Thursday, 24 February 2022

Banner Sends Message That Fight for Trees at Bradwell Hospital Goes On.

 


Campaigners fighting to protect trees on land adjacent to Bradwell Hospital have put up a banner to tell developers they haven’t given up their struggle.

 

The trees have been under threat since early last year due to plans by developers Seddon to build 85 homes on the site. Residents fearing the loss of a green space valued by the community have joined with Save Newcastle’s Green Sites to oppose the plans.

 

The Banner, which is twenty feet long and reads ‘Save Our Trees- All Life Matters was put up overnight and is clearly visible to passing traffic.

 

Bradwell is only one of several sites including the former Keele Golf Course that have come under threat of development as part of Newcastle-under-Lyme Borough Council’s plans to meet increased need for housing in the area.

 

Campaigners fear that in doing so habitats that are vital to wildlife will be lost, this will have a detrimental impact on already declining biodiversity. They are also concerned at the harm losing a green space they use for recreation will do to the wellbeing of people living nearby.

 

A spokesperson for Save Newcastle’s Green Sites said, ‘we recognize the need for more housing in the borough, but the council are going about delivering it in the wrong way’.

 

Adding that ‘the first options should be to build on brownfield sites and repurpose existing buildings that are standing empty’.

 

The group has repeatedly challenged the council on the way it has conducted the consultation into its ‘strategic options’ for building housing in the borough, particularly in relation to how difficult they have made it for people to raise objections.

 

Speaking about the banner the spokesperson said it was a ‘demonstration of our determination to work with communities to protect the green spaces they value from thoughtless development’.

Monday, 21 February 2022

Fresh Air Bears Come To Town with a Serious Message.

 


If you go down to Newcastle-under-Lyme town centre on Saturday 26th February, you'll be in for a big surprise.

 

Community group Stop the Stink/Cap it Off are holding a family event in Queens Gardens to highlight the impact of the 'stink' from Walley's Quarry on the health of local children.

 

The event will begin with a march through the town centre starting from Bridge Street at 10:30am.

 

There will be music and comedy at various points along the march, followed by speakers and activities for children in Queen's Gardens.

 

These will include an opportunity for young people to express how they feel about the: stink' and other environmental issues by writing and drawing in 'Fresh Air Bears' to be used to decorate a special tree.

 

Speakers at the event will include consultant in children's medicine Dr Iain Sinha and families living in near to the quarry describing their experiences.

 

Other speakers will include representatives from groups campaigning to protect green spaces in the borough and local trades unions.

 

Refreshments will be available from a stall in Queen’s Gardens run by Better Together.

 

The event will be advertised by a powerful social media campaign using dramatic images to represent the lived experience of families living near to Walley’s Quarry.

 

There will be a special guest appearance by a yet to be named celebrity, full details will be announced later this week.

 

The event will conclude at 3pm (approximate).

 

Updates and information are available at the Stop the Stink/Cap It Off Facebook page:

https://www.facebook.com/groups/191757102657715

 

 

 

Monday, 14 February 2022

The Cost-of-Living Crisis Will Result in Thousands of Entirely Avoidable Deaths.

 


On Saturday 12th February activists from North Staffs Green Party took part in a protest against the raising of the cap on energy prices.

 

The event took place outside Hanley bus station and was organised by Staffordshire People's Assembly. Also represented were local trades unions, and groups campaigning for asylum seekers and disability rights.

 

The protest was part of a national day of action with similar events taking place in twenty-five towns across the county including London, Birmingham, and Manchester.

 

Speaking to the Guardian on Saturday General Secretary of the People’s Assembly and former Labour MP Laura Pidcock said there was ‘real anger’ over the rising cost of living and the government’s failure to take effective action.

 

She added that “Working people could not be working harder and yet life is getting so much more difficult,” and that as a result “Older people will be cold in their homes, people will be struggling to feed their children, when none of this is a crisis of their making”. [1]

 

Speaking at the protest a representative of North Staffs Greens said that poverty was a 'contagion' in our society, and that it had a devastating impact on people's physical and mental health.

 

Zoe Nicholson, the leader of Lewes District Council and Green Party spokesperson for the Green New Deal said earlier this month of government support for people struggling to pay their bills "At a time when millions of people across the country are facing unprecedented rises in energy prices, the government's solution fails to respond to the seriousness of either the cost-of-living crisis or the climate crisis”.

