Wednesday January 18.

Tuesday, 10 January 2012

City named among worst areas of UK for child poverty

This article is published in today's Nottingham Post:
City named among worst areas of UK for child poverty
More than one in three children in Nottingham are growing up in poverty.
The Campaign to End Child Poverty group today names Nottingham as one of the ten most poverty-stricken council areas in the country.
Its figures show 35 per cent of children are living in poverty, compared with the national average of 20 per cent.
Mark Bowyer, of Broxtowe Partnership Trust, which works to provide opportunities for people in the Broxtowe estate area, blames a lack of jobs for the figures.
He said: "We need to have appropriate jobs for the people in our city, who definitely want to work.
"In Nottingham, for most people, this means entry-level jobs with the chance of moving upwards."
Figures released yesterday showed 31.5 per cent of households in Nottingham had no one in a job.
The figures led Nottingham City Council leader Councillor Jon Collins to call on the Government to avoid making spending cuts in the hardest-hit areas.
He said: "The question that needs to be asked is why is Nottingham City Council facing so many Government cuts compared to more affluent areas when so many families are living in poverty?
"Last year, some areas saw increases in their budget, while ourselves and other authorities faced big cuts."
The city council has faced cuts of £60 million this year, with a further £55 million being slashed in the next two years. According to the report, children live in poverty if their family's annual income is below 60 per cent of the UK average of £26,000.
Along with Nottingham, the only areas outside London in ten worst , were Manchester, Derry and Belfast.
The worst-hit area of Nottingham is Aspley, where 52 per cent of children live in poverty, while other problem spots include Bilborough, Bulwell and St Ann's.
Nottingham North MP Graham Allen, whose constituency includes Aspley, feels the figures can be improved.
He said: "We have the attitude in Nottingham to tackle this by getting to the root of problems early.
"With our early-intervention programme in Nottingham, we are equipping children with the social and emotional skills to make the best of themselves."
David Harris, principal of the Nottingham University Samworth Academy, in Bilborough, said: "There are a lot of positive things about Nottingham.
"We work hard here to raise the aspirations of our students to show them that there are opportunities out there and that they can make a success of themselves.
"We have a good bunch of head teachers in this area who are very positive about Nottingham. We are lucky to have young people who want to be successful in this city."
Councillor David Mellen, city council portfolio holder for children's services, said: "We know that a child living in poverty is more likely to have poorer health, lower attainment and less earning potential.
"Therefore, we are undertaking a considerable amount of activity to support parents and carers into work and help them to increase their family income.
"For example, the Nottingham Jobs Fair enabled 536 people to enter work and we have created the £1.5 million Jobs Fund to support young people aged 18 to 24."

"Racist songs at cup game"

This article is published in today's Leicester Mercury:
"Racist songs at cup game"
Allegations of racist and offensive chanting at Saturday's FA Cup match between Leicester City and Nottingham Forest are being investigated by police.
Sections of the home support at Forest's City Ground are said to have sung offensive chants aimed at Leicester's Asian population.
Videos have also surfaced on YouTube of Forest supporters racially abusing Asian City fans outside the stadium.
A spokesperson for Nottinghamshire police confirmed it was aware of the incidents and would be investigating.
Nottingham Forest FC said it would work with the police and continue to investigate any incidents reported.
The third round match finished 0-0. The replay is at the King Power Stadium on Wednesday, January 18.

Prisoners of the street light cuts

This article is published in today's Northants Evening Telegraph:
Prisoners of the street light cuts
Pensioners say they are becoming prisoners in their homes since the county council switched off street lights.
Elderly members of the congregation at St Ninian’s Church, Beanfield Avenue, Corby, have stopped attending functions in the evening because they fear falling over and being injured in the dark.
A fundraising musical concert and dinner planned by the church in February has been cancelled because no-one was prepared to go out in the evening.
Church elder Margaret Malley said: “The performers were booked and the invitations issued but unfortunately the concert has been cancelled because most of the congregation no longer felt safe to venture outside their homes after dark.
“They didn’t feel able to attend something to which they had looked forward.
“Lack of street lighting on the Beanfield estate makes them feel very vulnerable during the hours of darkness, even close to their homes, and consequently fearful of coming to the church in the evenings.”
The church elders have written to Corby Council and the county council to express their concerns.
So far the county council, which switched off half Northamptonshire’s street lights last year to save £2m a year, has not responded.
Mrs Malley said: “As an ageing congregation we understand the need to tighten our belts and to live within our means, apparently more than some politicians.
“It is something that we have all done throughout our lives.
“However, it cannot be right that discretionary spending decisions of the county council impact the most vulnerable in our society the most.”
The church has urged the county council to re-think its decision to ensure that the elderly are not isolated through the fear of stepping outside their own front doors.
Bill Morrison, session clerk at St Ninian’s, said: “The decision to switch off street lights is affecting community life. We understand the need for cutbacks but the way the lights have been switched off has left elderly people in fear of falling. Many are sight-impaired and they are worried they will stumble and be hurt.
“If alternate lights had been switched off it wouldn’t be so bad but this has not been the case.”Mr Morrison said a sequence dance group which meets once a week at the church and has elderly and middle-aged members has changed its starting time from 1.30pm to 12.30pm.He said: “People are simply afraid to be out in the dark.”
Ann Leech, 67, of Farndale Avenue, Corby, and her husband George, 68, are members of St Ninian’s congregation.
Mrs Leech said: “I won’t go out after dark unless I have someone to pick me up and drop me back home. I’m worried about falling on kerbs or other obstacles in the dark. It’s a terrible state of affairs, and very disappointing the concert has had to be cancelled.”
A county council spokesman said: “The lights haven’t been turned off on an ad-hoc basis. We’ve worked hard to establish a rationale, available at www.northamptonshire.gov.uk/streetlights, and have liaised closely with the police to help make our decisions.
“We continue to liaise with the police and monitor any feedback we receive to stay aware of any issues which arise.
“In addition, a new PFI scheme will see all of the county’s street lighting stock replaced over the next five years. The new, modern lighting system will provide a more consistent, better quality of light and will be much cheaper to run.”

