menu

Labour directs year-end financial surplus to resident priorities

Despite ongoing government cuts to funding, the Labour council has kept the city’s finances on track for a second year.

Cllr Warren Morgan
Cllr Warren Morgan

Labour inherited a £8.5m overspend when they took over from the Green Party in 2015, but for a second year the Labour administration has prevented a budget deficit at the end of the financial year, coming within less than 1% variance of the budget plan.

In a report going to Policy Resources and Growth Committee on July 13, council officers will report the end of year position for 2016/7 as showing a slight surplus.

Cllr Warren Morgan, Leader of the Council, said: “There are a number of priorities that have arisen since budget-setting this year, and other items that are already agreed by the opposition group leaders. The administration will direct funding towards these when proposing to committee the allocation of the budget surplus we have achieved. We will also aim to respond to the recent LGA peer review, by proposing a next step in enhancing the ward roles of councillors, which I am sure would be welcomed by residents for whom their ward councillors are so important. This would fit in well with our direction of travel of bringing the council services closer to residents in different ways including through more online services and through the neighbourhood hubs and enforcement programmes.”

Proposed allocations include:

♦ 150k recurrent funding to continue the supported buses network
♦ 100k one-off funding to restore week-end Park Keeper time were needed, and in addition to manage other safety issues affecting parks and open spaces by providing a visible presence;  to provide enhanced summer time verge cutting to keep pace with seasonal growth.
♦ £50k one-off funding to support domestic violence services with the volume of contacts being received
♦ £125k one-off funding covering the Shoreham memorial, the Saltdean Lido and project work for the Madeira Terraces

In addition the small surplus achieved means that the administration can move forward following the recent LGA peer review to enhance the role of ward councillors, by proposing a ward member community budgets scheme.  This idea would build on the strong relationships between ward councillors and their local residents and organisations. By allocating £5k per ward councillor for community initiatives, this could enable a new pattern of partnership working to emerge across the city, and would be discussed in detail in committee later in the year.

Cllr Les Hamilton
Cllr Les Hamilton

Cllr Les Hamilton, Lead Member for Finance and Resources, said:  “I would like to thank officers and staff for the way in which they have responded to the very challenging financial circumstances, and have kept the council finances on track. This has been yet again a very hard year for local government. Unfortunately we are now faced with unhappy fall-out from the Mrs May’s failed snap general election strategy, with new uncertainty due to the government’s shambolic shelving of the business rates retention scheme. But locally your Labour council will continue to manage the council finances carefully, which is in line with one of our key principles – getting the basics right.”

PREVIEW: Coming Out: Sexuality, Gender and Identity @Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool

Ground-breaking exhibition at the Walker in Liverpool, reveals concealed LGBT+ histories.

From Sodomy to Intimacy, 2015, John Walter
From Sodomy to Intimacy, 2015, John Walter

Coming Out: Sexuality, Gender and Identity, a new exhibition at Liverpool’s Walker Art Gallery, reveals previously overlooked LGBT+ art histories and institutional blind spots, through a diverse and exciting selection of artworks.

The exhibition runs from July 28 until November 5, 2017, with the opening marking 50 years since the partial decriminalisation of male homosexual act was passed in England and Wales (1967 Sexual Offences Act), on July 27 1967.

From David Hockney and Steve McQueen to Anya Gallaccio and Sarah Lucas, the artists represented have used their work to explore sexuality and gender identity since 1967, after the passing of the Act. 

Untitled, 1977, Linder the artist courtesy Stuart Shave, Modern Art, London
Untitled, 1977, Linder the artist courtesy Stuart Shave, Modern Art, London

Coming Out will reveal the findings of more than two years of research by the Walker into LGBT+ history and visual culture, exploring works of art within the Arts Council Collection as well as its own collection.

New acquisitions by artists including John Walter and Marvin Gaye Chetwynd also feature, recently acquired through Art Fund’s New Collecting Awards.

Charlotte Keenan, Curator of British Art at National Museums Liverpool, said:Coming Out will be one of the most important exhibitions in the Walker’s history. Showcasing the results of several years of research, it will make visible the themes of sexuality, gender identity and queerness that lie at the heart of some of Britain’s most significant contemporary works.

