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Hove paraplegic calls for Human Rights Commission to investigate Brighton & Hove Council

Robert Carver, a paraplegic gay man abandoned for the last 5 years in a second floor flat in Hove with no disabled access calls for Human Rights Commission to investigate Brighton & Hove City Council’s (BHCC) policy for housing disabled people.

Robert Carver

He is asking that his case be included in a new enquiry being undertaken by the Equality and Human Rights Commission into housing for disabled people launched on December 14.

Mr Carver has been housed in a second floor flat by Brighton & Hove City Council for the last 5 years. The flat has no disabled access and he has to be physically man handled up and down the stairs by his carer.

Mr Carver is paraplegic and has been told by his GP, nurse, occupational therapist and psychologist that he needs 24-hour-a-day care but Brighton & Hove City Council (BHCC) has only allocated him 28 hours a week.

This means he is left to his own devices for two days a week and on the other days from 17:00 till noon the next day. During that time he has no access to food, water, toilet, bath or even his bed.

Despite pleas for a review of this situation from Mr Carver’s medical team, independent advisers, and the local ambulance and fire services, BHCC recently reiterated that they see no need to expand the care he receives.

The accommodation the council allocated to Mr Carver is a second-floor flat which can only be reached by two flights of steep stairs. The flat has no lift and Mr Carver has to be dragged up and down the stairs by his carers in order to attend his medical appointments.

The flat itself is too small to accommodate a wheelchair which means that he is pulled around over the floor by his carer when moving round the flat to go to the bathroom and to bed.

For several years Brighton & Hove City Council social workers have maintained that Mr Carvers current accommodation and care is ‘perfectly acceptable’.

Following Mr Carver’s plight being highlighted by Meridian TV in October 2016 a BHCC spokesman admitted that the accommodation the council had housed Mr Carver in was “unsuitable”.

Despite BHCC saying in a statement to Meridian News on October 12 that new temporary accommodation with disabled access would be available shortly, no new accommodation has materialised.

Subsequently the Council have offered Mr Carver a bungalow in Whitehawk that was not wheelchair accessible and a ground floor studio in emergency accommodation in central Brighton notorious for damp, drug-use and misbehaviour, described by Caroline Lucas MP for Brighton Pavilion as being unsuitable for disabled people and previously ruled out by Brighton & Hove Council when they withdrew an offer of the property to Mr Carver in March 2016.

Mr Carver’s medical team and legal representatives advised him not to accept these offers despite being advised by Brighton & Hove City Council that if he does not accept their offer they might opt to choose to no longer recognise their duty of care to him.

This means Mr Carver could become ‘intentionally homeless’ and have no other option but to try to survive as one of the many street homeless in Brighton & Hove.

To sign the petition asking the Human Rights Commission to investigate Mr Carvers case, click here:

B RIGHT ON FESTIVAL to host Brighton’s LGBT History Month events

Rainbow Fund enables LGBT+/HIV groups in Brighton & Hove to participate in LGBT+ History Month.

A special Pavilion erected on New Steine Gardens named after the legendary drag entertainer Phil Starr will be home to Brighton & Hove LGBT+ History Month events in February 2017.

Miss Jason hosts the opening Gala event at the Phil Starr Pavilion on February 3

The Rainbow Fund have announced a small grants round to enable local LGBT+/HIV groups delivering effective front line services to the LGBT+ communities in Brighton & Hove to take part in the B Right On LGBT+ Festival which will run from February 3-19.

This year, LGBT+ History Month events in Brighton & Hove are being coordinated by the LGBT Community Safety Forum and will open with a Fundraising Gala night for the Rainbow Fund on Friday, February 3 hosted by Miss Jason, featuring an array of local performers.

Other events planned include:

♦ A Mental Health Day organised by MindOut the mental health service run by and for LGBT+ people

♦ A Younger Persons Day organised by Allsorts the LGBT+ Youth Project

♦ An HIV History Day and Big Community Lunch organised by Lunch Positive the HIV charity and lunch club

♦ Faith Days organised by the Village Community Church

♦ A Disability Visibility Day organised by Accessibility Matters

♦ An LGBT+ Worker & Volunteer Fair organised by the LGBT Community Safety Forum OUTReach project

♦ A Tea Dance and A Family Day

Live performance events include:

♦ A Rocky Horror In The Park sing-a-long party

♦ The return of the historic LGBT+ History Ball hosted by the Jazz legend that is Nicky Mitchell

Z Star appears at the Phil Starr Pavilion on Saturday, February 11

Sound Waves a concert of live music featuring amazing guitarist and singer Z Star, Travis Eddie, and Yourgardenday.

And that’s just for starters!

LGBT History Month is an international month-long annual observance of LGBT+History and the opportunity to commemorate and remember the bravery of those who campaigned and spoke out over the years to help us achieve the freedoms and equality we enjoy today.

Local LGBT+/HIV organisations delivering effective front line services to LGBT+ people in the city are invited to apply for grants of up to £500, which will allow them to participate directly in events taking place in the specially erected Phil Starr Pavilion on New Steine Gardens from Friday, February 3 – Sunday, February 19.

Chris Gull

Chris Gull, Chair of The Rainbow Fund, said: “We have been impressed by the scale and quality of arrangements being made around LGBT+ History Month 2017 in Brighton &Hove. 

“Continuing our support for local LGBT+ and HIV organisations, and encouraging them to work together, with the LGBT+ and HIV communities and beyond, we recognise that there are opportunities for them to promote their services, recruit volunteers, and fundraise for themselves during this groundbreaking festival event. 

“The grants can be used in any way, as long as it is directly used for involvement in the activities being organised on this site during the B Right On Festival. It could be used toward hiring the Phil Starr Pavilion to host a fundraiser, or to rent a stall, or space, to promote, recruit, or sell. Maybe an exhibition?”


Grant Applications

Applications should be made via the ‘contact us’ facility on the Rainbow Fund website (NOT the ‘apply for a grant’ facility as this is set up for the major funding rounds).

To make an application for a grant, click here:

For information about how to get involved, click here:

‘Rocky Horror Sing-a-Long-a’ at the Phil Starr Pavilion on Friday, February 17 at 7pm

 

More grants for community groups from Brighton Pride

Community groups from across Brighton and Hove receive a further boost thanks to the Pride Social Impact Fund.

From Whitehawk in the east to Portslade in the west, a record number of groups and organisations across the city have been awarded a slice of more than £8,000. The hope is they will use the money to bring a rainbow of happiness to their communities – in much the same way Pride does for more than 300,000 people in August.

Tim Ridgway
Tim Ridgway

Tim Ridgway, who chairs the Pride Social Impact Fund board, said: “We are grateful to all those who applied for the fund this year, as well as the panel for giving up their time to award the sums. There was a huge amount of diversity in the bids and the panel has tried very hard to make sure that every community and area of the city benefits in some way. “We know that in these difficult uncertain times, this money will make all the difference to some of the amazing groups and organisations doing great things in our beautiful city.”

Bids were considered by a panel made up of representatives from The Argus, BBC Sussex, Juice 107.2, Brighton and Hove Independent, Gscene, Brighton and Hove News and Latest TV.

Among the groups to benefit were the Tarner Community Project, which has received £1,000 towards providing a drop-in centre for a group of young people not in employment, education or training. A further £1,000 will go towards supporting the LGBT History Big Top event, due to take place in New Steine throughout February. A sum of £495 has been awarded to the Friends of Farm Green to bring a mobile farm to Bevendean during the June half term, while the residents of Ardingly Court will get a new mower and garden shredder thanks to a grant of £300. Further awards were made to Dottie’s Café, which provides employment to deaf people in East Brighton Park; Friends of Regency Square, to establish an exhibition in the subway linking their area to the sea; and the Mile Oak Recreation Action group, which is trying to refurbish an open space in the heart of a Portslade community.

The Pride Social Impact Fund is in its second year and aims to support those groups or organisations which need a little helping hand in making a difference in their community. The applications do not have to be LGBT+ related; they don’t even have to directly linked to Pride (although applicants directly impacted will be favoured). However big or small, the only criteria is that it will brighten up people’s lives by the time Pride comes round again next year.

Funding comes from contributions made by businesses within the St James’s Street Party area.