 

She went on to say “Instead of a simple and effective payment to everybody as we suggested, he has put forward a buy-now pay-later scheme which will create an additional burden for those on the lowest incomes further down the line”.

 

Adding that “At the same time he has done nothing to help reduce bills and reduce carbon emissions by insulating people’s homes, and instead opted to prop up the fossil fuel companies whose profits are sky-rocketing at the expense of all of us as well as the environment [2]”.

 

The Green Party has put forward a five-point plan for addressing the cost-of-living crisis.

 

They call for grants to help people at risk of falling into fuel poverty insulate their homes, an extension to winter fuel payments, more investment in renewable energy and for the hike in National Insurance payments to be scrapped.

 

This would be paid for through a windfall tax on energy companies including BP, who this week announced profits exceeding £9.5billion.

 

Speaking at the protest the Green Party representative said they stood in solidarity with 'children having to go to school with holes in their shoes, parents going hungry so their kids can eat and old people who have worked all their lives, and now can't heat their homes'.

 

Speakers from other groups also expressed concern about the impact of rising energy prices and other pressures on household budgets.

 

Blythe Taylor, a member of Stoke and Crewe Socialist Workers Party said it was an 'attack on the living standards of working-class people'.

 

A representative of Staffordshire Disabled People Against Cuts said combined with the difficulties they face due to Universal Credit a rise in household heating costs risked causing 'untold numbers of entirely avoidable deaths.

 

A speaker from Acorn, a group campaigning on housing and other community issues urged people to follow the example set by the Diggers, Chartists and Suffragettes by organising and fighting back.

 

The People's Assembly have announced dates for two further national protests, these will be held on 2nd March and 5th April.

 

A spokesperson for North Staffs Green Party said the event in Hanley had 'shown the depth of public concern around an issue that will have an impact on everyone'.

 

Adding that they party would be 'working with local trades unions and the People's Assembly to make the next two events bigger and better. Things do not have to be like this, through partnership and organisation we can bring about change'.

 

[1]https://www.theguardian.com/business/2022/feb/12/uk-cost-of-living-protesters-demonstrate-peoples-assembly

 

[2]https://www.greenparty.org.uk/news/2022/02/03/government%E2%80%99s-response-to-energy-crisis-creates-future-risk-rather-than-future-proofing,-greens-warn/

 

Tuesday, 8 February 2022

We Must All Work Together to Protect Vulnerable Households from the Cost-of-Living Crisis.


 North Staffs Green Party has put its support behind a campaign run jointly by Staffordshire People’s Assembly and North Staffordshire Trades Union Council calling for energy bills to be capped.

 

Last week energy regulator OFGEM announced that it would raise the price cap on household energy bills by more than 50%, seeing costs for the average household rise to £1,277 this winter, on top of a previous increase of 12% announced in August last year [1].

 

Attempting to avoid negative publicity at a time when the government is stumbling from one crisis to the next the Treasury announced measures to soften the blow of rising energy prices. These included a £200 rebate on energy bills for every household, this would then be paid back through bills in subsequent years.

 

Fuel poverty campaign groups have expressed disappointment at the measures put in place, a spokesperson for the End Fuel Poverty Coalition told the Guardian the rise in the price cap would be “be somewhere between devastating and catastrophic for millions of people across the country, could very quickly wipe out any support these loans can provide [2]”.

 

Also speaking to the Guardian Claire Moriarty chief executive of Citizens Advice said that around the country frontline advisers were hearing “desperate stories of families living in just one room to keep warm, people turning off their fridges to save money and others relying on hot-water bottles instead of heating due to fears about mounting bills.”

 

A spokesperson for North Staffs Green Party said “the cost-of-living crisis is driving families who are doing all they can to get by into poverty and in the very worst cases destitution. The package of measures put forward by the Treasury do not even come close to meeting the scale of need. There is a very real risk that if action is not taken lives will be lost”.

 

The rise to the cap on energy prices comes at a time when households are facing increasing pressure on their finances. Rising inflation rates, predicted to be above £% by April next year mean everyone will be hit by rising prices, but low-income households will be hit hardest due to having less of a financial ‘buffer’ against unexpected expenses [3].