“The exhibition also forms part of an even greater ambition for us; to make queer British art and its importance to art history permanently visible within our galleries. Visitors can expect to see new interpretation within our permanent displays, as well as some exciting new acquisitions as we look to show – through our own collections – that LGBT+ history is everybody’s history.” 

Works on display in Coming Out include feminist art by Margaret Harrison and iconic and provocative works by Linder and Sarah Lucas. Arresting photography by Zanele Muholi, Sunil Gupta, Maud Sulter and Wolfgang Tillmans feature, along with performances pieces and a number of audio-visual works by artists including Isaac Julien, Hilary Lloyd and James Richards.

Pauline Boudry and Renate Lorenz’s I Want (2015) is also included as a new acquisition through Art Fund’s New Collecting Award scheme. This film installation, featuring artist Sharon Hayes, is based on a script that plagiarises from the texts of punk poet Kathy Acker as well as the chats and addresses of whistle-blower Chelsea Manning.

Can love remember the question and the answer, 2003, Anya Gallaccio
Can love remember the question and the answer, 2003, Anya Gallaccio

A striking installation piece by Anya Gallaccio also features, titled Can Love Remember the Question and the Answer? (2003). The work comprises a pair of mahogany doors, each featuring a windowpane. Each time the installation is displayed, 60 gerbera flowers are inserted within the panes. During the run of the exhibition, the gerberas will begin to decompose.

Central to the exhibition will be a free programme of events and performances. Organised in partnership with artists, activists and communities, they will take place in FORUM; a designated room at the heart of the exhibition. The events are designed to encourage conversations around topics that have been ignored by institutions in the past, and to look towards the future.

Event highlights include a performance piece by Paul Maheke and ‘nail transphobia’ manicures by activist Charlie Craggs. While offering free manicures, Craggs will chat to visitors, encouraging them to ask questions relating to her experience as a trans woman, with the aim of addressing some common misconceptions.

Coming Out is a touring exhibition conceived by National Museums Liverpool, in partnership with Birmingham Museums Trust as part of the Arts Council Collection National Partners Programme 2016-19.

The show will travel to Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery in December 2017 where it will be re-presented within the major Gas Hall exhibition space. Works from Birmingham’s collection such as Francis Bacon, Grayson Perry and John Stezaker will be included as well as significant loans from other UK collections.

The Walker Art Gallery is an Arts Council Collection National Partner. The Arts Council Collection is managed by Southbank Centre, London on behalf of Arts Council England.


Event: COMING OUT: SEXUALITY, GENDER and IDENTITY

Where: Walker Art Gallery, William Brown St, Liverpool L3 8EL

When: From July 28 – November 5, 2017

Time: 10am-5pm

Cost: Free entry

For more information, click here:

Women of the World Unite, you have nothing to lose but Cheese Cake, 1969, by Margaret Harrison
Women of the World Unite, you have nothing to lose but Cheese Cake, 1969, by Margaret Harrison

Parliament launches videos commemorating 50th anniversary of the 1967 Sexual Offences Act

Parliament has launched the second series of Your Story, Our History videos to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the 1967 Sexual Offences Act.

The Sexual Offences Act decriminalised private homosexual acts between men aged over 21, while at the same time imposing heavier penalties on street offences.

Fifty years on, the videos explore the impact that Parliament has had on the LGBT+ communities in the UK. In the videos, Peter and Geoff, Nadine and Tia, and Jake, share their personal and moving experiences of how LGBT+ legislation passed by the UK Parliament has affected their lives.

Peter and Geoff comment on how the 1967 Sexual Offences Act changed their lives: “The Sexual Offences Act 1967 was a remarkable stepping-stone to what came afterwards. In 1994 the age of consent dropped to 18, and then in 2000 it became 16…finally, when the 2003 Sexual Offences Act passed I thought ‘thank goodness’…we are now absolutely in the criminal law on an equal footing with heterosexual people. I could think of younger people, our son, whatever his sexuality was going to be, and just think, well they will not have to go through all that fear that we went through…”

Nadine and Tia comment on how changes to the law affected their lives as Queer Woman of Colour: “When you are a queer woman of colour, you just feel like an anomaly a lot of the time…the Civil Partnership Act is incredibly important to me. I know that when I choose to have a family and when I choose to have children I’d really like to be able to know that my partner is an equal to me.”

