2012年2月10日星期五

Past and present

AppId is over the quota AppId is over the quota BBC News - When was the High Street at its best? BBC

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Skip to content Skip to local navigation Skip to bbc.co.uk navigation Skip to bbc.co.uk search Help Accessibility Help  Magazine Home UK Africa Asia Europe Latin America Mid-East US & Canada Business Health Sci/Environment Tech Entertainment Video Magazine In Pictures Also in the News Editors' Blog Have Your Say World Radio and TV Special Reports 2 November 2010Last updated at 08:20 GMT Share this page Delicious Digg Facebook reddit StumbleUpon Twitter Email Print When was the High Street at its best? By Megan LaneBBC News Magazine  Shopkeeper Debbie Sergison spools through different eras Continue reading the main story In today's Magazine Inside story of the UK's secret mission to beat Gaddafi Must a captain stay on a sinking ship? Are 'enforcers' the toughest guys in sport? Without Wikipedia, where can you get your facts? At its birth in the Victorian age, or the gracious Edwardian era? Or more recently, before the arrival of superstores and online rivals? Over the course of six weeks, one market town turned back the clock to try out shopping in each era for itself for BBC One's Turn Back Time.


Today's High Street is not in the rudest health. It must compete with online retailers and super-malls, or risk the whited-out windows and boarded-up shopfronts of empty units.


Nationally, 13% of shops are vacant, up from 12% in 2009. While a feared double-dip recession has yet to materialise, official retail figures show weaker than expected sales in September - and that was before the spending cuts and January's looming VAT rise.

Continue reading the main storyFind out more  Shepton Mallet (pictured above in 1972) stars in BBC One's Turn Back Time starts Tuesday 2 November at 2100 GMT Shopkeepers spent a week in each era: Victorian, Edwardian, Interwar, WWII, 1960s and 1970s Also pop-up shops and events around the UK Playing history detective on your High StreetWatch Turn Back Time on iPlayer It normally takes decades for a shop to spool from bakery to tea shop to milk bar to chain cafe, or ironmonger to penny bazaar to record shop to mobile phone outlet to vacant store.


Most High Streets (it's the most common street name in the UK) show glimpses of their retail history. Look up for bygone trade names in brick or stonework; look down and there may be brand names in doorway mosaics, a form of advertising popular until the 1950s.


To gauge how High Street shopping has changed, empty premises in the once-thriving market square of Somerset's Shepton Mallet turned into time capsules over the summer.


Modern-day shopkeepers lived and worked as Victorians for a week - with the wares, equipment and etiquette of the 1870s - then spent a week as Edwardian retailers, and so on up to the 1970s. Locals were encouraged to shop at these stores.


So when was a golden era for the High Street?


"It was in the 1860s and 70s that the High Street as we know it came about," says social historian Juliet Gardiner.

Continue reading the main storyA glimpse of the past 

Pinner High Street, in 1950 and as it is today

More then-and-now photos of High Streets "Because of urbanisation, people no longer had the facilities to grow food themselves or keep livestock. It was then that market stalls became shops, with fixed prices, customer service and home deliveries to entice people in."


But it wasn't until Edwardian times that shopping came of age, when product choice matched customer service thanks to the riches of the Empire. And its popularity was boosted by the Votes for Women movement.


"The suffragettes were quite bullish about women having somewhere respectable to go on their own - and this meant tea shops and department stores."


The next golden age took 50 years to arrive, she says, when Britain became affluent again in the 1960s.


"Mass production and disposable culture really took off, bringing prices down. Young people didn't want clothes made to last, they wanted fashionable clothes. And in 1964, the Resale Prices Act opened the way for buying in volume and slashing prices."

Andrew Sharp, second left, outside his Edwardian era butchery

What customers gained in choice and discounts, they lost in personal service. "This was the era of self-service and of sniffy boutique girls," says Ms Gardiner.


What about on the other side of the counter? Among the shopkeepers taking part was Andrew Sharp, a butcher with 30 years experience whose family has been in the meat trade for centuries. Which era did he prefer?


"The Edwardian age, without a shadow of a doubt. The level of customer service, the level of formality of the person serving, and the customer too," says Mr Sharp.


This was a time when customers were referred to as sir, madam, miss or master. Staff had to be well turned out at all times. Convivial chats across the counter were frowned upon.

Continue reading the main storyBirth of shopping as national pastime 

Demand for goods fuelled the Victorian economy.


Wage-earning opportunities for women and children boosted family spending. More people bought a greater variety of textiles, clothing, household and domestic items. More beer, butter, bread, milk, meat, vegetables, fruit, fish and all other foodstuffs were bought rather than made or grown at home.


