Category Archives: Big Issue North

Big Issue North: Predict & Provide – Food Poverty In The UK

THE BIOSPHERIC PROJECT credit Robert MartinFrom horsemeat in burgers to poverty related hunger, food is in the headlines in the worst possible way. Yet as food prices continue to rise and cities grow, the shortage of affordable and healthy food looks set to worsen. So what can an old mill in Salford do to bring sustainable and wholesome fare to our cities? Arwa Aburawa investigates.

With central government examining the surge of emergency foodbanks and charities warning of an increase in poverty-related hunger, it’s clear food insecurity is on the rise. The horsemeat scandal may have raised a lot of questions about our supermarkets but more daunting questions are now being asked about how we protect the poorest from rising food prices. How can we make healthy food more accessible in the wake of the cuts? And can cities really feed themselves? Manchester International Festival and the Biospheric Foundation in Salford are working together to answer these very questions….

Read on below:

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Big Issue North: One-parent families on the rise among British Asians

Big Issue North: Off-beam decision on solar panels

Big Issue North: Can You Dig It?

Here’s a feature I put together for the Big Issue North on radical gardening. Click on the images for a closer look.

Leese criticised delays in spending 1 million as unacceptable

Big Issue North 16-22 February 2009

The leader of Manchester City Council,Richard Leese, has criticised delays in spending £1 million to tackle climate change as unacceptable and insisted that the council “start delivering actual programmes” with the money.

In February 2008 the council pledged £1 million to help slash the city’s annual C02 emissions by a million tonnes by 2020. But the money lies unspent due to a lack of clear plans or projects to invest the money in.

In August last year a council spokesperson claimed it was within weeks of announcing a series of commercial and sustainable plans. These plans, however, never emerged and a council report from last month now says the local authority is still exploring options.

These options are now being considered by the council’s environmental strategy board, according to Beverley Taylor, head of environmental campaigns. She said the delay was to ensure the council had the correct strategy in place and that “we get it right”.

Manchester’s Green Party chair, Brian Candeland, said the council’s inaction was a “bad sign sign” and the recent report was a step back as it lacked “substance, targets or any solid commitments”. He said: “A good way for the money to be spent is to improve the insulation of domestic and council properties, and even pushing for free home insulation. This can make a big difference with the money if it is spent properly and protect those at risk of fuel poverty,especially among the elderly.”

Tim McMahon of Manchester’s Sustainable Neighbourhoods Pool, a community forum on housing and regeneration, said: “As far as the £1 million carbon reduction innovation and investment fund is concerned, I’m pretty sure that climate change can’t be combated by throwing money at it.

“The most effective action is free – behavioural and attitudinal change – but then perhaps the money should be spent on education. To understand a problem is often the key to solving it.”

ARWA ABURAWA

Wrong to recycle?

Big Issue North 1-7 December 2008

A recycling company’s plans for a green energy plant in Horwich, near Bolton is facing local opposition due to complaints about its existing site and a claimed lack of public consultation.

Armstrong Environmental Services, the Bolton recycling company based in Bolton, is planning to install the powerful 20-megawatt generator at the site of the former Horwich Castings foundry. The proposed plant would use recycled wood to extract gas that turns a turbine. The plant would create around 50 jobs and generate clean, renewable electricity for 40,000 homes. But Horwich residents who have complained about smells emanating from the company’s existing site in Horwich are opposed to the new plant.

They claim the smell can get so bad that children won’t play outside and local businesses find their customers are put off. One resident said: “I am fully aware that the company is doing necessary work in helping to reduce the landfill problem in this country. But surely there is a necessity for it to prevent the area from suffering?”

“Locals don’t have anything against this type of project,” Horwich councillor Steve Rock said. “They are simply worried due to the constant trouble they’ve had with Armstrong due to noise, dust and odour pollution from its existing site.”Another local councillor, John Barrow, added: “If you’d ever been to Horwich in the summer you’d know. The smell is so bad it makes people sick, actually physically sick.”

Barrow added that there has been no face-to-face consultation with Armstrong, the councillors or the public. “Or if there has been we weren’t invited,” he said. The company has applied to Bolton Council for a certificate of lawfulness, rather than planning permission, for the site.
Rock said:

“As I understand it, if they go through planning, public consultation will be necessary. Otherwise it won’t.
“Locals are 100 per cent against it. I’ve not heard of anyone for it. The company has a long history of bad dealings and relations with the public.” Armstrong would not comment.

By ARWA ABURAWA

Author Q&A: Andrew M. Davies


The Big Issue in the North
Issue: 745

THE GANGS OF MANCHESTER
(Milo Books, £11.99)
Andrew Davies is senior lecturer in modern British history at the University of Liverpool. The Gangs of Manchester: The Story Of The Scuttlers, explores the violent underworld of youth gangs that emerged in Manchester during the late 1870s until their eventual demise at the turn of the century.

What drew you to the scuttlers?
I first learned about the scuttlers from older people living in Salford during the 1980s. They’d heard tales of the gangs of the 1880s and 1890s from their parents and grandparents. I was fascinated by these stories.

How did you research the book?
Most of the episodes in the book are based on reports in local newspapers. The leading scuttlers appeared in court again and again. Everyone knew their names, though they were regarded with a mixture of admiration and fear. Court records survive for some of the major gang trials.

Were you surprised by any findings?
I was surprised to find gangs venturing right across the city in search of a fight. I’d assumed that feuds would be between gangs from adjacent districts. Many were, but I discovered vendettas between gangs four miles apart. Scuttlers from Gorton or Openshaw would walk through town to seek out gangs from Salford, and vice versa. They were fighting gangs, driven by pride, revenge and sheer excitement. Every gang wanted to prove their neighbourhood was the toughest.

Why did violent youth gangs emerge in major conurbations?
It can’t be a coincidence that gangs have always been formed in areas where young people have few economic prospects and no political voice. For most lads in Ancoats in the 1880s, there was little chance of an apprenticeship and few local people had the right to vote in general elections. To be a member of a gang like the Bengal Tigers was to be somebody.

How did the media react?
Then as now, most coverage of the gangs was sensational. Some of the things that went on were terrible, but it’s always easier to demonise young people – or point the finger at their parents – than to get to the roots of problems that stretch back for decades.

Did girls play a role in these gangs?
They often fought alongside the lads. The magistrates didn’t know how to deal with them. One stipendiary magistrate offered to discharge them if they went into domestic service but they said they’d sooner go to prison.

What were the long-term legacies of these gangs?
The most important legacy was the lads’ clubs set up in districts like Ancoats, which had long been a hotbed of scuttling, with backing from employers and figures like CP Scott, editor of the Manchester Guardian. Salford Lads’ and Girls’ Club, established in 1903, still does fantastic work in Ordsall today – some volunteers have been with the club for more than 50 years.

Are there comparisons between then and now?
All the elements are there, from the pride in where you come from to the obsession with looking the part. The scuttlers, with their flared trousers and long fringes, would have fitted in at a Happy Mondays gig 100 years later.

Are you excited about your book being turned into a play?
Very much so. I’ve seen the last plays by the MaD Theatre Company and their work is brilliant – funny but with a real edge to it. They write Manchester stories for Manchester people, and that’s what my book’s about –except half of it’s about Salford.

ARWA ABURAWA

Big Issue North 27 October- 2 November 2008.