Picket Lines across Westover as Bridgwater joins National Day of Action

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Kathy and Leigh out supporting public sector strikers in the Town centre today.

Westover ward councillors Brian Smedley and Kathy Pearce joined Bridgwater South County Councillor Leigh Redman this morning visiting picket lines to show solidarity with striking public sector workers as National Strike action spread to include public buildings in the town centre.

At midday the councillors joined workers from all the striking unions and their supporters at the town’s Cornhill handing out leaflets to the public explaining the reasons behind the strike.

Workers from the FBU, PCS, UNISON, NUT, UNITE,RMT were all taking part in the strike which saw picket lines around Bridgwater house, the job Centre, the Library and the Fire station along with several schools closed and the Town Hall offices closed to the public.

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Pickets were out all around sunny Westover this morning including the job centre.

Somerset County Labour leader and Unite member Leigh Redman said: “There is deep anger at this governments’ assault on public services. This is not just about pay. It’s about the pressure of huge workloads, the targets culture and the stress of bullying managers. People have had enough. Across Britain spending cuts have decimated local services. By 2015/16 the Con/Dem government will have hacked £11.3 billion from local government funds in England alone.”

Cllr Brian Smedley said “When workers go on strike it’s a hard decision and it takes courage to stand up for what you believe in and when that happens the Labour Movement should come together. I’m here as a Labour councillor and a UNITE member to support the strikers and the stand they’re making on behalf of everyone.”

 

WESTOVER RESIDENTS PARKING 91% SUPPORT AFTER CONSULTATION

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Scheme Champions with Cllr Redman. Karen Llewellyn (West Quay) Liz Edwards (Friarn) Mark Postma (Dampiet) Tony Heyward (Castle st) Andy Slocombe (St Saviours). Not pictured-George Weston (Blacklands)

After a 2 year battle to establish Residents Parking Schemes in the Westover ward of Bridgwater a consultation undertaken by residents acting as ‘scheme champions’ has resulted in a 91% support for the establishment of RPZ’s in their streets.

6 scheme champions knocked on 249 doors in Castle st, West Quay, Fishermans Wharf,Bond st, Blacklands, Friarn st, St Saviours Avenue, Silver st, Green Dragon lane and Kings Square, discussing the pro’s and con’s of the parking scheme with them and as a result have the documented information necessary to justify the creation of a residents parking scheme in the streets where this is supported by more than 80%.

The schemes were called for after the introduction of Civil Parking Enforcement resulted in increased traffic displacement, excessive fines and also addresses the long term failure for developers to consider including parking in town centre build.

Cllr Brian Smedley said “This has been a hard struggle over 2 years and several streets have either dropped out or failed to get the required percentages, but it’s a credit to the hard work of the scheme champions that they’ve done exactly what County required of them and came up with the evidence. We always said from the off that these schemes would only be introduced where the overwhelming majority of residents wanted them and we have now clearly identified these streets.” Continue reading “WESTOVER RESIDENTS PARKING 91% SUPPORT AFTER CONSULTATION”

ALL QUIET ON THE WESTOVER FRONT?

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Kristy Blackwell, SDC community safety officer, leads a night time safety audit, with Sgt Walls from the Police.

By day Bridgwater’s 19th century bridge is a bustling crossing between the east and west parts of the town centre but as night falls it can become a focal point for noisy drinkers sometimes until the early hours of the morning. Not only this but residents tell of boy racers skidding across it and hurtling around the chicanes created by the medieval one way system that is 21st century Bridgwater.

Sleepless nights plagued by unsilenced motors and unsilenceable drunks was one reason that town centre resident Steve Coram joined last nights ‘Night Time Safety’ Audit – set up by Kristy Blackwell Sedgemoor’s Community Safety officer. Steve said “I’ve never known it as bad as this and I’d like to see exactly what the Police are going to do about it.”

So the plan was for residents, councillors and the people there to deal with this kind of thing, to take a walk about during a Friday evening to assess the scale of the problem.