And clothing, personal and household possessions were important ways of communicating one's position in society. Ever-changing fashions and designs also stimulated demand.


Hence the growth of urban and village shops, the use of window displays, the rise of department stores from the 1880s, and of newspaper and billboard advertising.


By Prof Pat Hudson for BBC History

Delve into the Victorians' taste for shopping The decor and layout popular at the time is still seen today, particularly among high-end retailers and artisan producers - all muted colours and airy spaces. Selfridges, the London department store, dates from this era - its doors opened in 1909.


The customers lapped it up. "I felt like a lady. I was asked to sit down, and what would you like madam. I wish every shop was like that," said one Shepton Mallet resident after an Edwardian shopping trip.


And, when living the life of a Victorian pork butcher, Mr Sharp rediscovered the art of retail showmanship. His shop looked scarily visceral to 21st Century eyes, its frontage adorned with pigs' heads - complete with glued-on dolls eyes.


To tempt people closer, Mr Sharp did what his Victorian forebears did - live butchery and sausage-making on the street, complete with quick-fire sales patter. It proved a palpable hit.


But what was good for the retailer wasn't so good for the customer - trading standards had yet to be introduced, and until the 1870s there were no laws guaranteeing the quality of goods.


Butchers disguised rancid meat by painting it with chemicals. Bakers bulked up expensive flour with sawdust or plaster of Paris. Grocers added gravel to coffee beans and freshened old vinegar with sulphuric acid. They watered down milk, and added poisonous nasties such as red lead and mercury to cheese, pickles, sweets and tea leaves to improve the colour.


The poisonous additives in Victorian food


These sharp practices came as a shock to Shepton Mallet's time travelling grocer, Debbie Sergison. She refused to indulge in such dubious methods, but has taken some Victorian methods back to her Lincolnshire deli.


"It was a very manual era, you had to do everything from scratch - we blended tea, roasted coffee and made soap. I'd never thought to blend my own tea before, but it's delicious."


She found life as a 1930s grocer involved stock heavily weighted towards branded goods and confectionery as disposable incomes rose after the Depression, and the 1940s dominated by rationing and absent men. In the 60s came self-service, her shop decked out with new-fangled conveyor belts and pricing so competitive the butcher went out of business. By the 70s, it was a supermarket.

Continue reading the main storyHow to keep High Streets healthy Emphasise heritage features or natural surroundings to give a sense of place Clear up litter and repair damage to property Deter anti-social behaviour Keep it accessible with good transport links and reasonable parking charges Source: British Retail Consortium report Which, for her, was the golden age? "For the look of the shops, it's the Edwardian era. Everything was so smart. And we had assistants so we could provide great service to our customers."


And did the residents of Shepton Mallet fall back in love with their market square? Yes, to a point.


Some of the time capsule shops once again stand vacant. But hopes are high the 1960s milk bar will reopen, and 1970s boutique will be reborn as a vintage shop.

Below is a selection of your comments



It was so lovely to see our poor old high street come alive again, which died with the arrival of a large, oversized supermarket chain store in the town (I live there and saw it happen, including the death of our own village store). I was born in the wrong era, I would have loved to have been a housewife in the 50s, shopping for fresh food everyday in specialised shops, being served by friendly and helpful shopkeepers. Supermarkets have killed off high streets and are slowly killing off farming with their demands for cheap (tasteless) food - and with most couples having to work, we no longer have the luxury of time to shop properly.

Anne, Pilton, Shepton Mallet



Interesting article. In the main I'd argue that High Streets have responded well to the changing way retailers provide their services. Towns and High Streets are no longer single purpose trips as their vitality is determined by what's offer generally. For example, High Streets now provide a better overall shopping experience as people mix their shopping with other needs or habits - cafe society, for shopping, drinking and meeting people. This has been helped by some of the food retailers shifting to edge or out of centre sites. The empty shops providing space for more non-food goods and related services. The challenge now though is how High Streets respond to current economics, who will occupy empty shops, and what other needs are there to make these areas attractive places to visit.

Russell Hughes-Pickering, Aberystwyth, Wales



It may seem a little overly optimistic in the face of boarded up shopfronts and the clone town (in)experience but I have a positive feeling that we're a decade away from a new golden age for the High Street. The clone stores that rely on a high street presence are feeling the pinch every bit as much as the specialist stores. Where once Boots destroyed the family chemist, now Tescos is destroying Boots. Similarly both the supermarkets and the internet are having the same effect on Waterstones, WHSmiths and HMV that they had on their smaller forbearers. Extrapolate this into the future and we're looking at the collapse of the clone town as more and more of the everyday essentials are accommodated for by the out-of-town supermarkets. Society will still retain its desire for a general meeting place so a little intelligent town planning will create an opportunity for smaller specialist shops to thrive interspersed between convenience stores and cafes.

