Tendring Topics.......on Line
‘The Isle of Avalon’ – in north-east Essex ?
Viewers
of the tv serial Merlin will recall
the penultimate scene in which the apparently mortally wounded King Arthur was
being transported across a lake to the Isle of Avalon where, according to
legend, hail, rain and snow are unknown and the wind never blows coldly.
The Tendring District, of which Clacton-on-Sea is the biggest town, is hardly a second
Avalon on the southern East Anglian coast.
We’re certainly not free of cold winds, though we prefer to think of
them as ‘bracing breezes’! There’s no
doubt though that we do escape most of the extreme weather conditions that
regularly afflict other less fortunate regions of England . We had much more rain than usual during last
year’s summer and autumn – but we had no floods like those elsewhere. We did endure something of the cold snap that
brought much of England
to a standstill at the beginning of last week but, once again, we didn’t have
such a heavy snowfall as elsewhere, nor did the snow lie on the ground for so
long.
Snow
– falling snow and lying snow – is the one circumstance guaranteed to keep my
‘iron horse’ (my mobility scooter) in its stable. It did so on Sunday 20th January
and again on Monday and Tuesday, 21st and 22nd but that (so far!) is all. In Clacton
the snowfall began at about noon on Sunday and carried on continuously for
several hours. On Monday morning about
2in of snow was lying on gardens, highways and footpaths but it was slowly
beginning to thaw. There was rain on
Monday night that didn’t freeze as it hit the ground and on Tuesday the thaw
continued. Not bad – compared with the
way in which snow caused havoc elsewhere.
Considering
the fairly limited amount of snow that fell in our area, it does seem extraordinary
that 14 schools in the Colchester area and 10
in the Tendring District closed on Monday 21st January and others
opened late on that day. Iain Wicks,
Essex Development Manager for the Federation of Small Businesses felt that
these schools had let parents down. He
is quoted as saying ‘It seems after the
first flake of snow, some schools hit the self-destruct button’. In my own-school days in Ipswich
in the 1930s I don’t recall my school ever
closing because of snow. Nor do I
recall my sons’ schools in Clacton during the
1960s ever closing for that cause, though there were some pretty severe winters
during those decades.
It
is suggested that circumstances are different now because many children live
further from their schools. That may be
so – but between 1931 and 1937 when I was at secondary school, I used to cycle
three miles each way to and from school daily.
The reason most frequently cited for school closure is ‘health and safety’, giving the
impression that some bureaucrat (probably in Brussels !) sends out a directive demanding
school closure if there is snow on the ground.
Nothing could be further from the truth.
The decision to close a school or to keep it open is that of the head
teacher. A possible reason for closure can be the head teacher’s not
unreasonable fear that if a child falls and suffers an injury in a frozen
playground, the parents will sue for damages and if a teacher does the same
thing he or she will also sue!
In my day it was accepted that accidents did sometimes happen, and that if anyone was to blame it was the victim, who should have taken more care. This isn’t so today. Watch daytime commercial tv. You won’t have to wait long before a benign gentleman (or lady) will appear on the screen to advise anyone who has ‘had an accident that wasn’t their fault’ to contact so-and-so specialist solicitors who will pursue their claim for damages. Furthermore, they assure affected viewers, ‘you’ll receive every penny of the damages awarded, because the person or organisation from whom you are claiming will have to the pay the legal costs’. The implication is that there is no such thing as a genuine accident. Someone or some organisation is always to blame and they are going to have to pay damages. No wonder some head teachers decide to play safe and close the school rather than risk an accident and an expensive damages claim!
A
less worthy – and perhaps more probable – reason why a head teacher might
decide to close a school is the dreaded School
League Table. A snowy day will mean
that some children will genuinely find it difficult to get to school. Others will welcome the snow as an excuse for
playing truant. Genuine and non-genuine
absentees will all be regarded as truants – and the number of truancies is an
important factor in determining a school’s position on that Table. A school that is closed can have
no truancies!
It
is possible to understand the motives of head teachers who close their schools
when there is snow. It is rather less
easy to understand the Railway Company’s action in cancelling trains running to
and from Clacton for no other reason than the threat of snow! On Monday 14th
January, six days before Clacton had its snowfall, a 30 mph speed limit was
imposed on a number of trains leaving the station and others were cancelled,
leaving commuters in the lurch. This was because although there was no snow in Clacton there was snowfall in other areas through which
trains might have to pass. ‘There were
flurries of snow in Colchester and Norwich
had several inches’.
It seems that
these measures were taken ‘to reduce the
risk of snow being sucked into the trains electric motors and damaging them’. Is cancelling train journeys or slowing them
to a snail’s pace really the best or
only way to prevent this? Perhaps the
now-privately-run railway companies should consult those who run the
Trans-Siberian Railway. This carries passengers and goods across part of
northern Europe and the whole width of the continent of Asia from Moscow to the Pacific
coast, summer and winter alike.
Electrification began in the early days of the USSR in
the 1920s and the last steam engine was pensioned off in the mid-1980s. I can’t believe that a little snow on that
line brings their trains to a halt!
'The Shape of Things to Come'*
No-one
spelt out to me my duties and objectives when I was appointed as Tendring
District Council’s first Public Relations Officer in 1973. It was clear to me though that I should
endeavour to persuade the general public to identify themselves with the new
Council. They, the electorate, had
voted for the council’s members to be their representatives. It followed that the council’s successes (and
no doubt occasional failures) were their
own successes and failures, not those of some remote and alien body, known
to them chiefly as a sender of rate demands!