Monday, 9 January 2012

Barrister Usha Sood on the Stephen Lawrence verdicts

This is Usha Sood's Guest Column, published in today's Nottingham Post:
Barrister Usha Sood on the Stephen Lawrence verdicts
Usha Sood, human rights barrister based at Trent Chambers writes about the verdicts in the Stephen Lawrence case
Over the years since the Stephen Lawrence Inquiry, we have quietly buried the term "institutional racism", that was originally levelled at the police and other services by the McPherson Report.
In 2011 the Notts Race Equality Council was closed down, despite 50 years of assistance in the field.
This abandonment has unfortunately occurred without achieving full racial justice and tolerance in the UK, while only limited relief for the Lawrence family came from the conviction of Gary Dobson and David Norris, two of the perpetrators of the murderous, unprovoked attack.
In 1999, I was invited by the then Home Secretary Jack Straw to join his McPherson Steering Group to tackle the recommendations of the Lawrence Inquiry, including to institute detailed changes to police processes, monitoring and recruitment, and other measures to combat racism.
This group included the Lawrence parents, Doreen and Neville, who tried time and time again to ensure that the agenda remained focussed on raising awareness about the need for fundamental change among those delivering such important services.
During my tenure on the Steering Group, later Home Secretaries (David Blunkett and Charles Clarke) assumed the steer over the implementation of the McPherson recommendations, but like the Lawrences, I noticed that the Government's will to instill change wilted with Blunkett and Clarke, and the group was eventually disbanded.
A large measure of constructive recommendations had however already been implemented by then, and continue to help the quest for a level society, with effective action against hate crime.
The death on Boxing Day of a young Indian student in Salford, in a similar unprovoked killing, is an all too painful reminder that the search for respect for human life and dignity still needs nurturing, and that society has still to overcome ingrained racism.

The Big Society emerges at last - as a musical

This article is published in today's Independent:
The Big Society emerges at last - as a musical 
Phill Jupitus to star in theatrical send up of the Prime Minster's grand concept
You've heard the soundbite, you've listened to the speech – now enjoy the musical parody. For anyone still grappling with David Cameron's notion of the Big Society, help is at hand. The Prime Minister's idea has been given the Good Old Days treatment and is due to be performed in Edwardian music hall-style.
The all-singing, all-dancing Big Society! premieres at the newly restored Leeds City Varieties later this month starring the Never Mind the Buzzcocks comedian Phill Jupitus.
The show has been written and composed by Boff Whalley, the guitarist with Chumbawamba, the band whose former lead singer, Danbert Nobacon, famously decanted an ice bucket over John Prescott at the 1998 Brit Awards in protest at Labour's refusal to back the Liverpool dock workers.
Despite being set in 1910, the Red Ladder theatre company's production seeks to draw parallels with the present day. The story centres on the exploits of a variety show cast in a country presided over by an ageing monarch, run by an elitist government of public schoolboys and bedevilled by a corrupt media establishment.It also marks a return to more radical roots for Jupitus, who began his performing life as a punk poet and was part of Red Wedge, the anti-Thatcher music and comedy collective that included the socialist pin-ups Paul Weller and Billy Bragg.
In an interview with The Independent, Jupitus admitted that while he did not look back on the political scene of the 1980s with any great affection, he was perhaps even more deeply demoralised by today's system.
"The way politics is now there is no passion in it. For everything that was wrong with Thatcher and her cabinet, they were clearly defined, identifiable characters. I challenge any of your readers to name six people in the Cabinet today," he said.Jupitus, who as well as being a panel show regular on QI and The News Quiz has appeared in the musicals Spamalot and Hairspray, admitted that he too struggled to define what the Big Society actually was. "I don't even understand what he [Mr Cameron] means by it. It's something that sounded good to a focus group," he said.He urged working people to remember the struggles of the past. "This notion that trade unions are wrong is endemic in society at the moment, that they are somehow bad people. But we wouldn't have any employment rights if it wasn't for trade union activists at the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th century.
"People wouldn't have rights, women wouldn't have rights. There wouldn't be a lunch break, there wouldn't be tea breaks. People wouldn't have holidays."