West Midlands Climate Action presents … The Huntington Lane Fossil Fools weekend convergence

]Thurs­day April 1st-Sun­day 4th
It’s time to Spring back into Action.

Fossil Fools Weekend]Thurs­day April 1st-Sun­day 4th
It’s time to Spring back into Action.

After dis­cov­er­ing that many trees had already been felled sig­nalling that work was due to begin, West Mid­lands Cli­mate Action and a coali­tion of local groups, anar­chists and activists last week swooped upon the Hunt­ing­ton Lane Sur­face Mine Site to claim the land. We’ve had a camp set up on the pro­posed open-cast site for about a week now. There’s a com­mu­nal sleep­ing area, fire pit, a wood store and plans for a lodge.

Rep­re­sen­ta­tives from UK Coal have also vis­it­ed the camp to find out our ‘list of demands’ and didn’t seem pleased with the response — That we want­ed them to call a halt to all open cast coal min­ing on this site!

As part of Fos­sil Fools day West Mid­lands Cli­mate Action are putting on a week­end gath­er­ing at the new­ly estab­lished Hunt­ing­ton Lane Camp. The week­end will include a ram­ble over the pro­posed Hunt­ing­ton Lane Sur­face Mine Site, Ban­ner drops, cam­paign plan­ning and most impor­tant­ly car­ry­ing out any work on site that needs doing to help estab­lish a per­ma­nent base on site.

We need as many peo­ple as pos­si­ble, if you can come for the whole week­end that would be great, but even if it’s just for the day any help we can get will be great­ly appre­ci­at­ed.

If you haven’t got a tent there is a com­mu­nal sleep­ing area.

We have a wish list of things we need:

Food (and teabags please)
Tarps – the big­ger the bet­ter!
Tools of all kinds
Rope of all kinds
Fire bricks (for the sweat lodge!)
Stove pipe etc for a rock­et stove
Com­post toi­lets
Tripods
Peo­ple

And any­thing else you think we might need that is not on the list.

We need as many peo­ple on site as pos­si­ble as soon as pos­si­ble so if you can’t make the week­end or want to get there ear­ly any sup­port will be wel­comed by the camp.

The near­est train sta­tion is Welling­ton which is just out­side of Telford and the camp is a 20 minute walk from the sta­tion.

Web­site: http://wmclimateaction.wordpress.com/
Twit­ter: http://twitter.com/wmclimateaction

Huntington Lane Camp launched

After dis­cov­er­ing last week that many of the trees had already been felled sig­nal­ing that work was due to begin immi­nent­ly, West Mid­lands Cli­mate Action and a coali­tion of local groups and activists last week swooped upon the Hunt­ing­ton Lane Sur­face Mine Site to claim the land.

Huntington Lane CampAfter dis­cov­er­ing last week that many of the trees had already been felled sig­nal­ing that work was due to begin immi­nent­ly, West Mid­lands Cli­mate Action and a coali­tion of local groups and activists last week swooped upon the Hunt­ing­ton Lane Sur­face Mine Site to claim the land. We’ve had a camp set up on the pro­posed open-cast site for about a week now. There’s a com­mu­nal sleep­ing area, fire pit, a wood store and plans for a lodge. Ear­li­er today rep­re­sen­ta­tives from UK Coal vis­it­ed the camp to find out our ‘list of demands’ and didn’t seem pleased with the response, that we want­ed them to call a halt to all open cast coal min­ing on this site!

We urgent­ly need as many peo­ple to come down to the camp as pos­si­ble.

Dona­tions of all kinds are most wel­come, whether it be time, mon­ey, mate­ri­als or kind thoughts. Please see the wish list below for the ‘most want­ed’ items on site and per­haps pop along and see us if you can.

The usu­al kind of stuff is need­ed:

Food (and teabags please)
Tarps – the big­ger the bet­ter!
Tools of all kinds
Rope of all kinds
Fire bricks (for the sweat lodge!)
Stove pipe etc for a rock­et stove
Com­post toi­lets
Tripods
Peo­ple

http://wmclimateaction.wordpress.com/2010/03/17/huntington-lane-camp-launched/

To keep up with all the lat­est news the camp now has it’s own blog http://defendhuntingtonlane.wordpress.com/

We’ll see you on site.

Free the climate prisoners! Solidarity demo

Demo at the Dan­ish Embassy on Sloane Street, Mon­day 15th March 2010, in sol­i­dar­i­ty with the COP15 cli­mate pris­on­ers.

This morn­ing 15 cli­mate activists protest­ed out­side the Dan­ish Embassy, Sloane Street, West Lon­don, in sol­i­dar­i­ty with Tash and Noah, the first two pro­test­ers from the COP15 sum­mit to go on tri­al. See video of the protest.

Demo at the Dan­ish Embassy on Sloane Street, Mon­day 15th March 2010, in sol­i­dar­i­ty with the COP15 cli­mate pris­on­ers.

This morn­ing 15 cli­mate activists protest­ed out­side the Dan­ish Embassy, Sloane Street, West Lon­don, in sol­i­dar­i­ty with Tash and Noah, the first two pro­test­ers from the COP15 sum­mit to go on tri­al. See video of the protest.

Dur­ing the Copen­hagen sum­mit, over 2000 peo­ple were detained with­out cause. 7 will be going on tri­al, and the first tri­als are on Tuues­day 16th and Thurs­day 18th. All those detained durng the sum­mit were forced to sit in the ‘her­ring-bone’ lines, hands tied behind their backs, and denied toi­let breaks, food and water.

The protest this morn­ing last­ed about an hour, and the police kept turn­ing up, increas­ing from a cou­ple of bob­bies to as many as there were pro­test­ers by the end. They asked for a lia­son, but the pro­test­ers just chant­ed ‘Drop the charges’ in their faces. The pro­test­ers began by hold­ing a ban­ner read­ing ‘Drop the Charges’ in front of the Embassy entrance, and then sat down in the street in a ‘her­ring-bone’ line.

While Tash and Noah are fac­ing seri­ous charges, some­thing like con­spir­a­cy to cause civ­il unrest, they are not the first activists to be on tri­al for Cop15. There have already been more than sev­en tri­als, luck­i­ly most of them end­ing in acquit­tal or minor con­vic­tions with only one three month prison sen­tence.

All the charged deserve our sol­i­dar­i­ty!

For updates from the anti-repres­sion group check out: http://cop15antirep.blogsport.eu/

Bath Bomb #28 Out Now

THE BATH BOMB

@nti-copyright: copy and dis­trib­ute!
Issue #28
free/donation
Mar ’10

“The only local paper that does­n’t want your kid­neys”

Gov­ern­ment Cuts Take The PCS!

THE BATH BOMB

@nti-copyright: copy and dis­trib­ute!
Issue #28
free/donation
Mar ’10

“The only local paper that does­n’t want your kid­neys”

Gov­ern­ment Cuts Take The PCS!

