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Archive
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Agenda: Agenda to 17 July
25 June 2004
25 June: Sustainable Growth in the East of England. Organiser: The Waterfront Conference Company. Venue: Cambridge. Fee: £179-399. Details: (tel) 020 7787 1210. 28-29 June: Association of Town Centre...
Book Review: A guide to building better cities
25 June 2004
This book shows that cities are firmly on the UK policy agenda.
Diary: Bed, booze, choc bars and brawn - but bull really takes the biscuit
25 June 2004
Diary's journalistic integrity was tested this week when she was taken to Bed by Chartered Institute of Housing policy officers, plied with alcohol and rewarded with that old childhood chocolate favourite - a Curly Wurly.
Turning Point: Son's hell prompted a life change
25 June 2004
In 1999 my son informed me that he was a heroin addict. I can't really begin to describe how I felt. I was a nurse at the time, and although my work was very sympathetic at the beginning, this soon came to an end, mainly because there is little understanding of the problem.
Neighbourhood Renewal: Are you listening Gordon?
25 June 2004
The Neighbourhood Renewal Fund lies at the mercy of the Government's spending review this summer. Gavin Moore makes a plea to Chancellor Gordon Brown not to cut a vital lifeline for poor communities.
Physical Regeneration: Sinking fast
25 June 2004
Hackney's £31 million Clissold Leisure Centre was planned as a flagship public asset. But Ben Walker finds that the brand-new pool is at risk of drowning.
Opinion: Editorial - Strong leadership may be a casualty of Cabe's reforms
25 June 2004
Over the next few years, as the Communities Plan rumbles into action, a credible, combative and high-profile design watchdog will be needed more than ever. For this reason alone, it is vital that the Commission for Architecture and the Built Environment's reputation for probity is unblemished. The audit into potential conflicts of interest at the commission, published last week, concluded that it had taken "reasonable steps" to ensure impartiality. But it recommended that even more rigorous processes should be put in place. This is absolutely right, and Cabe has promised to act on most of the recommendations.
Opinion: Why the good guys keep losing
25 June 2004
Another one bites the dust due to PFI. That's the message from last week's news that the biggest and oldest architectural practice in Wales had gone into administration and was being picked up for a song by Capita.
Opinion: Welfare - no benefit for the poor
25 June 2004
It is hard to know what it's like to be poor without first hand experience. In the middle classes, myself included, there is a latent, unspoken, and therefore unchallenged feeling that poor people remain so through lack of proper effort. Benefits are consequently set at a level which reflects this contempt. In effect, the poor are punished for their poverty.
Opinion: Only one winner in North-West's casino gamble
25 June 2004
There's a whole set of glittering jackpot prizes awaiting regenerators next year - in casinos. Despite mutterings from anti-gambling Old Labourites, this New Labour Government is determined to push on with its Gambling Bill. Now in draft, it will go into Parliament next session and is almost certain to become law next summer. But the big question, for regenerators as well as punters, is exactly who hits the jackpot. Last week's government response to the first report of the Joint Parliamentary Committee gives clues - but remains tantalisingly unclear on where exactly the wheel of fortune is going to stop. It does say that there will be a special category of 'large casinos', with a minimum gaming area of 1,000sq metres and an extra gambling area of 2,500sq metres, plus an additional non-gambling area to which children will be admitted that will offer other entertainments. The response suggests there won't be many of these large casinos - but it leaves the decision up to the new regional planning bodies, which take responsibility for regional spatial strategic planning this year under the new Planning Act.
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