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Rainbow Fund benefits from local fundraising

Rainbow FundThe Rainbow Fund has recently been supported by three fundraising events, these are:

·         The Queen’s Arms raising £285.52

·         Charles Street’s 9th Annual Cabaret raising £351.03

·         Half of the proceeds of the bucket collection at Maisie Trollette’s glittering 80th Birthday Show at the Theatre Royal which raised £497.45, with the other half of the £994.90 going to the Sussex Beacon.

Rainbow Fund Chairman Paul Elgood, said:

“We would like to thank the organisers and performers at the three events who did so much to put together three tremendous occasions for the community. This money will go towards our grant funding, directly benefitting local LGBT and HIV groups who provide front line services to the community.”

The Rainbow Fund is a grants panel of the Sussex Community Foundation, and distributes funding to small, volunteer-led LGBT and HIV/AIDS community groups. The Rainbow Fund benefits from a number of high profile events each year. There are no salaries, office overheads or expenses related to the Fund, except for the professional advice it receives from the Sussex Community Foundation to ensure the safe and transparent distribution of funds.

Applications closed on October 11 for the latest round of Rainbow Fund grant funding, with decisions made by the end of November.

 

Labour critical of Police Commissioner’s plans to raise Council Tax

Brighton and Hove Labour say Sussex’s Tory Police Commissioner’s plans to put up Council Tax shows “the failure of her Government’s policy of slashing funding for key local services while at the same time demanding a freeze in Council Tax year after year”.

The Government is forcing cuts of £26 million on Sussex Police, meaning it cannot invest in services.  Katy Bourne, Sussex’s Police and Crime Commissioner, has suggested one of the options she is considering to tackle the shortfall is increasing the Council Tax precept by up to 3.6%, despite her election manifesto commitment to a Council Tax freeze just 18 months ago.  An increase of 3.6% is the highest amount she can bring forward without requiring a local referendum and would add £5 a year to Band D taxpayers.

Cllr Warren Morgan
Cllr Warren Morgan

Councillor Warren Morgan, one of the two Labour councillors who sit on the Sussex Police and Crime Panel, said:

“This shows that the Conservative policy of imposing massive cuts on police, councils and local services whilst promising council tax freezes is unsustainable and unrealistic. Anything below an inflation linked rise is a cut in funding.  Slashing millions from public service grants can’t be covered by savings. The Tories, locally at least, are waking up to that, but residents hit by falling wages and rising bills will pay the price.”

Katy Bourne
Katy Bourne

Katy Bourne, the Sussex Police & Crime Commissioner, responded saying:

“I have a statutory obligation to set the police budget.  I fulfilled my election pledge not to raise the precept in my first year of office and, as a result, residents have paid the same amount for policing in Sussex for the last four years making Sussex the lowest of all Shire forces and the fourth lowest in England and Wales.  However, in order to enable investment and ensure Sussex Police is sufficiently resourced to meet future challenges, I am consulting on a number of precept options for 2014-15 including another tax freeze or a 2% increase which would add £2.70 a year to Band D taxpayers.

“I am pleased to report that, despite the enormous challenge set, Sussex Police are on track to achieve the savings required by 2015. However, in order to meet the emerging crime threats, I need to consider whether it is necessary to secure additional funding next year.  I am duty bound to inform the Police and Crime Panel of my considerations and I will be consulting the residents and taxpayers of Sussex to help inform my decision in January 2014.”

 

UK’s first dedicated Trans FM Radio Show

Time 4 TransRadioReverb recently started what is believed to be the UK’s first regular show by and for Transgender people on FM in the UK.

The show is presented by Trans stand-up comedian and activist Claire Parker.

Time 4 T  features interviews, news and music, and will broadcast monthly on 97.2FM in Brighton & Hove and online at www.radioreverb.com on the third Sunday of the month and repeated the following Monday @ at 8am – Wednesday @ 2pm and Thursday @ 3am

Claire said:

“I am really excited and privileged to be hosting Time 4 T. Representation of trans people is a passion of mine and I firmly believe that we (trans) should be doing the representing. Someone recently challenged me with, “If you want a thing done well do it yourself”, So I am. I firmly believe that it’s now time 4 the T in LGBT to be heard across the air waves.”

Claire recently project managed with the BBC Writers room the Trans Comedy Award, a £5,000 award for a positive trans themed comedy script sitcom as well as supporting the Brighton Transformed project.

The next show goes out at 3pm on the October 20 @ 3pm and is a Pink List special with journalist Juliet Jacques and  Trans Politician Sarah Brown appearing via Skype.

RadioReverb also has its own weekly dedicated LGBT show, Out In Brighton presented by Cathy Caton who appears in the new Independent On Sunday Pink List of the 100 most influential LGBT people in the UK.

Radio Reverb is also the broadcast partner in QueensSpark Books groundbreaking oral history project capturing the stories of Trans people in Brighton and Hove,  Brighton Transformed facebook.com/BrightonTransformed

 

 

 

Local broadcaster appears on Independent’s ‘Pink List’

Kathy Caton
Kathy Caton

A Brighton broadcaster has been named by a national newspaper as one of the most influential Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender (LGBT) people in the UK.

Kathy Caton, producer and presenter of RadioReverb’s Out in Brighton appeared in the Independent on Sunday as one of its 101 most influential people in its annual Pink List, announced on 13.10.13.

Out in Brighton is the only LGBT radio show on the city’s airwaves, featuring a range of subjects from theatre to health.

