logo
Hereford museum talk is 'woke virtue-signalling'

Hereford museum talk is 'woke virtue-signalling'

BBC News7 days ago

A Ledbury town councillor has claimed an event to chart the direction of Hereford's new £18m museum and gallery will be an exercise in "woke virtue-signalling".The free event by Herefordshire Council's museums and galleries department, called Contentious Narratives, will look at how museums should respond to fake news and misinformation, at the History Store on 7 June.Councillor Ewen Sinclair said the organisers would "tell people what to think", as he hit out at the event in a post on Facebook.However, a council spokesman said: "In the upcoming session, we won't be telling people what to think."
The lottery-funded session was to give people "the chance to understand how we're approaching the redevelopment of the museum, not just what the plans are, but the thinking, values, and principles behind them", he said.The head of Herefordshire museums and galleries, Damian Etheraads, said the discussion would help shape displays based on what matters to communities.Building work is due to begin shortly on the Broad Street museum.
Sinclair's post said: "Herefordshire Council are funding an event to have an 'open' discussion, then the organiser will tell you what to think."He is going to discuss 'fake' news and 'misinformation'. Anyone who says disinformation and misinformation, is probably lying."In February, Sinclair was rebuked by Herefordshire Council's standards panel over an altercation with a resident.It was the third time he was found in breach of the town councillors' code of conduct since being elected in 2021.
This news was gathered by the Local Democracy Reporting Service, which covers councils and other public service organisations.
Follow BBC Hereford & Worcester on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Notting Hill Carnival sound system banned due to safety concerns
Notting Hill Carnival sound system banned due to safety concerns

BBC News

time14 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Notting Hill Carnival sound system banned due to safety concerns

A Notting Hill Carnival sound system will not be allowed to operate this year due to "public nuisance and safety concerns" after the applicant failed to turn up to a council licensing committee and Chelsea Council issued the Starliner Diamond Sound System and Bar Site with a counter-notice, effectively rejecting its application for a Temporary Event Notice (TEN).The decision was made after the applicant, Noel Gardner, did not attend a licensing meeting on 27 May or provide a risk assessment or event management system usually plays to festival-goers at the junction of Appleford Road and Bosworth Road. One million visitors The committee agreed that in the absence of Mr Gardner and the required paperwork, it would refuse the application on the grounds of preventing public nuisance and ensuring public council's legal officer said a risk assessment and event management plan were essential for the committee to make an informed decision on the TEN. She also said Notting Hill Carnival Ltd was expected to sign off on all TENs for sound systems and associated bars, a new requirement being implemented this year. It is the second sound system to be banned ahead of 2025's carnival. Volcano's licence was revoked after a man had a bottle smashed over his head last Hill Carnival is Europe's biggest street festival, and is second only to Rio de Janiero's worldwide, attracting well over a million event takes place annually in the north of the borough each August Bank Holiday to Time Out, Starliner Diamond Sound System has been supplying drum-shaking reggae, soca, afro-beats and funky soul for more than 40 years.

London's housing crisis 'should be priority in Spending Review'
London's housing crisis 'should be priority in Spending Review'

BBC News

time14 minutes ago

  • BBC News

London's housing crisis 'should be priority in Spending Review'

Investing in housing, transport and people should be the top priorities for the capital, business leaders have said ahead of next week's government Spending Dickie, chief executive of Business LDN, an organisation that represents a number of employers in the city, said Transport for London (TfL) needed a long-term financial settlement so it could "plan with confidence".He also said the housing crisis needed to be addressed, which in turn would help reduce lack of affordable homes in the city was "not just a social issue", he said, but was holding back the economy. Mr Dickie said London currently had the highest unemployment rate in the country, and Londoners should be given the skills they need to get into work."It means investing in people and in the jobs of the future. Perhaps most importantly, we need investment into housing."Housing is not just a social crisis in London, it's also holding back the economy. It's harder for businesses to keep and then retain their staff."The sheer cost of getting a house - whether renting or trying to get on the housing ladder - makes it hard for businesses to attract and retain the talent they need."He said "a bit more imagination, a bit more innovation" was needed. "There are multiple impacts - the most obvious is the cost and how it makes it harder to attract and retain talent, but also the stress that employees face from uncertain or precarious rental arrangements." Rental prices in London are still rising, according to Matt Hutchinson, from the flat-share site SpareRoom."We never see sustained decreases taking rents down to affordable levels," he said."While there are more people searching for somewhere to live than rooms available, rents will keep heading north – along with renters."He said a March 2025 survey indicated 28% of renters were spending more than half their take-home pay on rent, while 80% were spending more than 30%. He added that workers were moving out of the capital to the "relative affordability" of the suburbs."It might be fine for knowledge workers who can do their jobs from their laptops, but for service workers and those who work shifts and antisocial hours, and who need to be close to their places of work, this is a huge problem." One of those people who felt forced to leave is Jason Phillips, who lived in Crouch End for a decade before moving to Stevenage in 60-year-old said his London home had been sold by the owner and he looked for a new place to rent for more than a year, viewing about 40 said property agencies told him everyone attending their viewings "was in a bidding war and that the only way to win was either to offer more than the advertised rent or to offer to be tied into multi-year contracts. "One agent suggested both was the best tactic."Mr Phillips said a two-bed flat in Crouch End on the market for £1,800 a month eventually went to a tenant willing to pay £2,500 a month on a 30-month rental now lives in a three-bedroom house with a monthly rent of £2,075. Ian McDermott, CEO of the Peabody housing association and the chair of the G15 - a group of housing associations in London - said rent certainty was the most important issue that should be addressed in the Spending said the government should consider housing to be core infrastructure for the country, and that housing should be viewed "not as debt but as an asset"."The situation is utterly dire - one in 21 children in London will go to sleep tonight in temporary accommodation."The scale of the of the temporary housing is astronomical and threatens the financial viability of councils across London."