Jake comments on how the Gender Recognition Act has shaped his gender identity: “For the first ten years of my life I prayed to God that I’d wake up as a boy as I was supposed to be. I never thought that I’d be happy…by the time I came to transitioning, the 2004 Gender Act had already come into effect, so I was never one of those people who wasn’t quite considered a citizen…being able to finally be seen as the male that you are on your birth certificate was just amazing. It just felt right.”

David Clark, Head of Education and Engagement, UK Parliament, said: “The Your Story, Our History films show how the legislation that Parliament has passed over the last 50 years has affected people’s lives and shaped the UK and its tolerance to different communities. We’re excited to be able to release these films this month, to mark the 50th anniversary of the 1967 Sexual Offences Act.”

The #YourStoryOurHistory videos were commissioned by Parliament’s Outreach and Engagement Team as part of their ongoing programme of public engagement, which aims to demonstrate how Parliament affects people’s day to day lives, engage people the institution has not yet reached, and diversify the range of people who are involved with the work of Parliament.

Disability Pride, comes to the centre of Brighton today

Accessibility Matters volunteers will be helping organisers deliver Brighton’s first Disability Pride (DPB) this afternoon on New Road, starting at 2pm.

Accessibility Matters is a project of the Brighton & Hove Community Safety Forum (LGBT CSF). Volunteers will be on site at New Road from 2pm providing access support to attendees with mobility and emotional needs.

DPB is a proud celebration of the disabled community featuring a day of performances including live music, street food, education, arts and comedy at the heart of the city on New Road in front of the Theatre Royal.

This is an important milestone in the battle for acknowledgement and acceptance of those living with disability (visible or invisible) within Brighton and Hove’s communities.

Discrimination against the disabled remains a reality for many in the community and Disability Pride aims to address the issue and bring everyone together to support each other in a wonderfully positive way this July.

There has never been a Disability Pride event in England before. This event will run at the same time date as Disability Pride New York City as well as similar Disability Pride events in Switzerland and Italy.

Billie Lewis
Billie Lewis

Billie Lewis, Volunteer Chair of the Brighton & Hove LGBT CSF, said: “We are looking forward to taking part in the first ever Disability Pride to take place in the UK today. LGBT CSF Volunteers will be on site in our mobile Access Tent to provide support, advice, information and a listening ear to anyone that requires it regardless of ability, gender or sexual identity. The DPB Committee have been working hard to develop a safe and inclusive event and we are looking forward to supporting them this afternoon. Please pop along to show your support!”

Accessibility Matters is the only dedicated LGBT+ project that delivers effective front-line services to the Disabled LGBT + Communities and its allies in Brighton & Hove.

Accessibility Matters was created by the Brighton and Hove LGBT Community Safety Forum to address the needs of older disabled, and deaf members of the LGBT+ Communities in the city, to encourage and empower them to take part in community event and social life on a par with their non-disabled peers.

During the last twelve months, Accessibility Matters has delivered self-awareness and self-defence workshops to empower individuals to feel safer and protect themselves. These workshops were also delivered at the Forums’ B. Right. On. Festival which celebrated LGBT History Month in February, 2017.

Accessibility Matters was instrumental in enabling older, disabled and deaf people to take part in Pride 2014, 2015 and 2016 both in the Parade, where they were accommodated at the front of the parade, and at the main event on Preston park where Accessibility Matters provided a safe space for disabled people and their carers. For many disabled people, it was the first Pride at which they felt supported and welcomed as equals.

Accessibility Matters returns to Brighton Pride again this year.

For more information on the facilities and services available via Accessibility Matters at Disability Pride Brighton, click here:

For more info about Disability Pride Brighton, click here:

Government announce £2.3 billion Housing Infrastructure Fund

Local Conservatives call for Labour administration to get going with bid from new two billion pound fund.