 

In January the Green Party put forward a five-point plan to address rising fuel costs and the impending climate crisis.

 

The plan calls for emergency grants to help those at risk of fuel poverty to insulate their homes, an extension to winter fuel payments, a windfall tax on the profits of oil and as companies, higher investment in renewable energy and scrapping the proposed increase in National Insurance payments [4].

 

Green Party co-leader Carla Denyer said the plan represented the “sort of positive and radical action we need to protect the most vulnerable in society and ensure that we can all live a more comfortable life, at the same time as taking real action on climate change to provide longer-term security”

 

The campaign will see activists take to the streets across the county to protest against the rise to the price cap and to call for the government to provide more support to struggling households.

 

In a statement made on Facebook the organisers say: “The Government has failed. Join the protests outside Hanley Bus Station on Lidice Way! Bring friends, workmates, placards, banners and noise!”

 

Groups represented at the Stoke-on-Trent protest include North Staffs Climate Coalition and Stoke XR, other participants will be announced on the day.

 

The spokesperson for North Staffs Green Party said: “we stand with the Trades Council, the People’s Assembly and all other groups involved in calling for an energy policy that leaves nobody out in the cold”.

 

The protest will take place on Lidice Way, outside Hanley Bus Station at 13:00pm.

 

 

[1]https://www.theguardian.com/money/2022/feb/02/energy-bills-rise-ofgem-price-cap

[2] https://www.theguardian.com/business/2022/feb/02/treasury-preparing-11th-hour-package-to-soften-national-cost-of-living-crisis?link_id=19&can_id=8bc5e413fe5b14a23ca14eb06da17776&source=email-green-party-morning-briefing-wed-2-feb&email_referrer=email_1430737&email_subject=green-party-morning-briefing-thurs-3-feb

[3]https://www.jrf.org.uk/report/uk-poverty-2022?utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=JRF%20Newsletter%2021%20January%202022&utm_content=JRF%20Newsletter%2021%20January%202022+CID_c53a2a4fb4087b0d36a1112428db940f&utm_source=Email%20marketing%20software&utm_term=Read%20the%20report

[4]https://www.greenparty.org.uk/news/2022/01/06/green-party-five-point-plan-for-warm-homes,-lower-bills-and-a-safer-climate/?link_id=2&can_id=8bc5e413fe5b14a23ca14eb06da17776&source=email-carla-adrians-100-days-in-office-whats-next&email_referrer=email_1426825&email_subject=carla-adrians-100-days-in-office-whats-next


Tuesday, 1 February 2022

Leadership Team Mark Their First One Hundred Days with Ambitious Plan to Tackle the Cost-of-Living Crisis.

 

Green Party co-leaders Carla Denyer and Adrian Ramsey have marked their first one hundred days in office by setting out plans to tackle the cost-of- living crisis [1].

 

Figures produced by the Office for National Statistics (ONS) show that 66% of adults in the UK reported their cost of living had risen over the past month, driven by sharply rising fuel prices [2]

 

This will hit hardest those households living on lower incomes making them more likely to experience fuel poverty, in 2019 an estimated 3.18 million people in the UK who were struggling to pay for household energy [3]. The ONS statistics show 72% of respondents citing higher gas and electricity charges as making it harder to make ends meet.

 

Following decisions made at their autumn conference the Green Party will be backing councillors in all the local authorities where they have representation to call for a ‘retrofit revolution,’ which will provide insulation for thousands of homes, reducing harm to the environment and helping families who are struggling to pay their heating bills this winter.

 

Carla Denyer said, “Once again, this government is doing nothing while millions of people in England and Wales are left facing the prospect of having to choose between eating and heating, and things look like they are only going to get worse.”

 

Adding that, “Greens are not sitting around waiting for the Government to make a move. We are taking the lead from the ground up. Green Party councillors will ask their local authorities to trial a scheme which should ensure that families across the country have warmer homes and cheaper bills”.

 

Green Party councillors in Lewes are working with six other local authorities to mobilise £1billion to retrofit 40,000 homes. This approach if multiplied by the six hundred councillors the Green Party has at all levels of local government in England and Wales could bring about significant and beneficial changes.

