Sunday, October 29, 2006

BBC NEWS | UK | Lottery results: Are you a winner?

BBC NEWS | UK | Lottery results: Are you a winner?: "Lottery results: Are you a winner?
Lottery balls
Was the draw lucky for you?

Four lucky winners shared Saturday's �4m Lotto jackpot, Camelot said.

Each of the four tickets won �1,016,840 for matching all six numbers in the draw.

The winning numbers in the Lotto main draw were 29, 6, 20, 12, 4 and 5 with a bonus number of 30.

The set of balls used was six and the draw machine Topaz.

A total of 44 tickets matched five numbers and the bonus ball to win �28,443 and 1,115 each won �701 for matching five balls.

In Thunderball two ticket holders scooped the top prize of �250,000 for matching five numbers and the Thunderball.

The Thunderball numbers were 20, 4, 18, 23, and 32.

The Thunderball was 11.

And winning numbers in the Lotto Dream Number game were 2, 2, 6, 9, 3, 9, 0.

E-mail this to a friend"

Saturday, October 28, 2006

BBC NEWS | UK | Clock change 'would save lives'

BBC NEWS | UK | Clock change 'would save lives': "Clock change 'would save lives'
Tolsey Clock in Wotton-under-Edge, Gloucestershire
Clocks go back one hour at 0200BST on Sunday
Hundreds of lives would be saved if the practice of putting clocks back and forwards changed, say council leaders.

The Local Government Association wants the UK time system to be put forward by an hour to make the roads safer for children and cyclists.

Clocks would stay as they are every winter but go forward in Spring, putting them two hours ahead of GMT.

The LGA of England and Wales wants a three-year trial of the Single/Double Summer Time (SDST) clock arrangement.

The call comes as the clocks are due to go back at 0200 BST on Sunday.

The SDST has previously received backing from some MPs and a variety of road safety groups. But others claim it would be more dangerous for children in Scotland.

Rush hour

LGA spokeswoman Hazel Harding said: 'Councils are committed to helping people get safely through their day, and shifting our clocks an hour forward would prevent more than 450 deaths and serious injuries on our roads each year.'

She said the evening rush hour was the most dangerous time for road users and this was when school children were more likely to have a club or activity .

'Their increased exposure to road traffic together with tired drivers can lead to serious consequences,' she said.

'There has been widespread support for this change from different organisations over the years, and also much opposition.

'But unless we are given the chance to see for ourselves what the impact would be today, we cannot know for certain that our roads are as safe as they possibly could be.'

Ms Harding added that in the height of summer the sun rises at 0400 BST, while most people are asleep and 'sets while we are still enjoying our evenings'.

'Matching the daylight hours more closely with our living patterns would give us a greater opportunity to enjoy ourselves, get active and stay healthy,' she said.

However, last October the Scottish National Party (SNP) education spokeswoman Fiona Hyslop, said any change in policy would put more Scottish children at risk as they travelled to school.

Ms Hyslop tabled a motion at Holyrood backing the current Daylight Saving Time system.

"

Friday, October 27, 2006

Further Evidence Of Spin And Fudge (from Ealing Times)

Further Evidence Of Spin And Fudge (from Ealing Times): "‘Further evidence of spin and fudge’
By David Doyle

LONDON Mayor Ken Livingstone has admitted he has no funding for the controversial West London Tram (WLT).

The Mayor, who recently announced he would continue with the plan despite most residents opposing it, told London Assembly members he would have to apply to the Government for funds.

The leader of Ealing Council, Cllr Jason Stacey, said: 'He is about to take us through a very expensive public enquiry for something he doesn't have the money for.
continued...

'I'm glad he's finally admitted something we've all known for a long time - that he doesn't have the cash.'

Conservatives last week claimed the cost for the WLT could top �1 billion.

Richard Barnes, London Assembly member for Ealing and Hillingdon, said: 'The Mayor hasn't got the public support nor the cash to fund this ill-judged scheme.

'Perhaps the Mayor is secretly hoping the Treasury will provide him a get out clause by refusing funding, thus allowing him to save face seeing as he hasn't the grace to admit he was wrong.'

A recent Mori poll for Transport for London showed 44 per cent of residents were opposed to the WLT compared to 40 per cent in favour of it.

But Conservatives have accused Mr Livingstone of glossing over these statistics after it was learned three quarters of the opposition described themselves as 'vigorously against' it.

