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PREVIEW: Ishani supports suicide prevention month

Indian trip-hop singer Ishani releases her latest track Dark Angel.

IN SUPPORT of suicide prevention month, Indian singer Ishani releases her latest single Dark Angel on September 24.

As a follow-up to her previous track Insomnia, the dark trip-hop song aims to raise awareness of suicide prevention month, and explores the topic of suicide.

About the release, Ishani says:This song was pure therapy. It has helped me cope with the death of two of my friends, both of which turned my whole world upside down. I hope this song can help others. So many people are affected by suicide, whether it is the death of someone close to us or an idol.”

Co-produced by South West London composer and producer Zaflon, the track comes as a precursor to Ishani’s upcoming debut E.P Stormy Emotions, which is set to be released later this month.

Hailing from Bangalore, Ishani was first introduced to UK audiences following the release of her debut track Pelican Elephant, which gained airplay on MTV India, and saw her chosen as a BBC introducing artist, in 2014.

Since then, her second single Don’t Stop the Fight enjoyed further mainstream success and was showcased on American TV channel VH1. She went on to perform at Budapest’s Sziget Festival, and support the Icelandic electronic group GusGus at Be My Lake Festival.

VoiceOver Brighton @Brighton Digital Festival

VoiceOver Brighton is a social radio project for the trans communities by Umbrellium and in collaboration with artist and performance maker Emma Frankland.


TWENTY Five members of the Brighton trans and non binary communities will be archiving their responses to a series of questions orchestrated by Emma.

Of these responses, two audio pieces will be created, one which will be broadcast publicly as part of the Brighton Digital Festival. The other will be a private piece for trans identified listeners (access to which can be registered for at www.notyetarobot.co.uk).

The project is being conducted over four-weeks leading up to the festival, the progress of which is being shown by a digital instillation on the front of The Marlborough in the centre of Brighton. Using lights and colour the installation will display when a response is being recorded, designed to make the conversations visible.

VoiceOver was first developed in 2016, in East Durham, designed and developed with local residents and organisations to create a participatory hyperlocal means of communication, to bring together communities. VoiceOver Brighton will be for Brighton’s trans communities to engage in conversation, exploring public and private thoughts and feelings.


Event: VoiceOver Brighton

Where: Pop-up Brighton, 79-81 Kings Road Arches, Brighton, BN1 2FN

When: September 13 – October 13

BTN BikeShare celebrates 1st birthday

Brighton and Hove’s award-winning bike share scheme, BTN BikeShare, celebrates a year of success with better than anticipated usage figures and multiple scheme expansions.

Photo by Brighton Pictures
Photo by Brighton Pictures

SINCE its launch on September 1, 2017, 53,591 BTN BikeShare users have made 347,234 trips across the city, collectively riding for a total of 680,624 miles – the equivalent distance of 27 trips around the world.

In response to user demand, the Brighton & Hove City Council and Coast to Capital funded scheme expanded its boundaries to the east and west, opening several new docking stations including at King Alfred leisure centre and Hove Lagoon.

Further expansion is planned for later in the year following the arrival of an additional 120 new bikes, making it easier for more users to get riding.

Based on user figures, the scheme is believed to be one of the country’s best-performing bike share scheme outside of London, becoming a staple for residents and visitors alike.

BTN BikeShare aims to encourage an active and healthy lifestyle and provide a sustainable, environmentally friendly mode of transport.

Martin
Martin

One BTN BikeShare user, Martin, said: “I get to explore places I’ve not been before, despite living here for 16 years! I’ve used the scheme since day one – I love that it promotes sustainable transport by encouraging more people to cycle.”

Marilena
Marilena

Another Brighton bike share enthusiast, Marilena, added: “It’s so easy. I no longer have to worry about my bike being stolen or breaking down. And it’s social – my wife and I love going on bike rides together.”

Tim Caswell, owner of Hourbike, the company operating the scheme, said: “Community is at the heart of the bike share scheme and we’re delighted that it has been fully embraced by the people of Brighton and Hove. It’s been brilliant watching locals and visitors support the bikes, choosing to cycle as a healthy and sustainable way to get around the city. We’re excited for the scheme to grow and look forward to celebrating many more birthdays!”