Graham Bell, Braunton, UK



My memories of the High Streets in East London are of women shopping every day and carrying heavy bags of inferior food home after visiting umpteen shops in their lunch break. Very little choice, no 'best buy' dates and poor refrigeration meant meat butter and milk smelling a bit off. Fruit and vegetables were packed by shopkeepers from the back of the pile - you had to inspect every bag before you left the shop otherwise you got bruised and damaged goods. There were some nice shops with knowledgeable staff who would chat - OK for the ladies with nothing better to do with their time but not for busy working women like my mum. Out of town supermarkets and online shopping has given more choice, lower prices and a better experience for ordinary day to day shopping.

Barbara Dickens, UK



I can remember going to Sainsbury's in Southampton High Street with my parents when customers had to go to the various counters to order items from the assistants. It was famous for its bacon and cheese counters, both of which were cut individually for your order. Then we would go to the Cadena Cafe, which roasted its beans in the window so that the smell would attract customers. We were always served at the table.

Anthony Lee, Muntinlupa, Philippines



A study by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation three years ago concluded that high streets, despite neglect over the years by engineers, planners and politicians, have a key role to play in enhancing urban liveability, social inclusion and cohesion, and in developing sustainable urban communities. But to realise their potential a town centre's design needed to more balanced, to take due account of their function as "places" to shop and visit as well as their role as "links" in providing through routes for road traffic. Sadly, my own home town's town centre isn't as well thought out as it could be. There are two large out of town retail parks and some smaller retail parks in the local area which have all but drained the life out of the centre.

James Pilkington, Bolton



Shopping in the 50s when I was young was the best time. No supermarkets. All the shopkeepers were friendly and knew you by name. Not as much variety as today but everything was local grown and locally made on the premises. And you could buy a lot of things for coppers - a pair of kippers for two old pence.

Barbara Eagles, Clitheroe, Lincs



Thank god for the death of the high street shops. Why? Greengrocers selling more soil than produce, never any veg without the ubiquitous green fly. Bakers selling old cakes that were mouldy. Newspapers shops refusing to return money on bottles. Mutton dressed as lamb. Milk delivery of yesterdays' milk. Underweight amounts of bacon, ham etc. Cheese that had more mould that Lister would have been proud of. Consumer protection was the death of the high street NOT the supermarkets. Open your eyes to hygiene and product satisfaction not the misty rose tinted past you think you knew.

Howard Parry, Hong Kong



It is the car that has had the biggest effect of the decline on the High Street. Without our cars we would not be able to drive to the out of town retail malls, we could not buy and carry more than a few days provisions from the supermarket and we would not cause parking chaos in our towns. No, we would all walk or catch the bus, we would be fitter and healthier, we would interact with those around us and we would bring life back to the High Street. Best of all kids would learn mental arithmetic instead of how to use a credit card. Supermarkets have profited from the fact that so many of us now are lazy; busy, but lazy. We want it all NOW and for as little effort and money as possible.

Zoe Woodruff, Carmarthen, South Wales



My high street was at its best before the global take over of all things grocery by Tesco. My local High Street, now consists of one fruit and veg shop, six charity shops and one travel agent. To add further insult our Tesco megastore now has a Timpson shoe, key cutting outlet in-store along with an automated DVD console hire station. Which will force the local Blockbuster and cobbler to close.

Karl Duvall, Prescot, Merseyside



When I was a kid in the 70s the high street was full of smaller, specialised and interesting shops. These were staffed by people with knowledge to help and advise. Mum used to buy material, cotton, needles, patterns from a shop where the staff new how to make clothes, curtains and the like; Dad used to get tools from hardware shops where staff built things; I got models from a model shop where the guy made models. Now you can buy stuff from the internet - as long as you know what you are doing, or browse the shelves of a big multinational staffed by kids who don't know how to fry and egg let alone anything else. I would go back to the high street from the 70s - even if it meant having to wear flared trousers and a horrible shirt.

Dave, UK

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2012年2月9日星期四

Electric blue

AppId is over the quota AppId is over the quota BBC News - Why are kingfishers making a comeback? BBC

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Skip to content Skip to local navigation Skip to bbc.co.uk navigation Skip to bbc.co.uk search Help Accessibility Help  Magazine Home UK Africa Asia Europe Latin America Mid-East US & Canada Business Health Sci/Environment Tech Entertainment Video Magazine In Pictures Also in the News Editors' Blog Have Your Say World Radio and TV Special Reports 2 November 2010Last updated at 13:44 GMT Share this page Delicious Digg Facebook reddit StumbleUpon Twitter Email Print Why are kingfishers making a comeback?  A female with freshly caught fish - her bright lower beak is called "lipstick" Continue reading the main story In today's Magazine Inside story of the UK's secret mission to beat Gaddafi Must a captain stay on a sinking ship? Are 'enforcers' the toughest guys in sport? Without Wikipedia, where can you get your facts? A new wildlife survey shows sightings of these iridescent water birds have trebled in the UK. Why?


