our voice 2011 - the 30th anniversary issue

20
1

Upload: malcolm-cook

Post on 23-Mar-2016

217 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

A look into how the Centre started and where it is today.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Our Voice 2011 - The 30th Anniversary Issue

1

Page 2: Our Voice 2011 - The 30th Anniversary Issue

2

Here are some Useful Numbers & Help lines for you:

Samaritans 01273 772277MIND 01273 749600Alcoholics Anonymous 0845 7697555Survivors Network 01273 203380 (Supporting female survivors of sexual violence and abuse)BHT Brighton Housing Trust 01273 234 737 (Legal & housing advice service)St Patrick’s night shelter 01273 327736 (Church hall accommodation)Citizens Advice Bureau 0845 120 3710 (The charity for your community)Cocaine Anonymous 0800 612 0225 (Fellowship to help solve addiction)Sussex Beacon 01273 694222 (Specialist care & support for people living with HIV)Missing Persons Helpline 0500 700 700 (help and support)Independent Mediation Service 01273 700812 (Conflict resolution service)Women’s Refuge Project 01273 622822Victim Support 0845 30 30 900 (Find the strength)National Debt line 0808 808 4000 (Free confidential advice on how to deal with debt problems)Men’s Advice Line: 0808 801 0327 (Advice and support for all men in abusive relationships)

We offer welfare benefit advice, crèche, vegan lunches, tea, coffee and cold drinks, a variety of courses and classes, Allganics

wholefood Co op, many volunteering opportunities, clothing for adults and children, donated household goods, and room hire.

Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in this magazine are not necessarily those of the Centre

[email protected]

Drop us a message at

[email protected]

Join us on

Page 3: Our Voice 2011 - The 30th Anniversary Issue

3

In this issue, I’m very happy to say we now have Our Anniversary photo story, Our Writers thoughts on the number 30, Our Beauty and the most welcome addition of the Our Welfare section.

‘Remember, remember the 5th of November, gunpowder, treason and plot’ and ‘Lest we forget’ the 11th hour on 11th day of the 11th month. Where those have fallen in war for our freedom and rights are remembered.

The Occupy protest movement is showing itself in more than 900 cities around the world would host co-ordinated protests directly or loosely affiliated to the Occupy cause to express the growing wave of global anger at social and economic injustice. This week a €2 trillion bailout for banks who have spent your money and they’re closing your National Health System and your libraries. This pilfering of people’s rights and resources is a kleptocracy it is evil and wrong and needs to be countered and all points.

A Kleptocracy is a ‘rule by thieves’ or a form of political and government corruption where the government exists to increase the personal wealth and political power of its officials and the ruling class at the expense of the wider population, often without pretence of honest service. This type of government corruption is often achieved by the embezzlement of state funds.This is not a time for suffering in silence, now is the time to come together, make sure we are all in good shape for the coming times. The future’s your birthright. Together we are more than the sum of our parts.

OUR VOICEANNIVERSARY ISSUE

Would you like to take part in producing the next magazine?

Come along on Thursday mornings at 11am in the Main Area

OUR MAKERS & OUR CORRESPONDENTS: Richard Ince, Malcolm Cook, Kahn Priestly, Emily Humphries, Richard Connolly, Counsellor Ben Duncan, Joy, Amel, Nihida, Alanna, Michelle, Suzie

Oddball, Valerie mainstone, Pearl, Tino B Leonard, Judy, PHOTOGRAPHY CREDITS: Lucy Jo Brown, Richard Chickpea, Malcolm Cook,

30 years of the Brighton Unemployed Centre.................4

News...............................................................................5

30 Trivia.........................................................................6

Writing Our Own History............................................7

Our Anniversary: Emily opened by saying; The Centre has been created by people for people over a thirty year process. The Centre aims to empower ............................10

Our Welfare: The DWP will be writing to people whose benefits are due for reassessment ...................................13

Calling Tarner: A dedicated team of volunteers have been out into the local community to meet, talk to and record the memories..................................................................15

Home Made Fruity Facials: why not whip yourself up a delicious concoction made of fruits ................................16

CyberMummy: What do parents blog about their children? Everything! .....................................................17

Allganics: good quality organic whole foods affordable to everyone .......................................................................18

Our Allotment: has gone from strength to strength this year ...............................................................................19

Crossword....................................................................20

Page 4: Our Voice 2011 - The 30th Anniversary Issue

4

“It is not our task to make life more tolerable for the unemployed, nor to

reconcile them to their fate, but to raise them up to fight the capitalist system

which creates mass unemployment in the midst of plenty”

These were the words of Dudley Edwards, who was one of the foremost among our founders at the inaugural meeting of the Centre in 1981, Thirty years later we are still going strong.

How was the Centre born?In 1980 Dudley and other unemployed activists formed a group called “Brighton Campaign against Youth Unemployment” to campaign for an Unemployed Centre. They had no premises so for a time they occupied an empty council building.

