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Greens fight to preserve council’s social housing stock progresses

Cllr David Gibson
Cllr David Gibson

The Green Group of Councillors on Brighton & Hove City Council say they have secured a success at the Council’s Housing Committee that may avoid the sale and loss of Brighton’s dwindling social housing stock.

In an amendment to current Housing Revenue budget proposals last week, the Greens say they gained a firm commitment that the Council will explore ways to raise funds without selling off social housing.

The proposals are in response to a new Government policy known as the ‘right to buy levy’, which forces local authorities to sell off their higher value council homes when they become vacant. In what has been labelled ‘tenants tax’, the money raised by the Government levy is then used to subsidise the right to buy for Housing Association tenants.

Brighton and Hove City Council have now agreed to produce a report detailing all the alternative options for paying the levy, rather than resorting to the sale of any of Brighton and Hove’s social housing.

The amendment also called for a working group to be set up to consult with tenants, members of all parties and officers about the associated issues.

Green Group Councillor David Gibson, who proposed the amendment, said: “We are delighted that Housing Committee have committed to looking at the ways we can avoid more social housing being sold – and irrevocably lost.

“Right to Buy has a very harmful impact on local authorities, particularly here in Brighton and Hove, where we are drastically short of the amount of social housing and affordable rents the city needs. Since 1983 successive Governments have overseen the loss of almost 4 million council homes.

Cllr Anne Meadows
Cllr Anne Meadows

“It is vital we retain and expand on truly affordable housing in the city. Given that private rents in our city are 50% more than the national average, and that council housing is the only truly affordable housing, I’m pleased we have succeeded in getting the Committee to support this approach.”

Cllr Anne Meadows, Chair of the Housing and New Homes Committee responded, saying: “We are concerned by the government proposals for selling off high value empty council properties to fund right to buy for housing associations tenants. We are waiting for confirmation of what the final scheme will involve and what our options will be, and are committed to doing all we can to avoid having to sell our properties.”       

Manchester Pride announce three top female singers for the 2017 ‘The Big Weekend’

Melanie C will appear at Manchester Pride’s August Bank Holiday Festival alongside X Factor singers Saara Sofia Aalto and Louisa Johnson.

Award-winning singer, songwriter, and Spice Girl Melanie Chisholm, better known as Melanie C, will appear on the The Thomas Cook Airlines USA Stage over the August bank holiday weekend.

She will be joined by the 2015 X Factor winner, Louisa Johnson plus Finnish pop singer, songwriter and voice actress Saara Sofia Aalto who was runner-up in The Voice of Finland in 2012 and the 2016 X Factor contest.

Fashion consultant, author and television presenter Gok Wan will be trying his hand at something completely different in 2017 as he turns 90’s deep house and reggae DJ!

Gok who is famed for showing people how to look good naked will now be showing them how to look good on the dance floor!

Hercules and Love Affair vocalist and fashion icon Shaun J. Wright who has been exhilarating dance floors worldwide as a DJ will also be appearing.

The Manchester Pride Festival, which comprises The Manchester Pride Parade, The Big Weekend and The Candlelit Vigil, will this year take place between Friday, August 25 to Monday, August 28.

Pre-registration for The Big Weekend 2017 is now open and those who sign up before midnight Thursday, January 26 will be entered into a draw to win a three night trip to San Francisco Pride, courtesy of The Big Weekend headline sponsors Thomas Cook Airlines and Manchester Airport.

Tickets will be on sale from 9am on Friday, January 27. Weekend tickets will be available for £20.

In 2016 Manchester Pride raised a record-breaking £149,000 and attracted acts and appearances from a range of artists, including Will Young, Fleur East, MNEK, Shura, Judge Jules and Groove Armada.

To find out more about  Manchester Pride, click here:

 

Manchester Pride is a registered charity that campaigns for equality and challenges discrimination; creates opportunity for engagement and participation and celebrates lesbian, gay bisexual and transgender (LGBT+) life.

Give your love a gift from ‘Little Bear’ this Valentines

Valentines Day is fast approaching on February 14.

If you’re looking for a Valentines gift for your sweetheart, check out Little Bear Home Decor and More, the little shop with heart who are having a massive clearance sale.

You can purchase locally made art, ceramics and jewellery, handmade Valentine bears, heart-shaped candles, locally made cards and even heart shaped umbrellas. Support small businesses and shop locally.

Little Bear is at 56 Sillwood Street opposite The Grosvenor Bar on the borders of Brighton and Hove.

For more information, click here:

BRIGHTON PRIDE: Campsite prices frozen at 2015 rates for early birds

For those on limited budgets you can once again spend the Pride weekend under canvas as you immerse yourself in the Brighton Pride experience.

Brighton Pride Camp Camp will be open and operational from Friday, August 4 through to Monday, August 7.

Prices are frozen at 2015 rates for early birds, £12 50 per person per night or take advantage of the special early bird offer of 3 nights for the price of 2.

The Pride Campsite at Waterhall is equipped for your weekend stay. The Camp Shop will provide you with all your Pride provisions, and on-site catering will service all your culinary needs including delicious breakfasts.

This year you can book your pitch size according to your party size with costs based on the number of occupants.

As in previous years, there will be a special Pride bus service between the Pride Campsite Preston Park and the city centre throughout the weekend and there is ample parking on site (must be pre-booked) to make it easier to get to the campsite and set up your pitch.

Communal showers are available on site but you can also book private showers.

To book a pitch online, click here:

For more information about the camp site, click here:

Brighton Bear Weekend launch new logo for 2017

Brighton Bear launch new logo for the Brighton Bear Weekend which takes place from June 15-18, 2017.

This year’s logo has been designed by Eoin Norton, a London based graphic designer who specialises in branding development and creative direction.

Eoin Norton
Eoin Norton

Eoin said: “I support the Brighton Bear Weekend, as it creates an all-embracing non-judgemental and fun event for the communities in and around Brighton. I was fortunate to take part in 2016 and was overwhelmed with the friendliness and the community support that I saw from the event. I think smaller less corporate events like BBW create that unique tight sense of community that the other large events lack.”

Graham Munday
Graham Munday

Chair of Brighton Bear Weekend, Graham Munday, added: “We are very pleased with the design of the logo this year. We will soon be putting our t-shirts, polo shirts and other merchandise up for sale on our website which helps us to raise money for the Rainbow Fund.”

The Rainbow Fund make grants to LGBT+/HIV organisations who deliver effective front line services to LGBT+ people in Brighton & Hove.

For more information about Brighton Bear Weekend, click here:

For more information about Rainbow Fund, click here:

HIV and Finance tour to come to Brighton

The first ever HIV & Finance Tour organised by Chris Morgan and Unusual Risks in partnership with Terrence Higgins Trust will visit Brighton on Thursday, March 9 2017 from 2pm to 4pm.

The tour which will take place during February and March will also visit Bristol, Cardiff, Birmingham, Manchester and London offering free HIV and Finance Educational Workshops that are designed to provide training for professionals who work with people living with HIV.

Chris Morgan
Chris Morgan

Commenting about the HIV & Finance Tour, Chris Morgan said: I’m very excited to be touring the UK with the HIV & Finance Tour, offering HIV Professionals an opportunity to learn more about the financial issues facing their clients and financial products available to their service users”.

He continued: “We are extremely grateful to Terrence Higgins Trust and George House Trust for their assistance with organising and hosting the tour and in particular the THT Health, Wealth & Happiness Project, who will working with us facilitating the workshops”.

The tour will feature a presentation from Chris Morgan the UK’s leading financial adviser on HIV Finance Issues, plus group discussions and question and answer sessions. The workshop will offer free training and a chance for delegates to share experiences.