The first blow has been land­ed in what promis­es to be a sum­mer of dis­con­tent, the like of which has not been seen for decades. First, B&NES Coun­cil were forced to admit their plans for coun­cil jobs, start­ing at just shy of 100. And now, the PCS, a union for pub­lic sec­tor work­ers, held two days of strike action on the 7th and 8th of March involv­ing up to 300,000 work­ers at job cen­tres, MoD, life­guard facil­i­ties and courts, with near­ly 300 out at Ensleigh (rough­ly 90% of staff there). The strike, the first in what the PCS have said will be a series of action lead­ing up to the elec­tions, is protest­ing the shav­ing of over £500 mil­lion from civ­il ser­vice redun­dan­cy schemes. As per usu­al, our Labour gov­ern­ment has spo­ken out against the strikes, brand­ing them ‘upset­ting’ (boo hoo) and point­ing out that pub­lic ser­vice redun­dan­cy pack­ages are more gen­er­ous than pri­vate ones. This is hard­ly sur­pris­ing con­sid­er­ing the infa­mous lack of moral and social account­abil­i­ty found in the prof­it-dri­ven high­er ech­e­lons of the pri­vate sec­tor, and the fact that the gov­ern­ment is try­ing to drag the pay and con­di­tions of its work­ers down to pri­vate lev­els is a dis­grace. The gov­ern­ment has also refused to inter­vene and cap the mul­ti-mil­lion pound bonus­es of top bankers, cit­ing ‘con­trac­tu­al oblig­a­tions’. But the Tories would­n’t do much bet­ter, promis­ing pub­lic sec­tor pay freezes for two years, as well as a raft of oth­er anti-work­er poli­cies designed to keep the boss­es rich at our expense. Who­ev­er wins the next elec­tion, we are all going to be hit hard with aus­ter­i­ty mea­sures such as these, and pen­sion reduc­tions the like of which we have not seen for a long time. Unions such as the PCS and the posties’ CWU have been lead­ing the fight­back, and with more strikes and indus­tri­al actions look­ing cer­tain, it’s about time we band­ed togeth­er to fight back against the pro-rich, anti-work­er poli­cies of all three main par­ties (oh, and the BNP — spit!).

Look What The Cat Dragged In

Maybe tomor­row they might just set­tle down… but for Bath’s only autonomous occu­pied social cen­tre, the Black Cat, it’s been a frisky cou­ple of weeks. In their fourth pad this year, they’re cur­rent­ly curled up at the 19th Cen­tu­ry ‘Newark Works’ build­ing — Unit 3A River­side Busi­ness Park, Low­er Bris­tol Road, Bath, BA2 3DW – you’ll recog­nise them by the curi­ous cat-flap-size bright red door oppo­site Pick­fords.

The Black Cat briefly found a warm home at the for­mer Methodist manse at 110 West Avenue, Old­field Park, where they ami­ably moved on, before a week’s hol­i­day at 63 West Avenue. Despite an enthu­si­as­tic hissy­fit of police repres­sion wel­come (with two cop­pers try­ing to force their way in, threat­en­ing to get ‘the boys’ to kick the door down, and fum­ing beat man­ag­er Adri­an “you won’t have a com­mu­ni­ty social cen­tre if I have any­thing to do about it” Seck­er angri­ly knock­ing on neigh­bours’ doors and stir­ring up trou­ble), most neigh­bours seemed hap­py enough to see the long emp­ty build­ing in use. Alas, all goods things come to an end, and in this case it took the under­hand­ed lies of hous­ing devel­op­er Johan Gulot­ti, who brought his chil­dren around, claim­ing to be buy­ing the place to move his young fam­i­ly in. By the time the Black Cat folks were tipped off that he was real­ly refit­ting the place for stu­dent accom­mo­da­tion, it was already time to go.

The cur­rent loca­tion, two years vacant, shows much promise, though the col­lec­tive is soon fac­ing court on the 17th of this month. With five floors, gig space, bar, yoga/chill-out room, film/workshop room, — and yes, even work­ing toi­lets – the Grade 2 list­ed ware­house had brief local fame as the home of the squat­ter per­for­mance col­lec­tive Letinov Steam Cir­cus (see Bath Bomb #6). For­mer­ly a record­ing stu­dio, the Coun­cil uncer­e­mo­ni­ous­ly dumped the rate-pay­ing com­pa­ny out on the street when entre­pre­neur Sir James Dyson hint­ed that he want­ed the old Stothert and Pitt site for a new Dyson Acad­e­my. Though the plans had fall­en through by Jan­u­ary 07, the dam­age was done. After two weeks of clean­ing, the Black Cat have now shift­ed rough­ly 50+ cubic meters of beer bot­tles and assort­ed debris – sav­ing the coun­cil over £1,000 in waste removal – but have gained a grand piano, a sec­ond piano, a mas­sage table and all man­ner of art sup­plies and toys – all open now for pub­lic use! They like­wise have sam­ba danc­ing, debt advice, yoga, sound sys­tem, meet­ing space, art work­shops and the like all lined up – see the blog for details: http://www.blackcatcentre.blogspot.com.

Mean­while, the Tories have done their bit for the sprawl­ing moun­tain of UK emp­ty build­ings (cur­rent­ly at around 840,000), with David Cameron’s recent pro­posed offence of ‘inten­tion­al tres­pass’, crim­i­nal­is­ing squat­ters and trav­ellers alike, and side­step­ping local coun­cil oblig­a­tions to pro­vide sites for trav­ellers. But if Cameron does try to push the Black Cat out of Bath, his local Tory stooges will soon find out that kit­ty has claws!

http://www.thisisbath.co.uk/news/Squatters-Newark-Works/article-1862409-detail/article.htm

They Don’t Know What Is Shame

The Black Cat Cen­tre’s own slim and slimy miss-fit per­former Madame Hat­ter will on Fri­day 12th March, 7.06pm, be com­per­ing a wide open mic and bang poet­ry night of crazi­ness and won­der – the Scabrous Cabaret! We shit you not: “Should you be prud­ish pud­dings, freak frogs, veg­an vul­tures, break­fast brutes and funky fruits, bang poets or junk poets or even plain poets, stu­dious stu­dents and naughty rodents, mer­ry-go-round trav­ellers or mag­ic round­about surfers and hula-hoop singers, squat­ter­pil­lars or passers-by, the usu­al crows and so many more if you’re hun­gry for the encore, you are all invit­ed to the first edi­tion of a night of sweet delir­i­um open to all sorts of per­form­ers, musi­cians, artists, poets, sto­ry-tellers…” Appar­ent­ly the sin­is­ter lit­tle made­moi­selle is a plumber of deca­dence in res­i­dence, but we hon­est­ly have no idea what she’s on about – why not come along to find out!

GOT A STORY? WANT TO RECEIVE THE BATH BOMB BY EMAIL? HOPING TO SUE? Con­tact us by email­ing bathbombpress[at]yahoo.co.uk. Large print e‑versions avail­able on request. And for more info on any of our sto­ries, check out http://www.thebathbomb.blogspot.com

Allot More Space To Grow

Bath suf­fers from a lack of space for grow­ing food. The offi­cial fig­ures for allot­ment wait­ing times vary from one year to three, but the fig­ure is real­is­ti­cal­ly more like five. A gar­den-share project already exists in Bath Area Gar­den Share (BAGS), giv­ing some of those on the wait­ing list short-term solu­tions to their gar­den­ing dilem­ma. Yet, now, a new project called Old­field Park Grow­ing Togeth­er has emerged which, if it proves fea­si­ble, could pro­vide even more space.

The Prob­lem: Old­field Park is an area where most stu­dents from the two uni­ver­si­ties choose to live and is also an area with a fair amount of gar­den space. How­ev­er, as stu­dents very rarely stay longer than a cou­ple of years and are more often than not rent­ing the premis­es, the gar­den­ing poten­tial goes to waste. On top of this, the ten­sions between long-term res­i­dents and stu­dents have inten­si­fied recent­ly and one of the com­plaints which has come to B&NES Council’s atten­tion is the untidi­ness of gar­dens.