In 1981, the Council gave them use of a small building on an industrial estate in Kemptown. As well as the volunteers, the Brighton and Hove Trades Council and the Workers Educational Association were involved in setting up the Unemployed Centre. At this time other unemployed centres were formed around the country, and all became part of a network known as “The Combine” which still exists today.

The three main objectives:1. To provide advice about benefits for the

unemployed and unwaged.2. To provide educational courses for the

unemployed.3. To provide a base from which unemployed

people could organise themselves.

They marched, distributed leaflets, raised a petition calling for an Unemployed Centre which collected 10,000 signatures. They opposed groups such as the National Front and on one occasion defended their building against physical attacks. In 1981 they organised the first free Xmas party for children.

In 1984 the name was changed to “Brighton Unemployed Centre” and in 1985 moved to our present home in Tilbury Place. In 1986 the Labour party won control of Brighton Council. The Centre received a grant to pay for workers and to set up a creche.

In 1992 and 1993 the Council reacted to campaigns by the Centre such as the anti-Poll Tax movement and against the Child Support Act. Eventually our grant was cut to such an extent that all workers bar one were made redundant, and the Centre relied heavily on volunteers. The campaigning continued. In 1994, under Council pressure a charity was formed called the BUC Families Project, which was separate from the campaigning wing BUC Ltd.

From 1996 there was conflict between trustees who wanted the Centre to be just a charity and those who wanted to continue campaigning. After lots of disputes, involving also the Council and the Charity Commission, threats of legal action, and freezing of funds, eventually BUC Ltd left Tilbury Place. They have been based in Hollingdean since 1999.

As a union man, Dudley Edwards would be sorry that we have no formal links with the Trade Union movement and that we are not now a campaigning organisation, but Hollingdean now carries on that good work.

Yes, there is still the wide gap between rich and poor all around us. What the Centre gives is advice, support, activities, education, practical help, and social and emotional relief.

Page 5: Our Voice 2011 - The 30th Anniversary Issue

5

Dalai Lama says;The goal is to cultivate

in our hearts the concern a dedicated mother feels for her child,

and then focus it on more and more people and living beings. This is a heartfelt, powerful love. Such feelings give us a true understanding of human rights, that

is not grounded just in legal terms, but rooted deeply

in the heart.

To be without some of the

things you want is an essential part of

happiness.Bertrand Russell

Mary watches Matt and Malcolm putting up the new

sign outside the Centre. Malcolm’s taking picture...

The last magazine made available in four different languages; English, French (translated by Tchansia Kone), Spanish (translated by Alberto Gonzales) and Italian (translated by Daniella Cordi). (you can read then at www.issuu.com.

Search: Our Voice Spring, Nuestra Voz, Nostra Voce or Notre Voix). This Anniversary Issue can be found by

IN MEMORIUMEira Smith, Playroom volunteer

and sessional worker who has been ill for the past year, died in the Martletts Hospice on Tuesday September 6th. Eira

was a wonderful, fun-loving and strong woman with a commitment

to equalities, inclusion and best practice in her work with children. This is a sad loss to our community, and we would like to offer love and

sympathy to her family.

To everyones shock and surprise Gok Wan suddenly appeared with a camera crew and a photographer from the Argus at the allotment on Monday 26th September doing a publicity shoot for Vodafones World of Difference that funded Chloe’s time at the Centre.

http://www.theargus.co.uk/news/9273034.Gok_Wan_gets_hands_dirty_at_Brighton_allotment/

searching for Our Voice 30th Anniversary. Other language issues are coming soon!

You can also join the Facebook page just search for Our Voice.

If you have any comments or contributions please drop us a line at [email protected]

DJ Donald Shier presents a radio program called the One World show on local radio Reverb FM. Recently Matt Armstrong, Malcolm Cook and Richard Ince were interviewed by Donald. They talked with him about this magazine. Donald was very interested because he had a connection with the centre when it was based on Industrial Estate by the Bingo Hall on Eastern Road and used to lend the Centre the Polytechnic’s van. On hearing about the Tarner Stories writing class he suggested that members of the class make of their work for broadcast.Tino B Leonard one of our Welfare volunteer advisors (read her article in this issue) also works with on the show as a volunteer, handling bookings and more. Tune in and have a listen to the city’s access radio station. Broadcasting all day every day to all the people of our city - on 97.2 FM.

Page 6: Our Voice 2011 - The 30th Anniversary Issue

6

30 years ago:

Thirty years ago today, the country was in turmoil: unemployment was approaching three million, inner-city streets were scarred by race riots. The disarray of the England cricket team matched the nation step for step. They were 1-0 down in the Ashes series.

In the charts in 1981:Ghosttown by the Specials

Tainted love by Soft Cell

Woman by john lennon

Stars on 45 - Stars on 45

Kim Carnes - Betty Davis eye

30 is...

the sum of the first four squares, which makes it a square pyramidal number.