Quick. Look. That darting speck of blue-green and rust-red - a kingfisher dipping into a river to catch a minnow. A fleeting flash of colour is all many people will see of a fast-flying kingfisher.


In an annual survey of wildlife spotted around rivers and canals for British Waterways, the number of kingfishers seen by members of the public between March and September has risen 217% to 596, despite fears many of the birds might not survive last winter's icy spell.


British Waterways says this shows the UK's freshwater courses - slow-flowing streams, canals and lakes are the kingfisher's natural habitat - are cleaner and better able to support a thriving ecosystem.

Continue reading the main storyThe Answer  Kingfishers need clean water in which to hunt small fish and aquatic insects So they benefit from moves to clean up waterways and create wetlands They reproduce fast Slow motion footage of kingfishers hunting Water quality is a key factor in the kingfisher's survival. It feeds on tadpoles, aquatic insects and small fish such as minnows and sticklebacks - so the water needs to be clean enough for the bird to see its tiny prey as it skims across the surface, or peers from an overhanging branch. Once it dives into the water, a kingfisher is effectively hunting blind, its eyes protected by a third eyelid.


A kingfisher needs to eat its body weight in fish and insects each day. And with chicks to feed, a breeding pair must hunt during every moment of daylight - in a family with seven chicks, the adults must catch about 5,000 fish throughout the summer.


The RSPB estimates there are between 4,800 and 8,000 breeding pairs thinly, but widely, spread across the UK. Their scarcity mean kingfishers are protected under Schedule 1 of the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981. It is illegal to take, kill or injure a kingfisher or its nest, eggs or young, or to intentionally disturb the birds during breeding season.


The kingfisher is not the only British waterbird to suffer from centuries of polluted waterways and wetlands drained for agriculture. Herons, cranes and avocets have also declined.

Continue reading the main storyFind out more BBC Four's four-part series Birds Britannia starts Wednesday at 2100 GMT from 3 November It traces our relationship with garden, sea and countryside birds, and water birds like kingfishers Watch Birds Britannia on iPlayerTwitchers: A Very British Obsession on iPlayer But the tide is now turning. Efforts are underway to clean up waterways and preserve, or make anew, places for these birds to live. This is in part thanks to special grants being made available, and farmers returning land to its former use.


The RSPB is surprised but heartened by the reported bounce in kingfisher sightings. Conservation spokesman Grahame Madge had feared a population drop of up to a third after last winter, the coldest in 30 years.


"In the hard winter of 1963, there was 85% mortality in some areas, and local extinction in others. Kingfishers are one of the worst affected by cold winters because they feed in shallow waters that ice over, leaving them at risk of starvation."


But they are also well placed to recover after such a catastrophe - they reproduce fast and a breeding pair can raise three broods of chicks in a single season.


"They have also adapted very well to the habitat we provide for them, with the canal network and old gravel pits made over into wetland recreation areas," says Mr Madge. "They even can be seen in the centre of cities such as Manchester, Birmingham and Exeter."

A male, as its beak is black

Not only have polluted waters and icy weather done for kingfishers in the past, the little birds have been a victim of their own striking beauty.


Far more colourful than the average British bird, their electric blue plumage was sought after in Victorian times. "Their feathers were used in the production of fishing flies, and egg collecting was a popular pastime," says Mr Madge.


This was also an era when feathers, wings, even whole birds adorned the hats, stoles and dresses of society women, and taxidermists preserved stuffed birds under glass for those keen to bring a little piece of the countryside into their homes.


Not all well-to-do ladies of the time were so keen on these trends. A group in Manchester so objected to this needless slaughter, they took a stand against the plumage trade.

Continue reading the main storyWHO, WHAT, WHY? 

A part of BBC News Magazine, Who, What, Why? aims to answer questions behind the headlines

"They went to church and noted down the names the ladies wearing these hats, and the next day these ladies would receive a hectoring letter pointing out the suffering of the bird that adorned their hat," says environmental historian Dr Rob Lambert, of Nottingham University, in BBC Four's Birds Britannia.


By 1889, they had enough supporters to form their own society, which 15 years later became the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds.


While the British are no less keen on birds today, today's collectors gather sightings and photographs, rather than plumage and stuffed specimens.


Compiled by Megan Lane


Why do twitchers so obsessively try to see so many birds?