Paul Kemp
Paul Kemp

Paul Kemp, Director of Brighton Pride, said: “Pride is only able to deliver this fundraising with the help of local businesses who contribute to the fund and take part in the Pride village party. We’d like to encourage more local businesses across the city who benefit from the bumper weekend of business Pride brings into the city, to get involved with our fundraising efforts for all our communities.”

These grants awarded are on top of the £90,000 already donated by Pride to the Rainbow Fund to distribute to LGBT+ groups and organisations providing effective front line services to LGBT+ people in the city.


Full list of grants awarded for 2016/17

Brighton & Hove Speakers’ Corner
£250 to support five events and support to develop a more sustainable organisation

Ardingly Court Residents Association
£300 for new lawn mower and a garden shredder

The OWL HOUSE
£250 towards co-housing project for Older Wiser Lesbians.

Tarner Community Project
£1,000 towards drop in session for young people not in education, employment or training

David Harper of 4Streets in Hove
£250 towards community street parties, play street events and open-air cinema

Dottie’s Community Cafe in East Brighton Park
£300 towards running cafe which employs deaf people

Friends of Preston Park – bid one
£500 towards Easter Egg quiz and hunt

Friends of Preston Park – bid two
£500 towards Halloween event

Little Green Pig creative writing charity
£500 towards a videographer for This Is My City project

Stay Up Late
£1,000 to allow the group to develop it’s Gig Buddies project and LGBT outreach work

Friends of Regency Square
£250 towards purchase of the information board and the initial setting up costs of tunnel  exhibition near the i360

LGBT Community Safety Forum
£1,000 towards LGBT History Big Top Event during LGBT History Month in February 2017

Marta Scott Dance Company
£500 towards helping disadvantaged or abused women take part in the 2017 pride parade

♦ Friends of Farm Green
£495 for mobile farm to come to Bevendean park during half term

Mile Oak Rec Action Group (M.O.R.A.G)
£815 towards reviving the west side of the park to improve the look for all the community and allow access to children’s playground

MindOut and Allsorts launch ‘Urgent Need Advocacy Service’

A new project launches this month which aims to support LGBT+ people in economic hardship who live in Brighton by providing free independent and person-centred advocacy.

 

 

In July 2015 MindOut were successful in a Big Lottery bid to fund a five-year Urgent Need Advocacy project. The aim of this service is to support those in economic hardship by providing free, independent and person-centred advocacy. They are seeing an increasing amount of people who are struggling to afford their rent/ mortgages, to afford to buy food or finding it difficult to access mental health treatment when they really need it.

The housing crisis in Brighton has a part to play in this, as well as the ever-increasing cost of living and long waiting lists for NHS treatment. More people are on zero hours contracts, living with the uncertainty of whether they will have work week to week. Many people experience difficulties with the welfare benefits system, such as being denied a benefit that they are rightly entitled to.

The pressure and stress of dealing with such issues can have a massive impact on someone’s mental health, leading to feelings of depression, anxiety and hopelessness.

Lucas’ story
At first, Lucas was doing fine. He moved to Brighton where he had a few friends, delighted to leave Basingstoke and ready for a change. He found a room in a shared house, nothing special but the others were okay. He had a bit saved up for a deposit and to see him through. He had a job lined up with the supermarket he worked for back home. Minimum wage, but at least it was work.

At first, he got enough shifts, covered the rent and had a bit spare. Then two people came back from sick leave and his hours dropped. He asked for more, but the manager just shrugged. After a couple of months he could only just afford the rent and became terrified of being evicted. The only way he could make the rent was not to eat.

He got more and more stressed, low and anxious. He started to experience panic attacks when he went outside and was terrified that he wouldn’t be able to hold down the job.

Lucas got in touch with the online support service at MindOut, who recommended he see the Urgent Need Advocacy Service for support. He was able to receive a food parcel at his first appointment the following day.

Lucas found that having a safe space to explain what was going on and explore his options helped him to see a way forward. He was able to negotiate more regular hours at work and felt able to talk to his landlord about setting up a repayment plan to address his rent arrears.

With the advocate, Lucas found out what options there were to support his mental health. These included peer support and he is now attending Work It Out, a group for people who are in employment and struggling with mental health concerns.

