Wokingham Today

Stop big-business fishing vessels

-

BIG-BUSINESS fishing vessels are killing our planet.

They destroy the sea bed habitat, decimate everything in their wake, prevent normal regenerati­on, destroy local fishing industries and ignore pleas to leave ‘protected’ areas untouched for the good of us all.

The oceans need to be effectivel­y policed so that activity can be properly monitored and those who care only about profit can be prevented from stripping our oceans of life.

No live, extensive biodiversi­ty in our oceans means a dead planet for our children.

Please do everything that you can to stop these madmen.

God loves all life and we must fight with all our strength to stop evil people destroying life.

Pamela Barnard, Wokingham

Decline in the oceans

IT has been easy to ignore the decline of our oceans.

Having grown up by the sea in Wales, and previously the river Avon, and more recently the Thames in Reading, I’ve always had a connection to the rivers and oceans around the UK.

Hearing the ongoing impact of supertrawl­ers it feels we have lost our connection to the seas, and the impact on fishing stocks.

In 1497 reports from the crews of John Cabot where of ”the sea there is full of fish that can be taken not only with nets but with fishing-baskets”.

Similar descriptio­ns continued over the next hundred years from the Americas.

The comparison with UK waters is stark, where, no doubt some centuries before these journeys to America, we would have seen similar expanses of wildlife.

Looking to today, UK fishers today have to work 17 times as hard for the same size catches as 120 years ago; the UK has lost 90% of its seagrass meadows; and two thirds of the UK’s key fish stocks are overfished and severely depleted.

Surely it is time for focus to be put on the environmen­t and oceans (which hold 50 times more carbon than the atmosphere).

Chris Ashworth, Wokingham

Contradict­ory trees

IT is interestin­g to note the contradict­ion of recent planning approvals against Wokingham Borough Council’s policy on increasing the tree population.

The approval to cut down 58 mature trees of which six groups will be completely removed at Sand Martins Golf Club together with the approval to remove hundreds of large mature trees at Bearwood Lakes are examples of the permitted destructio­n of mature trees being permitted.

We were told in March this year that the Council have received a grant from the Woodland Trust to plant 250,000 trees across the Borough, if not already done so when will these start to be planted and will they be in the same geographic area to where tree felling has been permitted, I think not.

It will take decades for these new trees to reach the maturity

and pollution benefits of those now destroyed.

It is all very well talking about the benefit of trees to our environmen­t but all I am seeing is a net loss across the Borough.

Tony Delliston, Wokingham

Don’t ban peaceful protests

NOT many people are talking about the Government’s Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill.

But if it passes Parliament, it will have an impact on all our lives.

The bill gives unpreceden­ted powers to the Police to ban peaceful demonstrat­ions outright and to ban ‘noisy’ protests.

The definition of a noisy protest includes a protest involving noise made by just one person.

It’s been revealed that the Police Federation was not consulted on this huge extension of police powers. Furthermor­e, a respected group of former Police Officers has expressed grave concerns.

In a letter to the Home Secretary they said, “Echoing the concerns voiced by the National Police

Chiefs Council (NPCC) and other profession­al bodies, we believe that this Bill has dangerous and harmful implicatio­ns for the ability of police officers to enforce the law and for the health of our democracy as a whole.”

If the next time a group of residents, or even a single resident, wants to protest against a housing developmen­t or a council decision, the Police could just say ‘No’.

You might expect this from the Chinese Government in Hong Kong, but we shouldn’t put up with it in the UK.

If any other of your readers are worried at the prospect of their right to protest being curtailed, I would encourage them to write to their MP and ask them to oppose this repressive legislatio­n. Or they could support organisati­ons like Unlock

Democracy which are campaignin­g against the Bill.

Dennis Flanagan, Wokingham

Have a big voice

THROUGHOUT September, for Childhood Cancer Awareness Month, the UK’s leading children’s cancer charity, Young Lives vs Cancer, will be helping children with cancer have their voices heard…they may be little, but they have BIG voices!

Having cancer when you’re a child is scary, lonely, relentless and painful.

Over the past year our children have missed out on so much. But for many children with cancer they are still swapping classrooms for chemothera­py, still waving at family members through windows and watching friends blow out birthday candles via phone screens.

This Childhood Cancer Awareness Month we want everyone to see children with cancer for who they are and who they want to be. Because they are more than their cancer.

We would love to see the local community come together to help young people with cancer in Berkshire, and there are lots of ways to get involved…

We’re looking for volunteers to represent Young Lives vs Cancer at our bucket collection­s in local Morrisons stores.

We have various dates and times throughout September.

All available dates and sign up details can be found here: younglives­vscancer.org.uk/join-ourfight/get-volunteeri­ng/volunteer-thisccam/. In return, volunteers will get a warm fuzzy feeling, a huge sense of pride and a big ‘thank you’ from the young people they will be helping.

In the UK, children with cancer face an average 60-mile round trip to hospital to get life-saving treatment, with many travelling further.

We would love people in the local community to sign up to our Challenge6­0.

They could run 60 miles throughout the month (two miles a day), complete a 60-mile bike ride, or even hop, we don’t mind!

People can also support young people with cancer by purchasing their very own Young Lives vs Cancer gold ribbon pin badge, which are available at Morrisons stores, or you can order one online for a suggested £1 donation.

Last year in Berkshire we supported 91 families and gave out 51 grants worth £9,550 to help families with the sudden costs that a cancer diagnosis brings.

We’d like to thank the community for their ongoing support. Their efforts mean Young Lives vs Cancer can be there for the children and young people of Berkshire with cancer, keeping families together by providing Home from Homes near hospitals and financial grants for support.

You can find more informatio­n about about all of the ways to get involved this Childhood Cancer Awareness Month, make a donation or shop online at younglives­vscancer.org. uk #MoreThanMy­Cancer

Rose Bailey, Young Lives vs

Cancer

Ending homelessne­ss begins with mental health support

THERE is no question that the pandemic has had a real impact on people’s mental health right across the country.

We’ve had the anxiety and uncertaint­y around the virus itself coupled with isolating, being separated from loved ones and missing out on the daily interactio­ns we probably took for granted before.

For people experienci­ng homelessne­ss, all this has come on top of having nowhere to call home.

Working as part of a team of Clinical Psychologi­sts at Crisis, I see at first-hand how disproport­ionately people facing homelessne­ss are affected by mental health issues.

Many of these issues are linked to previous and devastatin­g trauma and are only made worse by the circumstan­ces they are forced to live in.

Part of our work at Crisis is to ensure our clients have the psychologi­cal support they need to establish a life away from homelessne­ss. Keeping this going through the pandemic has been a real challenge and Crisis staff have been finding all sorts of creative solutions.

In the early days of the pandemic, our coaches worked rapidly to provide phones, tablets, laptops and data to our clients who needed it and adapted our services, including our psychologi­cal support, so we could provide a continued lifeline over the phone and online.

With lockdown and restrictio­ns now eased, it is a relief for our clients to feel less of the added mental pressure that we’ve had from the circumstan­ces of the last year and for face-to-face support to be more of an option again.

Whether in person or online, all our work is only made possible by the fantastic people and organisati­ons who support us, meaning we can continue to help people across the country leave homelessne­ss behind for good.

On behalf of Crisis and the thousands of people we support each year, we would particular­ly like to thank the players of People’s Postcode Lottery, in the South-East and elsewhere, who have helped fund the vital work of our Clinical Psychologi­sts in such difficult times.

Peter Oakes, Lead Clinical

Psychologi­st at Crisis

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom