Home » Posts tagged with » media (Page 625)
Claimants ‘tricked out of benefits’

Soaring number of sanctions against unemployed amid claims that DWP staff are being told to trip people up with paperwork Rising numbers of vulnerable jobseekers are being tricked into losing benefits amid growing pressure to meet welfare targets, a Jobcentre Plus adviser has told the Guardian. A whistleblower said staff at his jobcentre were given targets of three people a week to refer for sanctions, where benefits are removed for up to six months. He said it was part of a “culture change” since last summer that had led to competition between advisers, teams and regional offices. “Suddenly you’re not helping somebody into sustainable employment, which is what you’re employed to do,” he said. “You’re looking for ways to trick your customers into ‘not looking for work’. You come up with many ways. I’ve seen dyslexic customers given written job searches, and when they don’t produce them – what a surprise – they’re sanctioned. The only target that anyone seems to care about is stopping people’s money. “‘Saving the public purse’ is the catchphrase that is used in our office … It is drummed home all the time – you’re saving the public purse. Feel good about stopping someone’s money, you’ve just saved your own pocket. Its a joke.” The claims came as the big businesses handed contracts to get the long term jobless into worktoday said the government should privatise jobcentres so that their firms could work with people who have been jobless for less than a year. Statistics from the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) show the total number of cases where people have lost their benefits has soared since the beginning of 2010 to 75,000 in October, the latest month available. The figures also reveal the number of claimants with registered disabilities being cut off has more than doubled to almost 20,000 over the same period. This follows a change in the rules in April last year where sanctions were extended to claimants who were late for jobcentre interviews and other less serious offences. When a claimant is sanctioned their jobseeker’s allowance is stopped. They then have to apply for hardship payments, which are usually about half the allowance, or just over £30 a week. John, in Wigan, has been sanctioned for six months and says he has to rely on food parcels and must sleep on his friend’s couch. “It’s left me in a state of depression. I’ve lost weight, I’m tired … I feel like I’ve been attacked for no reason.” The whistleblower blamed the targets. “We were told suddenly that [finding someone to sanction] once a week wasn’t good enough, we were far behind other offices, and we went to a meeting where they compared us with other offices, and said we now have to do three a week to catch up. Most staff go into work and they’re thinking about it from moment one – who am I going to stop this week?” The DWP denies there are specific targets, but the Guardian has seen email evidence of referral targets in one office, and the issue of targets has been raised by employees on online forums. The DWP said: “To say that we are targeting vulnerable people is ridiculous. We only sanction people if they do not adhere to their agreement. We are massively expanding the help and support that jobseekers will receive to ensure that they get the right help and support to get into work. If someone is incapable of work, they will continue to receive unconditional support.” But the whistleblower said the policy hit the vulnerable instead of hardcore benefit cheats, who he said were a small group. “The young often fall into it, because they haven’t been there long enough, they are generally a major target. The uneducated are another major target. I’ve seen people with … seriously low educational standards and it’s easy to exploit them.” He said staff had different ways to ensure they could stop benefits for a set amount of people. “So, for example, if you want someone to diversify – they’re an electrician or a plumber, they may not want to go into call centres or something. What you do is keep promoting such and such a job, and you pressure them into taking it off you, the piece of paper. Then in two weeks you look at the system, you ask them if they applied for it … they say no – you stop their money for six months. “You very rarely see the hardcore taken because they know the forms – they know it better than the staff, the system.” Shirley Cramer of the charity Dyslexia Action warned that the true impact on people with learning difficulties was likely to be higher because in many cases it was a hidden disability. “Because we know there are large numbers of them, and that they are hidden, and that they are over-represented in disadvantaged groups, they are very much at risk. And we know that with a bit of help they can be terrific employees.” Martin John, national officer for the Public and Commercial Services Union, said ministers had demanded a tougher approach since the general election. “We are against the use of targets for labour market sanctions, and are worried about the financial impact on people.” Citizens Advice has reported a significant rise in clients who have had their benefits cut. Andy Robertson, a caseworker in South Tyneside, an area with 13% unemployment, has a huge pile of paperwork for appeals, and says his casework has more than doubled in the last year. “What’s happening at the moment is possibly the worst thing I’ve ever seen with regard to practice from the DWP. Clients seem to be getting sanctioned for next to nothing,” he said. Robertson worked for eight years as an adviser and financial assessor at jobcentres. He has also seen the changes affect many vulnerable clients, such as those with dyslexia or mental health problems. “Advisers were previously exercising their discretion … now the client-adviser balance doesn’t seem to exist any more.” Yvonne Fovargue, the Labour MP for Makerfield, raised the issue of sanctioning in parliament during a reading of the new Welfare Reform Act. She is worried that at a time when funding to support groups such as Citizens Advice is being cut, an even stricter regime is being introduced. Fovargue said the situation would only get worse with the drive to bring people off incapacity benefit and on to the jobseeker’s allowance, where they are suddenly exposed to these sanctions. The whistleblower also thinks there will be an impact. “A lot of them haven’t been in work for a number of years. So I’m not expecting them to understand the system … which will make for easy sanctions. “This cannot be right that we are using a department that’s supposed to help people into work to stop them getting benefit that a lot of them are entitled to.” In Wigan, John said he first found out he had been sanctioned when the money did not appear in his account on the usual day. His jobcentre told him it was because he had missed the deadline for three jobs. He said his Jobcentre adviser said he would send application forms in the post, but they arrived too late. “It’s outrageous … to leave someone with no money for six months. It’s totally hindered my jobsearching, I spend all of my time dealing with these problems now.” The whistleblower says his office has been told there is no more money for back to work training from April. “From April, we offer no provision … nothing, no training course, nothing. The funding ends at the end of March. “[Now] your office can shine through one of two targets. You can either shine through getting people into work, but that’s really difficult. Or you can stop their money, and that’s really easy.” Case study John Robson, 53, South Shields “It never seems to go away. Every day you’re thinking: ‘I haven’t got a letter today, so obviously there isn’t a sanction going against me.’ Another day there’s a brown envelope from the DWP and you think: ‘What’s this for?’ There’s always that cloud hanging over you.” Robson was made redundant from his job as a delivery driver 13 months ago. “I was 17 when I started work so I’ve been working for 35 years. I’m not Jack the lad who’s never been in a job and is trying to con the government. I want to work, I just can’t get a job. “You try your best, and the minute you do something wrong, they’re on you like a ton of bricks.” Robson has been sanctioned three times. First he was ill and missed a jobcentre appointment. Next he was sanctioned for not applying for one job. “I was sure I had applied for it but I