Angie Bray, London Assembly Conservative member for West Central London, said: 'This is further evidence of the Mayor attempting to spin and fudge poll results in order to justify this scheme.

'We will continue in our efforts to ensure that this proposal ends up where it belongs - and where most people want it - on the scrapheap.'"

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

Whale to challenge Ken for mayor | News | This is London

Whale to challenge Ken for mayor | News | This is London: "Whale to challenge Ken for mayor
24.10.06

Add your view


Radio presenter James Whale has entered the race to stand as London Mayor.

The outspoken broadcaster is set to challenge Ken Livingstone in 2008 as a UK Independence Party candidate.

His key policy includes scrapping the congestion charge and his advisers include Lord Archer and Peter Stringfellow.

He claims he would also open up the Thames to travellers and 'get rid of the Gestapo parking officers'. His policies would also halt new homes in the Thames Gateway and involve recruiting CRE chief Trevor Phillips as race adviser.

He said today: 'The problem with Ken is that he's never come up against anybody whose prepared to put him in his place and give as good as they get.

'Ken would be no problem for me at all. Ever since he's became Mayor of London he's tried to put on this air of political superiority.

'But I'm pretty sure I could out-gob him. What Ken has done to the people and image of the capital is unforgivable. Under me, there wouldn't be the waste of money that there is under him. I would liberate the people of London from unfair taxes and continuous intrusion in their lives.'

However, Mr Whale, who was born in south London, could face a tough choice between his show at Talksport and standing for Mayor because of strict broadcasting rules. LBC presenter Nick Ferrari withdrew from the race to be Tory Mayoral candidate because of a conflict of interest.

Mr Whale says the London Mayor should be a part-time position. 'There are all these minions to carry out whatever you tell them to do,' he said. 'You have got a mountain of advisers. It's not a full-time job for goodness sake. You can fit it in easily.'

Mr Whale also had sharp words for those who could be in Number 10 by the time of the Mayoral elections. 'I'm concerned about the chinless wonders of Eton taking over the Tories,' he said. 'But I don't think for a moment that Gordon Brown is going to lead the country.'"

Saturday, October 21, 2006

George Michael's smoking of cannibis on TV is really not acceptable behaviour.

George Michael's smoking of cannibis on TV is really not acceptable behaviour.

Barrie runs the parking ticket appeal website AppealNow.com™
Remember you can fight back against illegally issued parking tickets.
If you want to appeal such a parking ticket but don't know how - then
visit http://www.appealnow.com
where you can appeal online in 4½ minutes.

© 2006 Barrie Segal All Rights reserved

Barrie Segal is the founder of AppealNow.com™ and is a regular radio broadcaster in the UK.

  • APPEALNOW.COM
  • Friday, October 20, 2006

    Bromley Times

    Bromley Times: "Tory: we won't join Ken's clean-up club

    19 October 2006
    A COUNCILLOR has slammed criticism from London Mayor Ken Livingstone over the borough's failure to join a London-wide clean up initiative.

    Mr Livingstone attacked Tory Bromley council for ignoring the Capital Standards campaign at the launch of the scheme's week-long crackdown on graffiti on October 9.

    The Mayor accusing them of putting 'party politics before Bromley residents' everyday concerns'.

    But Colin Smith, Bromley's environment executive, dismissed the attack as 'ill informed ramblings from the Zone One Mayor for Inner London.'

    He added: 'Of course we agree with a cleaner London, but why on earth would we want to join 'Ken's club' and waste Bromley taxpayers' money when it is only advocating doing what we are already doing here anyway?

    'We're clearly not perfect, nor will we ever become complacent, but it is a matter of record that we already match and in many cases exceed the performances of other London boroughs across the range of environmental issues.'

    Capital Standards was set up to tackle litter, fly-tipping and fly-posting, and shares knowledge across the Environment Agency, London boroughs, the Metropolitan Police and cleaning contractors.

    Of London's 33 local councils, 28 are signed up to the scheme.

    Mr Livingstone said: 'I want to send a strong message to Bromley council. Their absence from this campaign is just not good enough. Londoners expect a cleaner city.'

    His view was backed by Labour leader councillor John Getgood, who added: 'You only have to walk down Penge High Street on a Saturday morning to see how Bromley council is failing to act in its residents' interest. Capital Standards could make a real difference locally but Tory Bromley isn't interested, just because it comes from a Labour Mayor.'

    However, Mr Smith said Mr Getgood's criticisms 'captured in a nutshell why council tax rose 36 per cent in the three years his party were in part control and why, since regaining control in 2001, the council has become the lowest taxing in outer London under the Conservatives.