Below is a selection of your comments



I have seen them when fishing from the beach near Brighton Marina, they seem to nest in the natural rock groynes that were put in place some 10 years back, surprisingly they go for the white bait. Has anyone ever heard of them hunting in salt water before?

Pablo, Brighton



I was surprised to see a kingfisher fishing in the sea whilst on a recent holiday to Kas, Turkey. There was definitely no freshwater river or lake nearby and it was darting out into the bay where there are abundant small fry. It was a surprise to me as I have always thought of them as freshwater birds, living around rivers or lakes.

Vicky, North Somerset



The increase in small fisheries for pleasure anglers in recent years has provided these beautiful birds with ideal nesting grounds (most dug out lakes have deep soft banks) and an abundant supply of easy to find food - small coarse fish like roach multiply rapidly once stocked in even very small ponds. I have seen kingfishers at three different fisheries I have visited. More fisheries means less distance between water for young kingfishers to risk flying in the search for new nest sites.

Richard Lister, Penryn, England



As a member of the BTO ringing scheme we have had a very good year for kingfishers in our local patch. They do seem to be doing well. People often criticise the EU, but the simple fact is that the focus on water quality and cleanliness was inspired by EU regulations and potential sanctions.

Simon Tucker, Swindon, Wiltshire



We have a kingfisher that visits our garden pond regularly throughout the year. You hear the shrill shriek first as he flies in and then he will perch before diving for a fish. One year we had two viciously fighting each other. It's an amazing sight. In freezing weather they disappear - I guess to the three local rivers in the area.

Maria Ingram, Tonbridge



It is a 'halcyon day' when you see a kingfisher - I am lucky to see them flash by most bright days. I have an empty nest 20ft from my back door - not used at the moment because our kingfishers lost their family the day they fledged last summer and one of the adults died trying to defend their brood against the magpies. But I believe that another kingfisher has joined our lonely one. Is it legal to shoot magpies? I couldn't go through all that again.

Carol, Henley on Thame, Oxon



We saw three kingfishers whilst doing conservation work on the Welland in Stamford, Lincs. Better water quality is a product of better regulation of dischargers and abstractors, better land management, better management of the river channel, and huge investment by the water companies, much of these coordinated by the Environment Agency and partners. Last week we were celebrating the return of otters to our waterways; this week it's kingfishers. A healthy environment benefits everyone.

Paul B, Peterborough, Cambs



Would love to know what locals could do to help them during the winter to help them in hard times especially when the snow is out. Don't think they would appreciate canned pilchards. By far one of the most stunning birds native to these lands, their iridescent plumage is a wonder to behold. I am fortunate enough to see one fairly regularly as I live by a stream and occasionally see some on the Thames. They are so quick you have to get your eye in, to fully appreciate their beauty, rather than a speeding blur of blue.

Mark S, Oxford



I saw a brief flash of a kingfisher whilst walking round Ruislip lido a few months ago. There does also seem to be a lot of herons around - maybe a sign of plenty of fish.

Claire, Ruislip, UK



I saw a kingfisher in the Dominican Republic take a small piece of bread from the dining room, place it in the water in a fresh water lagoon and then perch nearby. When a small fish came up to eat the bread, the kingfisher grabbed him. It's a rare example of a non-primate using a tool.

Pete, Chicago, USA



I see kingfishers regularly on the River Foss in Strensall, just north of York. There are at least two pairs on the section of river close to my house and they are a magnificent sight as they fly low over the water, though you only see them for a very short time.

Tony Fisher, York



I work as head gardener on a 32-acre estate with two lakes and we have two nesting pairs of kingfishers. Their non-stop up and down, it's good to see.

Brian Fairs, Dorking, Surrey



Just yesterday I caught the flash of blue green in the willows overlooking an old papermill, the water runs very clearly except when the 4xwheel townfolk drive through the ford just for the sake of right of way. Further through the fields by a river, I also caught sight of an impressive heron and his mate and they were watching me and the dogs pass on the other side of the river. Fortunately the farmers/landowners in our village are pro-environment as a result there is lush greenery and wildlife.

Chez, Nr Ware, Herts



As a regular canal and river kayaker this years has definitely been a great year for kingfisher sightings. Long may it continue.

Bob Blainey, Weston-super-Mare, UK



I fish every weekend and have seen so many kingfishers this year compared to last, and on ponds and waterways that you wouldn't normally expect. I've also seen a lot of pairs and noticed that they don't seem to be as shy as in the past.

Sean, Stockport, England



As I regularly go fishing I see these birds a lot. This season alone I have managed to get very close views as they sit in the trees at my peg. Shame I didn't have a camera. I have even seen them surprisingly close to the city centre.

