Wednesday 30 November 2011

Heard around Tottenham

A local councillor predicts a thriving cultural scene, especially in hip hop music, will revive the borough regardless of how much assistance the government provides the area.

For their part, however, Tottenham traders fret that if money from the Riot (Damages) Act doesn't arrive soon, they'll go out of business.

A young musician says the success of rappers from around London, like Chipmunk in the north and Tinie Tempah in the south, has forced all aspiring artists to raise their game.

Wednesday 23 November 2011

Occupy London Updates

Plenty of movement on London's Occupy front today.

The Evening Standard says drug use overfloweth at the St. Paul's Camp

@OCCUPYLSX tweets that students have occupied 53 Gordon Square in Bloomsbury

Ian Johnston at msnbc.com runs a great story about two financial experts sharing gifts and ideas with protesters at St. Paul's.

And a London judge sets Dec. 19 as the date for the cathedral campers' eviction hearings

Tuesday 22 November 2011

A peek at Occupy LSX 'Bank of Ideas'

Occupy London's new location, just east of Finsbury Square, has a different feel than the park and St Paul's Cathedral.
Protesters from London's Occupy movement claimed a third site on Friday when they settled into a disused UBS building near Finsbury Square.

The occupiers declared squatter's rights, saying they plan to remain at the'Bank of Ideas' legally, but reports have the Swiss banking giant moving to evict.

Tuesday 15 November 2011

The end of Occupy?

After a crackdown in the US, is the Occupy Movement (as we know it) on its last legs? photo by Benjamin Gunn

City of London officials restarted legal action against Occupy London after a two week break. They say an eviction will likely take several weeks and police will not forcibly remove protesters.

Wednesday 9 November 2011

'I Love Tottenham' Tales: VIP Sports

VIP Sports' Bulent Huseyin stands outside his recently reopened storefront in Tottenham.
 
The final installment in our series of Tottenham businesses striving to recover from London's August riots. 
VIP Sports
 
The owner of a Tottenham sporting goods shop looks at CCTV footage of the empty street outside. “If I never saw the seconds ticking I would think the camera is frozen,” says Bulent Huseyin, who runs VIP Sports.

The shop raised its damaged shutters and reopened for business this week, three months after a neighborhood protest erupted into rioting. Huseyin expects it will take six months for his customers, mostly young men from the impoverished area, to return in force. But just opening the doors is a start.  

Thursday 3 November 2011

'I Love Tottenham' Tales: 2XL Recruitment


Boards surround the burned shell of 2XL's longtime offices on Tottenham High RoadPhoto by Alan Stanton.



Part four in our series examining Tottenham businesses riot recovery efforts.

2XL Recruitment

Somebody will foot a very large bill for London’s August riot. Wednesday’s Evening Standard estimated that tab could rise to £370 million, 300 of which would go to businesses damaged during the four days of violence.

Tottenham recruiting and training center 2XL is one of those firms waiting for compensation from the Riot (Damages) Act, the 1886 law that says impacted areas’ police funds must cover riot costs.

With the Metropolitan Police concerned about potentially massive deficits, however, no payment plan has been created and negotiations are ongoing. That’s a problem, says 2XL director Angela Hall.