There is no number 30 bus in the Brighton and Hove area....

The atomic number of zinc is 30

• Used (as –30–) to indicate the end of a newspaper (or broadcast) story, a copy editor’s typographical notation.

• The number of days in the months April, June, September and November

• The total number of major and minor keys in Western tonal music, including enharmonic equivalents

• In years of marriage, the pearl wedding anniversary

• The duration in years of the Thirty Years’ War - 1618 to 1648.

• The code for international direct dial phone calls to Greece

• The house number of 30 St Mary Axe (The Gherkin)

• The designation of E30, the European route from Cork to Samara

• The number of tracks on The Beatles’ eponymous album, usually known as The White Album

• Astageinyoungadulthood

Part of the name of:• 30 Odd Foot of Grunts, the band fronted

by actor Russell Crowe• 30 Days of Night, a comic book mini-series

and film.• Judas Iscariot betrayed Jesus for 30 pieces

of silver. Matthew 26:15.• The number of the French department Gard• 30 was the route number of the bus blown

up by terrorists in Tavistock Square during the 7th July 2005 bombings in London

•History and Literature

• One of the rallying-cries of the 1960s student/youth protest movement was the slogan; ‘Don’t trust anyone over thirty’.

• In ‘The Myth of Sisyphus’ the French existentialist Albert Camus comments that the age of thirty is a crucial period in the life of a man, for at that age he gains a new awareness of the meaning of time.

• In Franz Kafka’s novel ‘The Trial’ Joseph wakes up on the morning of his thirtieth birthday to find himself under arrest for an unspecified crime. After making many futile attempts to find the nature of the crime or the name of his accuser, Joseph dies on the eve of his thirty-first birthday.

• The number of uprights that formed the Sarsen Circle at Stonehenge, also the supposed number of holes forming the arrays of Y and Z Holes at Stonehenge.

Sports

• In tennis, the number 30 represents the second point gained in a game.

• Lewis Hamilton became the 30th Formula One World Champion on November 2, 2008.

To be ignorant of

what occurred before is to always

be a child...Cicero

Page 7: Our Voice 2011 - The 30th Anniversary Issue

7

a‘abomination’ that is tapioca.

The Tarner Stories workshops have been described as ‘exhilarating’ and ‘frivolous’ (which we take as a compliment), and fun. We love listening to each other’s ideas and creative work. And we have only two rules:1. No one has to read their work out loud if they don’t feel ready, 2. Chocolate is good.If you would like to explore community history, life’s big themes, and your own creative ideas then we look forward to welcoming you on Thursday afternoons.

Writing Our Own HistoryMany centre users already know that the Tarner Stories project is a community oral history project recording the stories and memories of the people who have lived and worked in the Tarner area from the 1930’s to the present day. What is less well known is that the Tarner Stories project also includes exciting art and creative writing workshops producing creative work for publication on the project website at www. tarnerhistory.org and in a book planned for publication in Spring 2012.

The Tarner Writers group is a friendly, supportive writing group that meets every Thursday afternoon between 2pm and 3.30pm, in the upstairs classroom at the centre. The group includes experienced writers and also people who have never written before, but who are interested in local history and in exploring their own creative ideas. Many of the writers come each week, while others dip in and out of the workshops, coming when they can. The group is facilitated by Kahn Priestley, an experienced writer and editor. Every week Kahn inspires us with writing games and exercises to get the ink flowing.

We often use photos of Tarner life and recordings of interviews with local people to inspire discussions about past lives, our own experiences and our creative work. Sessions have included lively discussions about community life in the Tarner slums in the early 1900s and about the politics of the 21st century. We have watched news reels from the 1930s, and explored the jobs people did and the food they ate, from freshly patted butter straight from the dairy to pease pudding and faggots. The workshops provide a supportive and creative space for people to explore their own memories and lives, as well as the lives of others from the past. Tarner Writers have written memorably and movingly of haystacks, and rehab, hen nights and dachshunds. Our work has included autobiography, description, poetry and short stories. You will find some of our writing in this magazine.

We have fluttered with butterflies over the South Downs, sat together around crackling fires and written about how we would change the world. We have been united in our dislike of the ‘gelatinous’

The BeginningBy

Susi Oddball

During those awful Thatcher yearsThere was many a sweat and lots of tears

As services were cut without adoWhere to go people had no clue

Jobs going here, and vanishing thereAffecting life everywhere

Amidst this chaos, amid this strifeThere became a new life

The Unemployment Families groupA focus for a lost people’s troupeA place to come and seek advice

Where meeting people was very niceAs more people come to seek out friends

The centre grew to extendEducation, food and a nursery place

It started adding to its baseJob seeking, IT training and dancing tooA cheap vegan meal, and a chat or two

Artistic and imaginative lessons,Foreign language and inspired writing sessions

A busy centre and at its hubThere’s always care and love

I hope this centre remains for another 30 yearsTo help people feel safe without any tears

To write fiction is to learn to

inhabit other skins, whether thinner or

thicker than your own.Graham Greene

Page 8: Our Voice 2011 - The 30th Anniversary Issue

8

Flirty thirty, quirky thirty,

Party thirty, the time when your character gets

shaped.

