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Britain's Council Estates, A Solution?

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  • #16
    Sandman

    School meals - not a bad idea but there would still be divisions as some people would bring packed lunches. Schools started going downhill when the clip around the ear was barred. A teacher was punched at my high school. Tell me when then happened say pre-1980.

    Super-strict enforcement of school uniforms.
    I think we need to start getting the kids in school to begin with don't you.

    I agree with Boddingtons that encouraging apprenticeships and skilled manual crafts is a good idea. University should not be alone as the 'acceptable' choice.
    It's the sort of thing you'd expect someone like Brown to see as an option wouldn't you.

    Build more stuff to do in council estates. Not pissy community centres, they run the risk of getting torched, stuff that's pretty indestructable, like skate parks and basketball courts.
    How about having curfews around the estate except for at these points. They can be policed, watched by security guards or neighbourhood watch groups could be used in some better areas. BTW my loca park had a basketball court that got trashed. Glass everywhere and no nets now.

    Often a single family can act as a focus for criminality and social disorder in an area. There should be tough laws that allow such families to be evicted. Where will they go? Bounce them around hostels, deport them, who cares?
    No point just shunting people around if the problem is always going to be there. Get these types of families on the 3 strikes and out rule, once created.

    Curfews for kids on particularly violent estates.
    Enforceable by? I think we need a lot larger police force than we currently have.

    Otherwise we'll be going to way of the US in the 80 and early to mid 90s. I'd suggest we already are anyway in some areas. All it takes now is an even larger supply of guns and the **** will really hit it..

    Gibsie
    Bulldozing.
    Has worked to an extent in inner-city Salford. However we can't just analyse single estates. What happened to the individuals who used to live there? Are they just causing havoc elsewhere?
    www.my-piano.blogspot

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    • #17
      MikeH, do you think we've reached a point with a minority* of the population that "containment" is the only option?

      * a phrased often used to describe a small amount of hooligans in an estate, but usually the problem is with the estate as a whole.
      www.my-piano.blogspot

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      • #18
        I hope not. Not sure what to do about the parents, they are the real problem. Doesn't matter what example you get set outside home if your parents are scumbags you'll most likely end up a scumbag as well!
        Jon Miller: MikeH speaks the truth
        Jon Miller: MikeH is a shockingly revolting dolt and a masturbatory urine-reeking sideshow freak whose word is as valuable as an aging cow paddy.
        We've got both kinds

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        • #19
          But then I don't live in Manchester, the crap areas up there are in a different class to anything in Reading.
          Jon Miller: MikeH speaks the truth
          Jon Miller: MikeH is a shockingly revolting dolt and a masturbatory urine-reeking sideshow freak whose word is as valuable as an aging cow paddy.
          We've got both kinds

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          • #20
            And it's those parents that tend to breed more as well. You know, it's odd..the outskirts of Bolton town centre look poor but not scummy. A lot of Asians live there - those families have the potential to earn a lot more, how you can tell I don't know. But you can.

            The thing is, this estate (Kenyon Way/madams Wood) starts less than one mile away and I know **** all what life on it is really like. Just from judgmental pictures gained from passing through it on a bus and looking at a few individuals postures on street corners.
            www.my-piano.blogspot

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            • #21
              A recent survey by the charity, the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, showed that what remains of council housing now tends to be occupied by the elderly, the unemployed, those unable to work and single parent families.

              Families who are slightly better off, with one or two partners working, prefer to move out and try to buy their own homes.

              This means it is harder to achieve balanced communities within council estates and they are becoming more and more the ghettos of the poor and disadvantaged.

              In turn this makes the estates even less attractive to anyone who can afford to get out.

              The report described the process as 'reverse gentrification".

              The research was led by Roger Burrows of the Centre for Housing Policy at York University.

              It showed that as few as 22 per cent of heads of household in social housing now have jobs and the pattern of "sink" estates is being repeated all over the country.
              So true.

              Latest news coverage, email, free stock quotes, live scores and video are just the beginning. Discover more every day at Yahoo!
              www.my-piano.blogspot

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              • #22
                Britain's Council Estates, A Solution?
                Fire, and lots of it
                "I work in IT so I'd be buggered without a computer" - Words of wisdom from Provost Harrison
                "You can be wrong AND jewish" - Wiglaf :love:

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                • #23
                  Originally posted by Boddington's
                  And it's those parents that tend to breed more as well. You know, it's odd..the outskirts of Bolton town centre look poor but not scummy. A lot of Asians live there - those families have the potential to earn a lot more, how you can tell I don't know. But you can.
                  It's not earning potential, they've got better home lives, more moral upbringings and they care more about keepin their areas nice. They also respect the value of education.
                  Jon Miller: MikeH speaks the truth
                  Jon Miller: MikeH is a shockingly revolting dolt and a masturbatory urine-reeking sideshow freak whose word is as valuable as an aging cow paddy.
                  We've got both kinds

                  Comment


                  • #24
                    Bod, an interesting theory on the way the middle classes have bought their way out of the council estates leaving the have not's to be drawn into compressed areas of deprivations, I agree.

