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Council’s pop up shop a real IT success

Over the last few weeks city residents have donated almost 1.5 tonnes of unwanted tech to help charities and people in the community.

Brighton and Hove City Council, and its partners opened a ‘tech take-back pop up shop’ in the city centre allowing people to declutter and safely dispose of their old and unwanted computers, laptops, phones, cameras and other tech.

The shop was open for just 10 days, but in that time 420 people visited and a total of 1,036 items were dropped off, including 84 mobile phones, 123 laptops, 53 computers, 201 USB memory sticks and hundreds of cables, with every item having a free, professional data wipe.

The tech, amounting to 1.44 tonnes in weight, is now being sorted, ready to be given to charities to distribute or sold to people less able to afford new tech.

Equipment beyond repair, is being dismantled for material recycling. If all the tech donated is reused or recycled, there will be carbon equivalent saving of 4.5 tonnes of CO2e – equivalent to the energy needed to produce and cook approximately 1,294 cheeseburgers or produce 44,440 plastic carrier bags.

Cllr Saoirse Horan
Cllr Saoirse Horan

Councillor Saoirse Horan, deputy chair of the city’s environment, transport and sustainability committee, said: “The public response to our first Tech-Takeback pop up shop has been amazing, and the benefit to those who have dropped off items is brilliant as all their data is completely and properly erased by professionals or dismantled and disposed of. 

“Each item donated also benefits charities, people who are less able to afford new tech or the environment as absolutely everything is reused or recycled.” 
 
Cllr Horan added: “The next pop up shop is being planned for some time in January, which will help people declutter their old tech if they have received new tech for Christmas.”

The shop, at 13 Pavilion Gardens, Brighton, was the first of five pop ups that will take place in the next year. The next is planned for January, with others linked to key dates during 2018. All times and venues will be announced shortly.

The pop-up shops are being run by Brighton & Hove City Council; Freegle, the free online reuse network; circular economy environment specialists SOENECS; and computer data experts EraseMyData.

Dr David Greenfield, co-founder of Tech-Takeback and managing director of SOENECS, said: “It is clear that the public want a service like Tech-Takeback provides, as many people told us they had been waiting ages for an opportunity like this to safely erase their data and enable reuse of their unwanted tech.” 

The shops are being sponsored by special funding after the city council won a £25,000 WEEE (Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment) Local Project grant under the national Distributor Takeback Scheme.

International lottery business raises money for THT

Leading international lottery betting business, myLotto24, donates all bets made on its site on Friday, December 15 to leading HIV and sexual health charity, Terrence Higgins Trust, (THT).

The announcement comes two weeks after World AIDS Day on December 1, when Prince Harry and Ms Meghan Markle made their first public engagement together, visiting the charity’s World AIDS Day fair in Nottingham.

All money raised on Friday, December 15 will support the THT’s, whose Work Positive programme helps people living with HIV and who are unemployed into employment, through support, training and work placements. myLotto24 is a proud partner of this programme.

Claire McMaster, Director of Fundraising, Terrence Higgins Trust, said: “With the amazing medical progress made over the last few years, we’re beginning to get closer to ending HIV. But we’re not there yet. More funds are needed to ensure people are getting tested and, if diagnosed with HIV, do so early and can access effective treatment. We must also continue to tackle the huge levels of stigma facing people living with HIV, and support and empower them to live well. That’s why we’re thrilled that myLotto24 has selected us as its launch charity of choice – helping us raise vital funds on our journey to achieve all of these things.”

Lena Patel, Head of Corporate Affairs, myLotto24, added: “Giving back is core to what we do. In the last four years myLotto24 has given close to a million pounds to amazing causes such as SportsAid and the London Community Foundation; helping support the athletes of tomorrow and the communities of today. As we launch in the UK, we’re delighted to give our customers the opportunity to bet for good; a chance to win life-changing sums of money while helping Terrence Higgins Trust continue their amazing work, including getting people living with HIV back into work through its Work Positive initiative.”

New LGBT+ student dating site

Connect2Students.com is a new social network based in Brighton that helps students connect with each other for a variety of purposes including help with finding a date.

Why is this site/app different?

To register on the site/app students must use their academic email address provided by Sussex or Brighton university/college which will end in “.ac.uk”.

This feature helps to ensure that only genuine students can create a profile. There are therefore no fake profiles or profiles imported from other dating sites.