Travellers at overcrowded Brent site asked to leave by council
Travellers at overcrowded Brent site asked to leave by council

BBC News

time14 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Travellers at overcrowded Brent site asked to leave by council

Irish Travellers living on an authorised site in north London have been sent letters asking many of them to leave due to overcrowding. The breach notices from Brent Council said the proximity of mobile homes and caravans within Lynton Close in Neasden was a fire risk and posed an "intolerable risk to life".It said "bricks-and-mortar" temporary accommodation was available for established residents to move into, however many called the offer "culturally inappropriate". Bernie Corcoran, 58, has lived in Lynton Close since it opened in 1997. He said: "We're not just going to get up and leave, we're going to make a stand." Mr Corcoran, who is considered by residents as one of the elders in the community, said he had always accompanied council representatives any time they visited the site. "If they're coming down here to evict everyone, they'll have to have the British army with them," he told the Brigid Corcoran, 48, of no relation to Mr Corcoran, pointed to a mobile home close to her own. "That's my daughter's home. She lives there, she needs that," she said. She said Brent Council had asked for it to be removed. "If I don't agree to that, I get an eviction," she early April, a wave of "notices for breach of licence" were sent to residents from the council, beginning a process of civil Corcoran believes she is one of roughly 300 residents, including 90 children, who face eviction if they do not comply with the council's demands "to bring the site within safe and legal limits".Residents were told that voluntary compliance was encouraged "to avoid the need for legal escalation". Lynton Close, which opened with 31 pitches, has become densely populated over the years and overcrowding is not a new issue.A report by Brent Council estimated there were now as many as 74 mobile homes on 2017, months after the Grenfell Tower fire, Brent Council published a report on the traveller site and described space between individual homes and neighbouring pitches as "practically non-existent", and said this posed a fire said the risk of a fire spreading would reduce if a gap of 19ft 7in (6m) was "maintained between each individual residence" or "a fire-resisting wall" was built between each who the BBC spoke to said that neither of the mitigation measures was discussed with them nor the BBC asked Brent Council about any efforts to complete the work that the 2017 report requested, the council did not respond on that point, but said the site's most recent risk assessment superseded the 2017 report. A London Fire Brigade officer who previously worked with the council on making Lynton Close more fire secure said he installed about 70 smoke alarms " in every van and mobile home that we could". Brent Council said the site's level of overcrowding had become an "intolerable risk to life" and told residents that it had accommodation in the borough ready for them to move into."The properties that we have found and matched families to are available now. They are all in Brent and have been matched to the specific requirements of families," the local authority told residents in a letter in woman, who did not want to be identified and who cannot read, told the BBC that the council asked her to sign a document relating to its offer of a temporary she said she did not realise that she and her family may end up outside the borough if she signed the Wright, chief executive of the council, apologised to the family and said established residents were assured there was "safe, affordable, secure, bricks-and-mortar accommodation for them in Brent". Some residents have left the site in an effort to comply with the council's breach early May, the BBC observed one family leave Lynton Close, towing their mobile home with a pick-up truck. "We'll try to find a Tesco or Asda car park, or some vacant land somewhere," the driver said. Dr Nancy Hawker from non-profit organisation London Gypsy and Travellers said some of the Lynton Close residents had been made homeless."The council had promised to accommodate anyone displaced as a result of the council's orders, but they have broken their promise," Dr Hawker said."We have found where residents of Lynton Close have agreed - under pressure of threats of wholesale site closure - to move at the council's behest, they have been denied council accommodation, and have been made homeless as a result." Ms Wright said she would not comment on the specifics of individual cases, adding that residents who were not deemed to be "established residents" would not receive the same housing offer."Any members of the community who weren't living there in April as an established resident absolutely will be supported through our homelessness program," she said. Local Labour MP Dawn Butler wrote to Brent Council's chief executive "deeply concerned" by what she saw and heard from residents after visiting the site in May. "Many families feel they are being displaced once again without consideration, echoing generational trauma," she said in a Wright said the council was not conducting "enforcement evictions"."What we've been doing with the residents is working with them really constructively in the last few months," she said."We recognise that there have been some mental health concerns and some anxiety and distress on the site and no-one wants to be in the position to see that."We have put in place a package of support for them through a community support day." Many Lynton Close residents told the BBC that they feared speaking publicly about what was happening in case they were treated also said they had no intention of moving into the bricks-and-mortar accommodation being offered by the council and called it "culturally inappropriate".Ms Wright said: "I recognise that bricks and mortar is not their chosen lifestyle."We have a situation at the moment where that site is unsafe and there are overcrowded living conditions and no responsible landlord wants to see their tenants living in those conditions."We've been clear with any family who is interested in moving that it would be a temporary relocation for them and we have already had two families that have moved off the site into bricks and mortar on a temporary basis."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store