The Solu­tion: Although only cur­rent­ly in its research stage, the project (which is man­aged by four Bath Uni­ver­si­ty stu­dents and fund­ed by a vol­un­teer­ing char­i­ty Vin­spired) aims to cre­ate a sense of com­mu­ni­ty at the same time as pro­mot­ing sus­tain­abil­i­ty and pos­i­tive use of land, by allow­ing com­mu­ni­ty mem­bers to put stu­dent gar­dens to per­ma­nent good use. If we find that it could work, pilots for the project should be up and run­ning with­in a month and the project could be in full swing lat­er in the year.

The research is exten­sive – we are inter­view­ing peo­ple to include in case stud­ies, col­lat­ing ques­tion­naire results and attend­ing com­mu­ni­ty group meet­ings – and the more opin­ion we get on the project the more com­pre­hen­sive our find­ings will be. So if you can fill out a ques­tion­naire, they are in the Velo Lounge and should take 5–10 min­utes, please do. If you want to find out more, are inter­est­ed in get­ting involved or need more space for grow­ing e‑mail us on op.growers[at]googlemail.com.

Lit­ter-ally Speak­ing

On Sun­day the 28th of Feb, the Old­field Park com­mu­ni­ty, includ­ing mem­bers of Bath Activist Net­work and the Black Cat Cen­tre, came togeth­er to sort out and clean up Bath’s straight­est green area, Lin­ear Park. Tired of find­ing the park cov­ered with rub­bish, around 40 mem­bers of the local com­mu­ni­ty descend­ed on the area with bin bags and lit­ter pick­ers, turn­ing the area from a depress­ing rub­bish dump into a sparkling park again! When inter­viewed about the lit­ter pick, one vol­un­teer, Rachel, had this to say: “Obvi­ous­ly, we think the coun­cil clean­ers do a great job under tough con­di­tions, and we would nev­er dream of crit­i­ciz­ing their great work, but the vol­ume of lit­ter in this area deserves a com­mu­ni­ty response”. Anoth­er lit­ter pick­er, Steve from Old­field Park, said “If the com­mu­ni­ty can come togeth­er over some­thing like this, imag­ine what else we can do? Com­mu­ni­ty gar­dens, com­mu­ni­ty cen­tres, street par­ties – when the com­mu­ni­ty comes togeth­er, you realise that we can do almost any­thing”. The lit­ter pick was a real­ly good day out, with great com­pa­ny, and shows what we can achieve when we act togeth­er as a com­mu­ni­ty, rather than wait­ing for the author­i­ties to do a bad job of it for us. There is anoth­er lit­ter pick planned for a cou­ple of months’ time (date tba), so we’ll keep you post­ed.

Bath Activist Net­work are a local umbrel­la group cam­paign­ing on issues as diverse as devel­op­ment, envi­ron­men­tal­ism, anti-war, ani­mal rights, work­ers’ rights and more. Help­ing to pro­duce the Bath Bomb, we are open to any­one, and our mem­bers range from trade union­ists to anar­chists, lib­er­als and greens, and peo­ple who just want to change Bath for the bet­ter. For details on meet­ings, demos, or just to get in touch, email bathactivistnet[at]yahoo.co.uk or see our web­site: http://www.bathactivistnetwork.blogspot.com

Greece Light­ning

As the politi­cians tell us that the reces­sion is over, a quick glance across Europe tells a dif­fer­ent sto­ry. Greece is once again on fire, with dai­ly protests involv­ing tens of thou­sands of work­ers and stu­dents. Why? The Greek econ­o­my is fail­ing, and des­per­ate to keep a fel­low nation state afloat, a coali­tion of coun­tries led by Ger­many are lead­ing the way to Greece’s eco­nom­ic revival. In real­i­ty, this has meant a mas­sive aus­ter­i­ty pro­gram, where work­ers are see­ing their wages reduced, tax­es and liv­ing costs soar­ing and rights in the streets and work­places tram­pled on. As always, the gov­ern­ment is try­ing to keep its head up at the expense of the ordi­nary peo­ple. But in Greece, the peo­ple are not tak­ing this pun­ish­ment lying down, and have been tak­ing to the streets, brick­ing up the entrances to banks and gov­ern­ment build­ings, riot­ing, cre­at­ing their own alter­na­tive polit­i­cal struc­tures. This batch of dis­obe­di­ence may not be as vio­lent as last year’s riots, but since then, the Greek peo­ple have decid­ed not to take it any­more. What is unfold­ing in Greece (woe­ful­ly under-report­ed by a cor­po­rate media ter­ri­fied that we might take inspi­ra­tion from the Greek work­ers) is a bat­tle between the gov­ern­ment and the peo­ple, and every­thing is up for grabs. If the gov­ern­ment wins, it will give a green light to oth­er Euro­pean coun­tries to push through sim­i­lar unfair mea­sures to tax the peo­ple to save a crooked and fail­ing finan­cial sys­tem. But if the peo­ple win, it could pro­vide an inspi­ra­tion for mil­lions of oth­er ordi­nary peo­ple across the world who are sick of hav­ing their liv­ing con­di­tions tram­pled to pre­serve the lux­u­ry of the few.

A Load Of Hot Air

A duo of waf­fling coun­cil meet­ings in the area have recent­ly come to pass, with the deci­sions over the expan­sion of Bris­tol Inter­na­tion­al Air­port and the appli­ca­tion for a bio­fu­els plant at Avon­mouth. The meet­ing of the South Area Com­mit­tee was held at the Town Hall, West­on-super-Mare on Wednes­day March 3rd, who most­ly ate out of the air­port’s hands, but spine­less­ly passed on the deci­sion to a lat­er Plan­ning and Reg­u­la­to­ry com­mit­tee, prob­a­bly in April. In their efforts to fur­ther cham­pi­on trans­paren­cy and democ­ra­cy, they removed the rail from the bal­cony just before the meet­ing to shut out sig­nif­i­cant pub­lic access on health and safe­ty grounds. Envi­ron­men­tal­ist and neigh­bour­ing cam­paign­ers want to cap the air­port’s expan­sions entire­ly, but also cam­paign for con­di­tions to be enforced on any devel­op­ments, such as a lim­it of 8 mil­lion pas­sen­gers in any 12 months (they only had 5.6 mil­lion in 2009), sav­ing the green­belt from carparks, a con­trol on the num­ber of overnight flights and demand­ing improve­ments in traf­fic and CO2 emis­sions.

Bris­tol Coun­cil demon­strat­ed a sur­pris­ing and land­mark quan­ti­ty of cojones though, when they went against their own plan­ners and legal offi­cer to reject W4B Bris­tol’s pro­posed ‘green’ bio­fu­els plant at Avon­mouth. Instead they took the side of pro­test­ers out­side, in sup­port of com­mu­ni­ties in Indone­sia, from whom the raw mate­ri­als would be tak­en. W4B Chair­man Chris Slack was even described by one coun­cil­lor as a “ruth­less prof­i­teer… mas­querad­ing” behind green­wash buzz­words. Coun­cils that lis­ten? We’ve heard it all.