Victims of the Night Time economy

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Cllr Kathy Pearce and several firemen take a look around Fore street.

Kristy was joined from Sedgemoor by hard working Community Development officer Rob Semple, Police Inspector Andy Pritchard and town centre beat manager Chris Walls, a group of Firefighters, Westover councillors Kath Pearce and Brian Smedley, several other concerned residents including Rafal and Gosha from the Polish community, and night time frontline operative ‘Terry’ who, as a ‘street pastor’ is sometimes up all night dealing with the victims of the night-time economy.

The purpose of the audit was to identify areas of the town where people didn’t feel safe, where there was a lack of adequate lighting, where intimidating groups might accumulate and to highlight other potentially contributing factors. The work will of course be ongoing – and we welcome suggestions.

Enforcing the Bye-Laws

So we headed off to the Town Bridge. Salmon Parade was already alive with a group content on drinking itself daft with cans purchased singly from the towns off licences. Into the river went the alcohol as the Police approached them pointing out that bye-laws prevented drinking on specified streets. An hour later members of the same group were nevertheless in a nearby off-licence replenishing lost stocks. Well, beer IS very moorish….

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Westover resident Steve Coram leads some of the group through Blake Gardens and into the Underpass

Into Blake Gardens we went. Scene of considerable attention by the Police in recent weeks following complaints by other park users, the problem was pretty similar. Groups of people drinking alcohol purchased legally but drunk in contravention of bye-laws. Alcohol could be removed. However, intimidating groups of drunks aren’t the most welcoming company when you’re out for a stroll in the park. But they can’t be removed unless they’re doing something wrong.  The group move through the underpass to the part of the park behind old Taunton Road, but the Police follow them and point out that it’s still the same park and the same bye-laws apply.

The underpass , as night falls, ceases to be a sensible shortcut into the town centre. The graffiti reads “Hell is empty and all the demons are here”. Profound and possibly true.

Eastover and Out

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Inspector Pritchard tries to look inconspicuous as the group heads down St John Street.

The route from the town bridge to the railway station is being targeted for a wash and brush up as part of the ‘Celebration mile’. Well, it needs it. For sure. The new hotel planned for the Eastover/Monmouth street junction will be a welcome boost for the area, but until then it remains dilapidated and uninviting. Empty shops, hardly any litter bins and once you’re across into St John street, the shops become largely a line of late night takeaways. By the time you reach the station you feel you’re at the back end of the universe – until you remember that this is in fact the area that people arriving by train first see of Bridgwater. Desolated, overgrown wastegrounds greet arriving travellers and then it’s undertakers, pubs and takeaways almost until you’re back to the virtual safety of the town bridge. And of course a reception committee of an obligatory gang of shouty youngsters. Presumably train spotters.

Across the river from the newly tarted up West Quay pedestrian zone with it’s atmospheric lighting and al fresco dining , the town is again let down by the derelict monstrosity of the former doctors surgery, now a land grab by Asda as part of a sweetener deal with SDC, simply left to rot. Another focus for disgruntled youth in a town that doesn’t give them many other choices.

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Steve expresses an opinion about ‘boy racers’ as the group reaches Binford Place

Back across the town bridge and the gang of early drinkers have topped their cheap booze energy levels back up again and have resumed whatever they were doing before that required ‘being a bit shouty’ and merited the risk of having their amber nectar poured into the amber(ish) Parrett. A risk worth taking? Maybe not if shops stopped selling booze bottle by bottle.

Top of the Town

Through the Fore street…still relatively empty, but, well, there was a World Cup on and presumably a lot of Columbian fans around having a quiet curacao at home. So we wandered up to the High street. Newcomer to the town , Moira , had joined the nightwalk because she’d witnessed a savage fight outside the ‘Three Lions’ (former White Lion) “with blood and everything” and couldn’t believe this was normal for the town she’d just moved to. To top it off it’d been 3 o clock in the afternoon. By now it was mid evening and the pubs were still filling up. But quiet.