 

Zoe Nicholson, Green leader of Lewes District Council said, “Working with other councils means that we can move faster on retrofitting, solve the skills crisis in the workforce by developing a guaranteed pipeline of work for the renewable industry, and form local retrofit taskforces that will help those in private rented accommodation and homeowners.” 

 

Speaking about the work in Lewes Adrian Ramsay said, “If councils pool resources and look to work collaboratively, it will not only create a huge demand for jobs, it will also help the millions of people who are forced to live with the incredible stress of not knowing how they are going to pay their bills”.

 

Adding that “On top of that, this is a serious boost to tackling climate change. Energy is the biggest carbon emitter in the UK. As Greens we are determined to do everything we can to create warm homes, cheaper bills and a safer environment."

 

Green councillors will also push local authorities to do more to work with colleges and universities to develop the workforce of the future by providing training in skills useful to the green economy.

 

The co-leaders also marked their first milestone in office by calling for the government to reverse the removal of the £20 uplift to Universal Credit, this would provide support worth £1000 a year to struggling households.

 

This is part of plans to deal with the problem of climate change whilst providing warm homes and manageable bill for struggling households set out by the party at the start of January.

 

In a five-point plan they call for an emergency grant to fund insulation and other home improvements for those at risk of fuel poverty, an extension to winter fuel payments, a windfall tax on the profits of polluting oil and gas companies, increased investment in renewable energy, and scrapping the proposed increase to National Insurance payments.

 

Launching the policy in January Carla Denyer said, “This is the sort of positive and radical action we need to protect the most vulnerable in society and ensure that we can all live a more comfortable life, at the same time as taking real action on climate change to provide longer-term security” [4].

 

Speaking about the plans to launch a ‘retrofit revolution’ and to continue the party’s calls for action to be taken on the cost-of-living crisis Adrian Ramsey said the Greens were ‘leading the way’.

 

Co-leader Carla Denyer added that, “Work like this shows why it is so important to elect Green representatives at every level of government. A Green in the room makes a difference.”

 

[1]https://www.greenparty.org.uk/news/2022/01/31/green-party-leaders-set-out-plans-to-tackle-cost-of-living-crisis-to-mark-first-100-days/?link_id=1&can_id=8bc5e413fe5b14a23ca14eb06da17776&source=email-carla-adrians-100-days-in-office-whats-next&email_referrer=email_1426825&email_subject=carla-adrians-100-days-in-office-whats-next

[2]https://www.ons.gov.uk/economy/inflationandpriceindices/articles/energypricesandtheireffectonhouseholds/2022-02-01

[3]https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/966509/Annual_Fuel_Poverty_Statistics_LILEE_Report_2021__2019_data_.pdf

[4]https://www.greenparty.org.uk/news/2022/01/06/green-party-five-point-plan-for-warm-homes,-lower-bills-and-a-safer-climate/?link_id=2&can_id=8bc5e413fe5b14a23ca14eb06da17776&source=email-carla-adrians-100-days-in-office-whats-next&email_referrer=email_1426825&email_subject=carla-adrians-100-days-in-office-whats-next

 

 

 

 

Sunday, 30 January 2022

It is Vital that We Defeat Tommy Robinson and his Hate-Filled Ideology.

 


It is a Saturday afternoon in late January and there is just enough sunlight to suggest that things might get warmer some time soon. In Southwater Square in the Shropshire town of Telford to protest against notorious racist rabble rouser Tommy Robison trying to use a rally in the town to relaunch his career, this time as an investigative journalist and filmmaker [1].

 

“We’re here to vent our anger,” an activist tells me both at Robinson and the Johnson government, which this week as its twists and turns over ‘partygate’ became even more convoluted seems finally have crossed the line into absurdity.

 

Activists have come from across the midlands and beyond to attend the event, something attested to by the banners and placards on display. These range from huge beautifully embroidered ones belonging to trades union branches held up on heavy wooden frames and will become increasingly hard to mange as the day gets windier, to simple placards made of cardboard and written out on the train on the way to Telford.

 

Robinson, real name Stephen Christopher Yaxley-Lennon [2], is a right-wing activist linked at various stages of his political career with the BNP, the British Freedom Party and other, mostly now defunct, far right groups and was an adviser to former UKIP leader. His claim to fame, or notoriety anyway, is as the leader of the English Defence League from 2009 to 2013. His journalistic career has, to date been limited to writing for Canadian far right website Rebel News and appearing in ranting Facebook videos.