Some of the topics to be discussed will include:

♦ Exclusion of people living with HIV by the UK Finance Industry

♦ Current position HIV and Life Insurance (HIV and Life Insurance Consumer Guide)

♦ Financial Planning for over 50’s living with HIV (Whole of Life Assurance)

♦ Current position HIV and Mortgages (Issues Faced by people living with HIV applying for mortgages)

♦ Other Financial Products for people living with HIV (Pensions, Income Protection, Critical Illness Cover )

There are already plans to take the tour to further venues across the UK such as Northern Ireland and Scotland. If your organisation would be interested in hosting a HIV & Finance Workshop, contact Chris Morgan by emailing: enquiries@unusualrisks.co.uk

To register for the Brighton event: click here:

5 years jail for people who ‘bully’ or ‘control’ their partners

A new law targets bullies who ’emotionally bully and control partners’ with ‘coercive and controlling behaviour’ with 5 years in jail.

Director of Public Prosecutions: Alison Saunders
Director of Public Prosecutions: Alison Saunders

In the past three-months it was revealed that domestic violence police units were on the verge of being ‘overwhelmed’ amid a 31 per cent rise in recorded domestic violence cases. Bullies who emotionally abuse partners face up to five years in prison.

Under laws, anyone who inflicts psychological cruelty on their other halves can be prosecuted – even if there is no direct physical harm.

For the first time, domestic abusers who stop short of lashing out at their victims will be targeted with a new offence where there is evidence of ‘coercive and controlling behaviour’.

This could include preventing a partner from seeing family or friends, keeping them short of money, controlling their social media accounts, spying on their communications or determining aspects of their everyday life, such as when they eat, sleep or even go to the toilet.

Prosecutors are determined to tackle the problem of perpetrators who trap their victims in a ‘living hell’ with repeated threats, humiliation and intimidation.

Research has shown that 30 per cent of women – about five million – and 16 per cent of men, or 2.5million, experience domestic abuse during their lives.

Director of Public Prosecutions Alison Saunders, said: “Controlling or coercive behaviour can limit victims’ basic human rights, such as their freedom of movement and their independence.

This behaviour can be incredibly harmful in an abusive relationship where one person holds more power than the other, even if on the face of it this behaviour might seem playful, innocuous or loving.

Victims can be frightened of the repercussions of not abiding by someone else’s rules. Often they fear that violence will be used against them, or suffer from extreme psychological and emotional abuse.

Being subjected to repeated humiliation, intimidation or subordination can be as harmful as physical abuse, with many victims stating that trauma from psychological abuse had a more lasting impact than physical abuse.”

Polly Neate, chief executive of Women’s Aid, said introducing the law was a “landmark moment” in tackling domestic abuse. “Coercive control is at the heart of domestic abuse,” she said.

“Perpetrators will usually start abusing their victim by limiting her personal freedoms, monitoring her every move, and stripping away her control of her life; physical violence often comes later.

Women’s Aid has campaigned to have this recognised in law, and we are thrilled that this has now happened.”

Prosecutors will be able to secure convictions using documentary evidence, such as threatening emails and text messages, and bank statements that show an abuser has sought to control the victim financially.

Police and prosecutors will be expected to take action against those who trap their partners in a manner that Home Secretary Theresa May has described as “tantamount to torture”. Coercive behaviour is defined as an “act or pattern of acts which are used to harm, punish or frighten a victim”. The offence was part of the Serious Crime Act 2015, which was passed by Parliament earlier this year.

In order for the offence to apply, a culprit’s behaviour must have a ‘serious effect’ on the victim. Home Office guidance says this involves causing someone “serious alarm or distress which has a substantial effect on their usual day-to-day activities”.

Police and prosecutors are now being trained to recognise patterns of abuse behaviour which meet the criminal threshold.

Louisa Rolfe, of the National Police Chiefs’ Council, said the new offence: “will provide more opportunities to evidence other forms of domestic abuse, beyond physical violence”.

LGBT HISTORY MONTH: Into the Outside@Jubilee Library

13-25 year olds in Brighton & Hove have been examining how issues faced today by young people identifying as LGBTQ+ compare with those faced by young LGBTQ+ people over the past 40 years in the city.

