Dark, dismal, damp and dingy at the Castle this morn, the
study is empty of all things broken and bollixed, his Maj is chasing things in
the garden, the Honda has reached 162 miles on twenty squids worth of go juice
and my lovely young lady arrived yestermorn to trim my locks.
The number of
children living in poverty in Britain will rise by 600,000 to 2.8 million by
2012-13.
The introduction
of the irritable bowel twins universal credit will lift 450,000 children out of
poverty but, the IFS says other benefit changes – such as linking payment
increases to consumer prices – will offset this. It projects that by the end of
the decade, 23 per cent of children will be in absolute poverty and 24 per cent
in relative poverty.
That would mean
the legally binding targets set under the 2010 Child Poverty Act being
comprehensively missed. The 2010 Child Poverty Act set a target for absolute
poverty to fall to 5 per cent of children and relative poverty to fall 10 per
cent by 2020.
The Department
for Work and Pensions says the IFS did not take into consideration the
beneficial impact on poverty levels that it expects to result from improving
the incentives for parents to work.
Which means that if the IFS are right 23 percent of families
in Blighty will be “living” in poverty?
British
taxpayers are spending up to £400,000 a year to help maintain French trains
in the aftermath of a failed European transport project.
The aborted rail
scheme cost British taxpayers more than £180million but the Department for Transport
continues to fund the failure.
It spent “between
£300,000 and £400,000 last year” on mothballed facilities for the aborted Regional
Eurostar project that would have provided a direct link between cities such
as Manchester and Glasgow to Paris.
Seven trains were
built for the Regional Eurostar but they were passed to the French train
operator SNCF because its
high-speed link between Paris and Lille was short of carriages.
A depot in
Manchester to maintain the trains is still the responsibility of London & Continental
Railways, a firm which is wholly owned by the DfT.
Here’s an idea-I have heard that there is a tunnel under the
channel, why not take the trains to the French owners and let them pay.
Hungarian police announced Monday they had seized a shipment
of weapons stored in a warehouse near Budapest airport, only for a film
producer to reveal they were props for a new Brad Pitt movie.
Police told a press conference they had found and
confiscated the arsenal -- which included machine guns, hand guns and sniper
guns but no ammunition -- at a customs-free area near the airport during a raid
at dawn on Monday.
"The military guns arrived from London on Saturday at
Liszt Ferenc International Airport," Janos Hajdu, director of the police's
Counterterrorism Centre, was cited by Hungarian newswire MTI, adding that the
aircraft transporting the weapons left the airport right after unloading.
The Hungarian police had contacted its counterparts in
Britain for more information, he also said.
As it turns out, the weapons were actually meant as props
for a new zombie movie featuring Hollywood star Brad Pitt, "World War Z”.
Shooting in Hungary for the film was to begin Monday evening
in an industrial district of Budapest, according to RTL Klub.
Firing blanks?
St
Stephen’s tower is a bit wonky, and is on the lean to such an extent that
the tilt can now be clocked with the naked eye, according to a report
commissioned by London Underground and the Parliamentary Estates Department.
“The tilt is now
just about visible. You can see it if you stand on Parliament Square and look
east, towards the river. I have heard tourists there taking photographs saying
‘I don’t think it is quite vertical’ - and they are quite right,” emeritus
professor and senior research investigator at Imperial College, London, John
Burland, told the Sunday Telegraph.
The level of the
tilt has accelerated since 2003, increasing to 0.9 mm a year, compared to the
long-term average rate of 0.65 mm a year, the report revealed.
These levels are
not considered to be unsafe.
The tilt has
resulted in the formation of cracks in the walls and ceilings of parts of the
House of Commons, including the Minister’s Wing.
Maybe it’s the entrance to the underworld opening up for the
residents.
A church is
refusing to change a light bulb because it says overzealous health and safety
rules mean it would cost £500 to change the £2 fixture.
Health and safety
rules mean scaffolding is required whenever a bulb needs replacing in the 30ft
internal roof at St Mary's Church in Cottingham, Humberside. The church says
the rules mean they cannot simply use ladders to change the bulb.
He added:
"Health and safety concerns also rule out candlelight as an alternative
for the grade one listed building.
But there may
soon be light at the end of the tunnel for St Mary's. The village church is now
looking at installing an LED (light-emitting diode) lighting system. LEDs have
a longer lifetime so the lights would not have to be so frequently
replaced."
Not replacing bulbs
would save the church valuable funds at a time when costs are high. The church
has had £30,000 of roof lead stolen in five raids in the past three years,
including the latest theft in August.
Father Smith said
stolen lead is being replaced with stainless steel in a bid to deter the
thieves. Villagers have rallied round to help with fundraising, with the
church's recent annual Gift Day raising about £6,000.
Ah, the old Elfandsafety scaffold ploy....
And finally:
Yesterday a Russian
region in Siberia confidently proclaimed that its mountains are home to yetis
after finding "indisputable proof" of the existence of the hairy
beasts in an expedition.
The local
administration of the Kemerovo region in the south of Siberia said in a
statement on its website that footprints and possibly even hair samples belonging
to the yeti were found on the research trip to its remote mountains.
Apparently they found its footprints, its supposed bed, and
various markers with which the yeti marks his territory, the statement said.
The collected "artefacts" will be analysed in a special laboratory.
Probably Premier league footballers in hiding......
That’s it: I’m orf to check
out the moat-just in case.
And today’s thought: Expecting the world to treat you fairly
because you are good is like expecting the bull not to charge because you are a
vegetarian.
2 comments:
Amendments to the Health and Safety divers .... Lighting should be sufficient to enable people to work and move safely.
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