Mar 19th

Poverty News 19 March 2010

By Amanda Taylor

policy picture - 19 March.jpg
The next Centre for Social Justice Roadshow events will be taking place on Thursday 25 March in Liverpool and Manchester. For more information about these events and to book a place, click here

GENERAL
The New York Times
‘The Broken Society’
Read here

CHILDREN IN CARE
Times
‘Birmingham City Council sacks six social workers’
Read here

BBC
‘Reviews into three teenagers' deaths to be published’
Read here

ADDICTIONS
Times
‘'Miaow-miaow' drug ban advice to come within days’
Read here

Times
‘Like all drugs, miaow-miaow should be legal’
Read here

Daily Mail
‘Action pledged on 'Meow, Meow' drug after two teen friends die within
hours of taking 'legal high'’
Read here

ECONOMIC DEPENDENCY AND WORKLESSNESS
BBC
‘Unemployment rate highest in UK’
Read here

PRISON REFORM
Telegraph
‘Half of prisoners return to crime on release’
Read here

Liberal Democrats
‘Reoffending figures show billions are wasted creating more crime says Howarth’
Read here

ELDER CARE
Times
‘Labour moves to avoid ‘£20,000 death tax’’
Read here

IPPR
‘Public not prepared to face up to challenges of paying for social care,
ippr/PwC research reveals’
Read here

HOUSING
Leftfootforward
‘Budget 2010: Housing investment must continue’
Read here

MENTAL HEALTH
Leftfootforward
‘Mental health problems cost Wales £7.2bn’
Read here

Photo: Andrew D Hurley

Mar 17th

Poverty News 17 March 2010

By Amanda Taylor

policy picture - 17 March.jpg
ADDICTION
Times
‘Three arrested over deaths of teenagers believed to have taken ‘meow meow’’
Read here

Times
‘Methadone for jailed heroin addicts: safety net or life sentence?’
Read here

Times
‘The Drugs Don’t Work’
Read here

Guardian
‘Calls for ban on mephedrone after teenage deaths’
Read here

YOUTH JUSTICE
Times
‘Boy, 12, sent to prison after string of crimes’
Read here

Times
‘Backing for call to raise age of criminal responsibility’
Read here

Independent
‘Exclusive: Scale of youth crime suppressed until after election’
Read here

FAMILY BREAKDOWN
Times
‘We mustn’t divorce ourselves from marriage’
Read here

MENTAL HEALTH
BBC
‘Report claims mental health problems cost Wales £7.2bn’
Read here

ECONOMIC DEPENDENCY AND WORKLESSNESS
BBC
‘Benefit repayments 'must improve significantly'’
Read here

Guardian
‘Unemployment expected to have risen in February’
Read here

SOCIAL COHESION
Guardian
‘Multiculturalism undermines diversity’
Read here

ELDER CARE
Independent
‘Brown's home care plans set for defeat in the Lords’
Read here

Liberal Democrats
‘Parties must agree to a Commission on social care funding says Lamb’
Read here

Joseph Rowntree Foundation
‘Care and support for older people and carers in Bradford’
Read here

ASYLUM
Leftfootforward
‘Getting to grips with asylum removals’
Read here

Mar 16th

Poverty News 16 March 2010

By Amanda Taylor

policy picture - 16 March.jpg

POLICE REFORM
Times
'Monitoring of police forces fails in key areas, says chief inspector'
Read here

GENERAL
New Philanthropy Capital
'NPC launches its manifesto for social impact'
Read here

ELDER CARE
BBC
'Social care revamp needed 'to make system fairer''
Read here

Telegraph
'Middle class pensioners will be spared spiralling care bills''
Read here

ADDICTIONS
BBC
'Young Scots want alcohol ads ban'
Read here

Guardian
'Legalise heroin, says former Downing Street strategy chief'
Read here

YOUTH JUSTICE
Independent
'The Big Question: Should 12, rather than 10, be the age of criminal responsibility?'
Read here

FAMILY BREAKDOWN
Telegraph
'Teenage mothers 'to get life coaching', under government plans'
Read here

MENTAL HEALTH
Telegraph
'Government 'broken pledges to make Alzheimer’s a priority''
Read here

ECONOMIC DEPENDENCY AND WORKLESSNESS
Conservative
'Conservatives pledge 50,000 training places for unemployed'
Read here