The Government has invited councils to bid for a slice of the £2.3 billion Housing Infrastructure Fund which will be available to help build new schools, healthcare centres and digital infrastructure to accommodate growing communities and alleviate pressure on local public services that all communities rely on.

With a severe shortage of new homes being built in Brighton and Hove, the local Conservative group have welcomed the launch of the new fund from Central Government that allows homes to be built faster for ordinary working families.

In welcoming the new initiative, the Conservative Group in Brighton & Hove say they have long been concerned that the Council’s citywide strategic plan has failed to adequately consider the much-needed infrastructure to support additional homes and welcomed this new Government initiative.

Cllr Mary Mears
Cllr Mary Mears

Cllr Mary Mears, the Conservative Housing Spokesperson, said: “Ensuring access to good schools, parking, shops, doctors’ surgeries, employment and sports and leisure facilities are available as well as improving roads, countering potential traffic issues and avoiding increased pollution as a result is an absolute must for successful long-term development in the city.

 “This fund looks to tackle this specific issue, and we are calling on Warren Morgan and the Council to put together a positive and constructive bid to get things moving in the city so that we can allow more hard-working local people to buy the homes they want and deserve in the near future. We say ‘Let’s get building – No more delays!”

Cllr Tony Janio
Cllr Tony Janio

Leader of the Conservative Group, Tony Janio, added: “we are pleased that the Government has recognised what we have long been saying locally that by investing in local infrastructure we can help unlock building thousands of new homes in areas where they are needed the most.”

A Labour spokesperson responded: “We welcome new funding options, and would bid as appropriate.  However, government initiatives like this can’t paper over deep and ongoing cuts to council funding – nationally there is an estimated £5.8bn funding gap to 2020. And for the local Conservatives to call on us to start building when we have the first new council houses built in the city in recent times being delivered by a Labour council, and when our living wage homes joint venture was held up in committee, the public can draw their own conclusions on who is working hardest to provide new homes.

“It is also not the case as suggested that the City Plan has ‘failed to adequately consider’ infrastructure needs.  The preparation of the City Plan and its component parts was a cross-party initiative and was unanimously agreed at Full Council on March 24 2016, and an Annex to the plan covering Infrastructure Delivery was agreed at committee on June 22 2017.”

TODAY: Brunswick Town Art Fair – Queer Art in the Regency Town House

The Brunswick Town Art Fair returns today for the sixth year featuring over 50 artists in the Gardens and some very eclectic colourful work in the Regency Town House where pop art meets the South Downs.

Richard Denne: Hollywood
Richard Denne: Hollywood

Brighton based artist, Richard Denne, uses Pop Art as a starting point to produce exciting bold and graphic work. He integrates his knowledge of traditional print-making process with digital technology and fuses them into magnificent prints and mixed media originals.

His images, often populated with the male form could easily be preconceived as Queer Art, the male figure seen as pornography rather than fine art.

Denne says: “Society has made progress in accepting the outsider but then is guilty of jumping to conclusions with this new-found knowledge and liberalism. I often find myself defending my work from being corralled into the essentially reductive queer category. Yes, it shows an evident appreciation for the male form, but there is a great deal more to it than that.”    

The intense light source found in Denne’s make believe landscapes of Hollywood and Palm Springs, invite you to be a voyeur and observe the dramas unfold before you. His use of colour draws from painters such as Matisse, Hockney and Frank Stella and the gesture of patterned areas only act to highlight this.

The Brunswick Town Art Fair is a popular community event set in the Regency splendour of Hove’s Brunswick Square Gardens and The Regency Town House. The fair features local artists exhibiting paintings, prints, photographs, cards, ceramics, sculpture and jewellery focusing on high quality but affordable work which is all for sale. Admission is free and refreshments are available.

The Regency Town House (13, Brunswick Square) will be open throughout the day exhibiting art in the beautiful first floor Drawing Room. From 1pm Afternoon Teas will be served in the Dining Room on the ground floor.


Event: Brunswick Town Art Fair

Where: Brunswick Square Gardens and The Regency Town House, Hove, BN3 1EH

When: Sunday, July 9

Time: 11am – 6pm

Cost: Admission free

For more information, click here:

X