Saturday, 30 March 2013

Minor offenders can get a job

Job applicants with old and minor convictions will not have their criminal past revealed to employers, it was announced earlier this week by the Home Office.

Under the proposed legislation, convictions resulting in a non-custodial sentence, will be removed from record checks after 11 years for adults and five and a half year for young offenders.

Cautions will be filtered from record checks by the Disclosure and Barring Service, previously the Criminal Records Boreau, after six years for adults and two years for underage offenders.

The changes will affect those applying for jobs that need background checks, and come after a case involving a young woman who had to reveal details of two minor offences that took place when she was just 11 years old.

Lord Taylor of Holbeach, minister for criminal information, said that criminal records checks are an important tool for employers to use in making informed safeguarding decisions.

This new system strikes a balance between ensuring that children and vulnerable groups are protected and avoiding intrusion into people’s lives,” he said.

The Home Office has announced the system would be implemented within weeks. 

However, all serious violent and sexual offences will continue to be disclosed.

Wednesday, 27 March 2013

David Miliband quits politics

Labour Party politician David Miliband has announced yesterday he will be quitting politics to head to America.

The former foreign secretary, who is moving to New York to take up a senior role at the charity International Rescue, in September, is forcing a by-election in South Shields, the constituency that he has been representing in Parliament since 2001.

Labour insiders hope his departure will ease tensions that have avoided Ed Miliband’s leadership since he beat his older sibling in 2010.

Miliband Senior declared that he wants to see his younger brother Ed take Labour back into power, and end up the ‘comedy’ surrounding his relationship with him.

This is right not just for me, but is right for the Labour party as well,” David Miliband said.
I entered politics to make a difference and now I am going to do it in a different sphere,” he added.

Mr Miliband, who was nicknamed “Brains” by spin doctor Alastair Campbell when he ran Mr Blair’s policy unit in 1997, was praised by several political figures.

Former PM Tony Blair said: ”He is obviously a massive loss to UK politics”.

Wednesday, 20 March 2013

A sad day for British democracy

March 18 was an important day in British history, as for the first time in three hundred years, politicians decided to reintroduce legislative controls over the British press.

Last week, Prime Minister David Cameron, announced that talks among the three big political parties had broken down, over proposals to back a new press regulating system.

Both Liberal Democrats and Labour wanted a watchdog set up by royal charter. Mr Cameron, however, was determined to avoid it, and said that statutory backing with legislation would threaten press freedom and may lead to politicians meddling with the media.

Labour party leader Ed Miliband said: “ It will be a regulator, a system of complaints where the regulator has teeth so they can direct apologies if wrong is done and it is independent of the press, which is so important because for too long we have had a system where the press have been making their own homework,”.

This is a sad day for British democracy,” Mr Cameron declared.

Newspapers could face £1million fines for breaches of the new regulations, with considerable damages for those who refuse to sign up to the new code.

Even bloggers could face fines for libel under the new deal, while scientific journals, student publications and not for profit community newspapers do not have to sign up.

The proposal was made by Lord Justice Leveson and the deal follows his Inquiry, which was set up after thousands of people had their phones hacked by tabloid journalists and investigators.

There are concerns that local newspapers could fall into financial difficulties because of the tougher regulations.

Wednesday, 13 March 2013

New welfare rules for EU migrants

EU migrants will be able to claim welfare benefits three months after arriving in Britain.

According to new plans proposed by Labour last week and unveiled by the Shadow Home Secretary Yvette Cooper, in fact, sensible action will be taken to stop migrants making claims as soon as they arrive.

She has also addressed fears about a possible influx of Romanians and Bulgarians when restrictions are lifted next January.

Work and Pensions Secretary Ian Duncan Smith had already declared that he wants “rules around the habitual residence test tightened to ensure immigrants are making a commitment to the UK before getting welfare benefits”.

However, Ms Cooper has insisted that a ‘presence test’ could be added to the usual residence test to let people prove they have been in the country for at least three months before being eligible for Government’s help.

Calling for a more fundamental review of EU benefit rules and residence requirements, the Shadow Home Secretary also said the loophole allowing foreign workers in Britain to get child tax credits for offspring back in their home country, could be eventually closed.

Meanwhile the Home Secretary Theresa May is considering several immigration-limiting measures, including the possibility, for non-EU immigrants, to pay a cash bond to enter the UK. It would be repaid if they left without either overstaying their visa or wrongly claiming from the Government.

All comments and speeches followed Labour leader Ed Miliband’s admission that his party had got it wrong on immigration when it was in power.

Wednesday, 6 March 2013

Coffee is the new beer


Cappuccino. Source:http://www.ilovecoffeebook.com/coffeeArt.html
More and more people all over the UK are deserting pubs for cafés.

Even though the British pub is still a key element in the UK society, around 29 per cent of these community assets across the country have closed in the past 25 years.

Record pub closures have made news headlines in 2009, bringing out the historically adverse conditions the pub and brewing sector has been experiencing, particularly since 2005.

Meanwhile, the café sector, including independents and chains, is booming: it grew by 7.5 per cent in 2011 alone.

According to Jim Winship, director of the Café Society, the trends will continue. He said that the pub is seen as a more traditional, which is less attractive to the young, while cafés have turned into a place to meet and socialise.
The high street has become based around the café as they have taken over empty shops. In fact, the café could be the savior of the high street, making it a social hub rather than just a place to shop,” he said.

In cafés people are not jostling for space; in fact, they get a seat and do not drink too much alcohol , which is not really healthy, and also get a chance to interact with other people or even with someone, one to one.

Nowadays, both independent and chain cafés, have free Wi-Fi and therefore offer freelancers and students a pleasant place where they can carry out their duties.