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Labour Group announce new team to run the city

Cllr Nancy Platts, the new leader of the Labour Group of Councillors on Brighton & Hove City Council has announced her proposed new team of lead councillors, who she plans will oversee the delivery of council services for the next municipal year.

Cllr Nancy Platts
Cllr Nancy Platts

APPOINTMENTS are expected to be confirmed at the annual meeting of the council, which takes place next Wednesday, May 22 and includes some new faces elected to the council at the recent elections.

Cllr Nancy Platts said: “I am really proud of this very strong team, a team which combines vital experience carried forward from the previous Labour administration as well as the very important skills and expertise of new Labour councillors elected this May. We are really looking forward to taking our first steps as a new administration, and beginning to implement our ambitious manifesto commitments to the city, including tackling the key challenges of housing and the environment.” 

The key proposed role holders are:

Chair of Children Young People and Skills Committee – Cllr Nick Childs

Chair of Environment Transport and Sustainability Committee – Cllr Anne Pissaridou

Chair of Housing and New Homes Committee – Cllr John Allcock

Chair of Neighbourhoods, Inclusion, Communities and Equalities Committee – Cllr Kate Knight

Chair of Tourism Development and Culture Committee – Cllr Alan Robins

Chair of Health and Wellbeing Board – Cllr Clare Moonan

Chair of Licensing Committee – Cllr Jackie O’Quinn

Chair of Planning Committee – Cllr Tracey Hill

 

Blue Camel Club to close Learning Disability Week

Learning Disability Week Brighton culminates with Carousel’s Blue Camel Club at The Old Market, Monday, June 24.

STARTED in 2000, the club offers a genuine clubbing experience in a safe and accessible environment for people with a learning disability. Presenting only the very best in learning disabled performers, the club is a showcase for high quality learning disabled talent from around UK.

With a host of DJ’s, visuals, bar and chill-out space, the club is an important fixture for learning disabled people who have limited opportunities to meet and mingle, dance and hear great bands.

The event is planned and presented by the 12-strong learning disabled team and regularly attracts 300+ clubbers from across Sussex.

This month’s club features Brighton’s Spraxa, 19 year old rapper expressing his uniqueness and Two Decks, lo-fi hip-hop bangers from London to get you jumping.


Event: Blue Camel Club

Where: The Old Market, Hove

When: Monday, June 24

Time: 7pm-10pm

Cost: £5 / £1 carers Advance booking recommended

To book tickets online, click here:

Lancing woman receives eight year sentence for homophobic attack and abuse

A woman who conducted a homophobic attack on a family man travelling back from Brighton Pride has been jailed in a young offender’s institute.

JASMINE Shepherd, 20, appeared at Hove Crown Court for sentencing on Tuesday, May 7 following her earlier guilty plea.

Shepherd of Hayley Road, Lancing targeted the victim, Owen Syred, as he left Lancing railway station on his return from Brighton Pride on the afternoon of Saturday, August 4, 2018.

She hurled a torrent of homophobic verbal abuse at Mr Syred then along with her mother and two children followed him into a nearby supermarket in South Street, Lansing before picking up a bottle of wine and throwing it at the back of his head causing a serious head injury and partial loss of hearing in one of his ears.

With the help of eye witnesses to both the assault and verbal abuse, she was quickly identified.

Shepherd who had a previous history of violence, pleaded guilty to the charge of grievous bodily harm with intent and was sentenced to eight years and six months in a young offenders’ institute.

Owen Syred
Owen Syred

Mr Syred told Gscene magazine he was particularly concerned about how hard he had to push Sussex Police to record the incident as a hate crime.

“The police kept asking me if I was gay. I told them it makes no difference if I am gay or not, I was attacked because I was coming back from Pride with Pride stickers on my clothes and Shepherd assumed I was gay. That is an offence, my sexuality is not the issue.”

Investigating Officer Robert Rollins of Worthing Investigation Team said: “Shepherd took an immediate dislike to the victim and the verbal abuse she shouted was abhorrent.

“The attack, understandably, caused the victim a huge amount of stress, pain and worry and I hope this sentencing provides closure for him.

“Shepherd’s previous bad character and the homophobic aspect of the assault allowed the judge to provide a higher sentence.

“We hope this statement will be a stark warning to everyone that this behaviour is wholly unacceptable and will not be tolerated.”

Shepherd was sent to a young persons offenders’ institute rather than jail because she had become pregnant since the incident.

Green Convenor to march in Belfast for equal marriage this weekend

Green Convenor, Councillor Phélim Mac Cafferty will join the march for equal marriage in Belfast, Northern Ireland this Saturday, May 18.

Cllr Phélim Mac Cafferty
Cllr Phélim Mac Cafferty

TOMORROW, Friday May 17 he will attend the International Day Against Homophobia, Biphobia & Transphobia (IDAHOBIT) event outside Jubilee Library in central Brighton, to call for renewed efforts to stamp out hate in the UK and abroad.

Green Councillors will join volunteers of the Brighton and Hove LGBT Community Safety Forum in a ‘minute’s noise,’ to remember all those who have lost their lives to homophobic, biphobic and transphobic violence.

Councillor Mac Cafferty said: “Greens will stand shoulder to shoulder with our city and our global LGBT communities to remember all of those worldwide who have lost their lives to prejudice as we once again commit ourselves to the international battle against transphobia, biphobia and homophobia. This year, we celebrate Andy Brennan the Australian professional football player who has come out- I hope it encourages UK players to feel they can come out too, so the work continues to ensure that ‘the beautiful game’ includes everyone. But IDAHOBIT is also an important reminder that both at home and abroad LGBT people still face violence and prejudice. Being gay is still illegal in 72 countries around the world; the Conservative Government maintains links with the homophobic DUP and even in our city, LGBT people continue to face discrimination and violence.