Continue reading …
Claimants ‘tricked out of benefits’

Soaring number of sanctions against unemployed amid claims that DWP staff are being told to trip people up with paperwork Rising numbers of vulnerable jobseekers are being tricked into losing benefits amid growing pressure to meet welfare targets, a Jobcentre Plus adviser has told the Guardian. A whistleblower said staff at his jobcentre were given targets of three people a week to refer for sanctions, where benefits are removed for up to six months. He said it was part of a “culture change” since last summer that had led to competition between advisers, teams and regional offices. “Suddenly you’re not helping somebody into sustainable employment, which is what you’re employed to do,” he said. “You’re looking for ways to trick your customers into ‘not looking for work’. You come up with many ways. I’ve seen dyslexic customers given written job searches, and when they don’t produce them – what a surprise – they’re sanctioned. The only target that anyone seems to care about is stopping people’s money. “‘Saving the public purse’ is the catchphrase that is used in our office … It is drummed home all the time – you’re saving the public purse. Feel good about stopping someone’s money, you’ve just saved your own pocket. Its a joke.” The claims came as the big businesses handed contracts to get the long term jobless into worktoday said the government should privatise jobcentres so that their firms could work with people who have been jobless for less than a year. Statistics from the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) show the total number of cases where people have lost their benefits has soared since the beginning of 2010 to 75,000 in October, the latest month available. The figures also reveal the number of claimants with registered disabilities being cut off has more than doubled to almost 20,000 over the same period. This follows a change in the rules in April last year where sanctions were extended to claimants who were late for jobcentre interviews and other less serious offences. When a claimant is sanctioned their jobseeker’s allowance is stopped. They then have to apply for hardship payments, which are usually about half the allowance, or just over £30 a week. John, in Wigan, has been sanctioned for six months and says he has to rely on food parcels and must sleep on his friend’s couch. “It’s left me in a state of depression. I’ve lost weight, I’m tired … I feel like I’ve been attacked for no reason.” The whistleblower blamed the targets. “We were told suddenly that [finding someone to sanction] once a week wasn’t good enough, we were far behind other offices, and we went to a meeting where they compared us with other offices, and said we now have to do three a week to catch up. Most staff go into work and they’re thinking about it from moment one – who am I going to stop this week?” The DWP denies there are specific targets, but the Guardian has seen email evidence of referral targets in one office, and the issue of targets has been raised by employees on online forums. The DWP said: “To say that we are targeting vulnerable people is ridiculous. We only sanction people if they do not adhere to their agreement. We are massively expanding the help and support that jobseekers will receive to ensure that they get the right help and support to get into work. If someone is incapable of work, they will continue to receive unconditional support.” But the whistleblower said the policy hit the vulnerable instead of hardcore benefit cheats, who he said were a small group. “The young often fall into it, because they haven’t been there long enough, they are generally a major target. The uneducated are another major target. I’ve seen people with … seriously low educational standards and it’s easy to exploit them.” He said staff had different ways to ensure they could stop benefits for a set amount of people. “So, for example, if you want someone to diversify – they’re an electrician or a plumber, they may not want to go into call centres or something. What you do is keep promoting such and such a job, and you pressure them into taking it off you, the piece of paper. Then in two weeks you look at the system, you ask them if they applied for it … they say no – you stop their money for six months. “You very rarely see the hardcore taken because they know the forms – they know it better than the staff, the system.” Shirley Cramer of the charity Dyslexia Action warned that the true impact on people with learning difficulties was likely to be higher because in many cases it was a hidden disability. “Because we know there are large numbers of them, and that they are hidden, and that they are over-represented in disadvantaged groups, they are very much at risk. And we know that with a bit of help they can be terrific employees.” Martin John, national officer for the Public and Commercial Services Union, said ministers had demanded a tougher approach since the general election. “We are against the use of targets for labour market sanctions, and are worried about the financial impact on people.” Citizens Advice has reported a significant rise in clients who have had their benefits cut. Andy Robertson, a caseworker in South Tyneside, an area with 13% unemployment, has a huge pile of paperwork for appeals, and says his casework has more than doubled in the last year. “What’s happening at the moment is possibly the worst thing I’ve ever seen with regard to practice from the DWP. Clients seem to be getting sanctioned for next to nothing,” he said. Robertson worked for eight years as an adviser and financial assessor at jobcentres. He has also seen the changes affect many vulnerable clients, such as those with dyslexia or mental health problems. “Advisers were previously exercising their discretion … now the client-adviser balance doesn’t seem to exist any more.” Yvonne Fovargue, the Labour MP for Makerfield, raised the issue of sanctioning in parliament during a reading of the new Welfare Reform Act. She is worried that at a time when funding to support groups such as Citizens Advice is being cut, an even stricter regime is being introduced. Fovargue said the situation would only get worse with the drive to bring people off incapacity benefit and on to the jobseeker’s allowance, where they are suddenly exposed to these sanctions. The whistleblower also thinks there will be an impact. “A lot of them haven’t been in work for a number of years. So I’m not expecting them to understand the system … which will make for easy sanctions. “This cannot be right that we are using a department that’s supposed to help people into work to stop them getting benefit that a lot of them are entitled to.” In Wigan, John said he first found out he had been sanctioned when the money did not appear in his account on the usual day. His jobcentre told him it was because he had missed the deadline for three jobs. He said his Jobcentre adviser said he would send application forms in the post, but they arrived too late. “It’s outrageous … to leave someone with no money for six months. It’s totally hindered my jobsearching, I spend all of my time dealing with these problems now.” The whistleblower says his office has been told there is no more money for back to work training from April. “From April, we offer no provision … nothing, no training course, nothing. The funding ends at the end of March. “[Now] your office can shine through one of two targets. You can either shine through getting people into work, but that’s really difficult. Or you can stop their money, and that’s really easy.” Case study John Robson, 53, South Shields “It never seems to go away. Every day you’re thinking: ‘I haven’t got a letter today, so obviously there isn’t a sanction going against me.’ Another day there’s a brown envelope from the DWP and you think: ‘What’s this for?’ There’s always that cloud hanging over you.” Robson was made redundant from his job as a delivery driver 13 months ago. “I was 17 when I started work so I’ve been working for 35 years. I’m not Jack the lad who’s never been in a job and is trying to con the government. I want to work, I just can’t get a job. “You try your best, and the minute you do something wrong, they’re on you like a ton of bricks.” Robson has been sanctioned three times. First he was ill and missed a jobcentre appointment. Next he was sanctioned for not applying for one job. “I was sure I had applied for it but I

Continue reading …
Heavy Fighting in the Ivory Coast; Liberia Mercenaries heading in as people are fleeing out into Liberia

Click here to view this media Fighting is now being reported in Abidjan, the biggest city in the Ivory Coast and where ex-ruler Gbagbo is holed up. BBC: Ivory Coast: ‘Heavy fighting’ near Gbagbo residence Hamadoun Toure, spokesman for the UN’s special representative for Ivory Coast: ”The countdown has started” There has been heavy fighting in Ivory Coast’s main city, Abidjan, between forces loyal to the UN-recognised president, Alassane Ouattara, and supporters of incumbent Laurent Gbagbo. Witnesses have reported hearing intense gunfire near Mr Gbagbo’s residence, while Mr Ouattara’s supporters say they have taken control of state television. His government earlier closed Ivory Coast’s borders and declared a curfew. Mr Gbagbo has refused to relinquish the presidency since November’s election. But the national army has put up almost no resistance since Mr Ouattara’s supporters launched an offensive on Monday. Pro-Ouattara forces reportedly now control about 80% of the country Will Sen. Inhofe write a new letter to Hillary Clinton and ask for air trikes in support for his C Street buddy and Pat Robertson favorite, Mr. Gbagbo ? With the turmoil continuing in the Ivory Coast because ousted ruler, Gbagbo will not give up his seat of power after he was defeated in a fair election, neighboring Liberia is entering into the madness on tow fronts. Adding to Liberia’s already mounting problems, is the flow of Liberian mercenaries into the Ivory Coast and the flow of more than 100,000 Ivory Coast refugees into Liberia. “It’s a serious threat to the stability of Liberia and, I might say, to the stability of all neighboring countries,” said Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf in an interview. “There’s been a lot of investment for peace in this sub-region; we’re beginning to see the result of that investment,” she added. “If nothing is done to resolve the crisis, all of these efforts will be undermined.” The mercenaries are fighting on behalf of the Ivory Coast’s entrenched leader Laurent Gbagbo— not recognized by the United Nations—as rebels in the north of the country battle for control. “According to what we hear, both sides are recruiting Liberian mercenaries,” said Harrison S. Karnwea Sr., Liberia’s interior minister. “When people have been used to living on violence, they have got no profession to earn their living on.” On Thursday, fighting had escalated in the Ivory Coast capital city of Abidjan where forces loyal to Gbagbo clashed with forces in support of U.N.-recognized president Alassane Quattara. So we have Ivory Coast people fleeing into Liberia by the thousands to escape any violence from the two clashing forces which is a huge problem for the country of Liberia, who can barely sustain their own people. Liberia Uneasily Linked to Ivory Coast Conflict “Gbagbo’s troops are composed of the Ivorian Army, the Liberian mercenaries and the militia,” he said recently, pointing to a carefully folded map. “We want to cut off the mercenary flow into Côte d’Ivoire.” But the traffic at the border moved in two directions. As General Michel’s troops gained ground, a tide of refugees escaping the crisis crossed the porous and remote border into Liberia , a country with a fragile grip on stability itself. According to the United Nations , more than 100,000 people have fled to Liberia, an exodus visible in the women with bundles on their heads and babies on their backs, trudging on or sitting exhausted by trail sides. And as the struggle over Ivory Coast spills beyond its borders, many fear it will rattle a region still trying to recover from its own history of civil war. “It’s a serious threat to the stability of Liberia and, I might say, to the stability of all neighboring countries,” President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf of Liberia said in an interview. “There’s been a lot of investment for peace in this subregion; we’re beginning to see the result of that investment,” she added. “If nothing is done to resolve the crisis, all of these efforts will be undermined.” The US is publicly staying pretty quiet on American TV about this conflict so far even if they are working the back channels as I was told by Ben Rhodes on our blogger call, but so why can’t we at the very least help lead an international charge to get relief aid to Liberia since the “humanitarian” level is quite extreme? Labour has warned the humanitarian situation in Ivory Coast is becoming “desperate” amid violence sparked by its disputed presidential election. They have urged ministers to step up international efforts to get aid to the thousands of people displaced and forced to flee to neighbouring Liberia. The UN has called for an immediate end to violence in the West African state.

Continue reading …
CBS Notices Obama Administration Playing Politics With Nuclear Waste Disposal, NBC and ABC Silent

