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Forty years providing a listening ear

The National LGBT Helpline celebrates landmark birthday

London National Switchboard

London Lesbian and Gay Switchboard (LLGS) turns 40 years old in March, with a programme of celebrations and community events to commemorate its achievements at the heart of Britain’s LGBT community over four decades.

Help them celebrate: go to their birthday event on Friday, February 21 at RADA, 16 Chenies Street, London from 7pm, and join an interactive discussion on the progress made in the last four decades and the ongoing and developing need for a helpline for LGBT people of all ages today.

Joe Lee, co-chair of London Lesbian and Gay Switchboard, said: “The LGBT community stands at a crossroads.”

“We have achieved so much in terms of legal rights, civil partnerships, employment, services and the ability of LGBT people to simply live their lives as they want to do, and have always wanted to do. We have come a long, and wonderful, way in 40 years that our founders would be very happy to see.”

He added: “But there is still a long way to go as many LGBT people still face difficulties – discrimination at work, within their families or communities, a lack of acceptance and even homophobic violence. The way the LGBT community is developing is also important – for instance, sexual health needs a renewed focus as more sexual activity migrates to online meetings. Even though our calls have changed over 40 years, many people – young and old – want the vital support of a helpful person on the end of the line to talk to at important times of their lives.”

Volunteer and Trustee, Ruth Turner said: “We started as an organisation in 1974 aimed at “relieving the suffering of gay people”, under our initial charity status, which reflects the attitudes of the times. Now, though life has moved on – in no small part owing to the efforts of our volunteers over 40 years – we still need to be there to offer a helping hand at all the important points of LGBT people’s lives. We offer calm words when people need them most.”

Lee added: “As the demand for our service shows, there is still a real need among the LGBT community for a confidential helpline on which people can talk about all the issues that concern us, from coming out to going out, from sexuality to sexual health, from relationships to work life. Some people are isolated by their circumstances, because of where they live or their age or their personal life, and we are a vital lifeline for anyone feeling under pressure or just needing to talk to someone neutral. Sometimes people are having problems with their family, their job, their relationship, or they want information on sexual health. Or sometimes they just phone us for a chat!”

Based in London, LLGS acts as a national helpline, open from 10am to 11pm every day, throughout the year, taking calls from all over the country and an increasing number of callers from abroad. Many of the contacts now come through the internet, as volunteers answer emails and instant messaging.

On March 4 1974, a handful of volunteers answered the very first phone calls in a small room at Housman’s radical bookshop in King’s Cross. The helpline’s phones have not stopped ringing since.

LLGS has played a central role in the struggle for LGBT rights:

• the helpline was the first to bring together lesbians and gay men in a single organisation,

• they provided the very first source of information on HIV-AIDS in the early 1980s

• volunteers from LLGS went on to start up a variety of other household-name charities including The National Aids Trust and The Terrence Higgins Trust

• LLGS was a leader in giving information on sexual health, and still performs that vital function today.

Today, LLGS has more than 180 volunteers, and has helped more than 3.2m callers, through the phone line and in recent years also through email, its internet site and instant messaging too.

The organisation is still led and run entirely by volunteers, with just one paid administrator, and holds true to its cooperative roots. Its voluntary structure – almost unique among charities of its size – means costs are minimal and all of the money raised goes straight to answering the phones.

Switchboard’s volunteers are all highly trained to be able to listen, offer support, give referrals and be a friend at the other end of the phone. They do not give advice, they do not tell people what to do, they do not pass judgement and we are entirely confidential.

On February 21 this year, LLGS will host a landmark event celebrating four decades of gay history. In that time, LLGS has developed into one of the biggest LGBT organisations in the UK, in terms of the number of people they have contact with each year, and in terms of the number of volunteers involved.

For tickets, CLICK HERE:

Volunteers answer 15,000 calls a year on a budget of about £75.000, much of which is raised from the community and all of which goes to the costs of running the phone lines and its online counterparts. Their costs are minimal because all of the work, from staffing the phone lines to providing IT support to fundraising, is done by volunteers – with help from the paid administrator.