    'Councillor Getgood and Mayor Livingstone can jump up and down as much as they like about it,' he added. 'We believe that actions speak louder than words and our position isn't going to change."

    Council Homes Dispute Erupts (from Barnet Times)

    Council Homes Dispute Erupts (from Barnet Times): "Council homes dispute erupts
    By Marcus Dysch

    Barnet Council may not be able to provide council homes to thousands of residents if its new planning policy gets the go-ahead, according to opposition councillors.

    Consultations on Barnet Council's affordable housing supplementary planning document (SPD) end today, with the council set to formalise its plans in the coming months.

    The document sets out guidance for developers and housing associations and should make clear what percentage of affordable homes in the borough will be either rented council-owned properties, or part-owned properties.
    continued...

    Mayor of London Ken Livingstone's London Plan advises authorities that 35 per cent of all new-build homes should be rented council properties, and 15 per cent should be part-owned. But the council's SPD fails to set any targets, leading Barnet Labour group's housing spokesman, Councillor Ross Houston, to call it a developers' charter'.

    He said: 'There is loophole after loophole to let developers ride roughshod over the council.

    'The guidance agreed will have a massive impact on whether the council can offer homes to the thousands of residents on its waiting lists.

    'We cannot stand idly by while the Tory administration attempts to cut back on affordable housing by not setting any targets at all.'

    Councillor Melvin Cohen, Conservative cabinet member for planning, said: 'Barnet is in full compliance with the London Plan on the overall levels for affordable housing. Thanks to our groundbreaking regeneration schemes, we are set to build unprecedented amounts of affordable housing across the borough."

    Thursday, October 19, 2006

    Dad slams critics of Madonna's adoption

    Dad slams critics of Madonna's adoption
    By RAPHAEL TENTHANI, Associated Press Writer
    Article Last Updated:10/18/2006 02:34:09 PM PDT
    Pop star Madonna walks between cars to avoid photographers at the end of her visit to the Kondanani orphanage in Bvumbwe, on the outskirt of Malawi's commercial capital Blantyre, Thursday Oct. 5, 2006. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)
    The father of the 13-month-old boy Madonna wants to make part of her family criticized human rights groups who have challenged how the adoption is being handled and said his child should stay with the pop star.

    Yohane Banda told The Associated Press on Wednesday he had entrusted his son to a Malawian orphanage after his wife died of childbirth complications, saying he was too poor to raise him alone. Now, he says, Madonna has given the boy a chance to have a family.

    "Where were these people when David was struggling in the orphanage? These so-called human rights groups should leave my baby alone," he said. "As father I have OKed this, I have no problem. The village has no problem. Who are they to cause trouble? Please let them stop."

    The Human Rights Consultative Committee, a coalition of 67 organizations, launched a legal challenge Tuesday, noting that Malawian regulations require prospective parents to stay with a child in Malawi for 18 to 24 months for assessment before the adoption is formalized. Madonna, though, was allowed to take the boy to England, where she has a home, and Malawian officials have said the family would be monitored there.

    Children's advocates in Malawi have stressed they are not opposed to Madonna adopting David, but want to ensure rules meant to protect children aren't ignored.

    Madonna and British film director husband Guy Ritchie spent eight days in Malawi and last Thursday signed adoption papers for David Banda. The boy's father
    Advertisement
    countersigned the papers and High Court Justice Andrew Nyirenda issued the couple an "interim order" allowing them custody, a step toward adoption. The boy was flown to London on Monday.

    Penston Kilembe, director of Child Welfare Services in Malawi's Ministry of Gender, Child Welfare and Community Services, told the AP the laws to which the civil rights groups referred in their challenge are "archaic." He said his government took into account the rights of children and families in allowing Madonna to pursue adoption.

    "Madonna and her husband has broken no laws as far as government is concerned. They have followed all the legal steps," he said.

    Madonna's attempt to adopt David has sparked a debate about how best to care for the millions of orphans in places like Malawi, a desperately poor country beset by drought and AIDS. Some children's advocates say children are best raised close to home, but AIDS has killed many of those in extended families who might once have cared for children in Malawi and elsewhere in Africa, leaving orphans in the hands of elderly grandparents, older siblings, strained orphanages — or on the streets.

    The case has drawn international attention.