Photo: Saskia Grundmann: From the series; 'Hold Your Own'
Photo: Saskia Grundmann: From the series; ‘Hold Your Own’

Into the Outside: the next chapter is an exhibition charting the responses and research produced by the group on the topic. It will include elements of the newly created queer archive for the city including photography, written responses and oral histories.

In 2016, photography and creative writing workshops, archive research and oral history training took place with the young people at both Jubilee Library and The Keep, a world-class archive resource centre that holds the archives of East Sussex Record Office (ESRO) and the Royal Pavilion & Museums Local History Collections.  The Keep also holds the Brighton Ourstory archive, the collection of a local LGBTQ history charity dating largely from the 1980s to early 2000s.

Participants have also been exploring a range of materials, including the National Lesbian and Gay Survey – a collection of autobiographical writing and ephemera submitted by over 250 people in the UK between 1986 and 2004.

The programme has been facilitated by artist Helen Cammock, who has many years of experience running high calibre projects with young people.

The Into the Outside group have worked with many different communities and at events across the city, including Pride and Trans Pride, to research and collect oral histories, many of which are included in the exhibition.

Elements of the project were included as part of 2016’s Brighton Photo Biennial as ‘work in progress’. This was lauded by local, national and international visitors to the photography festival, as well as being mentioned by the British Journal of Photography as a festival highlight.

This latest exhibition will show the group’s work as related to their investigations into the period between 1967 (which saw the Sexual Offences Act decriminalise homosexual activity) and the present day, encompassing some key historical moments for the LGBTQ+ community, such as the first Gay Pride marches, Section 28, the reduction of the age of consent, the Civil Partnership Act and the Equality Act. 2017 heralds the 50
th anniversary of this significant moment.

ITO participant Charlie Snow, said:The Into the Outside project has been a way for me to connect with the LGBTQ+ community. I’ve been able to talk to other young people about their experiences and felt listened to when I shared my own. It’s been eye-opening learning about issues faced by LGBTQ+ people in the past and how some of them are still a problem today for many. Sometimes it can be difficult when you’re trying to figure out how you identify, but being part of this project has helped me to be proud of who I am and the city I live in. ” 

Juliette Buss, Photoworks Learning and Participation Curator added:The young people taking part have been really keen to find out about the lives and experiences of other young people in the past who identified as LGBTQ+ and use this insight to create the work for the exhibition. They have been looking at what their social life was like, how they fitted in and how easy or hard it was for them coming out. This project is a valuable opportunity to help local young people feel more connected with their city and enable them explore, make sense of, and value the legacy of their cultural heritage. They are learning about the importance of archives, developing heritage skills, and build awareness of LGBTQ+ issues such as, representation, identity, emotional wellbeing and social barriers to inclusion.”

Participants for Into the Outside were recruited by an open call through social media, schools and community groups. The thirteen-month heritage-learning project is being delivered in collaboration with Brighton & Hove Libraries Services, and the Mass Observation Archive. Many other organisations from across the city are also involved including: The East Sussex Record Office, Queer in Brighton and the Brighton & Hove Aldridge Community Academies.

Into the Outside is a heritage-learning project funded by the Heritage Lottery Fund delivered by Photoworks in collaboration with Brighton & Hove Libraries Services, the Mass Observation Archive and the East Sussex Records Office. Many other organisations from across the city are also involved including local schools, Brighton Museum & Art Gallery, Queer in Brighton and Allsorts Youth Project.


Event: Into the Outside: the next chapter

Where: Jubilee Library, Jubilee Street, Brighton

When: February 3-19 March 19, 2017,

Times: The exhibition will be open during library opening times:
♦ Monday: 10am-7pm
♦ Tuesday: 10am-7pm
♦ Wednesday: 10am-5pm
♦ Thursday: 10am-7pm
♦ Friday: 10am-5pm
♦ Saturday: 10am-5pm
♦ Sunday:11am-5pm

Bear Patrol raise £21,929.46 for Sussex Beacon in 2016

Mayor of Brighton & Hove attends the Bear-Patrol Bacon and Sarnie social at the Sussex Beacon last month.