LLGS was a “big society” organisation decades before the term was coined, as a long line of volunteers have staffed the helpline in all its roles: some have stayed for several decades, helping to guide the organisation, and others have gone on to vital roles in other charities. Many have continued to have an association with the charity, helping to foster a sense of the LGBT community.

In recognition of its vitally important role in bettering the lives of LGBT people, and anyone who needs to consider LGBT issues, the organisation has received a number of awards including the Whitbread Volunteer Action Award, the Queen’s Award for Voluntary Service and most recently a shortlisting for the prime minister’s Big Society award.

For more information, CLICK HERE: 

 

Council’s music education hub SoundCity wins national award

Brighton and Hove has won a national award for its groundbreaking music education hub SoundCity at the 2014 Music Teacher Awards.

Sound City

Beating four other hubs shortlisted for the national prize the winning city was announced last weekend during the Music Education Expo in London.

Judges said that ‘no other hub had gone as far in achieving its priorities in a short space of time especially in the area of supporting children and young people in challenging circumstances and those with special educational needs or a disability’.

 

The shortlist was compiled by the editorial team of Music Teacher magazine from over 200 public nominations.

 

SoundCity is led by Brighton and Hove City Council’s Music and Arts service. It brings together the leading organisations for music in the city to enhance and develop music education and music opportunities that reflect the needs of children and young people.

 

Brighton & Hove City Council Music and Arts Head Peter Chivers, said: “It’s exciting to have won this award because it recognises the innovative and high quality music education opportunities across our SoundCity partnership that support all our young people to get involved and develop their music making.

 

“I am proud because The Music Teacher Awards are the most prestigious music education awards in the UK and feature a wide range of categories and we have won out of 123 hubs. This is the only award for music hubs nationally.

 

“It feels special that judges have highlighted how we have worked together to deliver our local priorities and bring more music to children and young people with special educational needs or disabilities and in often challenging circumstances.”

 

 

New life amidst the storms in Brighthelm gardens

A ceremony was held yesterday to celebrate the planting of four fruit trees to bring new life to the Brighthelm garden.

Brighthelm Garden

Two pear and two apple trees will offer a ray of sunshine in what’s been a tempestous winter. Alex Mabbs, the new Minister at Brighthelm, blessed the trees to provide them with an extra boost as they face the winter elements.

The trees have been planted by the Brighthelm Community Garden Group, which was set up last spring to reclaim and rejuvenate the garden.  Starting out with a couple of rather forlorn and overgrown flowerbeds, the group of local volunteers created a bountiful vegetable plot in 2013 and planted raspberries and strawberries in a raised bed next to a recycling bin.

There have big plans for 2014.  Besides the mini-orchard, the Group will be creating a wildflower bed, a wildlife hedge, and a new garden learning space in Brighthelm Pre-Schools playground.

The trees being planted this week have been carefully selected with advice from Brighton Permaculture Trust.  The apple trees are both traditional Sussex varieties – Saltcote Pippin and Tinsley Quince.  The pears are two English favourites – Concorde and Onward.  They are being planted in a cordon, which means they will be trained to grow on a diagonal, and will be carefully pruned to maximise productivity.

Planting the trees this week was quite a challenge. Most of the work was done on Tuesday morning at the height of one of the recent storms.

Geoff Barnard, a Brighthelm Trustee and one of the garden volunteers, said: “It was crazy out there.”

 

“Everything was blowing around and the rain was sheeting down. But we wanted to make sure the trees were safely in.”

Expert guidance was on hand from Mara Crippa, Growing Officer at Brighton and Hove Food Partnership, and a community garden specialist.

The tree planting has been made possible with financial support from the St Peter’s and North Laine Community First initiative, which has provided a grant of £800 to cover Community Garden activities in 2014, plus contributions from the Brighthelm congregation and a “shake-a-welly-boot” fundraising drive last autumn.

Brighthelm Community Garden Group is always looking for new volunteers to come and help in the garden, and meets regularly at 10.30 on Thursdays.

Everyone is welcome.

For more information, telephone: Geoff Barnard  on 07510 314397

Twitter: @brighthelmurc

 

A Pride House in Hove

BLAGSS the LGBT sport group created a Pride House at the Grosvenor Bar on Tuesday night.