In oth­er eco news, cam­paign­ers from Ris­ing Tide are also join­ing a mam­moth bike ride event, from Merthyr Tyd­fil in Wales (site of Ffos y Fran, a much-hat­ed open cast coal min­ing oper­a­tion strong­ly opposed by locals) to Ross­port on the West coast of Ire­land, where Shell are try­ing to build an envi­ron­men­tal­ly-destruc­tive marine gas pipeline and brib­ing the local cops to har­rass and imprison landown­ers and objec­tors. The ride leaves on the 22nd of May – con­tact bristol[at]risingtide.org.uk for details. For a much more sedate cycle, don’t for­get the Bath Crit­i­cal Mass on the 27th of this month. For those who like to get their hands dirty, this clash­es nice­ly with two tree plant­i­ng days – one at Old­field Park Sta­tion that day, 12.15–2.15pm, where 100 native mixed shrubs and trees are due for expan­sion of wood­land cor­ri­dors, and the oth­er on Sat­ur­day the 20th, 10am-12, at West­on Park for 200 trees; vol­un­teers with tools and safe­ty boots are need­ed for both. This also clash­es with our last shout out – the West­side cli­mate action gath­er­ing on the 20th March at the Black Cat Cen­tre. Choose wise­ly!

http://www.stopbia.com
http://www.n‑somerset.gov.uk/Environment/News/news-20100224-airportplansrecommendedforapproval.htm
http://www.bristol247.com/2010/02/24/biofuel-plant-rejected-in-landmark-planning-decision
http://www.stopffosyfran.co.uk
http://www.shelltosea.com

EVENTS

Bath Hunt Sabo­teurs meet­ings, 2nd and 4th Mon­day of the month, 8pm, The Bell, Wal­cot Street

Free sam­ba danc­ing class­es, Mon­days, 7–8pm, Black Cat Cen­tre, http://www.blackcatcentre.blogspot.com

Debt advice drop-in, Tues­days, 4–7pm, Black Cat Cen­tre, http://www.blackcatcentre.blogspot.com

Lon­don Road Food Co-op, Wednes­days, 4–7pm, River­side Com­mu­ni­ty Cen­tre, Lon­don Road

The Lost Plot work­day, Thurs­days, 10am-dusk, Bathamp­ton

Bath Stop The War Coali­tion vig­il, Sat­ur­days, 11.30am-12.30, Bath Abbey Court­yard

Recy­cle Your Sun­days, Sun­days, 10.30am, starts Abbey Church­yard, the reg­u­lar series of socia­ble, easy-paced cycle rides, http://www.bathrys.org.uk/ tel Hazel 01225 469199

Black Cat Cen­tre gen­er­al meet­ing, Sun­days, 1–3pm, Black Cat Cen­tre, http://www.blackcatcentre.blogspot.com

Exhi­bi­tion: ‘Loss of Inno­cence: Gaza Chil­dren’s Art­work’, ends Wednes­day 17th March, most­ly 10–4pm, St John’ Church, Frome, ffi e‑mail adam.stout[at]virgin.net

‘Madame Hat­ter’s Scabrous Cabaret’ open mic night, Fri­day 12th March, 7.06pm, Black Cat Cen­tre, http://www.blackcatcentre.blogspot.com

Bris­tol Con­ven­tion of the Left: dis­cus­sion and work­shops, Sat­ur­day 13th March, 10–5pm, Eas­t­on Com­mu­ni­ty Cen­tre, Kil­burn Street, Eas­t­on, Bris­tol, http://www.eastoncommunitycentre.org.uk/p_Contact_Us.ikml

Bath FreeShop, Sat­ur­day 13th March, 12–3pm, out­side Pump Rooms, Stall Street

Broad­lands Orchard­share Vol­un­teer­ing Day, Sat­ur­day 13th March, 12–4pm, Broad­lands Orchard, Box Road, Bath­ford, http://www.bathford.net/broadlands.php

‘Resole Your Sat­ur­days’ Spring Walk, Sat­ur­day 13th March, start­ing by train from Maid­en­head, ring Jane at 01225 423832 FFI

Course: ‘Intro­duc­tion to Veg­etable Gar­den­ing’ part 1, Sat­ur­day 13th March, 7–9pm, see http://www.eco-logicbooks.com FFI

Pow­er 2010 street stall, Mon­day 15th March, 12 mid­day, South­gate Street

Film pre­miere and pan­el dis­cus­sion: ‘Dirty Oil’, Mon­day 15th March, Lit­tle The­atre, ring 08717 042061 for start time

Bath Cycling Cam­paign meet­ing, Mon­day 15th March, 7.30pm, the New Inn, Mon­mouth Place, http://www.bathcyclingcampaign.org.uk

Bris­tol & Bath Ris­ing Tide meet­ing, Mon­day 15th March, 7.30pm, Kebele Com­mu­ni­ty Co-op, 14 Robert­son Road, Eas­t­on, Bris­tol

Video sem­i­nar: ‘The Crash Course (part 3)’, Tues­day 16th March, 7.15pm, Min­er­va Cen­tre, 8 Combe Park, entry by dona­tion, see http://www.chrismartenson.com for first 2 free episodes

Dis­cus­sion: ‘Com­mu­ni­ty Owned Renew­able Ener­gy: A Self Suf­fi­cient Bath­ford’, Tues­day 16th March, 8pm, Bath­ford Pri­ma­ry School, e‑mail jamiecolston[at]gmail.com/ tel 01225 851377 FFI

Rad­i­cal debate club: ‘When envi­ron­men­tal­ism becomes fas­cism’, Thurs­day 18th March, 7–9pm, Black Cat Cen­tre, http://www.blackcatcentre.blogspot.com

Bath Friends of the Earth AGM, Thurs­day 18th March, 8pm, The Ris­ing Sun, Grove Street

Bath tree-plant­i­ng project day, Sat­ur­day 20th March, 10am-12, West­on Park, bring safe­ty boots and tools

Kebele Cafe: food and talk on links between cli­mate change, coal indus­try and Columbian trade union­ist action, by Bris­tol & Bath Ris­ing Tide, Sun­day 21st March, 6pm, Kebele Com­mu­ni­ty Co-op, 14 Robert­son Road, Eas­t­on, Bris­tol

Talk: ‘Why Trams?’, Wednes­day 24th March, 7.30pm, Grove Street Unit­ed Reform Church Halls, £3 with tea and cake!

Film: ‘Born on the 4th of July’, Thurs­day 25th March, 7pm, Black Cat Cen­tre, http://www.blackcatcentre.blogspot.com

Trapese Col­lec­tive course: ‘Tools for Social Change’, train­ing in grass­root organ­is­ing for social change, Sat­ur­day 27th March-3rd April, Rag­man’s Lane Farm, For­est of Dean, £175-£350, lim­it­ed places avail­able so book ear­ly! http://www.stuffit.org/trapese/ragm.pdf

Bath tree-plant­i­ng project day, Sat­ur­day 27th March, 12.15–2.15pm, Old­field Park train sta­tion, bring safe­ty boots and tools

Bath Crit­i­cal Mass, Sat­ur­day 27th March, 1pm start, Kingsmead Square

Bath Hunt Sabo­teurs street col­lec­tion, Sat­ur­day 27th March, Bath cen­tre, 1–5pm

Bath Social­ist Forum, Mon­day 29th March, 8pm, upstairs at St James Wine Vaults

Bath Activist Net­work meet­ing, Thurs­day 1st April, 7.30–9pm, down­stairs at The Hob­gob­lin, St James Parade, http://www.bathactivistnetwork.blogspot.com

‘Fort­night of Shame’: two weeks of action against BP’s invest­ment in tar sands extrac­tion, 1st-15th April, con­tact bristol[at]risingtide.org.uk FFI

Rad­i­cal debate club: ‘Rad­i­cal­ism & reli­gion’, Thurs­day 8th April, 7–9pm, Black Cat Cen­tre, http://www.blackcatcentre.blogspot.com

Bath FreeShop, Sat­ur­day 10th April, 12–3pm, out­side Pump Rooms, Stall Street

Horse Rac­ing Aware­ness week demo, Fri­day 9th April, West­gate Street, con­tact bathanimalaction[at]yahoo.co.uk FFI

Broad­lands Orchard­share Vol­un­teer­ing Day, Sat­ur­day 10th April, 12–4pm, Broad­lands Orchard, Box Road, Bath­ford, http://www.bathford.net/broadlands.php

‘Defend our Pub­lic Ser­vices’ march and ral­ly, Sat­ur­day 10th April, Lon­don, tick­ets for coach avail­able

Bath Ani­mal Action meet­ing, Mon­day 12th April, 8–9pm, The Bell, Wal­cot Street

Bath Green Drinks, Wednes­day 14th April, 8.30pm, the Ris­ing Sun, Grove Street

Update and dis­cus­sion on the plan­ning process, Sun­day 18th April, 11–3.30pm, £5 ada­vanced
book­ing essen­tial by 5th April, e‑mail afrelmi­ra at]googlemail.com

World Day for Lab Ani­mals march in Lon­don, Sat­ur­day 24th April, coach 8.30am, leav­ing Bris­tol Tem­ple Meads, £10 tick­et

Intro­duc­to­ry Per­ma­cul­ture Week­end, Sat­ur­day 8th to Sun­day 9th May, £50, for book­ings e‑mail afrelmira[at]googlemail.com

‘Adapt­ing to Cli­mate Change’ week, 7th-11th June, see http://www.oursouthwest.com/climate/
FFI

Mean­while In Bris­tol…

Liti­gious tax-dodg­ing ultra-cap­i­tal­ist bas­tards Tesco have recent­ly announced plans to open a new store in Stoke’s Croft, Bris­tol. In scenes rem­i­nis­cent of last year’s open­ing of a sim­i­lar store on Bath­wick Hill in our own fair town, the com­mu­ni­ty has come togeth­er in protest at the plans. Local res­i­dents, busi­ness­es and char­i­ties attend­ed a packed-out com­mu­ni­ty meet­ing to organ­ise resis­tance to the plans. Inspired by the recent suc­cess­es of oth­er sim­i­lar cam­paigns, things got quick­ly under­way. A peti­tion was organ­ised; an inde­pen­dent con­sul­ta­tion of the local res­i­dents was begun; anoth­er group began to inves­ti­gate the coun­cil’s own woe­ful­ly inad­e­quate con­sul­ta­tion (55 address­es were con­sult­ed – many of which were found to be clear­ly unoc­cu­pied); and, of course, direct actions were quick­ly organ­ised.

With­in days, a diverse group of locals had squat­ted the pro­posed site to pre­vent work from start­ing. Tesco’s response was equal­ly quick and typ­i­cal­ly pre­dictable – they sent round a cou­ple of thugs with sledge­ham­mers to break down the doors. For­tu­nate­ly, passers-by came to the squat­ters’ aid and the police were even­tu­al­ly forced to inter­vene. Tesco’s heav­ies, despite hav­ing open­ly vio­lat­ed Sec­tion 6 of the Hous­ing Act and thus earned a poten­tial 6 months’ prison apiece, were of course allowed to leave unhin­dered. In response, a Tesco on Church Road in Red­field lost its win­dows on Tues­day the 9th.

Evic­tion now looms for the squat­ters, who have already resist­ed the first attempt – cur­rent­ly enjoy­ing a tent and tri­pod shan­ty town atop the roof — but in the mean­time the space is being used for a vari­ety of com­mu­ni­ty events. If you’re in the area, pop down to 140 Chel­tenham Road and offer your encour­age­ment – and, if the mood takes you, ask how you can help when the big day comes.

Brave Land Of Lib­er­ty

Here at Bath Bomb Tow­ers, we some­times wor­ry that we don’t devote enough col­umn inch­es to the pos­i­tive side of life in Bath. So we’d like to take some time this issue to cel­e­brate the many free­doms we all enjoy.

The most impor­tant free­dom of all is of course the free­dom to feel safe, secure, and ade­quate­ly pro­tect­ed. So we were over­joyed recent­ly with reports of the police clamp­ing down hard on a sus­pi­cious-seem­ing man engaged in the high­ly threat­en­ing activ­i­ty of pho­tograph­ing the new South­gate shop­ping cen­tre. He might have been just an inno­cent tourist, fooled by the mock-Geor­gian archi­tec­ture into think­ing he was in the mid­dle of some sort of World Her­itage site. Or maybe an avid read­er of the Chron­i­cle, plan­ning yet anoth­er scathing let­ter about the lack of Bath stone in our lat­est tem­ple to con­sumerism. But, ter­ri­fy­ing­ly, the was a chance – how­ev­er slim – that he might have been – cov­er your chil­dren’s eyes – FOREIGN. After all, he was kin­da… brown…

There is a hap­py end­ing, though, as offi­cers not only iden­ti­fied the man, pre­sum­ably using a com­bi­na­tion of blan­ket CCTV cov­er­age and the tech­no­log­i­cal mar­vels of the data­base state – they also rang him up, threat­ened to come round his house, and heav­i­ly implied that if any­thing – ANYTHING – hap­pens at the South­gate, well… they know where he lives…

We’re sure he won’t make that mis­take again. The law-abid­ing cit­i­zens of Bath can rest easy in their beds tonight.

Got Me Hang­ing On The Tele­phone

In reces­sion-swept Britain, dodgy loan com­pa­nies, bailiffs and oth­er scum are find­ing more and more inven­tive ways to sep­a­rate us from our hard-earned green. A mas­sive increase in one of their favourite tricks to bleed us for what­ev­er we have comes in the form of threat­en­ing tele­phone calls. Dur­ing the course of these calls, the caller will try to con­vince the debtor to set up unre­al­is­tic repay­ment schemes, far above what the debtor can afford, often using the threat of home repos­ses­sion, court pro­ceed­ings or bailiff action. While this may sound scary, the impor­tant things is to NEVER agree to a repay­ment pack­age over the phone. The rea­son that they are ring­ing you in such an aggres­sive way is that they know you hold all the cards. In real­i­ty, most debts and loans that you can­not pay, the law will not make you pay, or allow you to repay in min­i­mal amounts. Know­ing that you have the legal right not to pay back the debt imme­di­ate­ly, or at all, the com­pa­ny will try to scare you with a phone call, threat­en you with made-up threats of bailiffs and try and pres­sure you into a repay­ment. So, before agree­ing to repay any of your debts over the phone, pop down to the Cit­i­zens Advice Bureau, or the debt advice drop-in (Tues­days, 4–7pm) at the Black Cat Cen­tre, because nine out of ten times, the bailiffs will be bluff­ing, and you will have the pow­er to set up a repay­ment scheme that suits you. The best advice if you are rung or vis­it­ed by a bailiff is to refuse to talk to them, and speak only to their head office after receiv­ing advice from debt groups.

In For A Pony, Out For A Hound

Most of our read­ers will be aware that hunt­ing with hounds was made ille­gal in 2005, although the effect this has had on the amount of hunt­ing in the UK is of course neg­li­gi­ble. Some peo­ple, how­ev­er, may have missed this impor­tant event. These peo­ple include, but are not lim­it­ed to; her­mits; the chron­i­cal­ly news-averse; and the police.

Whilst out mon­i­tor­ing an ille­gal hare and fox hunt last month, hunt sabo­teurs from Bath nar­row­ly avoid­ed a horse charge and then the grub­by hands of local cops. Quick­ly ascer­tain­ing that they weren’t after their eye-wit­ness reports of ille­gal hunt­ing, so much as they were look­ing after the land­ed gen­try’s hob­bies, the sabs escaped through a near­by wood and helped the hunt pack up dis­ap­point­ed and ear­ly. And on Sat­ur­day the 6th of this month, 21 sabs from Bath, Bris­tol, South Wales, Pewsey, Read­ing and Southamp­ton con­verged on the joint meet of the Ted­worth and Llan Geinor Hunts. It was a bright, sun­ny, ener­getic day out for all con­cerned, which saw both hunts con­tin­u­ous­ly out­foxed by a trio of sabo­teur teams run­ning them to ground at all times. There was a smat­ter­ing of wast­ing of police time from the hunts, as well as a smashed cam­era and minor pushey-shovey near the end when the sabs brought the hounds out of cry at the last minute, but the hunts went away with noth­ing, and at least two fox­es sur­vived anoth­er day.

The sea­son’s draw­ing to an end now, so to get involved, con­tact bathhuntsabs[at]yahoo.co.uk quick­ly, or you’ll have to wait until Autumn…

Doing It Our­selves

The Black Cat Cen­tre has now a venue big enough to hold gigs, but also big enough to have all kinds of work­shops. At the heart of all com­mu­ni­ty-spir­it­ed ven­tures lies a wish for more self-suf­fi­cien­cy, auton­o­my and free­dom. In the way of such ideals stand the twin poli­cies of manda­to­ry edu­ca­tion (instill­ing uncer­tain­ty and sub­mis­sion in the mass­es) and planned obso­les­cence (the cre­ation of com­modi­ties with a very lim­it­ed shelf-life, cou­pled with replace­ment parts made more expen­sive than the prod­uct itself, due to fake intel­lec­tu­al ‘prop­er­ty’ rights).

The result is, when you’re faced with a defec­tive appli­ance, you do not repair it prompt­ly – nay, you could­n’t; instead, you throw it away and go get a new one. Gee, cap­i­tal­ists have it all marked out for them, eh?

But this need not be. In every com­mu­ni­ty, there is a trea­sure of unused skills, knowl­edge, and resources; the build­ing cur­rent­ly owned by the Black Cat is only one instance of a gen­er­al prin­ci­ple that could make life eas­i­er for a lot of peo­ple. The com­mu­ni­ty work­shop could be the place to pool our tools and skills togeth­er, so as to take con­fi­dence, and relieve our­selves from the pres­sure to buy new things, when we could repair them our­selves at a much low­er cost. Please think about the things you know, the tools you have, the appli­ances that gath­er dust, and all the things we can do about that, togeth­er. Get in touch (bathsocialcentre[at]googlemail.com) to help us start a valu­able skill­share that could save you time and mon­ey, and bring our com­mu­ni­ty togeth­er.

Book Review: Live Work­ing Or Die Fight­ing

Too few of us know about our col­lec­tive his­to­ry, and how our ances­tors won hard-fought bat­tles for rights that we take for grant­ed, such as the right to strike, hol­i­day pay and the 8‑hour work­ing day. What few­er of us choose to think about is those work­ers who are still strug­gling for those basic rights today, both in Britain and abroad. In ‘Live work­ing or die fight­ing’ Paul Mason tells these sto­ries in a fast-paced and excit­ing way, deliv­er­ing his­to­ry and mod­ern-day events through the eyes of the peo­ple who expe­ri­ence them. Mason com­pares the strug­gles of today’s immi­grant clean­ers with the fight to unionise and for fair con­di­tions fought by British work­ers near­ly 200 years ago.

The nar­ra­tive takes you through the dra­mat­ic riots and social exper­i­ments of the Paris Com­mune, drags us into the des­per­ate resis­tance fought tooth and nail by Pol­ish com­mu­nists, anar­chists and Jews against the Nazis, shows us the mines and rail­roads of 1920’s Amer­i­ca where dyna­mite-throw­ing trade union­ists bat­tled gov­ern­ment troops over pay and con­di­tions, and takes us through the fac­to­ries of indus­tri­al Chi­na, where anar­chist and syn­di­cal­ist rad­i­cals inspired a huge­ly oppressed group of women and child work­ers to take the pow­er back.

Mason gives us a taste of the new worlds cre­at­ed by these work­ers, then jux­ta­pos­es it with the still un-won fights tak­ing place across the world today. ‘Live work­ing or die fight­ing’ makes a vivid read, show­ing what we can achieve when we act togeth­er, but does­n’t shy away from high­light­ing mis­takes we have made in the past – espe­cial­ly detail­ing how we have been sold out by the ‘lead­ers’ of polit­i­cal par­ties and unions. Mason uses his­to­ry to make the case for a strong lead­er­less work­ing class tak­ing the pow­er away from boss­es and left­wing par­ty bureau­crats and mak­ing their own way. Mason’s ide­al­ism com­bined with his­tor­i­cal case stud­ies leave the read­er feel­ing that a new world real­ly is pos­si­ble.

If you have ever won­dered how we have the lim­it­ed rights of the mod­ern day work­place, won­dered how the new under­class strug­gle for rights, or just want to get stuck into one of the most inter­est­ing­ly-writ­ten his­to­ry books you will ever read, check out ‘live work­ing or die fight­ing’.

And now, to the dis­claimer: As any­one is free to con­tribute, the opin­ions expressed in each arti­cle are not nec­es­sar­i­ly reflec­tive of each con­trib­u­tor. Nat­u­ral­ly, any right-wing or cor­po­rate bull­shit will be binned and spat upon. Need­less to say, the opin­ions of the author of this dis­claimer do not nec­es­sar­il­ly rep­re­sent the views of any oth­er con­trib­u­tor.

Putting The ‘Fad’ Into ‘Intifa­da’

We received an anony­mous press release this month by a group call­ing them­selves ‘Glob­al Intifa­da’:

“Bath’s arms deal­ers and war prof­i­teers like to hide behind veneers of respectabil­i­ty and legit­i­ma­cy. One such group is British Mar­itime Tech­nol­o­gy Defence Ser­vices, who help design the engines for Britain’s ‘Tri­dent’ nuclear-armed sub­marines, and who sup­ply vital soft­ware to the Israeli mil­i­tary.

In sol­i­dar­i­ty with all the peo­ple liv­ing under the repres­sive occu­pa­tion of the Israeli state, with all the char­i­ty and human­i­tar­i­an work­ers mur­dered by that state’s mil­i­tary, and espe­cial­ly with the res­i­dents of Sheikh Jar­rah, an Arab neigh­bour­hood in Jerusalem which has come in for par­tic­u­lar­ly strong oppres­sion recent­ly, we have cho­sen to expose BMT for the crooks they are. A large ban­ner, bear­ing the leg­end “BMT are War Crim­i­nals” has been hung by their main offices. Now the peo­ple of Bath can be made of the atroc­i­ties being made pos­si­ble right beneath their noses.”

West Midlands Climate Action neighbourhood meeting

West Mid­lands Cli­mate Action is an autonomous non-hier­ar­chi­cal group who take direct action to sup­port cli­mate jus­tice and social jus­tice.

West Mid­lands Cli­mate Action emer­gency neigh­bour­hood meet­ing:
Tues­day 16th March, around 7:30–8:00 in the Spot­ted dog, 104 War­wick Street, Birm­ing­ham B12 0NH

West Mid­lands Cli­mate Action is an autonomous non-hier­ar­chi­cal group who take direct action to sup­port cli­mate jus­tice and social jus­tice.

West Mid­lands Cli­mate Action emer­gency neigh­bour­hood meet­ing:
Tues­day 16th March, around 7:30–8:00 in the Spot­ted dog, 104 War­wick Street, Birm­ing­ham B12 0NH

Fol­low­ing the dis­cov­ery on Sun­day that many of trees on the Telford coal mine site have already been felled and that work on the mine seems like it will begin immi­nent­ly we will be hav­ing an emer­gency meet­ing on Tues­day 16th March, around 7:30–8:00 in the Spot­ted dog, 104 War­wick Street, Birm­ing­ham B12 0NH
http://wmclimateaction.wordpress.com/2010/03/08/defending-the-shropshire-hills-from-uk-coal/

Merthyr to Mayo Cycle Caravan

The “Merthyr to Mayo” cycle car­a­van will spend two weeks trav­el­ling between Merthyr Tyd­fil, Wales and Ross­port, Ire­land: two com­mu­ni­ty strug­gles resist­ing fos­sil fuel extrac­tion in their areas.

Merthyr to Mayo Caravan flierThe “Merthyr to Mayo” cycle car­a­van will spend two weeks trav­el­ling between Merthyr Tyd­fil, Wales and Ross­port, Ire­land: two com­mu­ni­ty strug­gles resist­ing fos­sil fuel extrac­tion in their areas.

The time we spend in these com­mu­ni­ties will pro­vide an oppor­tu­ni­ty to learn from one anoth­er, to share sto­ries and to explore our areas of com­mon­al­i­ty; we will look at how we can work in sol­i­dar­i­ty with each oth­er.

On our jour­ney we will hold events in dif­fer­ent areas we pass through.

We will high­light the sto­ries of the Merthyr and Mayo com­mu­ni­ties, explore the links between them and exam­ine the glob­al sig­nif­i­cance of their strug­gles.

Join us!

May 21st-June 5th
www.merthyrtomayo.org

Another Shell recruitment event disrupted

9.03.2010
Cor­po­rate sleaze-mer­chants try­ing to recruit grad­u­ates in Oxford got anoth­er rough ride at the hands of local activists.

This evening, at the Uni­ver­si­ty’s Ash­molean muse­um, the oil multi­na­tion­al Shell attempt­ed to hold a talk on ‘The Chal­lenges of the Future’ and how bright young grad­u­ates can help. We had oth­er ideas…

9.03.2010
Cor­po­rate sleaze-mer­chants try­ing to recruit grad­u­ates in Oxford got anoth­er rough ride at the hands of local activists.

This evening, at the Uni­ver­si­ty’s Ash­molean muse­um, the oil multi­na­tion­al Shell attempt­ed to hold a talk on ‘The Chal­lenges of the Future’ and how bright young grad­u­ates can help. We had oth­er ideas…

Despite notice­ably increased secu­ri­ty (police, muse­um secu­ri­ty, Shell staff and even the head of Uni­ver­si­ty secu­ri­ty), a mix­ture of bla­tant blag­gery and stu­dent infil­tra­tion got most of us inside. As usu­al, we had our own alter­na­tive pre­sen­ta­tion ready, but when they sug­gest­ed that it would be accom­mo­dat­ed at the *end* of the event it was clear we were being fobbed off. So the heck­les and awk­ward ques­tions start­ed.

As more and more of the trou­ble­mak­ers dropped their incog­ni­to cov­er to lam­bast, inter­ro­gate or polite­ly-but-point­ed­ly-query the pre­sen­ters, it became clear that at least a quar­ter of the rel­a­tive­ly small audi­ence were involved. A won­der­ful moment came when those of us who already knew each oth­er were pleas­ant­ly sur­prised to dis­cov­er more under­cov­er allies who we did­n’t know, inter­ven­ing at the per­fect moment with a human rights report on Shel­l’s crimes in the Niger delta.

Even­tu­al­ly many of the ‘gen­uine’ audi­ence mem­bers just got up and left, despite the event not being over… until we were left with pret­ty much just us, Shell, and secu­ri­ty. At which point we got to tell them they could expect resis­tance every­where, and that their com­pa­ny would ulti­mate­ly be shut down whether they liked it or not, and left.

Favourite anec­dote of the night: the door secu­ri­ty guy who, on hear­ing my name was­n’t on the list and I did­n’t have ID, told me to go and ask his supe­ri­or if it was OK. I went off in the direc­tion indi­cat­ed, asked the cops the time to pass a moment or two, and then went back and:
‘She said it’s fine’
‘OK, in you go then’…! 🙂

BP Fortnight of Shame

The BP Fort­night of Shame is a call to action from the UK Tar Sands Net­work, Ris­ing Tide and the Camp for Cli­mate Action to force BP to reverse their crazy plans to move into Canada’s tar sands.

BP horse-rider of the apocalypseThe BP Fort­night of Shame is a call to action from the UK Tar Sands Net­work, Ris­ing Tide and the Camp for Cli­mate Action to force BP to reverse their crazy plans to move into Canada’s tar sands. It runs between the annu­al Fos­sil Fools Day on April 1st, which in recent years has seen a flur­ry of action against the fos­sil fuels indus­try, and BP’s Annu­al Gen­er­al Meet­ing on April 15th. Grass­roots groups across the UK, in sol­i­dar­i­ty with First Nations indige­nous peo­ples, will be tak­ing action to stop BP’s dead­ly plans in their tracks. This will include a glob­al day of action on Sat­ur­day 10th April. All are encour­aged to get involved.

Why Tar Sands?

Attempts to avert the plan­et from slid­ing into cli­mate cri­sis are being threat­ened by a sin­gle mas­sive project in the Cana­di­an wilder­ness. Already, mil­lions of bar­rels of tar sands oil are being extract­ed every day, pro­duc­ing three to five times as many green­house gas emis­sions as con­ven­tion­al oil. The extrac­tion process is immense­ly resource-inten­sive, cur­rent­ly using enough nat­ur­al gas every day to heat 3.2 mil­lion Cana­di­an homes. Add to this the mass defor­esta­tion the projects are caus­ing, rid­ding us of des­per­ate­ly need­ed car­bon sinks, then it becomes clear this project can­not be allowed to con­tin­ue if we are seri­ous about pre­vent­ing run­away cli­mate change.

The effects tar sands are hav­ing on local First Nations indige­nous com­mu­ni­ties are dev­as­tat­ing. The tar sands devel­op­ment in Alber­ta cov­ers an area the size of Eng­land, with tox­ic tail­ing ponds so huge they are vis­i­ble from space, leak­ing poi­sons into the local water sup­ply. Not only are indige­nous liveli­hoods and futures being destroyed, but com­mu­ni­ties on land where tar sands extrac­tion has been imposed are expe­ri­enc­ing dis­turbing­ly high rates of rare forms of can­cer and auto-immune dis­eases.

Why BP?

BP are the only major oil com­pa­ny with no tar sands extrac­tion projects cur­rent­ly in oper­a­tion. This is about to change. Since 2007, BP have qui­et­ly ditched the ‘Beyond Petro­le­um’ sham, because invest­ing in renew­ables sim­ply was­n’t mak­ing them enough prof­it. They have decid­ed to go Back to Petro­le­um, with a vengeance, under the lead­er­ship of new Chief Exec­u­tive Tony Hay­ward.

Mov­ing into tar sands was one of the first steps Tony Hay­ward took, acquir­ing a half share in the Sun­rise Project with Husky Ener­gy. The Sun­rise Project will be huge, pro­duc­ing 200,000 bar­rels of filthy oil a day, and using Steam-Assist­ed Grav­i­ty Drainage (SAGD), an extrac­tion process even more ener­gy and water inten­sive than the more vis­i­ble sur­face-min­ing oper­a­tions.

The reces­sion has giv­en us a win­dow of oppor­tu­ni­ty. BP have been forced to post­pone their final deci­sion on whether to go ahead until the sec­ond half of 2010. This means it is not too late for us to stop this out­ra­geous project. BP are des­per­ate for Sun­rise to go ahead, and will cer­tain­ly not go down with­out a fight, but with effec­tive and sus­tained action we can win this one.
What can I do?

Local groups across the UK, from Brighton to Scot­land, are already engaged in plot­ting and plan­ning for the Fort­night of Shame. If your local group isn’t already plan­ning some­thing, then get sug­gest­ing ideas. If you haven’t already got a local group, then check out the local groups that form the Camp for Cli­mate Action net­work. All are open to every­one to join.

Oppostion to Telford opencast mine plans continue… [updated: blog for updates]

6.03.2010
CAMPAIGNERS AGAINST UK COALS HUNTINGTON LANE SURFACE MINE were out on the bridges of Telford this morn­ing, equipped with a large ban­ner broad­cast­ing their mes­sage of ‘No New Coal’. The open­cast coal site near New Works in Telford is due to com­mence oper­a­tions in the near future.

Telford No New Coal banner 16.03.2010
CAMPAIGNERS AGAINST UK COALS HUNTINGTON LANE SURFACE MINE were out on the bridges of Telford this morn­ing, equipped with a large ban­ner broad­cast­ing their mes­sage of ‘No New Coal’. The open­cast coal site near New Works in Telford is due to com­mence oper­a­tions in the near future.

In 2007 UK Coal sub­mit­ted plans to Telford and Wrekin Coun­cil to open cast mine 900,000 tons of poor qual­i­ty coal from an area at the foot of the Wrekin in Telford over 32 months. The plans includ­ed destroy­ing parts of an ancient wood­land and will be respon­si­ble for a min­i­mum of 1,500,000 tonnes of CO2 emit­ted into the atmos­phere. The Wrekin is an Area of Out­stand­ing Nat­ur­al Beau­ty

After strong local oppo­si­tion the appli­ca­tion was sub­mit­ted to a plan­ning inspec­torate and late last year the Sec­re­tary of State, John Den­ham back­ing the plan­ning inspec­tor found in favour of UK Coal and the open cast coal mine has been approved.

UK Coal have said they will return the site to green fields once the min­ing has fin­ished. Jon Lloyd the chief exec­u­tive of UK Coal spent most of his career in the prop­er­ty devel­op­ment busi­ness before join­ing UK Coal.

The 230 acre site is part of the Shrop­shire Hills Area of Out­stand­ing Nat­ur­al Beau­ty and is also home to the pro­tect­ed sched­uled New Works Ancient Mon­u­ment.

A spokesper­son for the cam­paign­ers said “We believe that burn­ing coal to gen­er­ate elec­tric­i­ty is an anti­quat­ed and out-dat­ed tech­nol­o­gy. It is high­ly inef­fi­cient and is respon­si­ble for the release of huge quan­ti­ties of green­house gas­es into the atmos­phere. If the UK gov­ern­ment were seri­ous about address­ing the caus­es of cli­mate change there would be no need for the devel­op­ment of sites such as Hunt­ing­ton Lane. It’s a tragedy that this beau­ti­ful space in an Area of Out­stand­ing Nat­ur­al Beau­ty will be lost in the pur­suit of dirty coal.”

Cam­paign­ers say that were the UK to hit its exist­ing renew­able ener­gy and ener­gy effi­cien­cy tar­gets, the country’s pow­er needs could be met whilst reduc­ing both green­house gas emis­sions and fuel bills. It could also deliv­er thou­sands of jobs for areas like Telford.

“The truth is that the green ener­gy sec­tor offers a huge oppor­tu­ni­ty for job cre­ation where­as jobs in the fos­sil fuel indus­try sim­ply aren’t sus­tain­able in a cli­mate-chang­ing world. Seri­ous invest­ment in the renew­ables sec­tor would inject the econ­o­my with what the indus­try is call­ing a new wave of ‘green col­lar jobs’. In fact the government’s renew­able ener­gy strat­e­gy con­sul­ta­tion iden­ti­fies the poten­tial for upwards of 160,000 new jobs if it meets the UK’s 2020 renew­able ener­gy tar­gets.”

Telford Against New Coal
wmclimatecamp@riseup.net
http://wmclimateaction.wordpress.com/

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We’ve set up this blog in order to keep you informed of the cur­rent sit­u­a­tion at UK Coals Hunt­ing­ton Lane SMS (Sur­face Mine Site) in Telford and to appeal for sup­port. Thanks for tak­ing the time to vis­it, we hope you’ll be inspired to join us.

The 230 acre site near the foot of The Wrekin encom­pass­es both open ground and wood­land, eats into the Shrop­shire Hills Area of Out­stand­ing Nat­ur­al Beau­ty and is also home to the pro­tect­ed sched­uled New Works Ancient Mon­u­ment.

At least one Coun­ty Wildlife Site at Limekiln Wood and the flo­ra and fau­na of the Borough’s largest and most valu­able areas of ancient wood­land are threat­ened by the sur­face mine. The devel­op­ment also involves the dis­tur­bance of four bad­ger setts and the for­ag­ing ter­ri­to­ries of a fur­ther two bad­ger clans.

Not only does the pro­posed mine rep­re­sent a major blot on the beau­ti­ful rur­al land­scape, being clear­ly vis­i­ble from the Wrekin and many oth­er local areas, and also cre­ate three years of noise and dust for local res­i­dents – it will also be respon­si­ble for a min­i­mum of 2,430,000 tonnes of cli­mate chang­ing CO2 emis­sions into the atmos­phere.

If you’d like to help in any way please check out some of our oth­er pages and con­tact us at defendhuntingtonlane(at)hushmail.com for more infor­ma­tion.

Defend Hunt­ing­ton Lane. Telford against new coal.
http://defendhuntingtonlane.wordpress.com/

Coal Action Scotland InfoTour dates

The Main­shill Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp is going on tour! Check our list of dates below to see if we’re com­ing any­where near you. If you’d like us to to a talk where you are and its not on the list, email us at main­shill [at] riseup.net and we’ll get back to you as soon as pos­si­ble.

10th March
Brighton
7pm at the Cow­ley Club
Lon­don Road

The Main­shill Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp is going on tour! Check our list of dates below to see if we’re com­ing any­where near you. If you’d like us to to a talk where you are and its not on the list, email us at main­shill [at] riseup.net and we’ll get back to you as soon as pos­si­ble.

10th March
Brighton
7pm at the Cow­ley Club
Lon­don Road

12th March
Leeds
7pm at the Band­stand Com­mu­ni­ty Allot­ments
Wood­house Ridge, Mean­wood Road
15th March
Brad­ford
7pm at the 1 in 12 Club
21–23 Albion Street

16th March
Lan­cast­er
7pm at the Lan­cast­er Action Resource Cen­tre
78a Pen­ny Street