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PCC publishes guidance note on reporting Trans* issues

Press Complaints Commission

The Press Complaints Commission today published a guidance note for newspaper editors on the researching and reporting of transgender issues.

The guidance is intended to assist editors preparing coverage of Trans* issues and to inform members of the public about how the PCC can assist with concerns about intrusion, harassment, and discriminatory or inaccurate coverage. The guidance covers issues including using the correct pronouns, the terminology of gender transition, and special considerations that apply in cases involving children.

In preparing the guidance the PCC consulted members of the public and relevant community groups to ensure that it was accurate and reflected the real problems that Trans* people have faced in dealing with press attention and press coverage, as well as their views about how press coverage could improve to ensure greater public understanding of their community.

The guidance also includes information and contact details about organisations that can provide expert advice to editors, as well as examples of complaints to the PCC on these issues.

Charlotte Dewar
Charlotte Dewar

Charlotte Dewar, Director of Complaints and Pre-publication Services, said: “The experience of gender dysphoria and the process of gender transition can in some instances make individuals and their families incredibly vulnerable. We hope this guidance will be a valuable resource for journalists covering stories on this sensitive subject, and ensure that members of the public facing these issues are aware of how we can help when problems do arise.”

To read the note in full, CLICK HERE:

Press Complaints Commission

 

New city strategy to boost sport and physical activity

Brighton & Hove CouncilBrighton & Hove City Council’s economic development and culture committee have approved a new sports and physical activity strategy aimed at making people more active.

Between 2013 and 2018 the plan will try to encourage people from all areas of the city to improve their health and happiness through sport and physical activity.

In the UK more than three quarters of city residents do less than the recommended levels of physical activity. As a result, the annual estimated cost of ill health directly attributable to physical inactivity is £1 billion.

With fewer public leisure facilities, Brighton currently lags behind many other cities and the report has promised to tackle this. A new large multi-purpose sports centre was proposed which is to be completed by 2022. Additionally the report showed commitment to an increase in the number of community swimming pools and new specialist gymnastics facilities.

The Council also has plans to organise inclusive activity sessions including Health Walks and free swimming for young people.

To read the report, CLICK HERE: 

Scotland’s ‘Equal Marriage’ vote on November 20

Equality Network

The Equality Network (the LGBT equality charity that runs the Equal Marriage campaign in Scotland) will hold a rally outside the Scottish Parliament next Wednesday, November 20 at 1pm on the day that MSPs vote on Scotland’s Equal Marriage bill.

The stage one vote on the Marriage and Civil Partnership (Scotland) Bill is crucial because it will finally reveal whether a majority of MSPs will vote to introduce equal marriage, or whether they will reject the Bill and deny LGBT people equal rights.

The Equality Network will be sending a message to MSPs on the day – one which they won’t be able to miss. Organisers are urging supporters of Equal Marriage to go along and be part of the photo opportunity of this historic vote at 1pm sharp. Meet on the grass area outside the Scottish Parliament building where the Equality Network will be joined by supporters, same-sex couples, faith leaders, and MSPs from across the political parties.

Later in the day, between 5pm and 8pm the debate and vote in the Scottish Parliament on the Bill will take place revealing whether Scotland will join other countries around the world in supporting equal marriage, and how the vote will split. It will also show how individual MSPs and Scottish Government ministers choose to vote.

What: Scotland’s Equal Marriage vote on Wednesday, November 20

Where: On the grass area, outside the Scottish Parliament, Edinburgh, Scotland

Date: Wednesday November 20

Time: Photo opportunity at 1.00pm sharp

 

 

 

Council calls for ‘Sensible on Strength’ campaign to reduce alcohol harm

Brighton & Hove Council

Brighton & Hove Council has proposed a Sensible on Strength campaign to encourage off-licences to stop selling highly alcoholic beer, lager or cider.

The voluntary new scheme was devised with help from Sussex Police and local businesses to prevent street drinkers, crime and public nuisance. A similar idea has previously proved successful in Ipswich and Sensible on Strength will be put before the city’s Licensing Committee on November 21.

Shops that opt into the new plans will display Sensible on Strength stickers meaning that they no longer sell beer, lager or cider above 6% alcohol by volume.

Cllr Stephanie Powell

Cllr Stephanie Powell, chair of the Licensing Committee, said: “High-strength drinks can cause immense harm to vulnerable people.”

She continued: “Alcohol-related disorder creates fear of crime and an unpleasant environment for everyone.”