BLAGSS members support #SSHHI at The Grosvenor Pride House
BLAGSS members support #SSHHI at The Grosvenor Pride House

During the evening those present held hands in support of the Same Sex Hand Holding Initiative (#SSHHI). #SSHHI was launched by Pride House International on August 14, 2013 and calls on everyone in Sochi – athletes, staff, media, officials, spectators, sponsors, vendors and fans – to take every opportunity to hold hands with a person of the same sex during their time in the city.

To make as many people present in Sochi aware of #SSHHI, Pride House International has launched a photo blog at http://holdhandsinsochi.tumblr.com where anyone can post a photo showing themselves holding hands with a person of the same sex as a sign of solidarity with everybody who will be holding hands throughout the Sochi games.

A Pride House is a venue welcoming LGBT athletes, fans and their allies during international sporting events to learn about LGBT sport and homophobia in sport and to build relations with mainstream sports.

The first Pride House was organised for the 2010 Winter Olympic and Paralympic games in Vancouvewr/Whistler followed by others in Warsaw for the 2012 EUFA Euro Football Championships and London for the 2012 summer olmypics.

Pride Houses are planned for the 2014 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow, the 2014 FIFA World Cup in Brazil, the 2015 Pan-American Games in Toronto and the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio. Sadly the Russian authorities banned any Pride House in Sochi during the Winter Olympic and Paralympic Games.

For more information about BLAGSS, CLICK HERE:

For more information about SSHHI, CLICK HERE:

 

 

Rainbow Fund receives first donation and makes first grant

The newly re-constituted Rainbow Fund receives first donation from Brighton Bears Weekend.

Rainbow Fund logoThe Rainbow Fund recently announced that it would transfer its account from the Sussex Community Foundation to establish itself as an independent group.

Brighton Bear Weekender
Brighton Bears Weekender organisers hand over donation to Rainbow Fund grants panel

The Brighton Bears Weekender kindly donated £235.44 from their Saints & Sinners evening at Subline in November to kick-off the new fund.

The Rainbow Fund has also considered an unsolicited application from Older & Out to provide a small grant for an activity day at the Somerset Day Centre for £240.50 on Valentines Day. The group works with older LGBT people through activity days when older people can come together have some to eat and socialise.

Older & Out receive a grant of £240.50 from Rainbow Fund
Older & Out receive a grant of £240.50 from Rainbow Fund

Paul Elgood, Chairman of the Rainbow Fund said: “We are pleased to be fully operational again and looking to the future. Our time with the Sussex Community Foundation has given us an excellent start to now build on.

“We are grateful to the Brighton Bear Weekender who made the first donation of our new set-up. This is the third time that they have supported the Rainbow Fund and so it is fantastic to have their support again from the very start.

“The Grants Panel was pleased to approve a request from Older & Out for a small grant towards a Valentines activity day and lunch, and this continues our work supporting older LGBT people’s groups such as GEMS.

Whilst we will not be advertising a main grants round until the summer, we will occasionally consider urgent small applications such as this in the meantime, if an exceptional case is made and if funds are available.”

As part of its new structure and to insure a fully transparent approach, the Rainbow Fund is in the process of recruiting an Independent Treasurer and will be advertising for two Independent members of the Grants Panel in due course.

For more information about the Rainbow Fund, CLICK HERE: 

REVIEW: Verdi’s Rigoletto: ENO

rigaettlo2

Verdi’s Rigoletto: ENO

This is a sumptuous new production of Verdi’s tragic masterpiece Rigoletto  directed by Christopher Alden. Rigoletto is widely considered to be the first of the operatic masterpieces of Verdi’s career. The curtain rises and we are within a 19th century gentleman’s club, Michael Levine’s set is rich with exquisite period detail and atmosphere, providing the perfect backdrop for Verdi’s themes of passion, revenge and sacrifice. It’s panelled perspective is a fine focus for the actions but it also never changes so confuses the story a little further into the action when other places are usually represented, this combination of high definition reality then dream like metaphor confused me a little, and even detracted from some of the finer points that Verdi tries to make or Alden is struggling to point out.  It does heave with male malevolence though, my  (lady) companion commenting on the oppressive realness of this quite early on in the night.