 

His criminal career has been more prolific, Robinson has racked up convictions for crimes including violence, stalking and immigration fraud. These have seen him jailed on numerous occasions, his most recent brush with the law in October last year saw him made subject of a five-year stalking order for harassing a journalist.

 

On the day of the rally Robinson is thought to have brought some 1500 supporter to Telford, newspaper photographs of them marching from the railway station show several giving Nazi salutes.

 

Arriving earlier in the day with a party of activists from Stoke-on-Trent I encountered a small number of his supporters along with the increased police presence mounted to curtail any potential flashpoints. They were, drawn straight from fascist central casting, older seedy looking men with short hair and tattoos drinking from cans and scowling at everyone they deemed to be different from their perceived norm.

 

Braver in crowds than alone most stayed silent or shouted muffled comments when they were a safe distance away. Later as the protest column approached where Robinson was holding his rally some more courageous of his supporters would periodically run up to us to shout abuse, usually holding up a mobile phone to record their ‘bravery’ for posterity. The overall impression was of deep anger without much in the way of intelligence to give it focus.

 

Robinson had been planning to hold his rally, at which he would be airing a film allegedly exposing links between the local Muslim community and child abuse, in the square where the counterdemonstration was assembling. This, one activist told me, had been quashed by councillors for the town and they had been relocated to a carpark by the station.

 

The abuse claims made against the Muslim community in Telford have not been proved and anti-racist group Hope Not Hate draw links between Robinson’s making them and a longer history of far-right groups using sexual allegations as a slur, citing as an example accusations of paedophilia made against the Jews in 1930’s Germany.

 

They also highlight the significant hypocrisy Robinson has shown in relation to paedophiles amongst his own supporters saying he has ‘an appalling record of confronting paedophilia and abuse within his own team and amongst his supporters. Lennon has consistently ignored or even defended occurrences of these crimes in his own ranks, proving that he is more concerned with attacking Muslims than actually combatting CSE or challenging sexual violence’ [3].

 

They point to the high number of active paedophiles identified as leading members of the EDL, including Brett Moses, given a suspended sentence for ‘child grooming’ in 2010, Leigh McMillan jailed for sexual offences going back to the 1990’s and, most sickeningly the convicted murderer Robert Ewing.

 

Hope Not Hate condemn sexual abuse in all its forms but point out that Robinson is using unfounded accusations to stir up division and promote a political ideology filled with prejudice and hatred. They write ‘Child sexual exploitation reaches across all communities, and these sickening actions involve men from all ethnic backgrounds. Lennon’s relentless exploitation of others’ pain is an insult to survivors and to those who work tirelessly to demand justice and build support services for survivors. His failure to condemn child sexual exploitation within his own ranks only highlights his hypocrisy as no ally of the pushback against CSE’.

 

This would be echoed in the speeches made on the day, Louise Regan, a national officer with the National Education Union said he was ‘scapegoating’ the Muslim community to further his political ambitions, adding that it was ‘absolutely crucial’ that people came together to oppose him. Wahid, a spokesperson for the Muslim community in Telford denounced Robinson as a ‘thug’ and a ‘racist’ who had repeatedly told lies, adding that as a father himself he ‘abhorred’ child abuse but refused to keep quiet when unfounded accusations are used to sow division.

 

Other speakers linked the rise of support for extremist views to a decade of austerity economics and the social divisions intensified by the pandemic. They called for working people to come together to oppose fascism and to fight for improved public services.

 

Robinson may have been forced to relocate his rally, this hadn’t deterred his supporters from traveling to Telford to hear him and an undercard of right wing ranters speak. This became apparent as we reached the carpark where it was being held, which had been fitted out with a stage of the sort seen at music festivals, a powerful PA system and a huge screen.

 

This, one activist told me, suggested that Robinson was being backed by ‘serious money’ from some source. A worrying prospect only slightly relieved when another activist pointed out to me, and with the aid of a bull horn to the star of the circus, that ‘he’s so stupid he can’t even fly the flag the right way up’.