Since Japan's earthquake and following nuclear crisis, the CBS Evening News has done two reports on the Obama administration blocking use of the Yucca Mountain storage facility in Nevada to safely dispose of U.S. nuclear waste. Meanwhile, NBC and ABC have ignored the controversy. The first CBS report on the issue came on March 22, when Evening News anchor Katie Couric declared: “The crisis in Japan has renewed the debate over nuclear power in this country. Today a federal appeals court heard arguments in a lawsuit over what to do with spent fuel rods.” Correspondent Jim Axelrod explained: “An estimated 66,000 metric tons of spent fuel are stored at 77 sites around the country. That's more than 145 million pounds….Plans to make Yucca Mountain in Nevada a long-term storage site were scuttled by the Obama administration a year ago, after 20 years of planning costing $14 billion.” In a follow-up piece on Thursday's Evening News, correspondent Armen Keteyian went further in laying blame on the Obama administration: “There was one site designed to hold all of our nation's nuclear waste and it's right here in the high desert of Nevada, at a place called Yucca Mountain. Today, the federal government won't let our cameras anywhere near it. It's shut down, locked up, caught up in what critics charge is nothing more than pure politics.” Fill-in anchor Erica Hill teased Keteyian's report at the top of the broadcast: “Why did plans to bury nuclear waste inside Nevada's Yucca Mountain get killed? Was it safety fears or politics?” Keteyian described how the, “Obama administration kept its campaign promise….And shut down Yucca Mountain. Now the Nuclear Regulatory Commission must decide if it wants to restart what is already a 25-year, $14 billion project, in the face of tough opposition, like that from Harry Reid, the Democratic Senate majority leader from Nevada.” Keteyian also pointed out the political background of the head of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission under Obama: “A former staffer for Senator Reid, Greg Jaczko, now chairs the NRC. Jaczko recently came under fire after shutting down the agency's safety review of Yucca Mountain and after key safety recommendations were redacted, cut out, from a long-awaited NRC report.” In the March 22 report, Axelrod noted: “The head of the NRC may not see a pressing problem, but the states now suing did not want to take that risk before Japan's disaster and certainly don't want to now.” On Thursday, Keteyian challenged Jaczko: “Critics charge that you were simply doing the bidding of your former boss, Senator Harry Reid, a fierce opponent of this project.” Keteyian concluded his piece: “The NRC inspector general and Congress are now investigating the decision to shut down the safety review. Still, nuclear waste is scattered across 35 states, and Yucca Mountain sits silent and empty.” Here is a full transcript of Keteyian's March 31 report: 6:30PM ET TEASE: ERICA HILL: Why did plans to bury nuclear waste inside Nevada's Yucca Mountain get killed? Was it safety fears or politics?

Continue reading …
CBS Notices Obama Administration Playing Politics With Nuclear Waste Disposal, NBC and ABC Silent

Since Japan's earthquake and following nuclear crisis, the CBS Evening News has done two reports on the Obama administration blocking use of the Yucca Mountain storage facility in Nevada to safely dispose of U.S. nuclear waste. Meanwhile, NBC and ABC have ignored the controversy. The first CBS report on the issue came on March 22, when Evening News anchor Katie Couric declared: “The crisis in Japan has renewed the debate over nuclear power in this country. Today a federal appeals court heard arguments in a lawsuit over what to do with spent fuel rods.” Correspondent Jim Axelrod explained: “An estimated 66,000 metric tons of spent fuel are stored at 77 sites around the country. That's more than 145 million pounds….Plans to make Yucca Mountain in Nevada a long-term storage site were scuttled by the Obama administration a year ago, after 20 years of planning costing $14 billion.” In a follow-up piece on Thursday's Evening News, correspondent Armen Keteyian went further in laying blame on the Obama administration: “There was one site designed to hold all of our nation's nuclear waste and it's right here in the high desert of Nevada, at a place called Yucca Mountain. Today, the federal government won't let our cameras anywhere near it. It's shut down, locked up, caught up in what critics charge is nothing more than pure politics.” Fill-in anchor Erica Hill teased Keteyian's report at the top of the broadcast: “Why did plans to bury nuclear waste inside Nevada's Yucca Mountain get killed? Was it safety fears or politics?” Keteyian described how the, “Obama administration kept its campaign promise….And shut down Yucca Mountain. Now the Nuclear Regulatory Commission must decide if it wants to restart what is already a 25-year, $14 billion project, in the face of tough opposition, like that from Harry Reid, the Democratic Senate majority leader from Nevada.” Keteyian also pointed out the political background of the head of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission under Obama: “A former staffer for Senator Reid, Greg Jaczko, now chairs the NRC. Jaczko recently came under fire after shutting down the agency's safety review of Yucca Mountain and after key safety recommendations were redacted, cut out, from a long-awaited NRC report.” In the March 22 report, Axelrod noted: “The head of the NRC may not see a pressing problem, but the states now suing did not want to take that risk before Japan's disaster and certainly don't want to now.” On Thursday, Keteyian challenged Jaczko: “Critics charge that you were simply doing the bidding of your former boss, Senator Harry Reid, a fierce opponent of this project.” Keteyian concluded his piece: “The NRC inspector general and Congress are now investigating the decision to shut down the safety review. Still, nuclear waste is scattered across 35 states, and Yucca Mountain sits silent and empty.” Here is a full transcript of Keteyian's March 31 report: 6:30PM ET TEASE: ERICA HILL: Why did plans to bury nuclear waste inside Nevada's Yucca Mountain get killed? Was it safety fears or politics?