1097-4369-eno_rigoletto_2014_anna_christy_and_eno_chorus__c__alastair_muir See the trailer here:

Hawaiian baritone Quinn Kelsey is utterly captivating, full of power and conviction and just on his own would make this production something to see, his performance as the jester Rigoletto is the best I’ve ever heard, he’s on stage from the first moment, rarely leaving it, and it commanding with his huge presence from the off. With him soprano Anna Christy as Gilda is perfectly innocent and doll like, captivating the audience with her crystal clear singing. Barry Banks making his debut in the role of the Duke of Mantua is vocally perfect and thrills with his tone but oddly unconvincing as a man consumed with sexual conquests.

riggaletto1The chorus and all the other main singers stay on stage all the time, this gives a huge sense of presence and manipulative court like shenanigans to the opera but also crowds out the more intimate or brutal scenes with background action and rhubarb rhubarb orgiastic nonsense. However the music shone out with a brilliance even if Hugo’s story was given a tweak too far and lost something.

5038The singing really is top notch and Justina Gringytes’ Maddalena was a delight along with the dark creepy stage presence of Peter Roses’ Sparafucile, he made me shudder . Graeme Jenkins conducting with a fiery passion not seen for a while with Jonathan Millers rather comfortable previous ENO production of Rigoletto, but here the orchestra under Jenkins manic baton burns away the past with a furious attention to Verdian details that blasted the dust of this difficult opera and lifted into a living piece for me once again.

So not a perfect night by any means, the narrative journey is muddled a little by the mass of action on stage but there are enough excellent elements to make this a rather enjoyable evening out, the singing is perfect, the set a delight and the music without recent parallel.

ENO-Rigoletto-2014-Alastair-MuirWorth going along to enjoy Hawaiian baritone Quinn Kelsey just on his own, if not the sheer visual drama of the production while relaxing and letting the music enthral you.  Alden’s attempt to drag this opera back to its difficult and controversial roots – away from it’s cosy familiar place in the ENO repertoire is a success though, and brings it far closer to Verdi’s original edgy idea.

Until March 14th

 English National Opera

London Coliseum

St Martins Lane

London

Until March 14th

Sat 15, Thu 20, Sat 22, Tue 25th February.

Sat 1, Web 5, Fri 7, Mon 10, Wed 12 & Fri 14th of March.

For more information or to book tickets see the ENO website here:

 

 

 

Like playing cribbage?

CribbageA new card school is starting at the A-Bar every Tuesday night from Tuesday. February 18.

Whether your a card novice or expert or want to learn just pop along to the A-Bar on Tuesday nights at 7.30pm and is open to men and women, young and old.

“Cribbage, or crib, is a card game traditionally for two players, but commonly played with three, four, or more, that involves playing and grouping cards in combinations which gain points. Cribbage has several distinctive features: the cribbage board used for scorekeeping, the eponymous crib or box (a separate hand counting for the dealer), two distinct scoring stages (the play and the show) and a unique scoring system including points for groups of cards that total fifteen”.

What: Cribbage card evening

Where: A-Bar, 11-12 Marine Parade, Brighton

When: Tuesdays at 7.30pm starting February 18

Help Chestnut Tree House children’s hospice

Charity shop launches new campaign to get Brighton & Hove residents de-cluttering for 2014.

Chestnut Tree HouseWith statistics indicating that we wear 20% of our clothes 80% of the time and that getting rid of excess clutter could eliminate 40% of the housework in an average home, Chestnut Tree House children’s hospice has launched a new campaign targeted at ‘clutterers’ in East Sussex to help increase stock donations to their charity shops located on London Road in Brighton and George Street in Hove.

The campaign, named SOS – Stock our Shop, encourages people to re-think their outlook on collecting items within their homes and to kick start 2014 with a de-cluttered life.

Jane Tingley, Retail Area Manager for East Sussex for Chestnut Tree House, said: “I think it is fair to say that most of us will have items in our homes that we simply do not use and that are left in the wardrobe, cupboard or loft collecting dust. Our aim with the SOS campaign is to ask everyone to just take a couple of hours of their time to de-clutter and bring to us all their unwanted or unused clothes, bags, shoes, homewares, books, toys…the list goes on!. But don’t send it to landfill, recycle it in our shops!

