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Archive
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OPINION: Property boom must end in bust
5 December 2003
I'm sure if we surveyed most of you lot to ask what your favourite programme was, you'd all say Property Ladder. This is a bit sad, indicating both the decline a) in the quality of British TV and b) the viewer. On the other hand, I find it gripping too.
OPINION: Power politics require diversity
5 December 2003
The Government's plans to continue building large numbers of wind farms across Britain to meet a commitment that ten per cent of UK power will come from renewable sources by the year 2010 has been welcomed by Friends Of The Earth among others. However, they have provoked hostility among many rural communities and countryside protection groups. Chief among their concerns is that what has become known as "turbinisation" - the building of giant wind turbines the size of Big Ben in upland regions - will have a damaging effect on tourism and blight the landscape.
INTERVIEW: Advocate of responsible renewal
5 December 2003
Next week a key environmental watchdog will report on progress in sustainable regeneration. Ben Willis meets boss Jonathan Porritt and gets a sneak preview.
OPINION: Unwrapping a package set to woo the voters
5 December 2003
The Queen's Speech last week will surely be presented as a big bold legislative package - in the last full year of his second term, the intrepid Reverend Blair confronts every vested interest on his own back benches (Regeneration & Renewal, 28 November, p1). As he did over Iraq, he's doing what he thinks is right, and damn the consequences. But viewed more closely, Blair is doing the cleverest thing that a politician can do: walking the moral high ground while quietly pleasing big sections of the electorate.
ANALYSIS: Economic Development - Clearing up the brownfield issue
5 December 2003
Reports of a shortage of brownfield land for redevelopment are wide of the mark, says Chris Brown. He argues that what are really needed are joined-up public sector policies.
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT NEWS: Edinburgh tourism soars
5 December 2003
Annual spending by tourists visiting Edinburgh exceeded £1 billion for the first time last year. The figures, released last week by the Edinburgh and Lothians Tourist Board, show that the Scottish capital enjoyed a superb year in 2002, thanks to a huge increase in the amount of UK visitors to the city. Some 3.53 million trips were made by British tourists in 2002 - around 400,000 more than the previous year.
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT NEWS: US model advises retail-led regeneration policies
5 December 2003
Retail-led regeneration could help get people in deprived areas into work, a leading US regenerator told delegates at a conference last week.
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT NEWS: Skills minister warns UK to keep its access targets for university
5 December 2003
The skills minister has warned that the UK would be "laughed at" by its global competitors if the Government dropped its controversial plans to get 50 per cent of schoolchildren to university.
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT NEWS: Trust moots miner skills transfer
5 December 2003
The transfer of skilled miners to the construction sector this week emerged as a possible tool in preventing an economic disaster in the Yorkshire coalfields.
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT NEWS BRIEF: Business confidence returns across Yorkshire and Humbeside
5 December 2003
Business confidence has returned to its highest level across Yorkshire and Humberside for three years, according to a survey by regional development agency Yorkshire Forward and the Confederation of British Industry. However, the report says that low levels of unemployment mean companies must invest in skills training. RDA Economic Trends October 2003 can be viewed at www.cbi.org.uk/home.html.
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