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Town Bridge. 5 minutes before the Daleks land.

Street Pastor Terry confirmed that 99% of late night trouble was concentrated in the High street/ Penel Orlieu area. The ‘top of the town’ included late bars and a Night club plus a couple of takeaways. Bridgwater isn’t a big town and so it’s no surprise that drinkers follow well trodden paths to their weekend fun centres. However, it was at this point of the evening that the safety audit suddenly came to a halt. I couldn’t help thinking it was a bit like having a walk around somewhere, saying ‘well everything seems fine to me’ going home and then ten minutes later the Daleks invade.

So the plan is to do it again sometime…………

 

FOOD SHORTAGES AT THE FOOD BANK

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Mayor of Bridgwater Cllr Steve Austen and Mayoress Stella Austen are urging support for Bridgwater Foodbank

 Today is ‘open day’ at the Bridgwater Food Bank and Town Mayor and Westover councillor Steve Austen dropped in to see how they were doing. There are problems……

Since the rapid growth of food banks nationwide over the past few years it’s no surprise that an area like Bridgwater should have it’s own share of this growing need. For the past two years the volunteers who run Bridgwater’s foodbank, based at the Mount street Day Centre (next to the Cinema ) have struggled to maintain a permanent base. While they now think they’ve found that base the latest crisis to hit them is a shortage of food. Usage has stayed constant but donations have halved.

MAYOR URGES SUPPORT

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Steve and Stella discuss with volunteers the scale of the demand around the town.

Cllr Austen said “Food poverty across the country is a scandal in this day and age. This needs addressing and until it has been addressed  foodbanks are a necessary resource which we have to support because people rely on them. “

Volunteer Mark Hollidge said “Donations have halved but demand remains the same. This is the second year of our existence and we seem to have gone off the radar a bit. However, people keep coming and so we have to provide for them. Anyone wishing to make a donation can visit us Monday, Wednesday and Friday 1pm to 3.30 or there’s baskets at Asdas, Sainsbury’s and Morrisons.”

PLEASE DONATE (JUST NO MORE BAKED BEANS PLEASE)

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Bridgwater Foodbank is based at the Day Centre on Mount street

The foodbank has one large cupboard totally full of tins of beans. So one message is ‘we’re alright for beans thankyou’ however, there is a well established list of priority items.

Milk (UHT) , Sugar (500gms), Fruit juice (long life carton), Soup, Spaghetti (tinned), Pasta sauce, Tomatoes (tinned), Cereals, Rice pudding (tinned) Tea bags, Coffee (instant), Mashed potato (packet) , Rice, Meat (tinned), Fish (tinned) Fruit (tinned) Vegetables (tinned) Jam, Biscuits or snack bars, sponge puddings (tinned)

Mark Hollidge added “If you can add one of these items to your weekly shopping it would be gratefully received by the foodbank and we will pass it on to local people that are in crisis.”

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The foodbank re;lies on public donations but stocks are running dangerously low.

Steve Austen stressed the key message about Foodbanks “Today in Bridgwater there are families struggling to put food on the table. For people on low incomes, a sudden crisis-redundancy, benefit delay or even an unexpected bill-can mean going hungry. Every day parents skip meals to feed their children and people are forced to choose between paying the rent and eating. Bridgwater foodbank provides emergency food and support to local people in crisis.”

Bridgwater Foodbank is part of the Trussell Trust’s UK-wide foodbank network.

To contact the Foodbank call 07804 119273 or email info@bridgwater.foodbank.org.uk or visit their website www.bridgwater.foodbank.org.uk

 

On this day in History JULY 2ND 1896-‘Reading the Riot Act’

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July 2nd 1896 Brickworkers on strike man the barricades at Penel Orlieu. Sorry about this.

