In Today's Papers

Tuesday 7 June 2005

Posted: 07 June 2005 | Subscribe Online


By Clare Jerrom, Simeon Brody, Derren Hayes and Amy Taylor

The Times

2.2m elderly live in poverty

An estimated 2.2 million older people currently live below the poverty line, according to the National Pensioners Convention.

The group want to see the basic state pension set above the official poverty line.

Source:- The Times  Tuesday 7 June page 2

Parents blamed

Poor parenting has been blamed for antisocial behaviour in a study by the Institute for Criminal Policy Research at the King’s College for the Joseph Rowntree Trust.

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Source:- The Times  Tuesday 7 June page 2

New asylum chief

The chief executive of Birmingham Council Lin Homer has been appointed to head the Immigration and Nationality Service. Her job comes as another overhaul of the asylum system is expected.

Source:- The Times  Tuesday 7 June page 2

Road killing

A disabled man admitted the manslaughter of Deborah Kerr’s brother. Eugene Warwood killed Edmund Trimmer in an alleged road rage accident in Birmingham last August. Sentence was deferred.

Source:- The Times  Tuesday 7 June page 2

Heathrow death

The mother of a man with mental health problems shot dead by police who believed he was a terrorist told an inquest that she called a psychiatrist for help hours before his death.

Keith Larkins was killed by officers in 2003.

Source:- The Times  Tuesday 7 June page 2

Baby abducted

A woman who may have abducted a baby left abandoned on a street in west London is being hunted by the police.

The mixed race child was spotted by a 14-year-old girl but before she could call for help a woman put the baby into her car and drove off.

Source:- The Times  Tuesday 7 June page 4

Daily Mail

The deadly hangovers

A generation of young people are binge drinking themselves to death, according to experts yesterday.

Many of the group will die before their parents because of the damage caused by drinking to excess, a consultant at Norfolk hospital warned.

Dr Hugh Kennedy’s comments came as it emerged that alcohol related admissions at the hospital soared by 44 per cent in a year.

Source:- Daily Mail  Tuesday 7 June page 1

The Guardian

Hoodies from the past prove that teenage angst is nothing new

Concerned specialists will meet at a conference next month to discuss the insufferable habits of antisocial teenagers, hoodies and “feral youths” – from medieval times. Respect was a huge issue in the middle ages, according to historians.

Source:- The Guardian Tuesday 7 June 2005 page 3

Thousands of pupils bullied by camera phone

Thousands of secondary school pupils are the victims of bullying by camera phone, research by charity NCH has revealed.
Its poll of 11- to 19-year-olds found one in 10 have felt threatened or embarrassed by pictures taken by mobile phone.

Source:- The Guardian Tuesday 7 June 2005 page 6

“Sex stereotypes” deter fathers from childcare role

Men are deterred from getting involved in childcare as fathers or workers because playgroups and nurseries are dominated by women, a report by the Pre-School Learning Alliance says.

The study suggests that fathers are caught in a vicious circle and would play a bigger role with children if the workforce were more balanced.

Source:- The Guardian Tuesday 7 June 2005 page 7

Foster children ask for protection

Children being privately fostered in the UK want tighter checks on their welfare than safeguards proposed by the government.

A survey of privately fostered youngsters by the Commission for Social Care Inspection found that they thought a social worker should visit them every month at first to ensure they were safe and not every six weeks as planned.

Source:- The Guardian Tuesday 7 June 2005 page 7
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Ministers debate dropping VAT on condoms to encourage safer sex

Health ministers are in talks with the Treasury about dropping VAT on condoms to make them more affordable. Around 30p from every £1.99 pack of three condoms goes to the Treasury and since some GPs have stopped giving out free condoms, sexual health campaigners have been calling for the levy to be dropped.

Source:- The Guardian Tuesday 7 June 2005 page 10

The Independent

Infection expert resigned over hospital’s failure to control new superbug

An expert in infection control at Stoke Mandeville Hospital, which has been stricken by a new lethal bug, resigned last month in protest at managers’ failure to control the outbreak. The bug causes severe diarrhoea and can be life-threatening and has resisted all attempts to control it since the outbreak began 18 months ago.

Source:- The Independent Tuesday 7 June 2005 page 1

Daily Telegraph

Code denies youngsters their sporting chance

Guidelines meant to protect children from abuse are threatening the development of young sporting talent, it was claimed yesterday.

Roy Case, the chair of the English Golf Union’s boys’ selection committee, claimed that much of the guidance was excessive and impractical.

Source:- The Daily Telegraph Tuesday 7 June 2005 page 3

Scottish news

Child carers to be spotted earlier

There should be more collaboration between social work, health and education departments in identifying and supporting young carers.

Delegates at a Princess Royal Trust in Scotland for Carers seminar in Edinburgh heard that the majority of young carers receive no help at all. The Census 2001 indicated there are 16,700 young carers in Scotland. But a poll carried out by the trust indicated this figure is far higher.

Source:- The Herald Tuesday 7 June

Poorest Scottish families face £161m tax credit bill

More than £161 million of overpayments in child tax credits will have to be repaid by Scottish families.

There are calls for an overhaul of the scheme after latest figures showed 165,400 families throughout Scotland will have to repay an average of £1,000 to the Inland Revenue.

The government figures show that one-third of families who received the credit in Scotland were overpaid in the year 2003-04.

Source:- The Scotsman Tuesday 7 June

Welsh news

Sleep-out protest over property

Campaigners slept rough in Aberystwyth to draw attention to the housing problems faced by local people in Wales last night.

Members of Cymdeithas Yr Iaith Gymraeg say that there is an increasing housing crisis which is undermining local communities and needs to be tackled.

They want a Property Act for Wales to solve the problem and are carrying out a tour across the country to highlight their cause.

Source:- Western Mail Tuesday 7 June

Children’s service fragile

Not enough money is being spent on children’s social services in Powys inspectors have warned.

A report from the Social Services Inspectorate for Wales (SSIW) goes on to suggest that the children’s services at Powys County Council were underfunded when previous inspections took places but that this is getting worse.

Source:- Powys County Times Tuesday 7 June

 



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