Lucas’s story is not unusual: someone in work, with housing, who simply cannot afford to eat and is very close to street homelessness.


Who is the service for?

LGBT+ people in and around Brighton who are in need of support around issues, such as:

♦  Homelessness or threat of eviction;

♦  Financial difficulties, such as benefits issues or debt worries;

♦  Concerns around mental or physical health;

♦   Difficulties around work;

♦   Fuel and/or food poverty;

♦   Anything else which is causing distress and worry.

If you are outside the Brighton & Hove area do still make contact as they can help you access support in your local area.


How can they help you?

♦   They’re able to provide food parcels or vouchers if you are in need of food as well as providing information on where you can access free and cheap meals throughout the city.

♦   They can help you explore the options available to you and help you to decide what is the best way forward is.

♦   They can link you in with services and attend appointments with you if needed.

♦   They can help you claim benefits and attend assessments and appeals with you, when possible.

♦   They can help you to know what your rights are and support you in challenging decisions you are not happy with. This could be in relation to your housing situation, treatment you have received from the NHS or something which has happened at work.

Who are the advocates?

Emma Crossland (top right): “I’m MindOut’s Urgent Need Advocate and have worked for MindOut for just over a year. I have ten years’ experience supporting those in urgent need living in supported accommodation and feel privileged to be able to use my experience and skills to support the local LGBTQ community.”

Liam O’Hare (top left): “I’m the Urgent Need Advocacy worker at the Allsorts Youth Project. I work with LGBT young people aged 16-25. I’ve worked for two years to tackle anti-LGBT bullying in secondary schools and support migrant children at school. I find my work supporting young people in need highly fulfilling.”

If you would like to know more about the Urgent Need Advocacy service contact MindOut or Allsorts.

This service is free, confidential, independent and non-judgemental.


MindOut

♦   Call 01273 234839

♦   Email info@mindout.org.uk

♦   For more information, click here:  www.mindout.org.uk


Allsorts

♦   Call 01273 721211

♦   Email: admin@allsortsyouth.org.uk

♦   For more information, click here: 


To find out more about the new Urgent Need Advocacy Service go along to the launch on Wednesday, January 18 from 4–6pm at the Brighthelm Centre, North Road. Everyone is welcome! Light refreshments will be served.

If you would like to talk to someone about any aspect of your mental health, do get in touch.

MindOut services are confidential, independent, non-judgemental and free and are run by and for LGBT+ people with lived experience of mental health issues.

Film festival takes applications for 2017 diversity programme

Encounters Short Film and Animation Festival are taking applications from LGBT+ filmmakers for their 2017 diversity programme.

Marley Morrison took the main prize 2016
Marley Morrison took the main prize 2016

Encounters Short Film & Animation Festival is looking for up and coming filmmakers as part of its Widening the Lens programme, which is now open for entries.

UK based filmmakers from a black, Asian and minority ethnic (BAME) background, filmmakers with disabilities, LGBT+ filmmakers and female filmmakers are invited to apply for the free training and development programme by Friday February 3, 2017.

After a successful introduction in 2016, Widening the Lens will return for 2017 with the aim to address and improve diversity within the filmmaking industry. The programme has a particular focus on removing barriers and increasing opportunities for underrepresented filmmakers in the early stages of their careers.

In 2016 Marley Morrison took the main prize, receiving mentorship for her film Baby Gravy, a short comedy, set in a service station, about a lesbian couple awaiting the arrival of a sperm donor they have met online and the desperate events that occur when he doesn’t show.

Following the February deadline, 15 filmmakers will be selected for the programme which includes a series of workshops, master classes and one-to-one mentoring with industry professionals over a five month period.

The programme will start with a two-day workshop in Bristol on March 2-3, 2017.

Run by leading industry experts, the aim of the two days is to help the filmmakers develop their skills and knowledge of pre-production, funding, exhibition and festival strategies.

Following the event, the candidates will be matched with a mentor who will work closely with them over the following three months, building a personal development plan and ending with a celebration day in May.

The programme is supported by Creative Skillset’s Film Skills Fund, with BFI’s Film Forever National Lottery Funds.

The deadline for applications is February 3 with the shortlist set to be announced on February 20, 2017.

To apply online, click here:

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