BHANGEELAAR! Telling the "East London Advertiser" what key evidence must be included of role of elected Council in actually serving the people of Tower Hamlets. The jobless must not be used as propaganda fodder by either the Council or by big business and their agencies.
The context is that despite routine claims by occupants in posts created IN THE NAME DELIVERING services to the people, most of the utterances made by elected councillors and wannabe holders of allied posts and positions, make the utterances without having true respect for the duty that they are under to first tell the truth and then to be seen to be telling the truth.
More on this shortly.
The following original BHANGEELAAR! Comment, posted this morning [Tuesday 02 November 2010], is accessible on the web site of the "East London Advertiser"
"This kind of report about joblessness in East London must include latest data about how many people of what age groups are in fact out of work here. Then an evidential link should be made between the claimed project and the number of jobless people who are stated to be in for the reported help. Then an objective element should be cited as to who will audit the work that is being publicised. Otherwise, the people who are jobless are being used as propaganda fodder. Finally the role of the elected local councillors and of the Council as a whole in actually delivering solutions to the joblessness in the Borough should be mentioned in context."
BHANGEELAAR! The campaign against an elected executive mayor in Tower Hamlets will continue to publish daily the findings that its obtains as part of the ongoing campaign for a democratic, accountable elected council in Tower Hamlets.
Signpost to get East End families off the dole
Mike Brooke, Features EditorFriday, 29 October, 2010
19:21 PM
JOBLESS parents are getting a ‘helping hand’ in the East End from insurance brokers in The City to help break their ‘cycle of poverty.’
Lloyd’s, the world’s oldest insurance market, has put up a signpost in its underwriting hall to promote its new three-year partnership deal with the Bromley-by-Bow Centre and the Prince’s Trust charities.
The 8ft post, set up among historical artefacts like the Lutine Bell and a collection of Nelson memorabilia, shows the number of people who have benefited from the charities.
People helped so far by the Bromley Centre, for example, include Bina Begum and Ali Qasim Osman (pictured at last week’s unveiling).
The Lloyd’s Charities Trust partnership is giving the two organisations £350,000 over the next three years for community projects.
The Bromley centre is using its windfall to help those on the ‘dole’ who have children, to break the ‘cycle of poverty’ by getting them sustainable jobs.
The centre’s chief executive Rob Trimble said: “This will break the pattern of unemployment and create a better quality of life for children and their families.”
Lloyd’s Charities Trust is also funding a Mentoring Programme run by The Prince’s Trust at its centre in Shoreditch to give disadvantaged youngsters a chance of higher education, training or jobs.
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This kind of report about joblessness in East London must include latest data about how many people of what age groups are in fact out of work here. Then an evidential link should be made between the claimed project and the number of jobless people who are stated to be in for the reported help. Then an objective element should be cited as to who will audit the work that is being publicised. Otherwise, the people who are jobless are being used as propaganda fodder. Finally the role of the elected local councillors and of the Council as a whole in actually delivering solutions to the joblessness in the Borough should be mentioned in context.
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