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LGBT and HIV organisations receive grant funding

Brighton & Hove LGBT Switchboard fail to show and collect their grant at Rainbow Fund awards ceremony.

Lola Lasagne

LGBT and HIV voluntary sector organisations, cabaret entertainers and community fundraisers attended the Rainbow Fund grants ceremony on Tuesday, November 26 at the Hilton Hotel which was hosted by Lola Lasagne.

Gary Pargeter the volunteer project manager from Lunch Positive, the HIV charity who provide a healthy meal once a week for HIV positive people, opened the evening by explaining why the Rainbow Fund grants were important to the future of Lunch Positive and to the services they deliver.

In his opening speech, Paul Elgood, the chair of the Rainbow Fund explained how the Fund operates and how decisions are made as to which organisations get grant funding. He also announced that money had been set aside from this years fundraising to fund a needs assessment of LGBT/HIV organisations during the next year to make sure that the grants given to organisations are needed and services are not being duplicated.

David Hill,  director of Brighton Pride Community Interest Company explained how important the Council’s £25,000 grant is to the success of the community parade. He revealed that just two weeks before the event in 2013 there was not enough money to stage the event and that sponsorship for the event was the lowest it had ever been. Finances would have been much easier if the councils £25,000 grant had been in place.

He went on the record and challenged the assertion of Councillor Geoffrey Bowden that the grants to the Rainbow Fund were being paid out of a surplice of Pride money. He explained the £1 a head donated to the Rainbow Fund was a fixed cost for Pride, guaranteed in the budget. “It is an expenses like any other Pride expense” he said.

He finished by saying that the Pride team were committed to developing the event into an international event the city could be proud of but that could not be done without direct financial support from the city council. He acknowledged the “visionary contribution” his fellow director Paul Kemp brought to the event and said he was particularly proud of the political focus of Pride 2013 and looked forward to more politics in 2014.

Service users from the Clare Project, a project for transgender people, MindOut the LGBT Mental Health Project and Brighton GEMS (Gay Elderly Men’s Society) explained how the services provided by the groups were a lifeline for them in their everyday lives. Their contributions were the highlight of the evening.

The Hilton Metropole donated the use of the Regency Room for the night along with tea and coffee and Moshimo provided sushi. Sonia Marmite donated the sound system and lighting for the evening.

LGBT Switchboard did not turn up on the night to collect their grant despite being invited. It was suggest from the stage they must be busy answering the 2.5 telephone calls a day the service handles.

Grants Awarded were:

Allsorts Youth Project

Allsorts – £5,000 for a youth engagement worker to support the Transformer group for young Trans* people. Award presented by Cllr Bill Randall, Deputy Mayor of Brighton & Hove.

Lunch Positive

Lunch Positive – £7,000 towards food, venue hire and lunch club running costs for people with HIV. Award presented by Jennie Castell.

LGBT Community Safety Forum

LGBT Community Safety Forum – £7,000 towards hate crime advocacy. Award presented by ‘Davina Sparkle’.

Sussex Beacon

Sussex Beacon – £4,000 towards a new occupational therapy project. Award presented by David Raven aka Maisie Trollette.

MindOut

MindOut – £7,000 towards peer support groups and housing advice for people with mental health issues. Award presented by Mark Romany-Bruce.

Peer Action

Peer Action – £5,000 for health and wellbeing activities for those living with HIV. Award presented by James Ledward.

Brighton GEMS

Brighton GEMS – £4,000 towards support costs for befriending & support work for older gay men. Award presented by David Harvie of Brighton Bear Weekender.
Clare Project

Clare Project – £4,640 to extend for psychotherapy and speech therapy sessions for Trans* people. Award presented by Philip Marini from the Rainbow Fund.

Proposal for a New Controlled Parking Zone in Preston Park Station North

Brighton & Hove councillors have voted to approve plans for a new controlled parking zone to the north of Preston Park Station.

Cllr Pete West
Cllr Pete West

The scheme will operate from Monday to Friday only, to alleviate parking pressures in the area caused by commuter parking while allowing residents and visitors to still park for free at weekends.

The results of a recent consultation to extend a neighbouring controlled zone, known as Area A, showed a 50/50 split between those in favour and those against. However, a significant number of comments from both sides outlined that a controlled scheme from Monday to Friday only, would address the problem.

Residents in the zone A area expressed concerns about the potential impact that extending the scheme may have on them and taking this into account, councillors have now proposed to create a separate stand-alone zone, known as area E. If implemented, the scheme will be monitored for 3 months to assess its impact in the Beeches, Hazeldene Meads, Withdean Road and Withdean Avenue, with a formal review presented at the next Transport Committee meeting thereafter.

Councillor Pete West, Chair of the Environment, Transport & Sustainability Committee, said: “We ran the consultation in response to a significant number of residents who had raised concerns about parking pressures around their homes. While views about having a controlled zone for 7 days a week are clearly mixed, what has come across loud and clear is that the main issue is with people from outside the area using the streets to park in while they’re at work.

“We’ve also listened to the concerns of residents in adjoining streets and rather than extending the existing zone we feel the best way forward is to create a new zone with its own stand-alone parking scheme which would operate during the week only.”

Details of the proposal will now be advertised as a traffic order in the press, on street notices and on the Council website early next year.

Leaflets will also be circulated to residents in the area to make them aware of the plans and how to provide feedback.

All views expressed during the consultation period will be reported back to the Environment, Transport & Sustainability Committee meeting in March 2014.

For full details of the decisions made at the latest Environment, Transport & Sustainability Committee meeting, on November 27 2013, CLICK HERE: 

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