Pike , York



My garden backs on to the River Lark and I see kingfishers fairly regularly. I was down my garden a few months ago and one darted right across in front of me, the blue flash made me jump out of my skin as I was handling some cabling at the time. I do hope they continue to thrive, it would be a sad day if we lose them.

Phil Fryer, Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk



I live in suburbia - Finchley, North London - and am always fascinated seeing the bright flashes of fast-moving kingfishers around Dollis Brook that runs near my house. Not seen many in the last couple of years, but hopefully they are increasing in numbers.

Peter Galbavy, London, UK



I saw a Kingfisher on the Tiverton Canal. First time I've ever seen one and I was very pleased.

Laura, Devon



We are lucky enough to spend a lot of time on the Thames, training for the Devizes to Westminster canoe race or just having "river time" sitting by the river with my 4 year old daughter. I never tire of seeing this beautiful bird and hope the numbers keep growing. A "kingfisher day" is always a good day.

Andrew Roberts, Thames Ditton



I work in an industrial estate in Wimbledon that backs on to the River Wandle. I have been seeing kingfishers all summer - a fantastic sight and always a surprising contrast with the shopping trolleys and other waste in the canal at present.

Neil Wilkinson, London



We were on a short break with friends on the Shropshire Union Canal after a particularly bad period in our lives (loved ones and a beloved dog dying). I was up early and the canal was glowing with sunrise. I walked through the barge and as I passed a large window, a kingfisher flew past - it seemed to be flying slowly so I could see it. Its beautiful blue was highlighted by the rays of the sun. It then landed on the tiller and remained there for a minute or so. That is why we birders seek out birds. My grief disappeared for a few moments.

Sue Ross, Swansea, West Glam



Not sure about kingfishers, but in my unscientific survey, I've noticed far more herons this year than ever before.

Michael Eve, Rowlands Gill, Tyne and Wear



We were amazed to see a kingfisher whilst staying in Twickenham last week. I can't remember the last one I saw.

Dane, Nottingham

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2012年2月8日星期三

Postcode divide

AppId is over the quota AppId is over the quota 4 November 2010 Last updated at 17:14 GMT By Jon Kelly BBC News Magazine  The row over housing benefit has led to warnings of "social cleansing". But can those on low incomes really have an entitlement to stay in expensive localities?


They are postcodes synonymous with wealth and aspiration; the kind of districts that attract estate agents, upmarket retail chains and endless TV property shows.


They are also the places that many low-income families call home.


Some of these people might be long-term residents of places like London's Islington and Notting Hill that were, within living memory, down-at-heel, but have since gentrified beyond all recognition.


Others might live in social housing adjoining wealthy areas - like the Dumbiedykes estate in Edinburgh, which shares a postcode with the Palace of Holyroodhouse, the Queen's official residence in Scotland.

Continue reading the main story 

Job-hunting IT worker Christian Romane, 53, lives in a bedsit in leafy Earl's Court, west London, with £125 a week in housing benefits


At the moment I spend 40 hours a week looking for work, but if these changes go through that would stop.


To make up the shortfall in rent I'd have to cancel my broadband so it would be harder to search for jobs and keep up my IT skills. I have no other spare funds - as it is I get by on one meal a day right now.


I could move further out of London, but most of the work I'm looking for is in the city and the increased transport costs mean I'd be no better off.


I've lived here for 20 years, this is my home. It doesn't seem fair that I could be thrown out because of a political decision.

Or they could be private tenants claiming Local Housing Allowance (LHA) based on the local average market rates, rising as high as £2,000 a week for a five-bedroom house.


Whether they are claiming housing benefit because they are pensioners, low-waged, unemployed or facing long-term health problems, their presence in well-to-do districts might, to foreigners, seem incongruous in a country widely noted abroad for its preoccupation with class distinctions and social status.


Yet for all its clearly-defined hierarchies, within a city like London the rich and poor still co-exist in relative proximity compared with somewhere like Paris, with its plush inner districts ringed by notorious banlieues.


Now this balance is at the fulcrum of the row over government plans to cap housing benefit at £400-a-week for the largest homes or £290-a-week for two-bed flats. In addition, LHA will be based on the cheapest third of local rents rather than the market average.


It is a move the government insists is right and necessary. Prime Minister David Cameron has told MPs it was unfair that middle-income Britons were "working hard to give benefits so people can live in homes they couldn't even dream of".


Ministers have further appealed to voters' sense of justice by insisting that claimants will still be able to receive a maximum of £21,000 a year - more, they say, than most working families have to spend on their housing costs.


Yet opponents from across the political spectrum say the policy ignores the huge disparities in housing costs across the country and thousands will be displaced from their homes and communities - or "sociologically cleansed", as Labour's Chris Bryant has described the process.