Cllr Gill Mitchell

Chair of the Council’s Environment, Transport and Sustainability Committee, Cllr Gill Mitchell, said: “It’s great to see the popularity of the bike share scheme which means it can expand to benefit more people in more places. We’re hoping to encourage even more people to try cycling during Cycle September and enjoy a sustainable and healthy way of getting around the city.”

BTN BikeShare will be celebrating its birthday at a free bike breakfast and networking event, hosted by Love to Ride for the launch of Cycle September.

Join them and other local businesses on Thursday, September 6 from 8 to 10am at The Meeting Place Café on Brighton seafront – and nab some birthday cake to take back to the office.

Photo by Brighton Pictures
Photo by Brighton Pictures

 

Help needed to bring Brighton history archives alive!

Would you like to play an important role in preserving and promoting Brighton and Hove’s unique heritage and learn new skills in the process?

QUEENSPARK Books, the UK’s longest-running community publisher, has been documenting the lives of local people since 1972. They are looking for volunteers for their Heritage Lottery funded project Archives Alive.

The community-run organisation has published over a hundred books, including ebooks and graphic novels, recording largely hidden histories of Brighton & Hove from 1850 to the present day. These include seminal books such as Backyard/ Back Street Brighton which depicts the slum clearances of the 1930s to 1950s, Daring Hearts about the experiences of LGBT+ people in the 1950’s and 1960’s, and Brighton Transformed, a recent book about the city’s trans gender communities.

Sadly, the majority of QueenSpark books are now out of print and much of its unique archive of texts, voice recordings and photographs are stored away in boxes and underutilised. The concern is that this material will eventually deteriorate and be lost forever.

Archives Alive will ensure this important ‘people’s history’ of the city – the only one of its kind – will be revitalised and made available to everyone.

Archives Alive Project Coordinator, Ali Ghanimi said: “We are looking for volunteers who can spare a few hours per week or month to help us organise and the archives and make them accessible. This will involve sifting through the material, selecting and publishing 4 new books and creating a new interactive website. This will be a great project for anyone with an interest in Brighton’s diverse and fascinating history. Who knows what these ‘archive detectives’ will uncover in the process?”

No specific skills are necessary as training and guidance will be provided by experts. This is a great opportunity for people wanting to develop skills and experience in history archives, book publishing and web development.

If you interested in volunteering email:

Southampton Pride in pictures

Thousands of revellers celebrated at Southampton’s third Pride on Saturday, August 25, with a colourful parade through the city centre and a main stage event in Guildhall Square – followed in the evening by an official after party at the Edge nightclub.

HEADLINE artists on the mainstage included Lucinda LashesLauren Harries, Cherry LiquorAura JayMiss Disney, Cheeky Girls, Union J and Athena Heart, the fourteen year old boy from Dudley in the Midlands not allowed to perform in drag at his school prom, who went down a storm!

Photographs by Tyrone Darling

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The Housing Coalition One Year On

Barry Hughes reflects on the first 12 months’ work delivered by the Brighton & Hove Housing Coalition.


BRIGHTON & Hove Housing Coalition was launched last August at St George’s Church in Kemptown, in the presence of MPs Caroline Lucas and Lloyd Russell-Moyle and 200 delegates from 20 organisations who signed up to the Coalition’s aims and objectives at the end of the day. In the intervening 12 months this group of largely volunteer housing activists, supported with a grant from Pride’s Social Impact Fund, have been extremely busy but there remains a growing need for our breed of activism.

SOME CHOICE
Statistics published in January 2018 estimated that 4,751 people bedded down outside in 2017, up 15% on 2016. The numbers have increase by 169% since 2010, although those of us who walk the city streets may feel that these statistics are on the modest side.

Homeless people are significantly more likely to suffer from mental distress as a result of finding themselves without a home; at least 25-30% of the homeless population suffer from mental health problems including major depression, schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. The most prevalent health problems among homeless individuals are substance abuse (62.5%), mental health problems (53.7%) or a combination of the two (42.6%). Given that these problems are causally linked to homelessness it indicates these individuals not only need homes, but they need ongoing health and social care support. Not, as someone once said to me, to be put in a hostel with a bed and a light bulb and left to their own devices.