Out in Brighton is a globally influential LGBT show with listeners in Taiwan, Brazil and beyond, featuring in-depth interviews and musicians such as the Chalkwell Ladies Drum ‘n’ Bass League. She helps run the LGBT staff network BBC Pride and the cross-industry InterMedia network.

Kathy, said:

“I’m absolutely delighted to be named on the Pink List with such an amazing collection of people.  I’ve loved being able to use Out In Brighton to get LGBT voices and stories on air that you don’t get to hear on mainstream media – I’ve met amazing activists, community workers, artists and musicians through doing the show – it’s a privilege to help get those voices heard.”

Melita Dennett, Director of RadioReverb, said:

“I am pleased that Kathy has been acknowledged for her work in giving a voice to people marginalised by mainstream media, She’s developed an engaging show which deals sensitively and intelligently  with subjects like living with HIV, LGBT arts and culture and stories from Trans people told in their own words.” 

Paris Lees, Channel 4 and Radio 1’s first trans woman presenter topped the list with TV and radio presenter Clare Balding and Human Rights Campaigner Peter Tatchell shared joint second place.

To view the complete Pink List, CLICK HERE:

 

Out in Brighton is broadcast every Wednesday 5-6pm on 97.2FM in Brighton & Hove and online at www.radioreverb.com.

Dyslexia & Dyspraxia Awareness Week 2013

Mike Weatherley MP supports National Dyslexia & Dyspraxia Awareness Week
Mike Weatherley MP supports National Dyslexia & Dyspraxia Awareness Week

Monday, October 14 was the first day of National Dyslexia & Dyspraxia Awareness Week 2013, created to boost people’s knowledge of the conditions. According to the British Dyslexia Association, the aim of the week is to debunk the myth that dyslexia is just a difficulty with reading and spelling, and to highlight the other difficulties that dyslexic people face, such as poor short-term memory, maths difficulties and poor organisational skills, while also drawing attention to the strengths that it can bring.

Dyspraxia is a form of developmental coordination disorder (DCD), a common disorder affecting fine and/or gross motor coordination, in both children and adults.

In order to help raise understanding locally of both dyslexia and dyspraxia, Mike Weatherley, the Conservative MP for Hove and Portslade, is backing the national awareness week campaign, which has the support of local campaigner Sheila Brooks.

Sheila is founder of Red Zebra, a Brighton & Hove group which aims to improve the experience of those with dyslexia and dyspraxia through direct involvement with children and young people and by spreading awareness and providing support and training for families and teachers. She has organised an information stand in Barclays Bank at the bottom of George Street in Hove.

For further information on the group, CLICK HERE:  www.redzebrahove.co.uk

Mike said:

“I am delighted to be able to support this year’s Dyslexia & Dyspraxia Awareness Week and wish Sheila all the best in running an information stand in central Hove. I hope that any residents who have questions about either dyslexia or dyspraxia will pop down to find out more.”

JOE LYCETT @Brighton Comedy Festival: Dome Studio: Review

Joe Lycett Dome

From his first off-stage moment, doing some good old audience warming up from the wings with his distinctive nasal voice prompting the up for it audience to whoop, ohhhh and clap I relaxed, Lycett has that rare and difficult talent; threatening camp. It’s delightful, he’ll be fun as long we are fun, but push him and he slaps. It’s a well aimed slap too, nothing too much, just a hint of menace and the threat that his milquetoast ire might hide a sea of wrath and then a quick pull back, a smile and back to the jokes.

His lovely story of dispatching some homophobic hooligan lads was a delight and offered us a world view from Lycett, his ability to overcome aggression and threat using his own psychotic Mary Poppins approach of ‘now lets all behave… or else.’  He then goes on to explain that he’s bisexual, although i wonder if waking up after crashing out at a party with a naked girl next to you really knocks you out of the gay paddock.

He’s great, nice and simple and loveable too, a cuddly mix of Kenneth Williams and Julian Clary  but with a distinct voice all his own. He opened his show with some good material then stopped and walked into the audience, to greet and interrogate a dozen straight lads wearing masks of Lycett’s face on a stag night (with the stag dressed up as Beyonce), gently explaining that there was no Beyonce material in the show, it was just a pun. He then milked then for laughs in a gentle but firm way. Great fun and this relaxed surety of touch made us all kick back, relax and enjoy him.

135013-go-joe-lycetts-in-townLearn more of Joe and his thoughts on life here on his website:

His material feels like three 20 minutes slots cobbled together and there’s no coherent connection to it, but this doesn’t matter as the quality of his rambling oddness and beguiling charm overcomes this. He shares his taunting treatment of major corporations and his cyber assaults on pomposity which are genius funny and also gives us an insight into his deeper psychological naughty  self, his ‘Walrus’ side. This running joke is deftly woven throughout the night and underscores his tendency to blurt and trust on it being funny, and he is funny.

Lycett was fun to watch for an hour, gliding round stage making every one laugh, caressing the audience, occasionally shocking us just for fun (and one suspects to keep us in order)  then bringing it all back into some warm deeply personal self deconstruction and silliness.

The show is greater than its parts and his warm engaging style of comedy keept our attention.  He’s been around and is picking up awards the way some pick up STD’s, so catch him before the slick Dr’s get hold of him.  I liked him and left with a smile on my face.

Joe Lycett played the Brighton Dome Studio on Saturday 11th October 11 as part of the Brighton Comedy Festival

 

For more info on the Brighton Comedy Festival or to book tickets see the festival website here:

 

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