Although, during the seven years that I was the Council’s PRO I had my small successes and managed, on the whole, to present a positive picture of the Council and its activities to the local and regional press radio and tv, I can’t really claim to have succeeded in gaining that objective. Despite my efforts the electorate continued to regard the council with suspicion – as ‘them and us’.
Magnify
that situation a few hundred times and
you have something like the way in which much of the public regards the
European Union. From most of the
national press you would never dream that the United Kingdom was actually a
substantial and very influential member of the EU and that this membership had
been confirmed by a referendum in the 1970s.
The United Kingdom is
represented at every level in the Union and
our representatives’ opinions are respected even on matters concerning the
Eurozone of which, by our own government’s choice, we are not members.
Furthermore,
the European Union has its own parliament which, since it is elected by a
system of proportional representation, is more truly representative of the
electorate than our national parliament.
It even has members from Britain ’s
UKIP whose main, if not sole, policy is to abolish all European Union
institutions! It is surely extraordinary
that those who protest most strongly about the activities of the European
Commission, because it is not directly elected and is therefore ‘undemocratic’,
are also the most determined to deny additional power to the European
Parliament that unquestionably is a
democratic institution.
Over
and over again we see the EU being presented as an alien and hostile
organisation with which we are eternally in a state of ‘cold war’, instead of
as respected international organisation of which we are an influential member.
Now
the whole matter is to be settled – at some time in the future! If the Conservative Party wins the next
election and David Cameron is still leader, he will negotiate with other
members of the EU to try to ‘repatriate’
to the United Kingdom some of the powers currently vested in the EU (I hope
that they won’t prove to be powers that curb the money-manipulators who brought
the world into its current sorry state, and the powers that protect the jobs
and safety of working people!) Having
successfully done that, he will invite the British public to vote whether to
stay in or get out of the EU. He himself
will then support continued membership of the emasculated EU that he will have
created.
It is unlikely
that I shall still be around to see Mr Cameron face that very first hurdle;
winning the election. I certainly don’t expect – or hope – to live to see the
fruition of his plans. What I would like to happen is really of no interest
because there is no way in which I can affect the outcome. I am happy though to place on record what I think
could happen as the future unfolds.
During
the next few decades countries of the European Union are likely to draw closer
together both economically and politically. They will eventually become a
Federation like the USA, with clearly defined Federal Functions and State
Functions – saving millions of Euros by transferring many of the present powers
and functions of the various national governments to democratically elected
local authoriries (real localisation
in fact) and transferring others (overall economic planning, foreign affairs and defence for instance) to
the new Federal Government formed from a proportionately elected European
Parliament. These will be among the
factors that hasten European economic recovery. The Euro will recover its value (already at
the end of January 2013 it was gaining
in value against the pound sterling) and all members of the EU will adopt the
Euro as their currency. The EU (renamed
the European Federation or EUROFA) will then be able to co-operate,
negotiate and, where appropriate, compete with the USA and the world’s emerging economies on equal
terms, and without the dead hand of the UK continually impeding progress.
In
the UK
a triumphant Conservative/UKIP coalition will hold an in/out referendum on membership of the EU and will decide to
withdraw its membership. Scenes of widespread national rejoicing in England will be followed by Scotland ’s declaration of independence from the UK and its
application for membership of the by-then-established EUROFA. The USA
will transfer its ‘special relationship’ from the now-reduced UK to EUROFA. World markets – China , India ,
the USA , Latin America –
will find trading with a united Europe having a
single currency and a unified economic policy simpler and more straightforward
than with the previous proliferation of nation-states and currencies. They probably won’t even notice that there is
another once-powerful country that has voluntarily put itself outside Federal Europe ’s frontiers, clamouring for their attention.
In Britain
our great-great grandchildren will live to regret the way that their parents
and grandparents voted in that second referendum – and a movement urging yet
another referendum (‘Why should we suffer
as a result of a stupid referendum held way back in 2018 – or whenever’)
would be launched.
It’s
not a very enticing prospect for us Brits.
Never mind. I am sure that the
leader writers of the Express, Mail and
Sun would offer quite different possible futures. Only time will reveal which of us was right. It is quite likely that none of
us will be. It is a far from remote
possibility that accelerating climate change, still denied by some, will make
nonsense of all our current hopes and fears.
In any case, who in 1921 the year in which I was born, or indeed in 1945
at the end of World War II, could possibly have foreseen what our country, Europe and the world would be like in AD 2013?
* 'The Shape of Things to Come' was a work of Science Fiction, written by H.G.Wells and published in the early 1930s.. It purported to forecast the history of the world from the late 1930s to the beginning of the 21st Century. Parts of it were remarkably accurate. He forecast the outbreak of World War II in 1940 over a border dispute between Germany and Poland about Danzig and the Polish Corridor, but was wildly out in many of his later surmises. Fortunately perhaps, although we travel forward in space we travel backwards through time and can only see what is already behind us. I don't suppose that my, or anyone else's, attempted glance into the future is any more accurate than that of H.G.Wells.
* 'The Shape of Things to Come' was a work of Science Fiction, written by H.G.Wells and published in the early 1930s.. It purported to forecast the history of the world from the late 1930s to the beginning of the 21st Century. Parts of it were remarkably accurate. He forecast the outbreak of World War II in 1940 over a border dispute between Germany and Poland about Danzig and the Polish Corridor, but was wildly out in many of his later surmises. Fortunately perhaps, although we travel forward in space we travel backwards through time and can only see what is already behind us. I don't suppose that my, or anyone else's, attempted glance into the future is any more accurate than that of H.G.Wells.
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