Random Acts of Kindness

If you spot a backpacker or tourist who appears to be a bit lost, and has just climbed one of Bristol’s steeper hills, then here are a couple of cheap places to send them:

http://www.bristolbackpackers.co.uk/ (Bristol Backpackers Hostel) (+44 117 925 7900)


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http://www.fmbristol.co.uk/ (The Full Moon) (+44 117 9245 007)


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£20 Broadband Tax

Via Computer Weekly:

Non-BT networks will have to pay a £20 tax for every home they connect to a fibre-based next-generation network, according to proposals from the Valuation Office Agency (VOA).

This proposal could earn the government some £205m a year. This would be in addition to what it presently earns from business taxes on BT, Virgin Media, Global Crossing and other network operators that specialise in business networks.

The proposal is buried in an appendix to a guide for industryregarding next-generation access networks.

VOA logo

And even more irritatingly, apparently I’ve already paid a £7.50 tax for my Virgin broadband.

Here’s an idea:

Every social media pillock guru with an iPhone who can spell “XML” best of three times has been going on about digital inclusion for years. How about – and this is really controversial - rather than spending money on grants for marginal activities involving social entrepreneurs, fake charities and other oxygen thieves, the VOA/HMRC just choose not to levy a confusing and rather arbitrary tax on broadband cables that will only end up being passed on to customers in higher prices; a tax furthermore that is so confusing that it requires an extensive guidance document for telecoms investors.

Oi, Pickles: have a word with the Treasury and see about giving this lot the Audit Commission treatment, would you?

A Mosque at Ground Zero? Well, not really.

New York City does things on a grander scale than Bristol, but behind every great building is a planning office (the Department of City Planning), a local government body (The New York City Council), a planning committee and a few community groups to soak up the energy of local do-gooders (specifically Manhattan Community Board 1 in this case). And also a huge pile of planning and zoning applications.


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Proposals to create a mosque in an old coat factory in New York – previously “Cordoba House”, now the “Park 51 center” - have raised the expected heat and light in political and media circles due to its proximity to the site of the former World Trade Centres (Ground Zero). A particularly well-quoted poll purports that 64% of Americans think it is “wrong”, or that 34% say the group “don’t have the right”.

As with all polls: the trick it to ask the right question to get the required answer.

I suspect the following questions were not included asking:

  • Does a government have the right to stop the owner of a building using it for lawful purposes?
  • Is it wrong for the government to prevent a place of worship being opened?

As with all polls: ignore it, and look at the details.

One might think from what has been said in much of the press that this initiative is a plan to create a cubby hole for a store-front preacher. In fact the mosque is one tiny part of a $100 million property deal (the Cordoba Initiative) run by Soho Properties, a moderately successful developer backed by money from the Arab diaspora. So although one of the main backers, Imam Feisal Abdul Raif opting to make himself scarce, you can relax; this is all about Capitalism, not Islamism or indeed Terrorism. This bunch are no more likely to blow themselves up than is the Archbishop of Canterbury to strap on armour and smite unbelievers in the Holy Land.

This property deal is in the news due to the  August 3rd decision of NYC’s Landmark Preservation Committee to not designate the Park Place building as a Landmark; more bureaucratically “to remove it from the Commission’s calendar”. The original proposal put to the commission (someone local needs to find the RFE form) was as follows:

45-47 PARK PLACE BUILDING, 45-47 Park Place (aka 45-51 Park Place)
Landmark Site: Borough of Manhattan Tax Map Block 126, Lot 9 in part, consisting of the portion of the lot bounded by a line beginning at the southeastern corner of the lot; running westerly along the southern lot line 54 feet 5 inches to the southwestern corner of the 45-47 Park Place Building; thence northerly along the exterior of the western wall of said building and parallel with the easterly side of West Broadway to the northern lot line; thence easterly along the northern lot line to the eastern lot line; thence southerly along the eastern lot line to the point of beginning.

But if you have a look at it:

(note – I’m working by comparison to this picture of the old coat factory which is approximately half of the block, rather than the Google Maps address)

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then surely as long as the developers re-use the marble columns, what’s the problem? Mind you, I may be biased due to my old world values; I’m pretty sure I can stand in the middle of Bristol blindfolded and confidently point at something older than New York.

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