Continue reading the main story Shaun Bailey
You can talk about your right to live in the community where you grew up, but where do you get the right to spend other people's money?”

End Quote Shaun Bailey In the capital, where councils have warned that up to 82,000 people could lose their homes, the Conservative Mayor, Boris Johnson, said he would "emphatically resist any attempt to recreate a London where the rich and poor cannot live together".


In essence, the debate can be boiled down to a philosophical question: do the poor have the right to live in areas they could not otherwise afford?


Shaun Bailey is one government supporter who believes they do not.


Having grown up in a working class single-parent household in London's North Kensington - a once-deprived area which has since become fashionable - the former Conservative candidate believes it is unfair that middle-income couples find themselves commuting from the capital's outer reaches because of high housing costs while the poor have their rents in prime locations guaranteed.


"You can talk about your right to live in the community where you grew up, but where do you get the right to spend other people's money? I'd love to live in Buckingham Palace but I can't afford it," he adds.


"The current system only suits private landlords, who do very well out of housing benefit, and the liberal left, who want poor people ghettoised in the inner cities for their votes.


"The flipside of having a right to stay somewhere is that people aren't prepared to move around. The middle class have always been prepared to go all over the country to find work."


It is a provocative position, but one which appears to enjoy public sympathy. A poll by YouGov for the Sunday Times at the end of October found that 72% of people supported the planned cap.


Such sentiments have been fuelled by well-publicised cases such as that of Abdi Nur, an unemployed bus conductor who decided he didn't like his taxpayer-funded home in Kensal Rise, north London, and so signed a £2,000-a-week lease for a £2.1m townhouse in Notting Hill, and presented the local council with the bill.

Continue reading the main story Alex Morton

Alex Morton, research fellow, Policy Exchange, a centre-right think tank


It would be impossible to provide everyone with a house in a desirable area, so any "right" for particular individuals would be based on government arbitrarily selecting certain people and taxing everyone else to pay the high costs necessary.


It would mean treating one group of people much better than everyone else, which is why it offends a basic sense of fairness, and why a majority of voters across all the parties support the £400-a-week cap on housing benefit.


Government should instead focus on improving the number of desirable areas to live, through better policies on schools, housing and planning, and policing, not take up time and energy working out how to select some lucky individuals who then receive overwhelming individual subsidy.

Nonetheless, opponents of the reforms insist such cases are extremely rare, and that it is not the feckless and work-shy who will lose out - according to the homelessness charity Crisis, more LHA claimants are in low-paid work (26%) than are unemployed (22%). At the same time, it adds, some 1.6 million people receiving housing benefit are pensioners while many others are disabled or are carers.


Additionally, the recent past offers warnings about what happens when the urban poor are displaced from their communities, Lynsey Hanley, author of Estates: An Intimate History, argues.


Ms Hanley, who herself grew up on a council estate on the edge of Birmingham, has chronicled the ghettoisation, social breakdown and increased pressure on services that resulted from moving the working class to peripheral housing schemes.


Gentrification has caused many low-income households to suffer, she argues, pricing them out of communities that they once called their own.


And she argues the poor have every right to live in wealthy areas - because the wealthy rely on them more than they admit.


"Thousands of people working in cleaning, catering and retail earn the minimum wage and can't live in cities without housing benefit, but without their labour places like London would stop functioning altogether," she says. "If you take away housing benefit and shift them out, this country's high transport costs mean they'll have no incentive to come into our cities to work.


"What I'd say to David Cameron is: come back to me when the minimum wage is £12 an hour."


There may have been murmurings of discontent from within the coalition benches, but whether or not the housing benefit reforms go through - and Mr Cameron insists they will - the social balance of the UK's communities looks set to change regardless.


In a little-reported development, LHA rates will be linked to the Consumer Price Index (CPI) from 2013/14 as a result of June's budget.


According to Roger Harding, head of policy, research and public affairs at the housing charity Shelter, once inflation takes its toll this will drastically reduce the benefit's ability to keep up with rises in accommodation costs.


"Over a period of 10 years it's going to change the fundamental value of housing benefit," he says.


"That will be the most dramatic development in housing policy we've witnessed for years."


Whatever the philosophical arguments for and against, the social composition of many areas looks set to transform. Whether that is right or wrong will be for voters - and history - to decide.




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2012年2月7日星期二

Two-year degrees

AppId is over the quota AppId is over the quota 3 November 2010 Last updated at 12:04 GMT  Do accelerated courses prepare students to cope under pressure - or result in burn-out? The government is lifting the cap on university tuition fees to £9,000 by 2012. Will it increase demand for shorter, cheaper courses?