A single 500ml can of 9% lager contains four and a half units of alcohol. This exceeds the government’s daily recommended safe alcohol limit of two to three units for women and three to four units for men.

Jesse Wilde, service manager at Equinox, an outreach programme for people with alcohol problems, confirmed that the removal of super-strength drinks is a positive step for Brighton.

She said: “Street drinkers are more willing to engage with our support and are less likely to put themselves at risk or impact on the wider community when they have consumed weaker alcohol.”

Over 60 off-licences have already volunteered to remove the offending brands from their shelves, including all the off-licences in London Road where there have been problems with street drinkers and public disorder in the past.

Chief Inspector Simon Nelson from Sussex Police, said: “We know that super-strength alcohol is bought with the sole intention of getting drunk fast. This particular scheme is intended to allow retailers to take responsibility towards reducing alcohol related harm.” 

If agreed, the Sensible on Strength campaign will be up and running before Christmas.

To read the report for the Licensing Committee about the Sensible on Strength scheme see Agenda Item no. 15 here: http://present.brighton-hove.gov.uk/ieListDocuments.aspx?CId=157&MId=4593

Charity Bank launches free consultations to help Sussex charities

Charity Bank

Charity Bank, which lends solely to charities and community organisations, is offering free consultations for potential borrowers with their Lending Manager for London and the South of England, Jaishree Mistry.

Research conducted by the bank found that increasingly, charities need to borrow money to pursue their missions. However, these organisations are often unsuccessful in obtaining affordable finance from high street banks.

Jaishree, who spent many years in commercial banking and with the Prince’s Trust Business Programme, is passionate about seeing banking and enterprise used for the good of society. As a result, she intends to use her extensive knowledge in the free consultations to explore the suitability of loan finance for charities.

Her involvement with numerous organisations in the south of England means that she has great local knowledge and is well placed to refer her clients elsewhere if a loan is not the best solution.

Jaishree said: “We believe that we should use our local knowledge to provide better advice than high street banks to organisations looking for finance.”

She added: “Free consultations have always been a part of Charity Bank’s service and are especially important now as the need for borrowing continues to increase and high street banks are not fully meeting this demand.”

Charity Bank’s research included a survey that discovered that while 65% of respondents agreed that loans could help charities, 29% had their application turned down and 40% were offered a loan but it was too expensive or the conditions were too onerous to take up.

Jaishree continued: “Charity Bank not only comprehends the sector but also has a regional presence that helps us better understand local requirements. Our knowledge can be invaluable in helping organisations.”

Charity Bank has previously given aid to a number of Sussex organisations including Ditchling Museum, East Sussex Disability Association, Fiveways Playcentre, Lewes and District YMCA, Old Hastings Preservation Society and Trafalgar Road Baptist Church.

Bevern View near Lewes, a purpose-built bungalow for eight young adults with profound learning disabilities, also received help from the bank when it borrowed £318,000 for a hydrotherapy pool and three extra beds.

About the assistance his organisation received, Ian Pounce, Executive Director of Bevern View, said: “The loan from Charity Bank was crucial. We simply could not have extended our care home to provide a much-needed respite care service and hydro therapy pool without it.”

To request a free consultation, CLICK HERE:

Brighton MP, Kirby visits former Nazi death camp with local students

Auschwitz

Students from across the South East returned from the Holocaust Educational Trust’s visit to the Nazi concentration and death camp Auschwitz-Birkenau on Tuesday November 12 vowing to act on the lessons learned from the experience.

Simon Kirby, MP for Kemptown & Peacehaven joined students from BHASVIC, Cardinal Newman & Brighton College on the Project. It was a unique opportunity for the students to learn what happened at Auschwitz-Birkenau, to pay respect to those murdered by the Nazis, and to explore the lessons of the Holocaust and its relevance for today. The students will now use the experience to commemorate and educate others about the Holocaust within their schools and local communities.

Now in its fourteenth year, the Government funded project is based on the premise that “hearing is not like seeing”.

Students first visited Oświęcim, the town where the Nazi concentration and death camp was located and where, before the war, 58% of the population was Jewish. Students then visited Auschwitz to see the former camp’s barracks and crematoria and witnessed the piles of belongings that were seized by the Nazis.

Finally they spent time at the main killing centre of Birkenau where the day concluded with candle lighting and a period of reflection to remember the 6 million Jews killed in the Holocaust and the other victims of Nazi persecution.

