Ignore the killjoys — let’s have a right royal knees-up!
THIS work/life balance business is getting completely out of hand. One of my ladies, who I’ve agreed can remain nameless, writes from Brentwood, Essex. On a recent visit to a hair salon, she found herself in the next chair to a woman with a laptop, mobile phone and notepad. For three hours, while enjoying a number of ‘treatments’, the woman tapped away and gabbled into her mobile, obviously in some kind of Zoom wossname. She was so engrossed that she never once spoke to her stylist. Well, they do say the only way is Essex. But it certainly brings a whole new meaning to WFH: Working From Hairdressers!
WITHIN about five minutes of the first lockdown coming into force, councils all over Britain started closing roads with gay abandon and without warning.
Anti-car fanatics hijacked the Covid crisis to further their own ‘green’ agenda. residents woke up to find their streets had been turned into no-go areas overnight.
Cranes trundled in, dumping giant concrete planters to seal off access to motor vehicles. Metal barriers, bollards and numberplate recognition cameras were installed to enforce the ban.
no one voted for this policy. nobody was consulted. no notice was given. the socalled low traffic neighbourhoods were simply imposed on people by officials.
the folly of this madcap scheme soon became apparent, with the emergency services experiencing severe delays to response times and bus companies complaining that their routes were being disrupted.
tradesmen, such as builders and plumbers, were prevented from getting to work. Journey times, especially for the disabled, increased significantly. Promoted as a measure to help the environment, these ltns simply forced traffic on to main roads, increasing congestion and pollution.
A cursory, preliminary study would have pointed up these problems. But the left-wing, anti-motorist zealots who infest Britain’s town Halls simply weren’t interested. ideology took precedence, and to hell with the consequences.
yet in all other circumstances, these self-same council jobsworths are in thrall to the suffocating, tick-box elf’n’safety culture.
the run-up to the Platinum Jubilee celebrations has given them an excuse to go into red tape overdrive. if you want to hold a street party to mark Her Maj’s magnificent 70 years on the throne, these killjoys will make you jump through all kinds of hoops.
organisers have had endless obstacles thrown in their way by petty bureaucrats. Councils are insisting on extensive risk assessments before they will give consent to close roads for the day.
Michael gove, the levelling Up minister, has been forced to write to local authorities telling them to ease off after a raft of ludicrous rules came to light. the Mail on Sunday revealed that party planners in Bournemouth were refused permission to hang bunting from lamp posts because ‘they were not designed for this purpose’.
they were also told they had to take out a £5 million public liability insurance policy.
in Hemel Hempstead, Herts, pensioner gloria odell was sent a 23-page application form, demanding she carried out everything from a Covid risk assessment to a severe weather management plan. the council also wanted her to draw up a ‘counter-terrorism plan’.
not surprisingly, gloria abandoned plans to hold a party for the 15 houses in her street, which was to have raised money for a local hospice. Another triumph for the prodnose guardianistas.
in the govester’s own Surrey Heath constituency, officials are insisting on a ‘slip, trip and fall hazards’ assessment and specifying that only reusable plastic plates and cups can be used.
they, too, want to know what arrangements organisers have for dealing with ‘extreme weather’. Are they expecting a tornado to strike Surrey Heath in June?
the daft demand for organisers to provide detailed contingency plans for severe weather is standard pretty much everywhere.
Hasn’t anyone told these pernickety elf’n’safety commissars that in Hertford, Hereford and Hampshire hurricanes hardly ever happen?
Funnily enough, the english have always managed to cope with summer showers. it’s not uncommon for invitations to barbecues and street parties to feature the age-old proviso: if wet, in village hall. in many cases, councils making these unreasonable demands are exceding their statutory powers.
HoW many more times? give anyone a modicum of authority and they will always, always abuse it. organising a street party should be fairly straightforward. gove’s department has put out guidance busting many of the myths perpetrated by officials.
For instance, you don’t need a music licence and nor are you required to pay a fee for temporary road closures, provided you obtain the go-ahead from the relevant highways authority. there is absolutely no requirement to purchase expensive public liability insurance, either.
the bureaucrats behind all this red tape are simply creating work to justify their own existence. For the past 30-odd years this column has been documenting the explosion of the elf’n’safety industry, compounded by the spiv lawyers who advertise on daytime tV, promising com-pen-say-shun for any minor inconvenience or broken fingernail.
they have created a crazy, riskaverse society which sees calamity lurking around every corner and reached its nadir during Covid.
i often wonder what the Queen’s generation, who faced real danger daily during the war, make of this cry-baby, cotton-wool culture.
to be honest, i don’t recall any of this palaver during the Silver Jubilee celebrations. i’ve been looking back at pictures of street parties from 1977 and there’s not a hi-viz jacket or hard hat in sight.
So if you are holding a street party and you encounter unwarranted interference from a council clipboard commissar, just tell them to shove off.
After Covid threw a spanner into the last couple of summers, we’re all due a right royal knees-up.
And the good news is that if you now find yourself living in a low traffic neighbourhood, at least you won’t have to apply for permission to close the road . . .
offer his view on hunting in Africa, even though — according to his Wikipedia page — he was born in Britain (though educated in what was then rhodesia, now Zimbabwe) and has spent most of his career in this country, too.
Why should those who live outside Africa not have a say in Africa’s conservation? Lions, among other endangered species, are iconic to the world, making their future a global issue. And let’s face it, whoever is killing Africa’s trophy species, it’s not Africans, who have no history of killing animals for pleasure.
it is curious that Mr Boynton thinks trophy hunting — a colonial construct if ever there was one — is the answer to the prayers of rural communities in Africa.
in my experience, the protrophy hunting lobby often tries to portray its opponents as ‘emotional’ or ‘uninformed’.
But there are plenty of scientists, conservationists, community leaders and citizens from Africa who oppose trophy hunting.
i know. i have met them and talked to them during my own research. Besides, the move to ban the import of trophies is being driven from within the continent.
A year ago, Barbara Creecy, south Africa’s environment minister, announced her intention to act on the recommendations of an independent committee, which spent months examining the management, breeding, hunting, trade and handling of lions and other species including elephants, leopards and rhinoceroses.
Captive-lion breeding and hunting is now in line to be scrapped in south Africa, as are all tourist interactions with captive lions.
the sale of products such as bones is also on course to be outlawed.
i can think of no better way for Britain to support its Commonwealth partner’s efforts to get a grip on this complicated issue than by outlawing trophy imports.
i don’t see how this could have a negative effect. ■Lord ASHCROFT is an international businessman, philanthropist, author and pollster. for information about his work, visit lordashcroft.com and for more information on his wildlife work, visit lordashcroftwildlife.com. follow him on Twitter and facebook: @LordAshcroft
The move for a ban comes from within Africa