Few people forget their first days at university... The tentative introduction to the fellow fresher next door, hopelessly trying to navigate around a bewildering campus and wondering why everyone else seems more intelligent.


But how many would remember anything about their course during the first year?


Recollections are perhaps more likely to be of freshers' week and the student union bar than the lecture theatre, with students knowing that - so long as they pass the year - their performance will not affect their final qualifications. So is it worth it?


While the university funding debate focuses on raising the tuition fee cap to £9,000, the new financial realities are already dramatically altering the student experience.


Institutions are becoming more flexible in their delivery of courses, whether through part-time or distance learning options.

Not 'cheap alternative'

Mobile phone and internet technology is also likely to play an increasing role in offering undergraduates pondering £25,000 debts the cheaper option of studying from home, backed by occasional one-to-one tuition.


Another money-saving idea, mooted by Business Secretary Vince Cable, was to offer more degrees over two years.


The National Union of Students has given it a cautious welcome, saying extra choice helps students - particularly those short of funds or who do not want to delay careers.

Continue reading the main story Charlie Higson
Two years is nothing - a waste of time - university is about changing you as a person”

End Quote Charlie Higson Comedy writer However, its president, Aaron Porter, says accelerated degrees must not simply be a "cheap alternative".


"For many subjects the longer degree programme is vital to properly teach the subject," he says. "It allows the time for students to gain a deeper understanding and creates room for involvement in extra-curricular activities."


Fast-track, two-year courses are already being trialled at seven English universities, primarily in business-related subjects and law, with students giving up their long summer break in favour of a third semester.


Staffordshire University researchers calculated that graduates from its two-year courses ended up on average £20,000 better off than those studying over three years, once a year's salary and reduced tuition fees were taken into account.


Their results were also better, it found, by an average of two-thirds of a degree classification.


However, while fast-track students were more likely to be mature and begin courses with a better attitude, staff remained anxious about the perceived market value of their degrees.

'More intense'

And although the courses received an additional 25% in state funding, the report concluded that institutions would need to charge students 25 or 50% more per year than for traditional courses for them to become more widely viable.


Two-year degrees have been the norm at Buckingham since it was opened as the UK's only independent university in 1976.


Its dean of law, Professor Susan Edwards, says her course covers the same core areas as three-year degrees and broadly similar optional modules.

Scene from student comedy The Young Ones University should not just be about study, argue some

She believes it turns out the sort of graduates who work well under pressure that modern firms are looking for: "It's more intense but we produce students who employers know are going to deliver, prioritise and be focused."


The first six months' results do not count towards a student's final degree assessment, similar to the traditional first year at other universities.


That the university's four-term year - 40 teaching weeks separated by three fortnight breaks and a month off at Christmas - leaves little room for summertime relaxation is no great loss, Prof Edwards argues.


"What today's students do during the summer vacation is not to read around the subject but they find work to finance their studies," she says.


Despite this, Prof Edwards insists Buckingham's students can still throw themselves into the social aspects of university life thanks to a thriving student union with a range of societies.

'Academic sweatshops'

The university argues that when living costs are taken into account, its two-year courses prove cheaper than the alternatives, despite yearly tuition fees of £8,640.


Higher fees, it claims, allows it to fund a high student-tutor ratio (8:1), allowing it to better support students.


Prof Edwards believes a similar level of support would be essential if students at state-funded universities were to cope on shorter courses.


However one lecturers' union, the University and College Union, has branded two-year courses "education on the cheap" which creates "academic sweatshops".


Whatever the verdict on two-year courses, many see the university experience as being about not just an academic education, but an learning about other aspects of adult life.


Comedy writer and novelist Charlie Higson is a staunch believer in that and says accelerated learning misses the point.


"Two years is nothing. It's a waste of time," says Higson, who went to the University of East Anglia, in Norwich. "University is about changing you as a person - emotionally, culturally, spiritually - breaking away from your other life, meeting new people and having experiences."


The Fast Show star admits his first year was more about drink, drugs and sex than his degree in English American Literature and Film Studies. Only by the third year was he immersed in his text books.


Study and social life are about equally important, he reckons.


But while he "never had to show anyone a bit of paper" to prove he had a degree, meeting Paul Whitehouse and Harry Enfield changed the course of his life.


Higson penned the duo's sketches before making his on-screen debut in the Fast Show. University also led him to front a band for six years, while he credits the two unpublished novels he wrote as a student with laying the foundations for his later career as writer of the Young James Bond novels.


"It should be about increasing your potential in every direction. The academic side is part of that but you need to get a lot of other stuff out of your system too," he adds.


Whether university should simply be preparation for a good job or a life-changing experience is a matter for debate. But it appears students on the future may have to make more choices other than where to study and on which course.




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