Continue reading …
Max Mara art prize for women 2011

In pictures: Check out the artists shortlisted for the only women’s art award in the UK

Continue reading …
Oxfordshire speed cameras back on

Thames Valley Police said cameras that were switched off in August 2010 for cost-cutting reasons will be turned back on Speed cameras in Oxfordshire, which were switched off for cost-cutting reasons, have been turned back on again following publication of higher casualty figures. The withdrawal of central government funding for roadside cameras is creating an “on or off” dilemma at the end of every financial year for councils faced with competing pressures from motorists and safety campaigners. Thames Valley Police said 72 fixed camera sites and 89 mobile sites in Oxfordshire will start operating again from today. They were switched off on August 1 2010 after Oxfordshire County Council cut the authority’s road safety grant. Superintendent Rob Povey, head of roads policing for Thames Valley, said: “This is important because we know that speed kills and speed is dangerous. We have shown in Oxfordshire that speed has increased through monitoring limits and we have noticed an increase in fatalities and the number of people seriously injured in 2010.” Data released by Thames Valley Police shows in the six months after they were switched off, 83 people were injured in 62 accidents at the site of fixed cameras. The figure for the same period of the previous the year (August 2009 to January 2010) was 68 injuries in 60 accidents. Across Oxford, 18 people were killed in road traffic accidents in the period, compared with 12 people the year before. The number of people seriously injured rose by 19 to 179. Supt Povey said the money for switching back on the cameras came from cutting back office costs and from funding diverted from speed awareness courses. One local resident unlikely to be rejoicing is the BBC Top Gear presenter Jeremy Clarkson who filmed a TV advert in which he demolished speed cameras with a rocket launcher mounted on a Porsche. While Oxfordshire was turning its back on again, cameras were being turned off in Bristol and Portsmouth due to the financial squeeze on resources. The Department of Transport has washed its hands of such apparent contradictions saying it was up to each council to decide its spending prioirites. The road safety minister Mike Penning said: “The coalition government is committed to further improving road safety but it is right that local councils decide how best to tackle specific problems in their areas. We ended central government funding for new fixed speed cameras because we don’t believe we should dictate to councils that they use them as the default solution in reducing accidents.” According to the AA, speed camera offfences have almost halved since their peak in 2005 when around two million tickets were issued. Part of the decline is due to a change in the penalty system which allows those caught for the first time driving at a marginally higher speed than the limit can attend a speed awareness course. The cash from those courses is now being directed back into funding speed cameras, providing a new revenue stream to sustain the devices. Publicly announcing that cameras are being turned off, the AA spokesman said, undermined their deterrence value. “You want to maintain the threat,” the AA spokesman said. “You can do that by ensuring that enough people are prosecuted and complain to their local paper about it.” Julie Townsend, director of the road safety campaign Brake, said: “Switching speed cameras in Oxfordshire back on is great news for communities across the county, who have suffered from increased vehicle speeds and more dangerous roads in the past few months. “At the same time, it is outrageous that speed cameras are still being switched off in some parts of the country. Turning off cameras removes a vital deterrent against speeding – a dangerous and illegal act that all too often leads to tragedy – and leaves communities exposed to the perils of fast traffic.” Transport Owen Bowcott guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
In France, breast is definitely not best

