Friday, April 6, 2012

Is the Church of England a "threat" to the nation's morals?

Rt Revd Dr Alan Wilson
Bishop of Buckingham
As some readers will know and others will not I used to be a very active member of the Church of England. In fact I have a degree in Theology and went a far as selection as a priest but did not complete the training. Since then I have drifted away like many and I do not attend church at all. I consider myself an agnostic and at last two of my children say they are atheists. My sister actually is an ordained Church of England priest.

So when the Church of England is discussed I can at least to some extent see it from both the inside where I used to be and the outside where I am now.

I think there are many people of goodwill involved the Church and for many people their day to day contact with the church will be positive. Not for all though as many have a different experience. I still remember the reaction I had when my request to have my newly born son baptised was met not with welcome. But recently I attended a funeral and the priest there was sensitive and allowed the family to make the funeral what the person who died would have wanted.

Those who know me will be aware that I had long lamented the fact that the Church far from leading the way on ethical issues has lagged behind civil society and even tried to stop advancement. One of the most obvious examples is in its attitude to homosexuality.

Over time society has become more and more accepting that homosexuality and homosexual relationships should be treated in the same was as heterosexual relationships. Far from leading the way on this the Church has:

(a) refused to appoint Bishops due to their sexuality and the fact they are in stable relationships with a person of the same sex
(b) insisted on being exempted from legislation to allow it to discriminate in employment matters against homosexuals
(c) opposed the proposed change to the law to allow homosexuals to get married

It is an understatement to say that I have a hard time dealing with this. It is worse than that. I could not in all conscience be a member of an organisation that behaves in such a discriminatory manner towards people based on their sexuality.

And I am sure I am not alone. Bishop Alan Wilson, a junior Bishop in Oxford diocese wrote recently on his blog:
Yesterday, for the third time this year, someone expressed to me genuine concern about involving the Church in a project because they feared that dealing with a discriminatory organisation would compromise their moral integrity. The C of E used to be the guardian of the nation’s morals, but is increasingly perceived as irrelevant, or even a threat to them.
He goes on to consider how this has happened:
At first sight this is amazing, because the people I meet in Church are usually kind, upright and morally aware. The nation’s moral instinct has changed, however. The Church in its own bubble has become, at best the guardian of the value system of the nation’s grandparents, and at worst a den of religious anoraks defined by defensiveness, esoteric logic and discrimination.
Yes that is the Bishop talking not me! Today an opinion piece in the Guardian has picked this up and is an interesting read on the question of the challenges facing the outgoing Archbishop of Canterbury's successor.

This prompted a tweet from former St Paul's Canon Chancellor Giles Fraser who resigned from his post in protest at the way the church authorities dealt with the Occupy protests.


This is a reminder of another failure by the Church of England to seize the opportunity to show support for the Occupy movement to be allowed to protest and perhaps regain some legitimacy as the "moral conscience" of the country.

So would I re-join a church that supported Occupy (or at least its right to protest), had appointed Jeffrey John as a Bishop and led the campaign for homosexual marriage? Not sure. But I would certainly be more inclined to consider it.

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Hosepipe ban? Not in North Suffolk...

Much of South and West Suffolk is now subject to a hosepipe ban imposed by Anglian Water but customers in the North of the county served by Essex and Suffolk Water are not currently affected by a ban.

Anglian Water state on their website:
Because of the extremely dry conditions we’ve been experiencing, Anglian Water have had to restrict non-essential water use which means there is a ban on using a hosepipe. Did you know hosepipes can use up to 1,000 litres of water in just one hour?
Essex and Suffolk water state:
Our water resources are below average for the time of year following below average rainfall in 20 of the last 24 months (April 2012). Our resources are not currently at a level where it has been necessary to introduce water restrictions in our supply area at this time. We do not currently have a hosepipe ban. However, with it remaining so dry, the possibility of restrictions on the use of a hosepipe is becoming more likely. We will continue to monitor the water resources situation very carefully. If our resource situation worsens and we do need to introduce any restrictions, we will communicate with our customers about this with clear advice and guidance in advance.
So basically if you get water bills from Essex and Suffolk Water there is not a hosepipe ban at least as yet. If you want to check if the ban applies to you then use the Postcode checker or see the map below.

Click to enlarge - are within blue border not covered by the ban
You can also use the Postcode checker to see if the ban affects you


Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Beccles Free School Decision "likely to be after Easter"

Peter Aldous
Waveney MP
The EDP report today that the decision on Beccles Free School is likely to be after Easter now according to local MP Peter Aldous. It was hoped that a decision would be made before Easter so that some certainty could be brought to the current situation.

In his letter to Education Minister Lord Hill on 8th March Peter Aldous MP said:
I do believe that a decision should be made promptly, as the continued uncertainty as to the nature of the high school education that will be available in Beccles from this autumn is unsettling and unhelpful.
Meanwhile the Seckford Foundation as I previously reported are promising to advertise for teachers in the TES on 20th April. They will need to submit these adverts on 16th April at the latest.

It will be interesting to see if Seckford have appointed a Principal and Headteachers by that point and if the DfE give a decision before the advertising deadline.

Monday, April 2, 2012

Second former Suffolk County Council waste site closes. Portfolio holder blames local people

Cllr Lisa Chambers, Waste Portfolio Holder
Back in February the first waste site to be "divested" by Suffolk County Council at Bramford was forced to close due to a lack of demand. Now a second site at Chelmondiston is also to close its doors from 8 May as operator Collins Skip Hire says it was not viable. Their Managing Director is quoted by the BBC as saying:
People started to explore their own habits and ideas, and there are still free sites available, so they had options. If you don't need to pay and can find a way around it, you won't pay.
I am not sure why this is such a surprise. The County Council sites he says are "free" are of course not free but funded by people from their Council Tax so in fact what people are being asked to do is pay twice and unsurprisingly that is not popular.

But County Council Portfolio Holder Lisa Chambers seems to see the blame lying with local communities:
The community sites came from the public meetings that we held when we announced the closures. 
People said at public meetings 'we're prepared to pay, we want to keep our site open', but when it comes down to it they've actually decided to do different things with their waste.
So nothing to do with the County Council then. To me this shows what is objectionable about this divestment strategy. It allows the County Council to divest themselves of responsibility for the withdrawal of services and blame people for not wanting to pay twice!

Sunday, April 1, 2012

Do the Seckford Foundation know something we don't?

The Seckford Foundation have certainly been behaving with a lot of confidence. Despite a serious public backlash against the Beccles Free School proposal it has been "full steam ahead". Now the Beccles Free School Website (and the identical Saxmundham Free School site) has published this statement under in its vacancies section:

So is this just confidence from Seckford or do they already know that the school is going ahead? We will soon see!

Full Text of the Free School FOI Responses Published

I have published the full text of the freedom of information response I got from Suffolk County Council on the proposed Seckford Free Schools.

You can view and download the responses on the Wikisuffolk website. Note these are huge files each around 50Mb and 400 pages!

Part 1: Ixworth
Part 2: Beccles, Saxmundham and Stoke by Nayland (1/2)

The files ares searchable PDFs exactly as supplied by Suffolk County Council but run through OCR software to make them searchable.

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