Toot if you think Eric Pickles should have his licence endorsed:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7xpi9ULPD_w
An assimilation of thoughts and reflections on High Street decay and renewal.
Toot if you think Eric Pickles should have his licence endorsed:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7xpi9ULPD_w
Apparently the Scottish Government thinks so and has totted up the total to a bewildering £25 million. Wow! I wonder what methodology was used and what the confidence interval is? +/- £15 million? [1. A final significant area looked at for this study was the potential for litter to impact house prices. Taking a low end estimate of the possible effect of litter on house prices (where it can affect both the valuer’s and buyer’s perception), and assuming this might apply to just 1% of Scotland’s housing stock, still gave a very significant cumulative figure of £100 million. The Eunomia research team believes this figure should be treated with caution in the Scottish context. However, even if the impact on Scottish house prices is a fraction of the initial estimate, it would still be a figure counted in millions.]
We want our National Litter Strategy to achieve a cleaner, safer environment for people who live in and visit Scotland – where littering is no longer acceptable. The strategy we are consulting on is a package of measures to encourage people not to litter or flytip.
Throughout July to mark Independent Retailer Month some shops are offering discounts, others running competitions and still more putting on live music in a bid to get mre custom.
But nothing here in Dunbar: Independent Retailer Month Events.
A month of events could have been used to raise awareness, but it looks like few took this opportunity seriously, or simply lacked the time and resources to make something happen during what has to be Scotland’s favourite month to take time off. Trades weeks have to be a major cost to Scotland’s economy, just like Bank Holidays and those interminably long school holidays and associated complicated arrangements, which so frustrate those with children at school in city and country.
To assert that places matter and that people actually care about the places where they live sounds to me like a statement of the bleeding obvious. But what if Age UK, Civic Voice, the Design Council, English Heritage, Keep Britain Tidy and Sustrans all say it at once? Might we take a bit more notice? Giving local people a say in the planning and shaping of their own neighbourhoods has become pretty popular in the last couple of decades and not only has broad cross party support, is increasingly rooted in legislation, north and south (across regions, countries and continents). But how do people and place contribute to growing the local economy, cutting crime and improving public health? A new report “Why Places Matter” proposes to offer practical advice on such matters. Councillors and communities take note.