Chestnut tree Hospice“Over the years our charity shops in Brighton and Hove have proven very successful and the local community has been very supportive but we are always on the lookout for new good quality stock. Many people want to start the new year afresh with thousands deciding to detox or diet but their houses shouldn’t be neglected; we are urging local residents to bring the spring clean forward and have a good clear out of their homes. Chestnut Tree House is the only children’s hospice in Sussex and donations such as items from last season’s wardrobe or clothes that don’t fit, books you have read, or toys the kids no longer play with will really help our profits and enable us to continue providing our vital services to the children in our care. We also can claim Gift Aid on the sale of donated items if tax payers sign up to the scheme, so we can earn an extra 25% on top of the sale price at no cost to the donor!

Chestnut Tree House children’s hospice shops are located at 40 London Road in Brighton and 42 George Street in Hove. All donations are welcome however furniture cannot be taken at these stores. Anyone wishing to donate furniture should contact 01903 275660.

Chestnut Tree House provides specialist palliative care services to children and young people with life-limiting and life-threatening illnesses in East Sussex, West Sussex and South East Hampshire.

For more information on Chestnut Tree House children’s hospice CLICK HERE:  

 

Secretary of State for Justice meets 50 local Business owners in Hove

Hove MP hosts ministers visit to Hove.

Weatheley hosts business forum in Hove

Mike Weatherley, the Conservative MP for Hove and Portslade, yesterday (February 14) hosted a Local Business Forum with the Secretary of State for Justice, the Rt Hon Chris Grayling MP.

Mike introduced Chris to 50 owners of businesses in his constituency at the Bali Brasserie restaurant on First Avenue. A variety of different subjects were discussed during a question and answer session afterwards including the improving economy, the bureaucracy of health & safety legislation, and duty on alcohol.

The forum followed a meeting with Hove Citizens Advice Bureau at Hove Town Hall where a number of issues were discussed with volunteers and staff. Concerns were raised about the length of time that Work Capability Assessments can take and the quality of housing stock in Brighton & Hove. Chris mentioned how keen he was to hear about these problems from those dealing with some of the most pressing cases on a daily basis.

Mike said: “Having many of the local businesses attend the open forum was an exceptional way to hear their individual questions and concerns, and better yet, having my colleague along to hear and answer those questions. Hove has exceptional entrepreneurial talent and this opportunity was a great way to showcase local businesses.”

Why Pride Matters to Kate Wildblood

Writer, artist and campaigning blogger Kate Wildblood explains why Pride Matters to her. Kate alongside Karol Michalec created the Brighton Supports LGBT Russia campaign. 

Kate Wildblood
Kate Wildblood

“Recently I was asked by a relative trying to understand my sexuality why does there need to be Pride?  Why parade and why, as they so kindly put, flaunt it? My answer? I take part in Pride because I can. Because it’s personal. I enjoy a freedom barely imagined less than fifty years ago. Private homosexual acts between adult males were only decriminalised in 1967, when my missus was 4 years old. The Stonewall Riots happened in 1969, the year I was born, and without them and the social changes they propelled, my life would have been very different.

“The first UK Gay Pride marches didn’t happen until the early 1970s and the brave souls who risked their professional and social lives to make a stand for equality deserve not only our unending appreciation but also our proud action. I parade so I can march beside them. Thanks to them equality in the UK is a right, but there are too, too many countries across the globe where it is not.
“Pride matters to me because I can stand beside those in Russia, Uganda, India, Iran, Nigeria and the 78 other countries where homosexuality is illegal. The bullied, the frightened, the persecuted, the imprisoned, the hunted.
“Pride matters to me because it can be political, it can be campaigning and it, as seen with Pride Brighton & Hove’s support of the Brighton Supports LGBT Russia campaign, can make a difference.
“It is so much more than a lark in the sun, a dance in the moonlight. It’s a celebration yes, but it’s also a statement of intent that cannot be ignored. A statement I will continue to make until equality is a right, regardless of where one is born.
“So just like the drag queers and homos and dykes of Stonewall I will parade, campaign and, yes, flaunt it. Because Pride matters. Because Pride is not just for one day, it’s for life. Our global queer lives.”
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