Image: Nick Ford Photography
Image: Nick Ford Photography

Between bacon butties the Sussex Beacon CEO, Simon Dowe announced that Bear-Patrol events in 2016 had raised £21,929.46 for the Sussex Beacon and £6,763.16 for other organisations making the grand total raised for good causes by Bear-Patrol in 2016 to £28,692.62.

Bear-Patrol was founded by Danny Dwyer on May 28, 2008 and has been fundraising for good causes since January 1, 2011.

To date they have raised and donated a total of £158,115.99 to 20 different organisations.

The following totals have been raised for each organisation:

♦ Sussex Beacon: £141,330.13

♦ Rainbow Fund: £3,951.60

♦ Canine Partners: £3,629.72

♦ Sussex Cancer Fund: £3,078.75

♦ Rockinghorse: £1,636.25

♦ Mencap (south coast): £1,149.41

♦ GMFA: £763.75

♦ Lunch Positive: £505.73

♦ MacMillan (South): £425.00

♦ Great Ormond Street: £392.50

♦ THT (South): £305.00

♦ Chestnut Tree House: £240.00

♦ Peer Action: £180.00

♦ Mildmay Mission: £166.25

♦ Brighton Pride: £162.15

♦ Rise: £88.50

♦ Brighton Housing Trust: £50.00

♦ Demelza: £30.00

♦ Ditch The Label: £25.00

♦ Age UK: £6.25

Total amount raised: £158,115.99

Image: Nick Ford Photography
Image: Nick Ford Photography

All Monies Raised via Bear-Patrol and Danny Dwyer during their events goes directly to the charity/organisation via online donation pages and/or registered collection tins and buckets.

A high percentage of their funding is specifically allocated to named projects i.e. a new summer house, garden pond, decorating, equipment, chemotherapy chair and natural hair wigs for cancer patients.

BOOK REVIEW: A Little Gay History: Desire and Diversity Across the World

A Little Gay History: Desire and Diversity Across the World

B. Parkinson, Kate Smith, Max Carocci 

How old is the oldest chat-up line between men? Who was the first ‘lesbian’? Were ancient Greek men who had sex together necessarily ‘gay’? And what did Shakespeare think about cross-dressing? A Little Gay History takes objects ranging from Ancient Egyptian papyri and the erotic scenes on the Roman Warren Cup to images by modern artists including David Hockney and Bhupen Khakhar to consider questions such as these.

‘Homosexuality’ as a way to describe a single category of behaviour is a modern European term, but same-sex desire is not a modern western invention (as has sometimes been claimed). The British Museum has a large number of objects that provide evidence that desire between members of the same sex has always been an aspect of human existence and experience. Evidence shows that same-sex sexual practices and a variety of gender configurations were known in Africa before the arrival of Europeans. These practices and beliefs were largely prohibited by colonial administrators, and have often been forgotten, creating the impression that such things never existed on this continent.

You can follow this superb British Museum Trail for LGBT History month yourself, and see ( most of) these superb objects in all their Queer splendor!

The book also explores gender identity in a historical context . Gender roles vary between different cultures and are not a universal ‘given’. Ideas of what it means to be a man or woman vary, but many cultures also envisage the possibility of a third gender and the possibility of changing gender. In indigenous American societies cross-dressing was common, and some important pre-Colombian deities have male and female attributes in both oral accounts and visual representations. In Mexico, for example among the Mexica (Aztecs) and Huastecs, Tlazolteotl, the goddess of filth and sexual excess was in some incarnations represented as a woman warrior with both female and male characteristics.

Explored are the issues behind forty artifacts from ancient times to the present, and from cultures across the world, to ask a question that concerns us all: how easily can we recognize Queer love in history? You can see an on-line description of some of the artifacts featured in this neat little book here. 

Learn more about LGBT/Queer objects in the British Museum here

Out now£9.99

For more information or to buy the book see the publishers website here: 

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