“Even close to home, we still have significant hurdles to equality. Northern Ireland still doesn’t have equal marriage and remains the last part of the UK where same-sex couples cannot marry. This is a massive injustice and has to change. On Saturday I will be proud to march in Belfast, with campaigners and the Green Party’s sister party, the Green Party in Northern Ireland, including Green MLA Clare Bailey and our four newly elected Councillors on Belfast City Council.

“This year’s IDAHOBIT marks 29 years to the day that the World Health Organisation removed homosexuality from its list of ‘mental diseases,’ and though we celebrate achievements in the fight for LGBT equality, there is still a long way to go. From our work to set up the first Trans Equality Scrutiny Panel to better understand trans people’s needs, to our relentless support for our city’s LGBT community, Greens will always work to stamp out hate.”

For more information about the IDAHOBIT event which starts outside Jubilee Library tomorrow at 6pm, click here:

Fringe THEATRE REVIEW: 25/The Decriminalisation Monologues @Junkyard Dogs: The Doghouse

“People forget what it was like back then. Our rights were hard won and they can be sharp taken away. People would do well to remember that “.

SO says one of the two characters in these two tightly written monologues about gay life in Ireland in the 1970s and 80s.

In Moira’s story a lesbian civil servant is ‘outed’ in her Government department by an anonymous hater. In Mark’s story – we see the lack of rights of gay men in that period – specifically when their so-called “special friend” dies.

These are unknown and unseen stories about the small differences LGBT+ people make towards the bigger desire for recognition, equality and fair treatment.

Acting Out is a Dublin-based company that seeks to find those real-life stories and dramatise them.

As Moira, Lesley Ann Reilly gets to the heart of the problem in 70’s Ireland; lesbians were by and large invisible and indeed thought not to exist. In this case Moira and her girlfriend Karen move in with two gay men and to the outside world they are two happy straight couples. Moira’s tells us; “There was mass emigration of gays from Ireland to England. I didn’t want to leave so I acted straight.”

Up for promotion to a senior job, her lesbianism wouldn’t get her the sack, but she certainly wouldn’t advance in her career. For her partner Karen, the situation is much more dangerous. As an ex-nun and now a primary teacher, she faces the sack if the truth is revealed.

And then the anonymous hate mail starts to arrive internally on Moira’s desk. “Lesbians shouldn’t be taking men’s jobs,” says the second of three notes.

In the end Moira takes action. She puts a photo of her girlfriend on her desk and when a third hate note arrives, she posts a public message on the staff noticeboard. Her senior management support her and warn against bullying and intimidation.

She is promoted and years later retires as a very senior civil servant. Equally Karen becomes a professor and gay rights campaigner. And finally at the age of 73 Moira is able to marry her.

Lesley Ann is wonderfully buoyant, but angry, determined, and tearful too.

Howard Lodge is Mark, a camp, funny, lovely man with terrific one-liners, has a harder hill to climb. In the progressive gay lifestyle that is 1980s Soho, life seems good. When he meets Eamonn, it seems a perfect situation.

A sudden inheritance leads to the two going back to Ireland to set up Ireland’s first gay Bed and Breakfast.

This is also a story about hatred – that of Eamon’s family towards the couple, when the local community and parish priest are in fact very supportive. When Eamon dies of AIDS the nightmare is just beginning. Thrown out into the street and not invited to his partner’s funeral, Howard as the not to be cowed Northerner Mark stands up and defiantly delivers an impromptu funeral eulogy that unites the small community.

Ultimately he marries the ex-priest Father Pat.

So both stories have a happy ending, celebrating the 25th anniversary of decriminalisation of homosexuality in Ireland. Would that all such stories were like that.

The show, written, directed and produced by Sean Denver, runs at Junkyard Dogs at the Brighthelm Centre, North Road as part of the Brighton Fringe till May 18, then tours to Prague, London and Manchester.

To book tickets online, click here:

Review by Brian Butler

 

Fringe THEATRE REVIEW: What Doesn’t Kill You (Blah Blah) Stronger @The Warren

Award winning Australian theatre company Holland St Productions has brought its latest offering to Brighton Fringe for a UK premier – and what a treat it is.

STRAIGHT from the off this wickedly funny cabaret grabs you and sweeps you along with clever, catchy original songs and two dynamite performances from Erin Hutchinson and Tyler Jacob Jones.

The show takes its inspiration from real-life survival tales from around the world, setting bizarre stories about subjects like exploding toilets, serial ship-wreck survivors and people struck by meteors to a range of musical styles from knowingly bombastic show tunes to chirpy calypso pastiches. There are nods along the way to Sondheim, Rogers and Hammerstein, Disney and more, and it all makes for a hilarious and thrillingly entertaining ride.

Hutchinson and Jones are both blessed with great singing voices, but it’s their accomplished comic acting and a great on-stage rapport supported by some ingenious choreographic staging and use of props that takes this show to another level.

They are brilliantly supported by Joshua Haines’s intuitive piano accompaniment which was just right in all the right places, showcasing the wit and variety of Robert Woods original score.

This is a first class show that clearly merits the fringe awards and plaudits it has recently received back in Australia. Catch one of the remaining Brighton performances while you can.

Remaining performances on May 18, 20 and 21.

To book tickets online, click here:

 

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