►
From YouTube: Facebook LIVE Q&A 12/08/20
Description
BCP Council Leader Vikki Slade answers your questions. Tune in on Facebook Wednesday/Thursdays every other week for your opportunity to ask questions and get them answered by BCP Council Leader.
A
Good
afternoon
my
name
is
councillor.
Vicki
said
I'm
leader
of
bcp
council.
I
am
live
now
for
the
next
30
minutes
on
our
week,
regular
q,
a
that
takes
place
on
a
wednesday
lunchtime,
just
wanted
to
make
sure
we're
live.
Yes,
I
think
we
are
yes.
A
So
we've
moved
this
to
a
fortnightly
session
now
that
we're
in
more
of
a
business
as
usual
situation,
which
means
that
obviously,
it's
much
easier
for
us
to
to
give
you
ideas
of
what's
going
on
outside
of
the
covid
situation,
so
I'd
be
very
happy
to
encourage
any
questions
that
people
might
have
in
terms
of
non-coded
questions
as
well
as
those
related
to
covid
at
the
oh.
I've
got
one
one
thumbs
up,
which
means
that
it
is
working
a
couple
of
weeks
ago.
A
I
wasn't
seeing
any
questions,
so
I
have
no
questions
at
the
moment.
A
A
A
Okay,
thank
you
very
much.
I've
got
some
questions
coming
in
park
and
ride.
The
question
is
parker
ride.
Why
don't?
We
have
a
park
and
ride?
Presumably
parker
ride
works,
especially
well
in
areas
that
have
year-round
tourism.
We
did
have
a
beach
parker
ride
in
paul
a
number
of
years
ago.
A
Reason
being
that
unless
you
can
guarantee
hot
weather
the
costs
you
have
in
setting
up
the
bus
companies
to
to
give
you
access
to
buses
and
and
staff
every
weekend
over
the
whole
summer
takes
buses
out
of
out
of
sync
and
costs
a
lot
of
money.
So
realistically
a
permanent
year-round
park
and
ride
is
what
we
need
to
look
at,
but
that
needs
to
be
looking
at
where
it
should
be
to
service
the
year-round
the
year-round
needs,
so
various
options
have
been
looked
at
and
we've
got
the
space
in
pool
for
one.
A
There
isn't
hasn't
been
a
space
identified
in
bournemouth.
Recently
we
are
doing
a
strategic
parking
review
which
will
look
at
car
parks
going
forward.
It
may
well
be
an
answer,
but
I
don't
necessarily
think
it's.
It's
necessarily
the
answer,
because
we've
seen
people
want
to
get
as
close
to
the
beach
as
they
can
and
they're
prepared
to
pay
for
the
privilege.
A
So
if
you've
got
suitcases,
buckets
and
spades
and
picnics
and
all
the
rest
of
it,
how
likely
are
you
to
want
to
park
on
the
outskirts
of
town
and
wait
for
a
bus
in
there
are
some
options
around
potentially
parking
in
boscom
or
parking
in
poole
town
and
then
actually
getting
the
bus
to
the
beach
there's
nothing
to
stop
people
from
doing
that,
you're
likely
to
get
there
a
lot
quicker.
So
you
know
there
is
that
to
think
about,
barbara's
asked
what
the
plans
are
for
the
virtual
air
festival.
A
Thank
you
very
much
for
reminding
everybody.
We
have
that
this
weekend,
the
following
weekend,
the
21st
to
the
23rd
of
august,
where
we
will
be
reviewing
some
of
the
best
bits
from
not
only
our
show,
but
other
air
shows
interviews
with
the
red
arrows
pilots
and
talks
with
some
of
the
other
stars
of
the
past.
A
So
you
know,
if
you
are
a
fan
of
the
air
show,
and
there
won't
be
any
flying
going
on
obviously,
but
we
do
want
to
make
sure
that
we
recognize
that
the
air
festival
has
a
place
in
the
hearts
of
people
in
in
bournemouth
and
give
people
the
opportunity
to
catch
up
on
some
sites.