Owen Jones
Owen Jones

A recent piece by Owen Jones (The Guardian) indicated that up to a quarter of the young homeless population are LGBT+ and many have been rejected by their families. The Big Issue flagged this up in July, pointing to the fact that whilst Pride events were celebrating the half-century of the introduction of the Sexual Offences Act 1967, every day thousands of LGBT+ people are still subjected to suspicion, discrimination and violence.

A study by the Albert Kennedy Trust estimated that 150,000 LGBT+ people were homeless or at risk of homelessness. The main reasons given were parental rejection, abuse within the family, or exposure to aggression or violence.

Stonewall Housing say that two-thirds of young people who access their services state that their housing problems are related to their sexual orientation or gender identity. This against a background of cuts in crucial services.

Jones’s piece in The Guardian says that, in surveys, more than four out of ten respondents believe “most homeless people are probably homeless because of circumstances beyond their control.”  

He also makes the disturbing observation that a quarter of those expressing an opinion, say; “Homeless people have probably made bad choices in life that got them into their situation.” This is the mindset that Brighton & Hove Housing Coalition utterly refutes and seeks to change as a matter of the greatest urgency.

SEVERE WEATHER EMERGENCY PROTOCOL (SWEP)
Coalition members were integral in getting Brighton & Hove City Council (B&HCC) to open a night shelter at the Brighton Centre and have continued to put pressure on the council to up their performance going forward. The Brighton Centre can only be described as a partial success with 27 people being ‘decanted’ into the pouring rain on the morning that the shelter closed. Luckily Sussex Homeless Support was on hand with their converted bus to look after 19 of these guests whilst the others were found secure accommodation.

The multi-agency Night Shelter Group has developed into Community Action Group on Homelessness (CAGH) chaired by B&HCC Councillors, with members of the Coalition represented.

Fundamental to the work of the Group is SWEP and Chairman of the Coalition’s Legal and Advocacy Group, David Thomas, has taken the lead in ensuring that the council open the shelters for street sleepers taking into account such factors as wind chill. David has also pushed the council to ensure that all forms of extreme weather, which may pose a risk to the lives of rough sleepers, are taken into account – including extreme heat.

HOMELESS BILL OF RIGHTS
The Coalition is at the forefront of taking up an idea, which has been adopted in Barcelona and other European cities – a Homeless Charter or Bill of Rights. It is the Coalition’s ambition that the city of Brighton & Hove will be the first local authority in the UK to adopt such a charter which is a compilation of basic rights from European and International human rights law. By endorsing it, cities reaffirm their commitment to human rights, which should guide all players towards tackling the root causes of poverty and homelessness.

Penalisation strategies can push homeless peoples further into poverty and exclusion. Rather than punishing them, local authorities should extend a hand to encourage homeless people to claim their rights, the fundamentals of which are set out here:

The right to exit homelessness; the right to access decent emergency accommodation; the right to use public space and to move freely within it; the right to equal treatment for all;
the right to effective postal address of last resort; the right to access basic sanitary facilities; the right to emergency services; the right to vote; the right to data protection; the right to privacy; and the right to carry out practices necessary to survival within the law.

Will the city of Brighton & Hove have the courage to adopt such a Bill of Rights? The Coalition has started the campaign to make it happen for a launch in October.

STREET ADVOCATES
The Coalition has teamed up with Law for Life: the foundation for public legal education, funded by Lush Charity Pot, in providing training for volunteers to create what we call ‘Street Advocates’ – people with sufficient knowledge to help the vulnerable when faced with seemingly insurmountable problems of poverty, homelessness and injustice.

Bobby Carver
Bobby Carver

MORE WORK TO DO
At the end of this first year of campaigning any tendency towards complacency should be cut short by reflecting on the case of Bobby Carver, whose plight remains unacceptable. The Local Government Ombudsman (LGO) investigated Bobby’s case at the end of 2017 and stated that the council’s assessment raised Bobby’s expectations, but noted, probably, as a result of the LGO’s intervention, that the council had agreed to an independent assessment of Bobby’s case from outside of the council. In the meantime Bobby doesn’t have accommodation or support services appropriate to his needs.

Written by Barry Hughes 

Brighton and Hove city council were asked to respond to explain at what stage the independent  assessment of Bobby Carvers case was at.

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