    The Italian Foreign Minister Massimo D'Alema compared Madonna's taking custody of David to a "kidnapping" and called for clearer international rules, according to his spokesman, confirming accounts of his remarks in Italian media.

    In a statement last week, the British development group ActionAid lauded Madonna for helping David and her wider projects for AIDS orphans in Malawi. It also called on rich Western nations to make good on promises to get AIDS drugs to patients in poor countries, and said individuals could make donations to help communities care for AIDS orphans, so that children could "grow up in their own culture, and if orphaned, with any remaining family they have left."

    Madonna, rejecting the criticism of recent days, said in a statement Tuesday: "We have gone about the adoption procedure according to the law like anyone else who adopts a child. Reports to the contrary are totally inaccurate."

    Banda's wife, Marita, 28, died a week after giving birth to David. The couple, who had been married for over 10 years, had two other sons who died in infancy from malaria.

    "I was alone with a baby. I had no money. I couldn't buy him milk. That's why I surrendered him to the orphanage," said Banda.

    Madonna found David at the Home of Hope Orphanage, which looks after more than 500 children who have lost one or both parents.

    "Orphanage life is no good. We leave kids there because we can't look after them properly ourselves. Now my son has been taken by a kindhearted woman, these people want to bring him back to the orphanage," said Banda, standing in his small garden of onions and tomatoes.

    He said Madonna and Ritchie promised him nothing apart from "love and care for my David."

    Barrie's comments - Madoona has done a wonderful deed - why she is being criticised I just do not know!

    Tuesday, October 17, 2006

    icSouthlondon - Anger over bid to give Livingstone more control

    icSouthlondon - Anger over bid to give Livingstone more control: "Anger over bid to give Livingstone more control

    Oct 17 2006

    NEWS that Mayor of London Ken Livingstone could be handed more power has been met with outrage.
    Publish Post
    Southwark council leaders are planning a motion to persuade the Government to ditch plans to give Mr Livingstone more of a say.

    It is expected this month's Queen's Speech - which outlines the Government's plans for the coming year - will propose the Mayor has a bigger say in planning and waste issues.

    Council leader Nick Stanton said: 'The best knowledge about local communities comes from the people who actually live and work there. 'For example, giving the Mayor additional powers in the area of planning would probably have meant the approval of the development by Berkeley Homes at Potter's Field or the Downtown development.

    'Both of these fly in the face of public opinion and are being strongly opposed by the council. 'We will be bringing a motion to the next meeting of the council assembly and we hope to secure the ringing endorsement of all sides to oppose these ludicrous power-grabbing plans.'


    Story continues Continue story
    ADVERTISEMENT

    A London Mayor spokeswoman said Southwark council would retain 99.9 per cent of authority over planning.

    She added: 'The claim that these proposals will deprive communities of the ability to influence what gets built locally is complete nonsense.

    'The Mayor has made it quite clear that he will only be deciding a handful of cases a year of London-wide importance.'"

    Sheep impersonator almost found | Metro.co.uk

    Sheep impersonator almost found | Metro.co.uk: "Sheep impersonator almost found
    Tuesday, October 17, 2006
    Sheep

    After over a year of investigation, producing a report that some claim runs to 300 pages, and at a cost of around �10,000, Havering council in Essex stand on the verge of a breakthrough in the case that could rock local government to its very core.

    In blunt terms, they have nearly discovered who it was kept saying 'baaa' in a meeting.

    With the list of suspect now down to just four men, justice is surely just around the corner for the reprobate who wouldn't stop impersonating a sheep in a 2005 planning meeting.

    Unless, that is, it turns out to be the prime suspect, who isn't a councillor any more and so can't be punished.

    The scandal of the impersonated sheep – Sheepgate, if you will – began in a planning meeting over whether a mobile home could be put on a farm with rare breeds of horses and sheep. Throughout the meeting, a repeated 'baaaa' noise could be heard, although it was unclear which councillor was responsible.

    This so infuriated Cllr Jeff Tucker that he reported it to the Standards Board for England. The Standards Board for England - the body which tried and failed to suspend Ken Livingstone for four weeks – promptly referred it right on back to Havering Council.

    Now, over a year after Sheepgate first began, with around �10,000 worth of staff time spent on the issue, the list of suspects is down to four names. They will be interrogated over the matter by the standards hearings sub-committee next month.

    Then, finally, perhaps the residents of Essex can sleep sound once more - knowing that the phantom baaa-er of Havering council will have been brought to book at last."

    Sunday, October 15, 2006

    First Test Post