Anonymous contact: The form below will work with a false email address, but I will not be able to get back to you.
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Benjamin Gotts
Dear Andrew,
Please forgive the intrusion, I tried to send this to you privately but it returned on me. I’ve been following your blog for some time and wonder if you would mind answering a few questions. I’m a PhD student from the University of Aberdeen and I’m doing some research on online news work, particularly the social forces that are reshaping the public’s relationship to news media, the opportunities that the web has provided for innovation and new news management, and the ways in which news work and news-workers are affected by technological change. Would be fantastic if you (or anyone else reading!) could contact me at b.gotts@abdn.ac.uk
thanks again,
Ben
http://www.iade.fi hanna weselius
hello andrew,
I’m trying to contact you but the message mailed to the adress above keeps coming back. sorry for this – which address should I use?
best regards from helsinki,
hanna
http://www.livenewscameras.com Rebecca Sanchez
I work at Fox Chicago where we started a new online project called LiveNewsCameras.com. Its purpose is to display live streaming news sites from across the country and around the world all on one web site. We currently have more than 180 streams, not only from many American stations, but from England, Ireland, France, Spain, Italy, China and more.
We also feature a moderator who guides viewers to streams with breaking news when they happen.
We believe this is the future of journalism and would love some feedback from you and your bloggers as to what you think about it.
As far as we know, we are the first to have come up with this news concept.
Thanking you in advance,
Rebecca Sanchez
livenewscameras.com
Secretblogger
I respectfully request that you seek a response and request an enquiry as to the validity/credibility of the report by Tom Winsor in relation to Police reform, pay and conditions.
This is based on the fact that such a report should be impartial.
It is clear from the below information this is not the case.
I would go as far as to say it appears corrupt if not criminal that he should have the opportunity to complete such a review as he clearly has the opportunity to personally benefit from his recommendations
Tom Winsor (Winsor review) has produced a report that will change the way in which the Government adopts Pay and Conditions for the Police (Winsor 1 & 2).
A major recommendation is to privatise elements of the Police structure; G4S are likely to do this.
We all know Tom Winsor is the author of the Winsor report – the review of police officers’ & staff pay and conditions, but did you know that he is a Partner in the legal firm White & Case, a company he has been with since 2004 (link to his company profile below)
And we also know that a lot of his proposals lean heavily towards opening the door for the potential privatisation of the police and the civilianisation of pre-existing police officer roles in an attempt to “cut costs”. This becomes even clear when you have a look at the G4S website and their preparations to expand their recruitment and skill base to fill these roles.
An interesting thing that you probably didn’t know though is that White & Case are recently responsible for providing advice to G4S to help them secure a £200million contract with Lincolnshire Police to reform the way it does its business.
All of a sudden the Winsor review doesn’t look quite as impartial as the Home Secretary would like it to.
An obvious close partner of G4S I wonder how much Tom Winsor stands to make if the proposals of his report go through and all forces are forced to reform according to his new recommendations.
Can this be impartial and is this appropriate, I believe not.
One of the nice things that has happened in East Anglia this century is the increasing number of really good cheese makers. I enjoy surprising visitors from other parts with a fine range of local cheeses. Another good thing is that they are now much more widely available. Memorable Cheeses in Dial Lane, Ipswich is […]
Three controversial Conservative party donors helped finance Ben Gummer’s successful campaign to win Ipswich, 113 on the Tory target list, at the last election. Between them the three donors contributed £35,000. Two of them Andrew J. Clark (£25,000) and Abdul-Majid Jafir (£5,000) are listed without an address in Mr Gummer’s entry on the Commons register [... […]
One of the Conservative party donors entertained by David Cameron was billionaire businessman Michael Spencer who has a house near Woodbridge and is an associate director of Ipswich Town. The Ipwich Star picked up on this story today and went to local MP Ben Gummer for a quote in which he called for a £50,000 […]
A call for the new organisation charged with running Suffolk Libraries to take a gradual approach to change is made today by James Hargrave on his blog. I entirely agree with his post which could serve as manifesto for most library campaigners in the county. Please read it. Following the resignation of the county council […]
It is not so much the “granny tax” that is making me angry but the suggestion that pensioners have been protected from the worst effects of the nation’s austerity. We are paying heavily, will continue to pay, and pay more because George Osborne thought he could slip a nasty little measure into his budget. Pensioners […]
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