When creating a profile, students looking for a date can select they are looking for a same-sex date.

The site, which is supported by an app, is free to join and easy to use.

Luke Jeffers, founder of Connect2Students.com said: “Students who are unsure about their sexuality may find this site useful for connecting with other students at a similar stage or with more experienced gay students who can give them advice.  Not every student is confident about going into gay bars or to their LGBT+ university society. As a gay man myself I know I would have found this site useful when I was a student for reaching out to other gay students even if it was only to chat online and not feel isolated and different.”

As well as dating Connect2Students.com helps students find a flat or flatmate, a travel companion or other students to network with to share ideas and get advice from. The Events Page on the site allows students to advertise events free to all other students.

There are currently students from the UK, USA, Spain and the Middle East using the site.

 

 

 

Kebab shop skewered for dumping waste in residents bins

A city kebab shop has been fined a total of £1,650 for dumping its waste illegally.

The Turkish Delight Kebab House, on Preston Road, got rid of its rubbish, including raw and cooked chicken breasts, skewers of raw and cooked lamb doner meat, salads, menus and advertising leaflets, in residents bins rather than disposing of it properly as a company.

By law, businesses are required to hold a special certificate and arrange the safe and legal storage, removal and disposal of the recycling and refuse they create.

The shop, owned by Brighton-based company Globay Limited, was originally given a Fixed Penalty Notice (FPN) of £300 by Brighton & Hove City Council which it had to pay for depositing waste in the residents bins, and was told to produce its certificate within 14 days.

However it failed to show a certificate on time and was given another £300 fine, which it did not pay.

At Brighton Magistrates court on December 6, the company was convicted and ordered to pay a fine of £1,000 with £550  costs and a £100 victim surcharge.

Cllr Gill Mitchell

Councillor Gill Mitchell, chair of the council’s environment, transport and sustainability committee, said: “This case shows that companies who dump waste illegally will be caught. If they don’t pay their original fine we won’t hesitate in escalating the case to the courts, and the fines and costs will be far greater than the original fine.

“Even if you operate a business from your home or you work as a mobile trader, like a burger van, gardener or builder, the recycling and refuse you produce is classified as business waste.

“Our advice to companies is ‘dispose of your waste legally to ensure you avoid breaking the law’.”  

Although the council is responsible for collecting household waste, it is not legally responsible for the collection and disposal of business waste. It does however offer a commercial waste service for businesses.

More information about the council’s business waste service, click here:

BOOK REVIEW: Fathomless Riches by Rev Richard Coles

Fathomless Riches: Or How I Went From Pop to Pulpit 

by Reverend Richard Coles

Fathomless Riches is the Reverend Richard Coles’s warm, witty and wise memoir in which he divulges with brutal, searing honesty and intimacy his haj from a rock-and-roll life of sex and drugs in the Communards to one devoted to God and Christianity and TV punditry.

He’s very honest in this book, deliciously waspishly candid about his life and I found it encouraging that he tells us some shocking stories of his arrogance, lies & deception and grand indulgences that he’s had the miss/fortune to take part in they are also placed with care alongside some very funny anecdotes that made me laugh out loud, he’s a very imperfect man but his blunt honesty charmed me, even when his odd reluctance to call the church out more on it’s institutional failings and cruelty annoyed me.  His ego is a constant companion too, but then this is his memoir and the gent has lived a large proportion of his life out in the spot light or glitter ball, so i can forgive this, his brutal honestly about his own failings more than makes up for that.

His life has been framed by the AIDS epidemics and there are some awful moments that  recall the horror of those years. His telling of the losses and horror, madness and confusion of those times will be familiar to a lot of people, again he does it with a candid vigour that bears witness to the suffering but also to the desperate times they were, the urgent push for some kind of meaning rescued from the pandemic.

However there’s no doubting this book is a wonderful headlong lurch from one world to another with a candid enquiring mind in the driving seat and well worth the read.  Part confession, part damnation this very modern memoir impresses. The result is one of the most unusual and readable life stories of recent times, and has the power to shock as well as to console. A wonderful book and one worth smuggling into the daily mail reading family members book pile at Xmas just to watch their faces when they read it…ha ha.  It’s got that jolly vicar off the tellybox on the front, what could possibly go wrong……

Coles is my new favorite person i want to get stuck in a train carriage in a snow drift with, as long we’ve got a large bottle of rum and a digestive for the good Rev to dunk.

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