They
may
never
have
seen
before,
for
example,
things
like
the
fact
that
ours
was
the
first
dusk
flying.
A
A
That's
a
deliberate
move,
because
one
of
the
arguments
that
has
been
made
for
the
air
festival
over
the
years
is
that
it
draws
people
into
town
and
actually
those
people
who
don't
like
the
air
festival
will
say,
hang
on
a
minute.
Look
what
it's
like
on
weekends,
where
we
don't
have
an
air
festival.
It's
rammed.
We
don't
need
the
air
festival
in
the
middle
of
the
summer
to
draw
people
here,
because
we're
already
busy
and
that
argument
you
know
I
I
completely
accept
so
the
idea
originally
was
to
extend
the
summer
season.
A
So
what
I
did
when
we
agreed
to
take
next
year's
air
festival
was
to
actually
ask
which
we
moved
to
the
first
weekend
of
september
when
some
of
the
schools
will
be
back
and
therefore
it's
an
opportunity
for
us
to
genuinely
extend
our
summer
season
and
make
a
better
economic
argument
for
the
air
festival.
We're
also
going
to
be
increasing
the
environmental
impact
issues.
A
So
last
year
we
offset
the
carbon
from
the
flying,
we're
looking
to
do
more
than
that
next
year,
we're
looking
to
involve
the
sea
more
we're,
also
looking
to
involve
local
businesses
more
so
that
it's
not
just
about
you,
know,
businesses
that
are
related
to
to
the
the
military,
but
also
businesses
that
are
related
to
marine
and
aerospace
engineering
locally.
So
there's
a
lot
of
work,
that's
being
done
on
that,
and
a
lot
of
work,
that's
being
done
with
other
types
of
transported
in
the
sea.
A
Yacht
clubs
are
looking
at
whether
we
can
work
with
sun
seeker,
whether
we
have
any
other
attractions,
so
lots
going
on
there.
Okay,
what's
happening
about
the
shack
at
muzzcliff,
so
angela's
raised
the
problem
that
there
is
a
children's
services
building
in
muskliff,
where
a
service
was
set
up
for
a
company,
an
organization
to
work
with
children
who
weren't
in
school
to
give
them
support
and
training
around
becoming
involved
in
hospitality.
A
That
project
unfortunately
didn't
work,
and
it
was
a
fixed,
a
fixed
term
that
that
the
shack
could
be
used
as
a
community
cafe
where
these
young
people
would
be
trained
in
hospitality
to
actually
look
to
improve
their
employability
and
their
job
skills,
because
that
scheme
was
unsuccessful.
It
closed.
But
there
was
an
agreement
that
for
the
rest
of
the
license
period,
the
community
that
somebody
came
forward
and
said
that
they
would
like
to
continue
to
run
as
a
community
cafe,
which
they
have
done.
A
That
license
period
has,
I
understand,
now,
finished
and
that
that
was
a
fixed
term
of
opportunity
and
the
children's
services
team
need
that
facility,
because
we
have
a
lot
of
children
who
have
been
excluded
from
schools
and
are
currently
traveling
from
places
in
bournemouth
and
in
paul
across
to
a
service
in
christchurch
which
can't
manage
the
needs
of
all
of
the
children
in
the
same
place.
A
So
we
need
to
actually
be
looking
at
what
facilities
the
council
owns,
and
that
is
run
by
children's
services
for
the
most
vulnerable
children
in
our
community,
who
need
to
have
an
alternative
provision
other
than
going
to
a
mainstream
school.
Either
because
they've
been
excluded
from
a
mainstream
school
or
because
they
have
particular
needs,
that
means
they
can't
manage
in
a
mainstream
school.
Sometimes
that's
because
of
medical
reasons,
emotional
reasons
or
mental
health
problems,
and
this
facility
was
designed
for
that.
So
we
know
that
the
community
and
the
lady
that's
been
running.
A
The
the
community
cafe
are
very
upset
about
this.
This
operational
decision.