                    I think where the country has gone wrong for so many years is the liberal attitude it takes to petty crime, i.e. these crimimals* know the law is an ass and that they can get away with crime after crime with little more than a slap on the wrist (they can't be fined as they are on benefit, have no money and steal for a living anyway - plus the government doesnt have the balls to lock them up). Also with the state of Policeing in this country they probably only get caught for 1 out of 20 offenses.

                    *only a small minority of the areas in question (perhaps only 1% dominate the whole area.

                    I think the best option is build more prisons and invoke the 3 strikes and your out system, i.e. 3rd conviction and you get a minimum sentance of 5 years (theyre still out after 3 on probabtion).

                    I feel so sick and sorry for those other families, pensioners etc that have no way out and are effectively prisoners in their own homes. The criminal families (Scum for short) are not decent people and you often find the criminality passed from generation to generation.

                    Barley.

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                    • #25
                      I think Stew raises many salient points here, there is most certainly a spiral of social dereliction and no amount of justification is going to sort it out. The nature of the education system does fail some children, but I don't think this accounts for most of the problem. There is a severe issue with upbringing of children, which is passed on and is very difficult to solve. I agree with more extensive education that suits all, but I don't think this is the core of the problem. Something needs sorting out about how children are often poorly brought up...quite how this is solved I am not sure. I think better use of the penal system is required in addition. Sometimes crime does appear not to have any disincentive, we do need a better penal system which is broader and harsher in many ways, but also with a stronger emphasis on reform. I don't think it is sufficient to allow severely troublecausing 14 year olds to roam the street causing nothing but trouble. Their behaviour in society needs correcting. I think it is a shame that their anger is focussed on the wrong people. If it was used productively it could do a lot of good.

                      But the effectiveness of policing needs to be increased too.
                      Speaking of Erith:

                      "It's not twinned with anywhere, but it does have a suicide pact with Dagenham" - Linda Smith

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                      • #26
                        Another Boddington troll. How sweet.
                        (+1)

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                        • #27
                          When I was younger we lived in a middle class suburb near Birmingham there was one house which was for sale for about 2 year till eventually they sold it to the council. The council moved in a "troublesome" family who were causing alot of problems on a council estate. Within a week the other residents had a petition to have the family moved out, within 2 months the council gave in and moved them back to the same estate they came from.

                          They didn't really cause any trouble while there other than doing odd things like flying a kite in the rain and climing onto the roof of the house. In many ways they had almost settled in and caused no problems, but they never stood a chance of staying there.
                          Are we having fun yet?

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                          • #28
                            I don't think this is a troll.

                            Cambridge is fine, until you enter the Arbury Estate (though the drunk and druggies around Mill Road aren't fun either, but as they're homeless, they don't much to do with estates). Burnt cars, pikey kids in shell suits and no forehead, boarded up houses.

                            And that wasn't a patch on the estates around where I lived in Manchester (Longsight and Park Side (Moss Side)).

                            I like 3 strikes and you're out. I also like forced labor. I'd like teachers to be able to retaliate (or have people retaliate for them, sort of like school bouncers) and not be sued. I'd like people engaged in a criminal act to have no legal protection (someone tries to steal your bike? Blow him away). But then people accuse me of being an authoritarian sometimes...

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                            • #29
                              Bulldozing
                              In the USA, the things are called "housing projects" and are being dynamited by the dozen. They're being replaced by saner rowhouses much like those the projects replaced back in the 50s and 60s. Doesn't fully solve the problem, though. For one thing, rowhouses only hold about half as many people, and cost more. Projects that were built to house senior citizens have been successful though, as there aren't as many young hotheads running around.

                              In Taiwan, they're called "national residences" and have been relatively successful because they more or less look like any other apartment... since there's not enough land to build anything less dense. Also, the blocks cover a smaller area per project and are up against the street without parking, so the "wasteland effect" doesn't set in. Some of them do smell pretty nasty though.
                              Visit First Cultural Industries
                              There are reasons why I believe mankind should live in cities and let nature reclaim all the villages with the exception of a few we keep on display as horrific reminders of rural life.-Starchild
                              Meat eating and the dominance and force projected over animals that is acompanies it is a gateway or parallel to other prejudiced beliefs such as classism, misogyny, and even racism. -General Ludd

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                              • #30
                                Re: Britain's Council Estates, A Solution?

                                Originally posted by Boddington's
                                Not everyone can work with their brains so why is the only possible advancement in this country thorugh intellectual means
                                [/rant]
                                And you're living proof.
                                Vive la liberte. Noor Inayat Khan, Dachau.

                                ...patriotism is not enough. I must have no hatred or bitterness towards anyone. Edith Cavell, 1915

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