Photo copyright of the Centre for Social Justice

Mar 15th

Poverty News 15 March 2010

By Amanda Taylor

policy picture - 15 March.jpg

GENERAL
New Statesman
‘Poor relations’
Read here

YOUTH JUSTICE
Times
‘Children under 12 ‘can’t be criminals’’
Read here

Times
‘Bulger judge Baroness Butler-Sloss rejects raising age of criminal responsibility’
Read here

BBC
‘Calls to raise age of criminal responsibility rejected’
Read here

BBC
‘Should the age of criminality be raised?’
Read here

Independent
‘Black and Asian youths still victims of rough justice’
Read here

FAMILY BREAKDOWN
BBC
‘Black fathers urged to be more involved with children’
Read here

Telegraph
'Extra small condoms for 12 year-old boys go on sale in Switzerland'
Read here

MENTAL HEALTH
Independent
‘£500m 'squandered' on scheme to help dangerous prisoners’
Read here

COURTS AND SENTENCING
Telegraph
‘It's simple – punishment should fit the crime’
Read here

HOUSING POVERTY
Conservative
‘Reforming Labour’s failed housing policies’
Read here

THIRD SECTOR
Leftfootforward
‘Tories must come clean on cuts to voluntary sector’
Read here

Mar 12th

Poverty close to home

By Kent Community Activist
Tunbridge Wells is affluent, but the poor are always with us. Today's Tunbridge Wells edition of the Kent & Sussex Courier carries a two page story about a family on low income. In an excellent hard-hitting editorial a number of key points are made:
  • Deprivation in this country is often overlooked.
  • The lady who is the subject of the article is like thousands of others, struggling each week to feed herself and her family
  • The families' situation is an all-to common one: They have found themselves in a vicious circle of spending too much and racking up debt. Fuelled by a mixture of poor budgeting, low income and easily accessible credit they are now in a particularly vulnerable financial position.
  • Such people are society's forgotten poor. They are not homeless and begging on the street, so it is easy for people to pretend such problems are not rife among us.

The editorial rightly argues that the current benefit system needs to be changed as it is hurting individuals and society as a whole by trapping people in poverty. The Courier has a clear understanding of the problems of poverty and is to be congratulated on publishing this story.

I make two observations:

1. The newly formed Kent Savers Credit Union has statutory duty to provide advice on budgeting and thrift.

2. Should we be looking in Kent at setting up a foodbank along the lines of those established in the USA? Foodbanks in Kent are small and not much is known about them. Perhaps an opportunity for a social enterprise?

Mar 12th

Poverty News 12 March 2010

By Amanda Taylor

policy picture - 12 March.jpg
On Thursday 11 March, the Centre for Social Justice held two more of their Roadshows in Birmingham and Nottingham. Both of the events were a success, and attracted a variety of local third sector organisations and local policy developers. For more information about the upcoming Roadshows, click here

GENERAL
‘Young people self-harming with sharp objects up 50%’
Read here

ELDER CARE
Times
‘Council tax-payers in major cities subsidising care in rest of country’
Read here

Times
‘Labour refuses to rule out 'death tax' to fund care for elderly’
Read here

BBC
‘Social care under-funded and rationed, say MPs’
Read here

BBC
‘Elderly social care consensus urged by MPs’
Read here

Telegraph
‘Free care plans condemned by MPs’
Read here

Joseph Rowntree Foundation
‘Funding care: how can each generation pay its fair share?’
Read here

Joseph Rowntree Foundation
‘Who should pay for the care of older people?’
Read here

EDUCATIONAL FAILURE
Times
‘Number of failing schools leaps 150 per cent under new regime’
Read here

BBC
‘More schools are failing Ofsted checks’
Read here

ASYLUM
BBC
‘Handcuff restraint of asylum seekers criticised’
Read here

Independent
‘Asylum-seekers abused by security guards, says report’
Read here

CRIMINAL JUSTICE
BBC
‘Conservative crime correspondence’
Read here

Daily Mail
‘Don't put burglars in jail (unless they hurt someone), courts told’
Read here


POLICE REFORM
BBC
‘Police accused of failures over anti-social behaviour’
Read here

BBC
‘Tories say ministers will cut uniformed police numbers’
Read here

BBC
‘How should anti-social behaviour be policed?’
Read here

Leftfootforward
‘Reform of police service is key, not a fixation on numbers’
Read here

GANGS
BBC
‘Anti-gang guidance from government offered to schools’
Read here

Mar 10th

Poverty News 10 March 2010

By Amanda Taylor


GENERAL
Guardian
‘Is Britain broken?’