Works as their

mnemonic.Thirty, two semi-circles backwards

And a loving embrace.

What a state!By Michelle Lunn

We need to cut costs and make no mistake,So is it totally necessary to fund the NHS and welfare state?

We have lots of characters claiming sick pay.If they say they’re in a wheelchair with multiple sclerosis,

No need to drain the state, there is a simple way around this.We offer them work for less then minimum wage,

Less than an able bodied person;That way employers are appeased, tax payers too

And the deficit doesn’t worsen.

And as for heroin addicts, on methadoneClaiming benefits, because their life has gone awry;

We simply pop them into rehabIn six months they’ll be dry.

We’ll get them back to work, find a friendly employer,If they quibble about pension schemes

Well we’ve done away with legal aid lawyers.Perhaps we should take America’s stance and

Eradicate the Welfare State,And if there’s a public outcry,

as my colleagues say, let them eat cake!

Thirty days for

November, April, June and September, some remember it on

their knucklesOthers find

rhyme

At thirty you

can still beFoolish and that’s ok

You can play the clownDance till dawn and

experiment with differentCareers then society feels

It’s time to settle down.

Thirty the age for

witA time to develop

humourThat will release stress,

Able to laugh at yourselfShare laughterSoothes and

heals.

1. Is the man who comes everyday for the only hot meal he will get that day. 2. Is the man who wants to learn computing skills, interested in it since he became ill. 3. Is the woman who lost her job now she’s looking for a new hobby. 4. Is the woman who comes with her kids to play in the crèche like her mother did. 5. Is the woman who wants to sew, How long she’s been coming I don’t know. 6. Are the couple in benefit strife, they are waiting outside for a little advice. 7. Is the worker who answers the phone, regularly making calls to his home. 8. Is the volunteer, who works in the cafe, His motivation is having a laugh. 9. Is the tutor teaching people how to write, planning lessons in the middle of the night. 10. Is the centre manager who keeps it all together, let’s hope for another successful 30 years for the centre. Anon

30 Hour DayBy Susi Oddball

If there was 30 hours in a dayI would have 6 more hours of say

I would be able to sleep for me it seemsAnd could go on a shopping spree (in my dreams)

There could be more day and more nightA slightly higher bill for lights

I could think for 6 more hours longOr play my guitar to a song

I could paint a picture with extra timeOr create a garden oh so fine

What fun to have a longer dayMore time to be happy, think and play

Theft of a life

A life undone laddered

Then hung from a treeHow much for a life?Do they come cheap?Do they come easy?

30 PIECES OF SILVER by Alanna

Page 9: Our Voice 2011 - The 30th Anniversary Issue

9

WMALIGAYANG KAARAWAN!

(Happy Birthday)

A poem for everyday

May I have...Enough happiness to keep me sweet,

Enough trials to keep me strong,Enough sorrow to keep me human,

Enough hope to keep me happy,Enough failure to keep me humble,

Enough success to keep eager,Enough friends to give me comfort,Enough wealth to meet my needs,

Enough enthusiasm to look forward,Enough faith to banish depression,

Enough determination to make each dayBetter than yesterday!

Thirty Years Ago I Didn’t Know…

That the natural world is more wonderful than we could ever imagine

That love can break your heart, but a heart can learn to love again

That my family tree has roots all over this city, including the slums of old Carlton HillThat I would survive cancer with the love

and support of my family and friendsThat in retirement, I would do all kinds of

interesting and useful thingsThat seventy would be my best birthday yet

That I would have four lovely grand-daughters who would bring me joy every

dayThat it’s never too late

That the best is yet to comeThat I do like to be beside the seaside

That social justice is always worth the fightThat being alone is not the same as

lonelinessThat laughter is a golden key to unlock grief

and sadnessThirty years ago I didn’t know …

THIRTY YEARS AGO IN 1981

Thirty years ago, in 1981, I was a respectable matron. I had lived in the same semi-detached house in Worthing for thirteen years, and been married to the same man for twenty-one years. I was working as a school secretary, and looking after my family, husband, daughter aged eighteen and son aged fifteen. I my spare time I was a trade union activist, serving on the local Trades Council, Chair of Worthing Humanist Group and on the committee of the local Franco-British.

It was the year that François Mitterand was elected President of France, the first Socialist President for many decades. A group of French tourists were visit-ing Worthing at the time, and invited the Franco-British Society to celebrate in a local hotel.

We played a game in which twelve wives were blindfold, and their husbands rolled up their trouser legs. Then the women had to feel the men’s legs and say which one was their husband. Fortunately, my husband’s legs were quite hairy and it was easy to identify him in the line-up. Nobody knew that we had been estranged for years, and that I was already planning my get-away.

