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Council saves subsidised bus routes

Brighton & Hove City Council has agreed to protect the city’s entire supported bus network (19 routes) for the next four years with £150,000 additional investment.

New four-year contracts have now been awarded to Brighton & Hove Buses and the Big Lemon to run the routes which include eight school routes across the city, buses to outlying local communities that are not commercially viable, an extension of some commercial routes to operate during the evening or weekends, and the ‘Breeze Up’ countryside bus that runs from the city out to the Downs.

Cllr Gill Mitchell

Gill Mitchell, lead councillor for transport, said: “I am pleased we have been able to protect all of these routes which are often a lifeline for local communities to connect people to the city.

“We are also providing a small number of improvements that residents asked for, such as better connections in the east of the city between Ovingdean, Rottingdean and Saltdean through the 47 route serving Ovingdean during the day.”

Total budget for supported bus services is just over £1m and the £150,000, part of an underspend on concessionary bus fares, will offset savings agreed in the February budget.

Seafront Officers save swimmer in trouble off Hove beach

Brighton and Hove’s Seafront Officers have once again demonstrated their bravery and shown how crucial their role is after rescuing a local resident caught in strong currents  last Sunday, September 10.

Oscar Porras Perrez and Ryan Pook were alerted by one of the beach’s seasonal lifeguards who had seen the man and his partner entering the water on Sunday afternoon despite the fact that there was a red flag in operation.

Mr Porras Perrez swam through the heavy waves and round a hazardous groyne and, with the help of Mr Pook, brought the casualty safely out the water.

The resident received medical treatment once on shore and was then transferred to an ambulance for additional treatment and checks.

This rescue follows two weeks which have seen several major incidents and lives saved.

The city’s Seafront Officers are a vital year round resource for the beaches and waterfront and are supplemented by seasonal lifeguards who work from May to September.  

Commenting on the rescue, a council spokesperson, said: “We urge people to take caution on the seafront, especially when the conditions are rough. Even on a calm day sea currents, undertow or a sudden change in weather can create life threatening hazards without warning.

“Luckily in this case our seafront team were on patrol and their swift actions helped save a life.”

For more information about the City’s  Seafront Officers and how to keep yourself safe at the beach, click here:

 

The things you see on Brighton beach at sunrise on a Sunday morning

Should you happen to be out jogging along Brighton beach on Sunday morning around 6am, or walking the dog, chances are you will bump into Horsham based photographer Greg Turner, collecting people through the medium of his camera, then featured in his project The Things You See on Brighton Beach at Sunrise on a Sunday.

I asked Greg why here and why this project?

“I love Brighton in particular for its diversity and liberal attitude. You can fit right in being the weird bloke who keeps asking people if he can take their picture! It needs very little explanation so it makes my type of photography more rewarding. My primary interest with photography is people. I’m interested in the psychological aspects of what makes a person who they are and how this is expressed externally through what we see. Almost all of my work includes a person in the frame somewhere.”

As someone who is himself out exceptionally early on a Sunday morning, I see the fascination in being out at the beginning of the day and running into people coming to the close of theirs. Greg agrees:

“The sun rises over Brighton beach around 5am during the spring and summer months. I am there for a Sunday morning but the revellers are still there for Saturday night. Along with the revellers you can find the die-hard swimmers tiptoeing down the shingle for their early morning swim entirely unaware of both the bitingly cold temperature of the water and the sprawling hedonism around them. And there are fisherman still rowing their boats and towing their nets.

“It is, truly, a wonderful place to be. There is a sense of collectivism and love and its hard to know if the groups of people sitting on the beach are formed on the basis of long held friendships or simply the result of being caught up in the moment, of the shared experience of simply being there as the sun rises.”

All of Greg’s images are shot between sunrise and around 9am in the morning. He intends to be down there for the nest part of a year, through the changing seasons, but the images he has taken are already uploaded onto his website and can be viewed at www.tearsinrain.co.uk

“I think the most significant insight I’ve had [during this project] is that given the right circumstances – a degree of uninhibited behaviour, the peacefulness of a moment, the calmness of the sea – large groups of people who largely don’t know each other and are probably quite different, can simply come together and ‘be’ in a group on the beach and the fact that they are strangers to each other does not matter. We are a naturally gregarious species, but we are also tribal and that’s a shame because the identification with ‘tribe’ means we tend to only move in the small, homogeneous groups. So I’ve also learned a lot by not being judgmental about people and being willing to approach people whose life experiences are probably vastly different to mine. That’s been hugely valuable to me.”

BOOK REVIEW: Manhood: The Bare Reality by Laura Dodsworth

Manhood: The Bare Reality

By Laura Dodsworth

WARNING: This review does contain pictures of penises. It may not be work safe. Be warned. There are no knob puns though.

These days we are all less bound by gender and traditional roles, but is there more discussion about what being a man means.  From veteran to vicar, from porn addict to prostate cancer survivor, men from all walks of life share honest reflections about their bodies, sexuality, relationships, fatherhood, work and health in this pioneering book.

Following on from her previous study & photo essay, Bare Reality: 100 Women, Their Breasts, Their Stories, Dodsworth has turned her gentle, enquiring attention to men and their dicks.

Stuffed with plenty of insights and curious asides this book bares more than just penises, and the thoughts and obsessions of them men who are attached to them.  It uncovers the state of modern masculinity and how insecurities about an organ which is hardly ever seen consumes and obsesses men to the point where they change their lives to accommodate and deal with their feelings about it.  Straight men hardly ever get the honest opportunity to look at other cocks or discuss their dicks in a rational way, and unlike gay men may only ever handle one penis their whole lives.

See the Bare Reality website for more background and information about this series of books

Size matters (to men) this book says over and over again, along with the incongruities of nudity and the strengths and vulnerabilities that this brings forth.

All one hundred of these interviews are intimate and exploratory and give us candid, honest and sometimes difficult insights in what it means to be a man in the 21st Century. Manhood shows us the spectrum of ‘normal’, revealing men’s penises and bodies in all their diversity and glory, helping in dispelling body image anxiety and myths.

Sensitive and compassionate, Manhood may both surprise and reassure you. It may even make you reconsider what you think you know about men, their bodies and masculinity and make you look at your own dick (if you have one), or dicks in general  in a whole new light.

Out now £12.99

For more info or to buy the books click here:

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