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SON OF GRIDKNOCKER

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Posts posted by SON OF GRIDKNOCKER

  1. I should like to nominate council officer Geof Hughes for the newly-created Voice accoloade of Roadworks Muddler of the Year, for the disgracefully uncoordinated planning of the installation of the signalling systems at the eastern extremity of the £25-million Link Road to Nowhere which have now been going on for over a month. The planning of an alcoholic celebration inside a brewery come to mind.

  2. The oak hammer-beam roof, in the upper floor of the oldest part of the building - originally a merchants' hall and (as far as I know) not fired-damaged - was described by Pevsner, in his Herefordshire volume of Buildings of England, as 'outstanding'. Since it is not going to be a pub any longer, does that mean that some lucky yuppies will have a hand-crafted 15th century ceiling for the living room of their High Town apartment?

  3. I will never forget (King Bobby was sitting in the back row at the Kindle Centre and can confirm this) Cllr Morgan's presentation to Hereford Civic Society some years ago, on the theme of the county's 'heritage assets', when she spoke movingly about feather-edged boarded rural bus shelters. I promise I'm not making this up!

  4. According to newly-arrived Herefordian Richard Hammond, the DVLA and private mart sales of personalised number plates is now worth £100-million a year. Which seems an awful lot of money to shell out to have your name plastered across the front of your car.

     

    A relative was recently talking to a neighbour who was the proud new owner of a top-of-the-range BMW. She remarked that she was rather surprised that it sported a common-or-garden number plate, without reference to his christian name or initials. "Delia (not her real name)", he said, "when I take my wife shopping in Sainsburys, I think I can find my way back to the car without having to be reminded which one is mine!"

  5. Wholeheartedly agree with Adrian Pitt's post. HV is head and shoulders above the badly-presented dross that masquerades as the once-mighty Hereford Times. But the carping naysayers here (no names, no pack drill) should try to lighten up and provide positive, well-constructed comment.

  6. If you have a product that has be tested by Govt departments,given a British Standard number & also a class 0 fire rating which then fails

    new fire standards,who do you blame?

    On the other hand other Countries have also tested this type of cladding and come up with very different levels of fire resistance.France give it an absolute zero for being flamable and say it's non combustible,UK give it a 0 which means a very slow spread of flame something like 8 inches in 10 mins.

    Germany's fire rating gives it the same rating as wood.

    Blame lies with outdated regs.

     

    I find a useful tip is to always read through one's thoughts before posting them on The Voice. For typos, grammatical errors, punctuation and that sort of thing. Helps other folk to understand your 'stream-of-consciousness bile'. You should try it Ragwert.

  7. If the Met's announcement last week that it was considering bringing charges of corporate manslaughter was supposed to reassure Grenfell survivors, it seems to have had the opposite effect. For a start, the seven-year-old act carries no custodial sentences, only unlimited fines (the first company to be successfully prosecuted got hit with a fine of just £38,000!). So, sitting on capital reserves of £275-million is hardly likely to give RBK&C councillors or officers sleepless nights. Secondly,, it is now being suggested that if charges were to be brought by the CPS, former Appeal Judge Sir Martin Moore-Bick's Inquiry (whose narrow terms of reference have already been questioned) might have to be halted. The phrase 'being caught between a rock and a hard place' comes to mind.

  8. The Guardian is reporting (ok, ok Ragwert - I know we shouldn't believe everything the sandal-wearing muesli-eaters read) that one-in-five of all High Street estate agents face extinction, due to growing internet sales. So what will the city's Broad Street / Bridge Street area look like in a few years time, where there are currently 17 estate agents? Room to shoehorn in a few more coffee franchises and a couple of tattoo parlours perhaps?

  9. The Grenfell tragedy, according to the Met, is now the largest criminal investigation it has ever undertaken, outside of terrorist attacks. All power to its elbow.

     

    But this must be cold comfort to the survivors and relatives of all those who lost their lives, when it is realised that the likelihood of charges of Corporate Manslaughter being brought against RBK&C - if successful - only carry fines and not custodial sentences.

     

    We all know how cash-rich RBK&C is, with its obscene 'slush fund' of £275-million (compare that to HC's current  running debt of £125-million). A punitive fine wouldn't even dent its reserves. And heads would be unlikely to roll.

  10. @ Glenda: sorry for getting the Courtyard event's date wrong. I shall be going too.

     

    In this thread's opening post I deliberately used the phrase 'brave Rotherwas women', recalling an image that is featured in Bill Laws's excellent history of the factory - In the Munitions: Women at War. It shows a picture (clearly composed for publicity purposes by the government's Orwellian propaganda machine The Central Office of Information) of two young women wearing full-length cotton dresses and bob caps, reminiscent of Victorian chambermaids. One woman is tall, the other is short. Both are bent forward, filling an upturned circular steel object on the floor from an enamel jug. Are they filling a coal skuttle? Or making lemonade for the Master's weekend tennis party? They most certainly are not. They are filling steel shell cases (destined for the re-supply of naval battleships at Portsmouth) with highly-volatile explosive material, in the Rotherwas Shell Filling Shed. Without protective clothing, goggles, gloves or hard hats. The skins of many of these women, who were daily exposed to the fumes from this operation, turned a vivid orange, causing them to be taunted, whenever they crossed High Town: 'The Canary Girls'.

  11. The BBC Radio Hereford & Worcester reporter Nicola Goodwin has done some sterling work in her personal campaign to get to the bottom of the true number of fatalities and casualties that occurred following the German bombing of the Rotherwas Munitions Factory, 75 years ago. At a service of commemoration at Rotherwas (attended by three 90-year-old survivors of the raid), the figures given were 16 killed and 27 injured, though there is a suggestion that the true fatalities figure could have been as high as 40. It was Hereford's worst wartime disaster. Ms Goodwin recently discovered that the 16 known fatalities were buried in an unmarked grave at Bullinghope's St Peter's Church. BBC war correspondent Kate Adie will be talking about the brave Rotherwas women at The Courtyard on 8 September. The event will be followed by a book signing.

  12. The Law Society are there to protect their own - why should they do anything? What are councillors doing about officers who time and again shortlist corrupt and incompetent people for highly paid jobs when googling them will show their history in a few seconds? Come to that, why don't councillors do a bit of searching before employing these people?

    Nevertheless, if the Law Society's complaints department received letters from several Voice contributors, would they not have to haul Mr Norman before their Disciplinary Tribunal?

  13. I've no idea whether Miss Lamputt bears any resemblance to Dame Maggie Smith (aka Miss Shepherd), or if King Bobby could double as Alan Bennett, but this unfolding story bears a striking similarity to the play / film 'The Lady in the Van'. Let's hope the good burghers of Plough Lane show slightly more compassion than the snooty residents of Camden's Gloucester Crescent!

  14. "To little or no fanfare..." Par for the course, mate.

     

    Now if Tony Johnson was suffering from hay fever, the council's dynamic Media Unit would have pushed out a fulsome Press Release, with medical report on the Great Leader's condition.. But open a traffic-free route for pedestrians and cyclists? Forget it.

  15. I believe TWG is very well-read on this subject (ie HC's insane need to be constantly moving its Customer Services Unit - or should we now term it the CS Hub perhaps?).

     

    If memory serves, this extremely important public facility was once housed in (long-gone) Garrick House, a decently-designed building for which the architects' original brief was: "When the structure is no longer needed for offices, ensure that it can be inexpensively converted into flats." But it had to come down in order to accommodate the city's 99th coffee franchise.Franklin Barnes seemed a decent alternative. Let's move council staff down the road (once we've re-fitted at £250k). Ey-up: the planners are moving out. Let's move Customer Services again - but waste time and money cladding it in zinc or copper or protected rhino hide.

     

    Nearly ready Councillor Bramer? We've got news for you: the replanning of our listed Broad Street library building will need to incorporate an all-singing all-dancing (you've guessed it) CS Hub.

     

    You Couldn't Make It Up (except 'ere in 'ereford)

  16. The whole district is festooned with tributes: flowers, candles, toys and ribbons. They are fixed to every lampost, bollard, telephone box and bus stop. And 'MISSING' is the word which appears most frequently. Unlike the mountains of flowers which were placed outside Kensington Palace after the death of Princess Diana, these Grenfell messages are heart-felt and very touching. Their three principle locations are outside Notting Hill Methodist Church, the Wall of Hope in front of the Latymer Road Community Centre and the Wall of Truth beneath Westway. This unfriendly concrete canyon seems to be the focal point for outdoor protest meetings, radio and TV interviews and some of the strongest-worded declamations. Like the huge graffiti, in Rastafarian colours, reading: 'Convict RBK&C of Corporate Massacre'. The most moving was certainly: 'Say a prayer for all the NO NAMES' - a reference, I imagine, to the unknown number of visitors, friends, house guests and illegal tenants who perished, but will never be identified.

  17. Black Tomb. The definitive images of the charred hulk of Grenfell Tower were nearly all taken with telephoto lenses from the elevated Westway, which carries the M40 west out of London. At street level, the picture is very different and, if anything, even grimmer. Grenfell appears at the end of streets and pedestrian passageways, or is seen framed by the brick facades of low-rise council housing blocks. Though now a securely sealed and guarded enclave, it haunts you. My purpose in visiting the scene of the tragedy was not to glimpse the dreadful tower, but to read the survivors' poignant posters, notices and messages.

  18. Thanks for your support Clarkester.

     

    I have one small confession to make. In my litany of acrid cultural dosh, I forgot to single out an architectural gem which overshadows even Hereford Cathedral itself. And is presently clearly visible from the entrance to Hereford United Supporters Club on Blackfriars Street.

     

    I refer, of course, to the three-storey facade of the extension to the Robert Owen Academy on Lower Widemarsh Street. Brutalist / Cubist I'd say (Two Wheels can correct me here), its faux-Portacabin facades finished in tasteful shades of dog turd brown, rancid cream and John Major grey. As impressive as the side of a Chinese container ship.

  19. Considering this type of cladding has been used around the world with a few fires on tall buildings which led to

    it being banned you have to think why the Government never took action over here.

     

    Same type of cladding here (Polyethylene covered in aluminium) 

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/dubai/12076792/Dubai-skyscraper-fire-new-years-eve-2015-live.html

     

    I think it was the late Dennis Healey who once opined: "When you're in a hole, stop digging."

     

    I suggest Ragweed does the same, as I find his moronic 'contributions' (I'm flattering him) to this site boring beyond belief!

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