Shortly afterwards, I wrote the University of Sussex to ask about their mature students’ entry scheme. Would they still accept my GCE A Levels, which I had passed twenty-five years before? They would, and they did. Then I started organising my own DIY divorce, which cost £40 out of our joint bank account.

At last I was free to start my new life, and graduated five years later. Neither of my children wanted to go to university straight from school, but both graduated later, as mature students like me.

My life has been so different since then that I find it hard to put myself back, in imagination. Thank good-ness I saw, and had the sense to grasp, that opportu-nity.

Valerie Mainstone

Page 10: Our Voice 2011 - The 30th Anniversary Issue

10

The begininng of the thirtieth year of the centre was marked with a celebration day that was so attended that the main area was overflowing!

Emily opened by saying; The Centre has been created by people for people over a thirty year process. The Centre aims to empower people,

encourage people to be politically aware. The Paid Workers run the facility, the Volunteers who

do the DIY, providing food, childcare, education, information, healing, relaxation, respite, crisis support. It is the members should make the

decisions about what the centre does next. The trustees are the caretakers of the organisation their job is to check that the members and the workers dont make decisions that threaten

the long term survival of the Centre.

Nahida asked; What

is the vision for the Centre going to go in the next

few years?

Emily replied: An active and vibrant membership and that we are secure.All of the projects have

ideas about where to go in the future. Joy added; I see the Centre as a great big family and people that come here provide that to Centre.

Page 11: Our Voice 2011 - The 30th Anniversary Issue

11

Richard replied; After 30

years of erosion of Trade Union laws.The

initiative has to come from the people,

grassroots as well as the unions.

Richard took his lead from the stigmatisation

of the unemployed and benefits; Unemployed

people have been given the responsibility for

their own employment and there’s cutting of Disability Benefits of people already assessed by health professionals.

The government has proposed cutting these benefits by 20% by

2016 and disabled people should be paid less than

National Minimum Wage. All of this and Housing Benefit reductions of 10%, campaigning is more relevant than

it ever has been.

It’s not just what we do it’s the way we do it! That’s why we have a Safe Centre Policy. The personal is political. Benefits

merely support low paying employers. People are not paid properly for the work

that they do and that’s why we are still here. Sorry Dudley but we are...

Valerie says; I’m down with Che

Guevara and Thomas Paine!

I’m interested in why have we distanced ourselves from the trade unions why

are we not unifying under one banner? How has this come about?

I have been in and out of

work and done wonderful things

here. I have learnt I.T. skills

and found work training others. I’m wondering

if there’s negociation

about funding for disabled lift

with the council.

It is a Council building and they are also funders so they fund us and we pay the

rent back. It cost £100 000 for the lift, with funding being hacked back all of time and given with conditions on what you can do

and how you can do things... We have got to raise the money ourselves...

Page 12: Our Voice 2011 - The 30th Anniversary Issue

12

Amel says: We

want training and proper

jobs not just free volunteering, we have had

enough!

What is being organised locally

does anyone know? Has any one been taking part in any

of the organised campaigns in city

I fed up with this culture of taking from the poor and giving to the rich

I will have a look for a list of buildings around the city with disabled access with information about their costs and seek a briefing about this. But there will be no funding

Valerie suggested that next time could there be an induction loop at meetings. Helen asked if we could have a look at the Video Project run by Lucy Brown, about centre users as a part of the Brighton Fringe Festival. People were asked to have a look at it in the Computer Room, and to have a look at the new website and give suggestions. Everyone had a meal, enjoyed the bands, drama, photograph exhibition and the clown on stilts blowing bubbles in the garden.

Pictures; Lucy Jo BrownTranscription: Malcolm Cook

Malcolm asked; So how far did you run and just

how much did you raise? Do you think that

more transparency in authorities and

organisations would lead to better feedback?

Ben replied; I raised £800! I ran the full 26 miles of the Brighton Marathon

and I won’t be doing it again!

I’m not sure how it works, is their funding for access

and accessablity?

The short answer again is no. I can’t speak for the government as it changes it’s plans as things become better understood... I think the gavernments stance at the moment is not to fund training buit lessen it... It gives us less money and tells what we can do with it. A policy about the Big Society shifts responsibility onto the voluntary sector, then people scratch their heads saying this isn’t going to work of training needs...

I’ve trained here and found work because

of it and have trained others so is their any funding for training?

Page 13: Our Voice 2011 - The 30th Anniversary Issue

13

Group. This means you will:• receive extra money

on top of their basic ESA, called the support component.

• NOT have to participate in any work related activity, but can do so voluntarily.

What happens if you are NOT awarded ESA?

The DWP will phone and write, notifying you of their decision, and what to do if you feel it is incorrect. (You have the right to appeal, within one month of the date of the decision letter)

They will explain alternate options available, which may include claiming Job Seekers Allowance (JSA), Income Support (IS), if a lone parent, and Pension Credit.

