Tuesday, 5 April 2011

Increasing bus fares.

As of the 3rd of April, bus fares for concessions in Greater Manchester increased. Concessions includes people aged between 5 and 16, people over 60 and people with a disability before 9.30am and college students who have a concessions passes. The concession fare was once 40p a journey, just before I started high school it increased to 50p and increased to 80p a few years ago. This didn't really affect me as I had a free bus pass because I lived further away, and there's not a church school near where I live and the school I went to was a church school in another town. But see now I have a concession pass which means I don't have to pay adult fare to get the college. I must here add that whereas according to the law I am not yet an adult, but I have to pay adult fare for public transport because I'm over 16. I must also add that adult fares are ridiculously high on buses. My concession pass has meant that for the last 7 months I've been able to travel to and from college for 80 pence a journey, which comparatively to £2.70 as an adult is pretty good.

Now, due to the changes in concession fares, the fare is half adult fare. My bus journeys are now costing me £1.35, that's 55p extra a journey, £1.10 extra a day, £5.50 more a week!

I, like many am astonished at this vast increase in price, and as a poor college student unable to find a part-time job living off my parents this isn't good. I don't like my parents having to spend so much on my travel, I mean we're not poor, we're pretty much a middle class suburban family but an extra £5.50 a week is a lot of money.

It would be very easy for me to complain about the bus services and the council wanting all our money, but they can't really help it. After digging around to confirm my suspicions, the council have had to dramatically reduced subsidies to GMPTE (Greater Manchester Public Transport Executive)-though I think they now call themselves Transport for Greater Manchester? So basically from what I can infer, due to the massive cuts the government is making to all their departments including local councils (the larger cuts happening to councils in poorer regions- this is somehow allowed), this increase in fares is all due to the government! Surprise surprise!

And see, they've had to increase the fares to make up for all the money they're loosing and given that as I've explained adult bus prices are extortionately high, the concession fare is the only place this money could have come from. A half fares is generally a fair deal if you think about it (or at least it would be if you weren't halving an already very high price.

So, once again it seems government cuts are going to affect young people. So that's tuition fees tripling, EMA's going and public transport costs increasing. It's almost as if every cut is negatively impacting people who aren't rich, middle-aged, posh, tory MPs. Funny how that works out. I sometimes wonder if David Cameron, you know that prime-minister we have that wasn't voted in, and his coalition government, also oddly not voted in, are trying to screw up the country as much as they can in 4, oh wait sorry is it 5 now, 5 years before they scarper off back to their large fancy mansions in whichever posh village they choose to reside.

Basically, to sum up my poorly constructed, quite opinionated rant, the coalition UK government are ruining everything and should be stopped, maybe we could protest, it worked for Tunisia and Egypt, and we live in a democratic country, we have a say, surely they have to listen when we speak, surely when the people of Britain protest on the streets of London the government are going to listen...


(I must add that I am sure to have made factual errors in this post, and I take a pretty opinionated view on all this, but, I'm kinda right ;) (but just, don't quote me or anything).

Monday, 21 February 2011

Short story

Hello, hello, hello. I wrote this short story last night because it was fun and the internet was not working, so yes I wrote this thing, it's not the best, and I'm not very good at how the spacing works and stuff but yes, enjoy, or not- you may hate it, I'm certainly starting to. (also note I did write this in the early hours of the morning so if it makes barely any sense, that's why.)

Minnie.

Minnie had been named after her Great-Grandmother. Grandma Minnie died 2 days before Minnie’s birth, so in turn her parents felt obliged to respect their dead relative by naming their new-born child after this lady. And so Minnie came to be, though, it being an odd name and rather old-fashioned, Minnie’s friends, family, and anyone who she happened to come across referred to her purely as ‘Min’. Which, as far as nicknames go wasn’t too garish or loud so to Minnie didn’t seem such a bad one to have.

Minnie often liked to observe, she could spend hours staring out of her bedroom window onto the fairly un-eventful, un-interesting street below. Minnie’s family couldn’t understand why she would ever want to spend her time doing this, and would often beg her to play with dolls and run around outside like the other children, but Minnie always insisted she would much rather watch from the inside as the day went by outside. This watching out the window was for the most part, inconsequential. Sometimes Minnie would happen to see the neighbouring couple squabbling before entering the house, or would watch as the teenage boy from around the corner fell off his bike while attempting a wheelie (something Minnie doubted he would ever be able to do, although secretly hoped he would never give up). While Minnie sat and watched these things, they never accounted for much.

When Minnie turned nine, her mother and father presented her with a compact camera. She was delighted and from then on, not only watched the street, but opened the window as wide as it would stretch and snapped photo after photo of the view below. No-one ever seemed to notice as Minnie watched them from above, zooming in on their life. Careful not to ever use the flash, these photos gave Minnie more insight into people’s lives than they cared anyone to know.

One Sunday morning, when Minnie was 17, a tall man walked sheepishly down the street of Minnie’s house. He was a young man, early twenties, short black hair, and scruffy clothes, with a nervous scowl on his face. ‘Snap’. The man looked around him, obviously anxious, he was well on guard. The street was quiet, it being fairly early most of the neighbours were still in bed or lazily going about their morning routine behind closed curtains. The man crossed the street, kicking at a pigeon on his way across. Minnie decided to get dressed, but as she turned away she heard 3 loud thuds, shocked by the noise she turned back to the window. The man was now outside number 32, banging on the door with one hand, other hand deep in his pants pocket, Minnie watched intently as the man rocked impatiently outside the door. As soon as it opened he forced himself through, slamming the door behind him.