 

It would be easy to see Tommy Robinson as a clown, the latest in a long line of far-right bogeymen who rise up, caper about the stage for a moment and then sink back into obscurity. There was little in his film, portions of which we were treated to from the far side of the road where we were corralled by the police, that suggests his latest re-invention as a journalist will be any more successful than any of his numerous other ones.

 

There are though things that should give pause for thought followed by some sleepless nights. Putting on an event the size of the one in Telford does require serious money, more certainly that the, allegedly, bankrupt Robinson could lay his hands on. The anger on which he thumps out an awkward tune like an ape trying to play the piano is very real and runs deeper in the community than just the usual suspects standing in the cold clutching their flags.

 

As an individual Tommy Robinson is a clownish figure, a strutting bully long on angry invective but forever short of much in the way of reason to back up his arguments. He might though serve as a useful, if noisy, place holder for a far right that can see a moment of opportunity approaching and just needs a leader with better social skills to make it appear acceptable to a public frustrated by the failings of mainstream politics.

 

That makes it even more important, something highlighted by all the speakers on the day, that all sections of the left come together to defeat not just Tommy Robinson, but the hate filled ideology for which the is, for the moment, the front man.

 

[1]https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/newsbirmingham/thousands-take-part-in-telford-protests-as-tommy-robinson-airs-documentary/ar-AAThab3

[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tommy_Robinson_%28activist%29

[3]https://hopenothate.org.uk/2022/01/11/tommy-robinson-is-a-hypocrite-when-it-comes-to-opposing-child-sexual-exploitation/

 

Thursday, 20 January 2022

Newcastle Council Assault on Green Space in Bradwell is ‘Disgraceful’ Say North Staffs Greens.

  


“The hypocrisy of the leader of a council that is trashing green spaces chairing a board promoting sustainability is nauseating".

 

“I’m devastated our council haven’t protected it’s people and the environment from the developers, I feel completely ignored by my concerns that have been swept under the carpet despite our legitimate concerns”.

 

This is what Bradwell resident Jessica Mellor wrote in a Facebook post responding to the news that Newcastle-under-Lyme Borough Council had granted developers Seddon Homes permission to build eighty-five houses on land to the north of Bradwell Hospital.

 

This will see one hundred and twenty trees felled to make way for the houses, last year residents formed Save Newcastle’s Green Sites to campaign to protect this and other threatened green spaces.

 

MS Mellor wrote to Peter Stepien, Landscaping Officer at the borough council, protesting on behalf of the group at the plans to fell trees on the Bradwell site.

 

His reply, as quoted in the Facebook post was: “I’m afraid planning permission has been granted for this development. This includes tree removal.”

 

A spokesperson for North Staffs Green Party said: “granting planning permission to build on this site and destroying 120 trees in the process represents a serious assault on a much-valued green space”.

 

Going on to add: “we fully support the efforts of residents in Bradwell and other communities to defend green spaces that are vital to their health and wellbeing and to preserving threatened nature”.

 

Describing her feelings about the loss to the trees and green space Jessica Mellor writes in her Facebook post: “I am looking to move home as I cannot stand and watch them tear down and destroy all those tree’s alongside killing any animals who utilise the land, I have seen foxes, squirrels, all sorts of birds there and they are losing their home and probably their lives. It genuinely gives me anxiety and I am tearful and helpless at this appalling decision.”


On the same day Jessica Mellor wrote her heartfelt Facebook post about the impact felling trees at Bradwell hospital will have on her wellbeing Simon Tagg, leader of the borough council and Councillor Joe Porter were named as Chair and Vice Chair of the newly formed Staffordshire Sustainability Board.

 

In a Twitter post Councillor Porter writes that ‘Across Staffordshire all our councils are working together in partnership to tackle climate change and recover nature’.

 

The spokesperson for North Staffs Green Party said: “the hypocrisy of the leader of a council that is trashing green spaces chairing a board promoting sustainability is nauseating. They are not working to recover nature and are doing nothing to tackle climate change”.

 

Save Newcastle’s Green Sites have produced a hard-hitting YouTube video highlighting the impact felling to trees at Bradwell will have and urging residents of Newcastle to respond to the public consultation on the council’s Strategic Options for green spaces.

 

It can be watched at:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6_sfv8DvoXo

 

They have also launched a petition of the Newcastle-under-Lyme Borough Council website, accessible at:

https://tinyurl.com/budtjc33