Useful websites:

www.turn2us.org.uk/

www.dwp.gov

www.citizensadvice.co.uk

Locating urban centresCities are the cultural and political nuclei. Cities globally tend to be coastal. This pattern illustrates the importance of urban hubs to trade and transportation, both historically and today. As the population becomes more urban, we note a movement of people from the heartlands to the coastlines.

Abstract Courtesy of the National Geographic Atlas

Between April 2011 and April 2014 if you are receiving Incapacity benefits (IB), Severe Disablement Allowance (SDA), Income Support (IS) on grounds of disability or illness, you will be assessed for Employment and Support allowance (ESA).

The DWP will be writing to people whose benefits are due for reassessment. They will also phone people asking questions to see if they need any extra help. They do not need to phone the DWP.

People will then be sent a medical questionnaire (ESA50), which you need to complete and return. The information on the form will then be used to assess eligibility for ESA, and whether you need to attend a Work Capability Assessment (WCA), which is much like an informal medical and interview. You will be contacted by phone if you need to attend the WCA.If it’s decided that you are entitled to the benefit then you will not need to attend a Work Capability Assessment. This can be done from the information provided by the ESA50. Filling in the ESA50 correctly is essential.

A decision of entitlement will then be made using the ESA50, WCA and other medical evidence, such as doctors/consultant letters.

If ESA is awarded, you will continue to receive your current benefit. Moving to ESA will NOT result in a reduction of current benefit. The DWP will write and phone you notifying you of your entitlement, and will transfer the claim automatically.

If the DWP decide that there is a possibility that you will eventually be able to return to work, they will be placed in an ‘ ESA Work Related Activity Group where you will have to;

1. Participate in Work focused interviews with an advisor.

2. Get support to help you prepare for suitable work.

3. Receive extra money on top of basic ESA benefit called Work-related activity component.

If the DWP assess that your disability or illness has a severe impact on their ability to work, they will be placed in a Support

Page 14: Our Voice 2011 - The 30th Anniversary Issue

14

Tarner Stories is an exciting 2 year local community history project based here at the BUCFP, funded by the Lottery Heritage fund and now in its final year. Through oral history recordings, photography and creative writing we are aiming to create a learning tool and archive for future generations. A dedicated team of volunteers have been out into the local community to meet, talk to and record the memories of those that have lived and worked in the Tarner/Carlton Hill area as far back as the slum clearances of the 1930s. The research, recordings and creative pieces can be found on the Tarner Stories website; www.tarnerhistory.org and will be published in a book and displayed in a final exhibition by May 2012.

Do you live in Tarner? Perhaps you live or work in the area or have done for a number of years and would like to tell us about what life is like here now? You could talk to us, write a poem about it or send us your

photographs.

Tarner Stories needs your photos… We are on the hunt for images old and new. So if you have photographs that you would be happy

to use in the project (we scan

and return copies) our details are below. Do you fancy getting out your camera-phone or digital camera and taking some photos of the area as you see it? We are looking for images of people working, playing, shopping, the streets, local architecture, landscapes, signs and patterns - anything that catches your eye. Your photographs will be included on the Tarner Stories website and maybe even the book.

Would you like to become a volunteer on the project? Some of our volunteers have trained as oral historians and carried out interviews, others have joined our creative workshops, history and time-line building workshops, helped at local events, photographed the area, attended tours and carried out research, some have even performed with the Tarner drama group.

Richard Ince one of our trained oral historians who has been

involved from the very beginning and who has now carried out more than 10 of the interviews told us a little about his experiences as a volunteer on the project:

‘I would never have dreamt I’d have the confidence to go out and interview someone. Volunteering for Tarner

Stories has helped me to

become more understanding and

tolerant of others, it has helped me to

learn how to talk to someone and more importantly

Page 15: Our Voice 2011 - The 30th Anniversary Issue

15

how to listen. I’ve really enjoyed just getting to know people.’

There are many ways you could get involved so please give us a call 01273 671213 for a chat about areas of the project that are of interest to you. Email your images of life in Tarner in 2011 to Jess and Chloe on [email protected] with your name, phone number and picture titles or upload them on our Facebook page. We will let you know when they are up on the website.

Why not join us for the:• The Creative Writing Groups @ The BUCFP

Centre every Thursday afternoon 2pm – 4pm

PICTURE CREDITS:Tarner Stories 2011Colour Street Signs: Chloe Howley.Clearance Map: Brighton and Hove Museum

What is a Slum?

A group of individuals living under the same roof in an urban area that lacks one or more of the following five conditions:

1. Durable housing – housing that is built on a non-hazardous location and has a structure permanent and adequate enough to protect it’s inhabitants from the climatic conditions.