Concerned, Minnie attached her camera to the tripod and changed the setting to record and listened intently, by now the street was slowly waking up. Next door Mr Gujarat returning from his night shift, looked up at Minnie in the window, and scowling walked moodily into his house. But neither he nor the woman and her child leaving for church just next door to 32 heard the sounds coming from with-in. Minnie listened closer still, head stretching out the window. She could only hear the odd shout, a smash of pot on the floor. Worried, she pulled on the hoodie left lying on her desk chair and slipped into the flip-flops by her door. Leaving the camera, which was still recording, Minnie crept downstairs, and, disabling the house alarm she slowly left the house, closing the door as quietly as she could behind her.

It was cold outside, not unbearably, but the chill still clung to Minnie legs. Slowly, she walked the path from the door to her gate, but before she could open it, ‘BANG!’ Minnie flinched and then froze. Screaming was now coming from number 32, and before Minnie could move the door swung open and out ran the man from before. Minnie dived behind the wall beside her, crouching down she tried not the breath as she heard the man run fearlessly down the road. The man dove into the white van sitting at the end of the road and with a load screech accelerated off around the corner. Minnie, now grasping her nerve shot up, leapt over the wall and ran towards number 32, the door still ajar she ran in to find the owner of the house, Emily Jones, lying screaming in agony in the centre of the hallway, clutching her chest.

“Help me!” she exclaimed.

Minnie, recovering from the shock of the sight went over her and kneeled beside her.

“It’s okay I’m here”, Minnie managed to muster up these quiet words before grabbing the phone lay cracked beside the woman. It was thankfully still working, Minnie called for an ambulance. Running into the kitchen she grabbed a tea towel, and then once back in the hallway placed it on the woman’s wound, applying pressure to stop the bleeding.

The rest, to Minnie, was a blur. Soon after neighbours turned up and took over, eventually the ambulance and police arrived, then Minnie was left, sitting in shock on the curb outside. After being told by the police they would be around later to question her, Minnie’s parents took her inside, making her change out of her blood stained night clothes. Alone in her room Minnie lay on the bed, and, still in shock, drifted into a daze.

“Beep beep beep”

The noise woke her from her daydream, getting up Minnie went and looked at the camera, ‘Memory Card full’. All of a sudden Minnie realised she had left it recording, and it had only just stopped. Taking the camera off the tripod, Minnie looked at the content, with a glowing smile she hurtled out of the room and skipped down the stairs.

‘Inquisitive Girl saves Woman’s life and helps put Scum in Jail’, though dismayed at the word ‘scum’ (in Minnie’s opinion, the front page of a local paper wasn’t a place for opinions), Minnie was secretly delighted. She paid for the over-priced publication and left the store, feeling more significant to the rest of the world today than she had on any other day in her life. That day a bunch of flowers had arrived sent from Emily Jones- ‘To Min, Thank you so much, you saved my life, Em’. According to the doctor if the bleeding hadn’t been stopped as soon as it was Emily Jones would have died. Without the picture of the man, ‘Ben Smith’ and the footage of him storming and fleeing the house, he couldn’t have been arrested and charged. As the police were telling Minnie this, her Mother clutching her, sobbing, a little in pride but more likely because emotions her emotions were running high, Minnie smiled weakly and politely shook the officer’s hand.

Minnie watched non-committedly as her Mother framed the newspaper clipping, listening as she complained how the word ‘inquisitive’ implies Minnie was nosy. Minnie didn’t care, she was nosy and it had apparently saved someone’s life. Later on, back in her room, Minnie once again stared through the window, though this time; she concentrated her gaze on the boy next door but one as he laid reading on the grass.

Monday, 31 January 2011

Reflections of January.

So, a month has passed since my first blog, and here I am, still blogging, so that's a good start to the year blogging-wise.

My first blog was about why 2010 sucked so much, I can't say January has exactly been the best month ever. My Grandma sadly died from dementia on the 4th which I guess put a downer on the rest on the rest of the month, I also had an important exam and have had some pretty hard deadlines to meet, as well as coursework (wow they really need to think about spreading this stuff out instead of work for every subject climaxing at once). But it's almost, in about a hour anyway FEBRUARY!! A month which shines hope upon all! (well just me but whatever) New Art project and New Photography project, both of which I am actually prepared for the work of. Also, new book in English, 'The Great Gatsby', which, although I had to read these pages like 3 times before understanding them, the first 3 pages were freakin' awesome.
Also I think I'm going to study English at university, so I've been looking around, interestingness, my only worry is that I won't get into the ones I want to go to.

All in all, February 2011, at the moment, is looking hopeful for being good, we'll have to see of course, but I think it could be less stressful than January.

Also: (shopping list)
  • Wall Map of World
  • Hula hoop
  • Miranda Series 1 boxset
  • Ring bound A5 notebook
Things to do:
  • Write Art evaluation
  • Write letter to Olivia (include photos)
  • Go take photos around market, then edit and print
  • Buy loads of chocolate and send to America
  • Find a job
  • Find an enrichment activity
  • Tidy room.
Just thought I'd make a note of those things, wanted to write them down but current notebooks aren't ring bound and it's starting to bug me.

I think that's all I have to say for now. Hopefully I'll have a cool blog idea later in the week.
Bye for now :)