Bridgwater is a town with a radical and interesting history. The Battle of Sedgemoor, the petition against the Slave trade, the Siege during the civil war have all gone down in history. But on this day – July 2nd – in 1896 the town was literally a riot.

During the 19th century the chief industry of Bridgwater was brickmaking and the town was dominated by tall brick kiln chimneys mingling with the high masts from the ocean going sailing ships that harboured as far inland as the town bridge. The work in the brickyards was hot, dirty,dangerous and labour intensive with brickworkers even wearing string around their knees to stop rats running up their legs along the river banks.

In 1896 relations between workers and brickyard owners boiled over into confrontation and a strike broke out all across the town on 29th May with pickets across the town at all brickyard entrances, mass meetings of strikers on the ‘Rec ‘ (modern day Cranleigh Gardens) and marches through the town with the workers flying their Trade Union banners. The workers were demanding 6 pence a day increase  and a half day less on saturdays .

Strike

Whilst the strike was solid so was the determination of the bosses not to give up any of their profits so they sat back and left it to the Borough Council to deal with any consequences of the strike. The Mayor (Henry Pollard) and his ‘Watch Committee’ – so called because they kept a ‘watch’ on law and order and the emergency services – were not convinced they could control 2,000 angry and frustrated strikers and made secret plans to bring in the military. Already the Tory Government of Lord Salisbury had used the army in action in Wales and Yorkshire against Miners with some fatalities but now the Town Council were seriously considering it on the people who (probably hadn’t) elected them.

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Scene from the 1986 Sheep Worrying play ‘Brickyard strike’ at the Bridgwater Arts Centre featuring Brian Smedley and Roger o Hare as Police officers arresting striker Will May played by Eddie Grey

In this atmosphere of escalating tension the strikers stepped up their direct action and started to seize scab brick carts en route to the brickyards taking it into their own hands to stop all movement of bricks and tiles. On July 1st strikers seized 2 carts and took them to the Cattle market – present day the land next to the cinema on Penel Orlieu. The brickyard owners were apoplectic with rage – but at the same time knew they had the resources of the state behind them and demanded from the Council and the Chief of Police that the carts be returned. What had made things worse was that the strikers had in fact overpowered Police escorts to the carts at St John street and at West Bow crossroads. Now virtually the entire available Police force from around Somerset was sent to Bridgwater.

Riot

Tension mounted  as the hot summer day turned to hot summer evening when at 7pm 108 soldiers of the Gloucestershire Regiment, previously on their way to active service in South Africa, arrived at the railway station kitted out in Zulu war period tunics and pith helmets, and marched to the town hall getting a hostile reception from the towns people.

The Town Hall was now filled with Police and Soldiers giving the Mayor and the chief of Police the confidence  to try to regain the carts by force and at 9pm made a baton charge from High street into Penel Orlieu. Striking Brickworkers at once uptipped the carts forming barricades and fought them off by weight of numbers (and flying bricks) sending them back into the Town Hall where the ruling class sat surrounded by the working class. Who now started to throw bricks through the windows….

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Bridgwater in 1896

After 6 hours of siege Mayor Henry Pollard and town clerk William Brice appeared at the door of the town hall and read the riot act to the strikers. At once the military appeared with fixed bayonets and proceeded to charge up and down the High street clearing the strikers from the streets. One of the first casualties was a young novice female reporter for the local newspaper who was badly beaten in the initial assault.

The first target of the troops was the armoury in Friarn street where the Mayor feared the strikers would head for to acquire weapons themselves. In fact they hadn’t thought of it and were too busy running for their lives .

Mayor Pollard in 1896 had the powers to read the Riot Act and order soldiers to attack striking Bridgwater Brickworkers

On this night in Bridgwater history 27 people were arrested and subsequently charged on riot related offences and the town was occupied by the redcoated military – an event depicted today by the banner of the Bridgwater Trades Union Council.

A photograph of the occupation is on display in the Charter Hall of Bridgwater Town Hall.