2. Sufficient living area – no more than three people share the same room.3. Access to improved water – a sufficient amount of water for family use, at an affordable price, available

to household members without extreme effort, especially on the part of woman and children.4. Access to sanitation – access to an excreta-disposal system, either in the form of a private toilet or a

public toilet shared with a reasonable number of people.5. Access to tenure – protection from forced evictionsAbstract Courtesy of the National Geographic Atlas

Page 16: Our Voice 2011 - The 30th Anniversary Issue

16

Page 17: Our Voice 2011 - The 30th Anniversary Issue

17

Blogging: therapy & raising awareness in your community

Cybermummy, one of the biggest blogging conferences was held in June this year with over 425 delegates, high profile guest speakers and workshops to help bloggers improve their skills. Parent blogging has exploded over the last few years, with thousands on-line all over the country sharing their experiences of parenthood.

It was clear listening to the delegates at Cybermummy that parents blog for a variety of reasons and not all to try and make money. Some start up blogs to help channel their emotions through the tough moments of parenting. There are blogs which focus on raising awareness for causes such as children’s charities or disability groups plus numerous parent to parent review sites. Sound confusing? Well that is the only downside, with so many parent blogs on-line it is difficult to figure out which ones to follow. However sites like BritMums.com and Netmums are pooling bloggers together in one place on their networks, like reading your favourite Sunday paper with lots of different columnists. These would be good places to start following other parents musings and get great tips for all aspects of family life.

So how can you get a blog going? With publishing websites such as Wordpress it’s free and fairly easy to start one up if you have the means or access to get on-line. Brighton based, Sussex-wide charity SCIP has had a limited amount of funding to provide training for free on blogging plus audio publishing (podcasts) video blogging (vlogging). The Brighton & Hove Community

Reporters group meet monthly, a free network for those already publishing or aspiring writers or broadcasters. It’s a great support network for your venture. If you don’t feel confident about setting up your own blog but have an issue you want to relate there are sites that look for guest blog content, albeit unpaid, it’s a start to get your voice heard and ‘out there’. Your experiences and advice could help other parents in the city plus offer great therapy for whatever it is you are going through.Top tips for your blog & getting heard:

1. Be genuine: write about what you’re passionate about whether it’s a personal journey you are sharing or writing about a charity or cause in your community. The passion will come through in your writing and have the right impact on the reader plus can be extremely enjoyable to write.

2. Keep the word count concise: remember that reading on-line is harder work on the eyes that reading a book or newspaper. People tend to drift after first few paragraphs, so keep the word count between 400-500 words and come to the point quickly & exactly.

3. Social network: create a Facebook page for your blog, a Twitter account and interact with other bloggers. You’ll create a community of your own, be inspired and get more readers.

4. Add some colour: if you can add images or video to the blog it stands out. Ask your community group to invest in some technology and organise group assignments with others interested in the field of photography, video or audio? With most publishing websites such as Wordpress it is very simple to incorporate different media and a great group project to promote social cohesion.

5. What do others say? @isdaddycool, tells me on Twitter that he blogs ‘to share, let it all out, enjoyment, to get to know other blogs. It’s like diary.’

All that remains to ask, what are you waiting for? More details on SCIP and their services can be found at www.scip.org.ukBrighton & Hove Community Reporters news and events: www.bhcr.scip.org.ukwww.BrightonMums.com Welcome input from guest parent bloggers. Contact: [email protected]

The BUCFP also run an Introduction to Blogging on September 28th with Laurence and Wordpress for Web Design on the 3rd, 4th & 5th October, a 3 day course.

Page 18: Our Voice 2011 - The 30th Anniversary Issue

18

Allganics is a food co-operative run by volunteers at the Brighton Unemployed Centre. Our aim is to make good quality organic whole foods affordable to everyone.

We buy our products in bulk to reduce costs and minimizing packaging waste.

Snacks

each

Hemp 9 Bar 0.75

Licorice 0.54

Sesame Bar 0.42

Chocolate - Montezuma 1.05

Chocolate - Maya Gold 0.63

Digestive Biscuits 0.88

Fruity Oat Biscuits 1.19

Corn Crisps 0.74

Fruit Bar (cereal) 0.41

Teas & Drinks

Soya Milk ( - GREEN) 1.23

Soya Milk ( plain- RED) 1.20

Rice Dream 0.82

Tea, Loose English B/fast (100g)