The visit to Auschwitz-Birkenau was preceded by a seminar in the UK where participants were introduced to Jewish life in Europe before the Second World War. Following the visit, the students will attend a seminar to reflect on the visit and discuss their personal responses to it.  The fourth part of the project requires all students to pass on the Lessons from Auschwitz to their schools and wider community. In this way, as many people as possible benefit from the Lessons from Auschwitz Project.

Government funding has enabled the Trust to facilitate regional visits to Auschwitz, as part of its Lessons from Auschwitz Project for thousands of students each year.

Simon Kirby at Auschwitz

Simon said: “One cannot overstate the importance of visiting Auschwitz-Birkenau and of recognising the full extent of the industrialised nature of the Holocaust. These events may have taken place 70 years ago but the lessons are still very relevant today, in a world where people continue to be persecuted for their religion, race or sexuality.

“I know that the day has had a profound effect on me, and the students from BHASVIC, Cardinal Newman & Brighton College. In Brighton Kemptown and Peacehaven we are extremely lucky to live in a tolerant and peaceful society, but we must never take that for granted.

“I would like to thank the Holocaust Educational Trust for organising the visit and for the excellent work they do.” 

Karen Pollock MBE, Chief Executive of the Holocaust Educational Trust added: We are delighted that Simon joined us on the visit with students from his constituency. The Holocaust Educational Trust’s Lessons from Auschwitz Project is such a vital part of our work because it allows young people to learn about the Holocaust in a way they cannot in the classroom.  The Holocaust was a defining episode in history, and this visit enables young people to see for themselves where racism, prejudice and antisemitism can ultimately lead.”

 

‘Matt Shepard is a Friend of Mine’ to screen at IDFA in Amsterdam

Matthew Shepard
Matthew Shepard

The documentary ‘Matt Shepard is a Friend of Mine’ launches the first-ever Gay Night at IDFA in Amsterdam with six screenings from November 21 – December 1  2013

The film – takes an intimate look into the life of 21-year-old American student Matt Shepard who was tragically murdered in 1998 because he was gay.

Framed through a personal lens by first-time director, Michele Josue, a close school friend of Matt’s, the film is a story of loss, love and courage in the face of tragedy. Michele travels to pivotal locations in Shepard’s life, interviewing friends and family, intercut with home video footage.

After years of tireless campaigning by his parents Judy and Dennis Shepard, Matthew’s brutal murder changed hate crime legislation in the US forever and was signed into law by President Obama in 2009.

The film will launch IDFA’s first-ever Gay Night (November 27) alongside Facing Fear a short film by US director Jason Cohen.  Despite considerable achievements in the last fifteen years, LGBT inequality and hate crimes are still very real today. Though a deeply personal film, Matt Shepard is a Friend of Mine tells a universal story.  The film is particularly topical with the recent anti-gay marriage protests in France. In the Netherlands, the Dutch foreign minister Frans Timmermans, has announced that Russians discriminated against under a law banning gay “propaganda” may provide grounds for asylum in Holland.

Matthew Shepard

“Fifteen years ago in October 1998, two men lured Matthew Shepard, a gay freshman at the University of Wyoming, from a bar in Laramie, WY. He was kidnapped and driven to a field where he was tethered and tortured to a fence and left to die. Never regaining consciousness, Matthew succumbed to the severe injuries from the attack and died on October 12, 1998.

“The murder of Matthew Shepard was a devastating tragedy that made countless headlines around the world. As people denounced the hatred and senseless violence that caused his death, a much-needed dialogue about hate crimes and intolerance against the LGBT community began and continues to this day. His tragic story brought the reality of inequality and vicious, irrational contempt into the public consciousness and set the stage for the landmark Matthew Shepard and James Byrd Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act, which President Barack Obama signed into law in 2009. This was driven through by Matthew’s parents Judy and Dennis Shepard, who also founded the Matthew Shepard Foundation, which promotes tolerance, in his name.

The screenings are as follows:

Thursday November 21, 12:30 Tuschinski 4 International Premiere

Saturday November 23, 14:15 Brakke Grond Expozaal

Tuesday November 26, 11:15 Munt 12

Wednesday November 27, 19:30 Munt 11 Gay Night

Saturday November 30, 21:00 EYE Cinema 1 Judy and Dennis will attend

Sunday December 1, 14:15 Munt 10 Judy and Dennis will attend

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

For more information, CLICK HERE: www.mattshepardisafriendofmine.com

www.matthewshepard.org

@myfriendmatt

 

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