Soltalk April 2018 | Page 29

The wardens reportedly work for a contractor, NSL, hired by Manchester City Council which promised to issue “very clear instructions” and encouraged anyone seeing an enforcement vehicle parked irresponsibly to report it to them. Even worse, when the first warden was challenged by a member of the public, he claimed, entirely wrongly, that he was allowed to park on double yellows because it was part of his job. Perhaps the training courses at Traffic Warden College should be reviewed? And in Pwllheli, North Wales, wardens have sparked fury by ticketing cars which were abandoned when the heaviest snowfall in a generation hit the town. Witnesses said the vehicles were not causing an obstruction but were covered in two feet of the white stuff. Gwynedd Council advised drivers affected to appeal. Skool Daze A study costing almost £10,000 of tax payers’ money has concluded that physical education in Britain’s schools is racist. (Yes, you heard correctly!) The report (snappily entitled “A Whitewashed Curriculum? The Construction of Race in Contemporary PE Curriculum Policy”) says traditional games were developed in the Victorian era by “white privileged males” at elite public schools which often discriminated against minorities, and suggests that learning dances from different cultures should be given greater prominence. It goes on to claim that the games have been used by the British as, “part of a civilising process,” and transported around the world as, “an extension of nationalism and the Empire.” The authors add that PE classes are “whitewashed” because they are based on values that had predominantly white historical roots, while pupils who do not conform to their prevailing values are seen as “lacking” or “deficient.” They add that by focusing on the need for “healthy, active lives” there is “a danger PE lessons can contribute to a re- colonisation of ethnic minorities’ physicality.” (Yes, it’s full of such jargon!) Unsurprisingly, the findings have been largely ridiculed. Former England football star Les Ferdinand, a black player who is now director of football at Queens Park Rangers, described the “ludicrous” research by the British Academy as “a waste of money and a waste of time,” while Lord Ouseley, who chairs the anti-racism football campaign 27 Kick It Out, described it as “an irrelevance and also patronising because people make their own decisions about their involvement in sport.” Spare a thought for … … an anonymous police officer in West Yorkshire who was puzzled to receive a letter ordering him to pay a fine of £81 (€93) for driving an untaxed vehicle in Bradford during February. The mystery was solved when it was found he had written his own name and address on the form recording the offence, instead of the details of the offending driver. ... the National Trust in the UK which has sparked outrage by publishing a picture showing a scone with cream spread on it before the jam to promote visits to the Lanhydrock estate at Bodmin in Cornwall. Local scone lovers were quick to point out that photo depicted a Devon cream tea rather than a Cornish cream tea. Lanhydrock apologised for the “heinous error,” adding that those responsible had been, “reprimanded and marched back over the Tamar” into Devon. ... organisers of Brighton’s Big Cheese Continued overleaf