1.25

Loose Chamomile(100g) 1.21

Loose Peppermint(100g) 1.16

Fennel Tea 1.18

Wild Berry Tea 1.48

Licorice Tea 1.39

Jasmine Green (loose) 1.23

Earl Grey 2.09

Pukka Ayurvedic 1.72

No Caf 2.05

Rooibosch (Tick Tock) 1.86

Carrot and Apple Juice 1.82

Apple and Blackcurrant 4.12

Apple Juice Concentrate 4.11

Miscellaneous Foods

Mixed Herbs 1.76

Beetroot (jar) 1.72

Coconut Milk 1.61

Falafel Mix 1.04

Sausage Mix 1.08

Pesto 2.69

Molasses 1.64

Mayonaisse 1.95

Miso (rice) 3.29

Tomato Puree 1.06

Coconut Block 0.98

Sea Salad 3.62

Tamari (100ml refill) 1.19

Stock Cubes 1.19

Cornflakes 1.97

Sun Dried Toms (jar) 3.02

Rice Syrup 2.22

Cleaning Products

Laundry Powder (1kg) 2.85

Washing Up Liquid (1ltr) 1.51

Toilet Rolls (x4) 2.02

Ecover Bleach 1.56

Flour

Buckwheat 2.08

Gram Flour 1.50

Polenta 1.73

Spreads

Peanut Butter 3.70

Tahini 2.06

Honey - mountain 3.13

Yeast Extract 3.29

Pumpkinseed Butter 3.25

Jam -Blueberry 1.89

Jam -Cherry 1.89

Jam -Raspberry 1.89

Jam -Orange spread 2.04

Mushroom Pate 2.13

Bread & Crackers

Oat Cakes(plain) 1.06

Oat Cakes(herb) 1.23

Ricecakes (no salt) 0.73

Ricecakes (quinoa) 0.82

Raisin Loaf 1.36

Pizza Bases 1.64

Open weekdays 10.30-12.30

Bring your own bags

Page 19: Our Voice 2011 - The 30th Anniversary Issue

19

The Centre allotment has gone from strength to strength this year, starting with the great terracing work that got done over the winter. In Spring we barrowed tons of soil and compost onto the new beds and they have been quickly filled with toma-toes, lettuces, kale, chard, dill, cress, rocket, car-rots, broad beans, peas and even dahlias and grape vines.

We also planted lots of new fruit and nut trees in the Spring, a few of which sadly did not survive the long dry spell. On the North side of the site fruit production is expanding even more with extended raspberry and rhubarb patches, as well as the two long beds with parsnips, basil, parsley, cucumbers and more.

We have been supplying the Centre kitchen with large crops of delicious mixed lettuces, chard, dill and other herbs, not to mention flowers for our Volunteer Thank You Celebration and the wonderful 30th Brithday Party. The herb garden at the Centre itself is flourishing with mint, oregano, parsley, chives, sage, rosemary, nasturtiums, lemon balm, thyme, chamomile, calendula, lavender and more, all doing well.

New volunteers are always welcome, and volunteers from other areas of the Centre can come and visit - Monday afternoons leaving the Centre at 12.30 is the time to remember for anyone who has not been up with us before.

In the autumn, look out for some cooking sessions coming up. The first one is on the August Bank Holiday, Monday 29th, from 12pm. If you need directions for that day, please ask in the office for a map.

Food ProjectBUCFP6 Tilbury Place,BN2 0GY01273 671213 / [email protected]

It was so very much what I needed;

a welcome oasis from the city, where like minded volunteers joined in commun-ion with each other and flora and fauna.

Delvin

Page 20: Our Voice 2011 - The 30th Anniversary Issue

20

Across2 If you ? something with another person, you both have it, use it, or occupy it. You can also say that two people ? something. (5)5 A third person plural used refer to a group of people, animals or things. (4)6 Existing in or relating to mountains, especially in Switzerland. (6)7 A feeling of certainty that something exists, is true or is good. (6)9 Give something up to obtain something else. (9)10 A light greenish-blue colour. (9)12 Very firm and stiff to touch and is not easily bent, cut or broken. (4)13 A very common four legged animal that often kept by people as a pet or to guard or hunt. (3)15 A group of people who are related to each other, especially parents and their children. (6)18 Official break up of an organization or institution. The end of a session of Parliament. (11)19 Strong and noticeable, not dark. (6)22 Very large animals with long trunks, which it uses to pick things up. (9)23 The capital and largest city is Budapest.(7)24 Coins or bank notes that you use to buy things. (5)27 Putting off or delaying, especially something requiring immediate attention. (15)28 The colour of lemons, butter, yolks and cowards. (6)29 Working hard or concentrating on a task, so that you are not free to do anything else. (4)30 The place where Adam and Eve lived, (4)

Down1 The hole in a lock that you put a key in. (7)3 A payment or gift made to help someone. (8)4 Belonging to or relating to France, or its people, language or culture. (6)8 A sea creature with a long soft body and many soft arms or tentacles. (5)9 The luck some people have in finding or creating interesting things by luck. (11)11 Is all the people who live in a particular area or use a particular place. (9)14 Objects used to protect yourself from rain or hot sun. (9)16 has many parts or aspects that are difficult to understand or deal with. (11)17 A place or society is full of people from many different countries or cultures. (12)20 A sweet food made by baking a mixture of flour, eggs, sugar, and fat in the oven. (4)21 A holiday during which you travel on a ship or boat and vist a number of places. (6)25 Consists of paintings,sculptures,and other objects which are created for people to look at admire or think deeply about. (3)26 Feelings of pleasure, usually because something nice has happened or because they feel satisfied with their life. (5)