Claims that a couple breastfed their baby to death play to prejudices in a land where ‘breasts are for your husband, not your baby’ Now and again a story comes along that utterly confirms all our prejudices. This week it was France’s turn to wallow in the warm glow of I-told-you-so when vegan parents were accused of breastfeeding their child to death . All that was missing for the perfect flush of French prejudices was for the baby to have worn a hijab. Veganism is so way out in a country wedded to steak frites and four portions a day (of baguette) that the bizarre details of the case – such as the clay poultices the sickly child was treated with – went clean over people’s heads. Everyone, however, knows the dangers of breastfeeding. Breastfeeding destroys lives. It starts by robbing women of their most powerful weapons of seduction, then their style and then their feminine mystery. Before you know it your baby is sleeping in your bed, and you are carrying her around like an African villager and avoiding so many proper French foods that you may as well be doing Ramadan. Lovemaking and une vraie vie de couple becomes impossible, sending husbands running into the arms of their mistresses or gay colleagues who they can be sure will never turn into brooding sucklers. Breastfeeding – particularly after two or three months – is regarded in France as something akin to drinking your own urine. Strange foreigners may do it, but that is no reason a nation brought up to idolise Liberté in the form of Marianne’s perfect breasts should. As a gynaecologist reminded a friend of mine the day she confirmed her pregnancy: “Your breasts are for your husband, not your baby.” France has the lowest breastfeeding rate in the western world, a statistic that doesn’t look like it is going to change any time soon if its health system or its most-read feminist philosophers have anything to do with it. One of this year’s biggest bestsellers, The Conflict: The Woman and the Mother , warns that breastfeeding is a trojan horse rolling back the gains of the women’s movement and shackling women to “despotic, gluttonous babies who devour their mothers”. The philosopher Elisabeth Badinter argues that women must beat back their babies with bottles of formula milk and rigid feeding regimes if they are to retain their independence and their sex lives. You won’t be in the least surprised to learn that breastfeeding, like so many other grave threats to civilisation, was invented in America. You may think of La Leche League as a group of sleep-deprived hippies, but to Badinter it is the most powerful and nefarious lobby on earth, a coven of Catholic fundamentalists bent on using the World Health Organisation to turn back the clock to an unscientific patriarchal “naturalism”. French women, she claims, are being bombarded by the league’s breast-is-best propaganda designed to make them feel guilty for not overcoming their “disgust” at putting their babies to their breasts. If that is really the case, they are putting up remarkable resistance. By Badinter’s own figures, the number of French mothers still breastfeeding after six months is so negligible that it doesn’t even make the graph. Frankly, as my partner and I discovered, getting a mother out of a French maternity ward while she is still breastfeeding is something of a miracle. We were repeatedly told that we would never get our premature child home unless we gave it a bottle. Everyone agreed breast milk was best – in theory – but the hospital (one of the most advanced in the country) preferred if the mothers pumped their milk so it could be given to the babies by a gastric tube or by bottle, usually pasteurised. We gently resisted the offers of free formula (and the four baby milk posters in our room) and our daughter became known as le bébé au sein (the breastfed baby), such a freak of nature that France Télévisions wanted to make a documentary about how I carried her skin-to-skin, a standard practice for premature children for decades elsewhere. A psychologist, a diehard Freudian (as the law dictates all should be in France), later suggested that my partner breastfed because she was getting a sexual kick out of it. Most of our friends who do manage to breastfeed hit a wall at between four and nine weeks when their doctors tell them they don’t have enough milk, and they must pass to the l’étape biberon (the bottle stage). This peculiarly French phenomenon may have something to do with the fact that women are beginning to think about going back to work at that point, maternity leave being on average less than half of what it is in the UK. A paediatrician as good as confirmed this to me, claiming that he was doing women a favour by allowing them to rediscover their vie de femme . It is possible to work and breastfeed in France, although the only woman we know who dares to bring a pump to the office is a human rights lawyer who spends her days putting the fear of God into central Asian dictators and Algerian generals. Which is where fathers come in. Within days of my daughter’s birth, doctors, nurses and friends were reminding me of my primary duty as a père de famille – to couper le cordon , to cut the cord, and save my partner from turning into a mama-vache , une bovine , une tétine géante (a giant dummy), as one put it. She will get her perinea retrained to return her to peak sexual performance – a wonderful French tradition that is actually about preventing incontinence, and which the NHS would do well to copy – and my job was to make sure the baby did not get in the way of her vie de femme . In that, I am afraid, I have mostly failed as a French father. My daughter is, at 17 months, still a boob baby and we all sleep in the same bed. But that is our little secret, OK? I don’t want those documentary makers knocking on the door again, this time for one of the regular reports on weirdos who still allow a sneaky suckle at two or even three years of age! That, as one radio presenter said, is quite possibly sexual abuse. Breastfeeding France Parents and parenting Children Europe Health Fiachra Gibbons guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …

So we have ACORN destroyed because of a trumped-up video, Shirley Sherrod got fired over a bogus right-wing video edited report, and NPR is paying a heavy price for the latest hidden video trick. So why is Bill Sammon, D.C. Bureau chief of Fox News, still working there? David posted about this on C&L previously: Fox News executive admits his attempt to link Obama to socialism was a lie During the 2008 presidential campaign one Fox News executive repeatedly tried to smear Barack Obama with charges of “socialism.” Liberal watchdog group Media Matters has uncovered audio that indicates Fox News Washington managing editor Bill Sammon was just engaging in what he called “mischievous speculation.” In 2009, Sammon told an audience aboard Mediterranean cruise sponsored by a right-wing college that his 2008 attempt to link Obama to socialism was “a premise that privately I found rather far-fetched.” “Last year, candidate Barack Obama stood on a sidewalk in Toledo, Ohio, and first let it slip to Joe the Plumber that he wanted to quote, ‘spread the wealth around,’” Sammon said. “At that time, I have to admit, that I went on TV on Fox News and publicly engaged in what I guess was some rather mischievous speculation about whether Barack Obama really advocated socialism, a premise that privately I found rather far-fetched.” During the 2008 campaign, the then-Washington deputy managing editor repeatedly suggested that Obama had socialist tendencies. On Oct. 14, 2008, Sammon said that Obama’s comment to Joe Wurzelbacher “is red meat when you’re talking to conservatives and you start talking about ‘spread the wealth around.’ That is tantamount to socialism.” In early February, Media Matters obtained an email where Sammon offered talking points to Fox News staff, linking Obama to socialism and Marxism during the 2008 campaign. “If Fox News really cares about its ‘reporting,’ they will fire DC exec Bill Sammon over this,” former MSNBC anchor David Shuster tweeted Tuesday. “These remarks, unearthed by the liberal advocacy group Media Matters, raise the question of whether Sammon, who oversees Washington news coverage for Fox News, was deliberately trying to sabotage the Democratic presidential candidate,” The Daily Beast’s Howard Kurtz noted . In another e-mail obtained by Media Matters, Sammon told his staff to downplay the importance of climate science that showed the world was getting warmer. Additional emails showed that Sammon asked his news department to refer to the public option as the “government run option” because polls showed the phrase “government option” was opposed by the public. Jon Stewart did a comedy segment that asks the same question as he mockingly runs to Fox News in New York to give Brett Baier, a Fox News host who had recently appeared on TDS , the heads-up that Sammons got busted for pimping propaganda and that their coverage is indeed conservatively biased. Fox News pumped this false narrative about Barack Obama being a “socialist” 35 times in the weeks before the election (and countless times since), so I ask again: Why does Bill Sammon, who comes from the Moonie Times, still have a job at Fox? If a chief news executive at CBS, NBC, ABC, or CNN got caught not just once, but all these previous times as well, it would be carried around the clock until that person was forced out of a job. Double standard much? Stewart: Over at Fox, you’re the guy they use whenever you criticize them for any of their programming, they’re like, “you’re saying Brett Baier is not a good guy. Brett Baier is not a good journalist?” You’re like the human shield, they get you and bring you out.

Continue reading …
Moshi Monsters plan online TV move

Moshi TV will include cartoons of popular ‘moshlings’ such as Lady Googoo, Dustbin Beaver and 49 Pence, as well as users’ animations Moshi Monsters, the UK social networking website for children, has revealed plans to move into online television with a free iPlayer-style service. The website, which started in 2008, invites children to adopt a monster, play games and communicate with each other. The online TV player, Moshi TV, will include cartoons of popular Moshi characters, or “moshlings”, such as Lady Googoo, Dustbin Beaver and 49 Pence, as well as animations uploaded by users. Due to launch later this year, Moshi TV has the advantage of tapping into an existing audience of nearly 38m registered users worldwide, mostly aged between six and 11. Michael Acton Smith, founder of parent company Mind Candy, said there was a widespread demand among children for a safe, socially powered video website entirely for them. “That’s how kids want to enjoy media. They don’t want to sit and be broadcast to – they want to interact and share and comment,” he said. “We’re flipping traditional TV on its head and letting the kids decide what’s popular by voting things up and making them more discoverable.” Moshi employs 20 moderators and a safety officer, and insists it will vet every piece of uploaded content. Children will be able to upload their own animations and short films, but not footage of themselves or other children. Moshi Monsters is profitable: while signing up to the site is free, a subscription fee enables its members to collect more moshlings, and merchandise sales alone are forecast to reach $100m (£62m) in 2011. Acton Smith said Moshi TV was being spun off as a new business, and expects to have recruited nearly 30 staff by the end of the year. Rather than charging children or running adverts, Moshi TV may charge content owners to put their output on the site. Though Moshi claims rapid growth in the US, which now accounts for 35% of its total audience, it still faces an intensely competitive market. In the UK the Disney-owned Club Penguin dominates, with an estimated 1.224m monthly users in February, according to comScore. Moshimonsters.com recorded 927,000, Stardoll 754,000 and Habbo 481,000. Acton Smith said time and thought had been invested in creating a distinctive, edgy visual style of Moshi Monsters, initially created by illustrator Vincent Bechet. “Pixar is one of the companies we’ve been inspired by, and it puts hundreds of millions of dollars into each film,” he said. “Secondly, it’s the realisation that social is key – kids love to show off and communicate just as much as adults do, and we’ve built safe tools for them to do that.” He added: “The internet is a winner-takes-all market. Facebook has won social, LinkedIn has won business and Zynga has won social gaming. But no one has gone deep in the kids’ space, even though it’s a multibillion offline industry. We want to be the top player so we’re expanding rapidly.” Social networking Children’s TV Internet LinkedIn Facebook Pixar Disney Channel Jemima Kiss guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …