UK News and Discussions
Posted: Tue May 18, 2021 12:22 pm
A general thread for non-Brexit related news and discussions (please see the Post-Brexit thread for that particular subject).


A community of futurology enthusiasts
https://futuretimeline.net/forum/

https://inews.co.uk/news/politics/conse ... ms-1007172May 18, 2021
Boris Johnson is prepared to spark a war with his backbenches and Tory grassroots in a bid to push through the biggest overhaul of the planning process in more than 70 years.
Riding the wave of support from the recent elections and enjoying a bounce in the polls from the successful vaccination programme, the Prime Minister is now looking to implement “Project Speed”.
As set out in the Government’s Queen’s Speech, a key part of this will be to usher in major reforms to the planning system to deliver on the Tories’ manifesto pledge to build 300,000 homes a year by the mid-2020s.
No surprises there, given the amount of bribes - sorry, I mean "donations" - they get from property developers.Time_Traveller wrote: ↑Sat May 22, 2021 8:45 pm Boris Johnson prepared to go to war with Tory backbenchers and grassroots over vast planning reforms
Boris Johnson is reportedly to marry his fiancee, Carrie Symonds, in July 2022 after sending save-the-date cards to family and friends, according to the Sun.
They have been engaged since late 2019 but, like many couples, had put their marriage plans on hold due to the coronavirus pandemic with numbers able to attend ceremonies curtailed.
While this will be Johnson third marriage, it will be the first for Symonds.
It is unknown where exactly the couple will celebrate the occasion. However, the prime minister’s Buckinghamshire residence, Chequers, is tipped to host the wedding. Another possible venue is said to be the Port Lympne safari park in Kent, as Symonds works for the conservation charity.
https://www.theguardian.com/business/20 ... -fur-tradeMon 31 May 2021
The public is being asked to weigh in on the fur trade, as the government considers a potential ban on sales across the UK.
The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) has launched a call for evidence amid plans for tighter animal welfare standards following Brexit. The consultation will consider the social and economic impacts of fur sales, both in the UK and overseas.
It is understood that the UK could introduce an outright ban depending on the feedback it receives.
The UK was the first country in Europe to ban fur farming in 2000, and has introduced strict rules prohibiting the import of skin and fur products from commercial seal hunting and domestic cats and dogs. However, the sale of other furs are still legal in the UK. Carrie Symonds, Boris Johnson’s wife, has described anyone who buys fur as “really sick”.
The government has been been mulling tougher rules after Brexit, given the UK is no longer bound by the EU’s single market rules that blocked any individual country from taking a unilateral stance on fur trading.
https://www.theguardian.com/business/20 ... t-covid-19Mon 31 May 2021
The UK economy will post its fastest growth since the second world war this year but also faces deeper economic scarring than other major economies, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) has predicted.
In its latest economic outlook, the Paris-based thinktank sharply upgraded its view for UK growth, thanks to the success of the Covid-19 vaccination programme.
It forecasts UK GDP will rise by 7.2% in 2021, the fastest growth since 1941, after a 9.8% contraction in 2020 – the worst in almost 300 years. Back in March, it had forecast UK growth of 5.1% this year. For 2022, growth has been revised significantly higher, too – to 5.5%, from 4.7% three months ago.
https://www.theguardian.com/education/2 ... -proposalsTue 1 Jun 2021
The government is considering paying teachers to add an extra 30 minutes to the school day in England under leaked proposals to help pupils overcome a year of disruption caused by the Covid-19 pandemic.
A plan drawn up by Sir Kevan Collins, the government’s education recovery commissioner, seeks to establish a minimum 35-hour week and add 100 hours of additional schooling compared with existing timetables in many state schools and colleges.
The details come from a 56-page document reported by the Times newspaper, which said Boris Johnson had been briefed on the plan. The proposals are also expected to include further individual or small-group tutoring for five million students and professional development for teachers.
The government has been working on a promised “catch-up” plan for schools and colleges, expected to be published before the summer holidays, but the rumoured £15bn price tag – £700 per pupil over three years – is said to have run into opposition from the Treasury and the chancellor, Rishi Sunak.
Funding the package will hinge on support from No 10 but it adds to the battles the Department for Education (DfE) faces before the autumn spending review, as it is already seeking additional funding for the government’s lifetime skills guarantee as well as an £11bn bill for school and college repairs identified in a report published last week.
Pubs used to be communal hubs until a few decades ago, but gradually they just became more and more like ordinary restaurants. Traditional family-owned or independent pubs have largely been replaced with generic, commercialised chains. That said, there are still independent pubs to be found and even with the chain pubs, many of them still use the old buildings. On the whole though, over the last 40 years, as communities themselves have eroded and become atomised, pubs no longer fill the same role as before. There are some places which still have intact communities where pubs are the same as they ever were, but the list of these places is shrinking. As for breakfast, lunch and dinner - yes, you can do that (just like any restaurant), but if you're looking for a bed for the night, your best bet is a hotel with a bar - the same as anywhere else in the neoliberal world. Bed and Breakfasts exist too, although they're also a lot less common and less frequented than they used to be.Set and Meet Goals wrote: ↑Wed Jun 02, 2021 12:22 am So is the UK actually full of pubs that act as a hub for the local community where people can get breakfast, lunch, dinner and a bed for the night?
I love the idea of that.
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/p ... l2j-lgKgU42 hours ago
Priti Patel is planning to hike visa fees for NHS and other workers from EU countries, triggering criticism of “a stealth tax on frontline heroes”.
Labour is also accusing the home secretary of partially going back on her promise to scrap the immigration surcharge paid by overseas health and care workers, conceded after huge protests.
The row has blown up because Ms Patel is exploring removing a £55 discount on application fees for citizens from 26 countries, most of which are EU members.
The move would hit workers in the NHS and care sectors, as well as seasonal workers such as fruit pickers – all areas where there are fears of staff shortages after Brexit.
It would also mean employers would lose their exemption from paying a £199 fee as part of their sponsorship of foreign workers.