Read here

CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Times
‘Reoffending short-term prisoners cost the country £10bn a year’

Read here

BBC
‘Short-term prisoner reoffending 'costs economy £10bn'’

Read here

BBC
‘How can we reduce reoffending?’
Read here

Guardian
‘Failure to tackle reoffending rates of short-sentence prisoners 'costs
£10bn'’

Read here


Telegraph

‘Cameron accused of being criminal's friend’

Read here

The Spectator Blog
‘Tough on dangerous dogs, blind to the causes of dangerous dogs’

Read here

PRISON REFORM
ConservativeHome
‘Alan Duncan MP: How a Conservative Government would not only reform prisons but also address the underlying causes of our broken society which lead people to offend in the first place’

Read here

EDUCATIONAL FAILURE
Times
‘Scottish Tory proposals aim for less state control of education’

Read here


CHILDREN IN CARE
BBC

‘Baby P rules 'may put children at more risk'’

Read here


ELDER CARE

BBC
‘Social care deal 'dead in water' ahead of key talks’

Read here


Guardian
‘Political parties trade blows ahead of elderly social care talks’

Read here
Mar 9th

Poverty News 9 March 2010

By Amanda Taylor

policy picture - 9 March.jpg
ASYLUM

Times

‘Asylum is a complex and emotive issue that will never satisfy everyone’

Read here

Times

‘Suffering and isolation of Russian family who leapt from tower block’

Read here

Independent

‘The estate where asylum seekers abandon hope’

Read here

Daily Mail

‘Asylum man, wife and son tied themselves together and jumped 200ft to
deaths’
Read here

CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Telegraph
‘True scale of violent crime rise revealed’
Read here

Yahoo! News
‘Tories say figures show crime rise’

Read here

Labour
‘Action on Anti-Social Behaviour’
Read here

ConservativeHome
‘Chris Grayling vindicated as independent evaluation concludes violent crime has risen by 44% under Labour’
Read here

EDUCATIONAL FAILURE
ConservativeHome
‘Michael Gove: The Conservative plan to improve school standards’
Read here

Mar 8th

Poverty News 8 March 2010

By Amanda Taylor

policy picture - 8 March.jpg
On Monday 1st March, the Centre for Social Justice held an event on Early Intervention in Northen Ireland, which attracted individuals from both politics and voluntary organisations. Speaking at the event were Iain Duncan Smith, Philippa Stroud, Helen Crighton, Roy Beggs MLA, Rev. Bill Shaw and Owen Paterson.

GENERAL
Joseph Rowntree Foundation
‘Why should we care about poverty?’
Read here

POLICE REFORM
Times
‘Tories accuse senior police of giving political cover to Labour’
Read here

ELDER CARE
Times
‘Blueprint on funding elderly care aims to call halt to politicking’
Read here

Joseph Rowntree Foundation
‘Better Lives for Older People: Asking for Ideas’
Read here

HOUSING
Guardian
‘Housing in London: the debate rages’
Read here

Joseph Rowntree Foundation
‘How can we make the housing market more stable for vulnerable households?’
Read here

CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Guardian
‘Tough on crime? Jail's not the answer’
Read here

FAMILY BREAKDOWN
Centre for Policy Studies
‘No man in the house for three generations’
Read here

YOUTH JUSTICE
New Philanthropy Capital
'Flog young offenders, put them in stocks and pelt them with oranges.'
Read here

ECONOMIC DEPENDENCY AND WORKLESSNESS
Policy Exchange
‘Escaping the Poverty Trap: How to help people on benefits into work’
Read here

Mar 4th

Kent Savers Credit Union up and running

By Kent Community Activist
Kent Savers Credit Union launched today at a press conference held at a children's centre in Gravesend. BBC local television covered the launch in a 'special report' on the evening news.

Kent (including the Medway towns) has many areas of severe deprivation: Chatham, Dover, Folkestone, Gravesend, Sheerness and Margate, but there are pockets of severe deprivation across the county including, yes, places such as  Ashford, Maidstone, Sevenoaks and Tunbridge Wells.

The credit union will tackle poverty issues across Kent.  Kent County Council, Maidstone Borough Council and a number of housing associations have backed the credit union financially.