It's
absolutely
not
a
political
decision.
It's
it
was
within
the
the
the
contract
came
to
an
end
and,
and
the
officers
did
what
they
felt
was
right
for
and
for
the
people
that
they're
looking
after
I.e
the
most
vulnerable
children.
A
We've
now
been
made
aware
of
this
local
ward
members
were
not
aware
of
it
at
the
time.
I
was
not
aware
of
it
because
it
was
deemed
to
be
an
operational
issue
now
that
we
are
we're
looking
at
how
we
can
facilitate
those
children
getting
what
they
need
and
the
community
still
having
access
to
a
community
cafe,
either
through
a
use
of
using
the
space
differently
or
through
whether
there's
another
facility
within
the
musklif
area
that
can
be
used.
A
A
So
our
first
question
about
camping
on
the
beach:
let's
go
through
what
the
the
actual
rules
are
around
camping
on
the
beach.
We
have
bylaws
that
stop
people
from
camping
on
the
beach.
However,
the
way
that
the
bylaw
actually
operates
is
that,
if
somebody
is
camping,
we
can
approach
them
and
ask
them
to
remove
themselves.
If
they
don't
remove
themselves,
we
can
serve
them
with
an
eviction
notice.
We
can
actually
serve
them
with
a
prosecution
that
prosecution
doesn't
actually
force
them
to
move
on.
A
What
it
does
is
it
requires
them
to
provide
their
name
and
address
so
that
we
can
then
take
them
to
court
for
camping
on
the
beach.
However,
the
only
people
who
can
be
required
to
give
their
enabled
address
to
is
our
csas
officers
and
the
police
officers.
So
what
we've
got
is
a
situation
where
people
can
abuse
the
situation
and
where
it's
actually
quite
difficult
without
the
support
of
the
police,
who
quite
understandably,
have
a
lot
of
other
issues
that
they
have
to
deal
with.
A
It
is
good
to
say
that
we
did
manage
to
remove
a
hundred
campers
from
the
beach
on
saturday
night.
We
served
35,
formal
eviction,
notices
and
that
you
know
we
have
moved
even
more
staff
who
are
working
literally
through
the
night
security
officers
working
through
the
night
and
beach
patrols
working
late
until
the
evening
and
from
early
in
the
morning
to
dissuade
people
from
from
camping
on
the
beach
and
removing
them
as
and
disrupting
them.
A
It's
worth,
bearing
in
mind
that
our
tractors
start
at
2,
30
3
o'clock
in
the
morning
and
cleaning
the
beaches.
That
is
a
problem
for
us
that
it
puts
them
in
a
difficult
position
when
people
decide
to
to
come,
and
it
means
it's
not
actually
a
peaceful
experience
for
people
who
are
choosing
to
camp
because
they
are
going
to
be
disrupted.
A
It
is
not
something
that
is
easy
to
deal
with,
because
actually
you
cannot
physically
drag
somebody
off
of
the
beach.
If
somebody
does
not
wish
to
leave
the
beach,
we
have
called
the
police
and
the
police
will
base
their
their
attendance
at
events
on
what
they
see
as
risk
to
life
or
property.
So
that
is
how
the
police
monitor.
If
you
phone,
101
and
say
this
is
going
on,
they
will
assess
their
calls
based
upon
the
risk
and
the
harm.
A
So
I
was
completely
misquoted
earlier
this
week
in
suggesting
that
there
was
no
harm.
The
reference
was
regarding
the
level
of
harm
which,
which
the
police
see
from
the
activity
of
a
tent
on
the
beach.
It
has
harm
to
our
community.
It
has
harm
to
our
environment
in
terms
of
people
defecating
on
the
beach
people
whole.
A
You
know
camping,
having
fires
on
the
beach
and
people
disturbing
the
community,
but
in
terms
of
is
somebody's
life
at
risk
or
property
at
risk,
and
therefore,
if
you
call
999
police
come
understandably,
the
police
are
going
to
prioritize
other
in
other
issues
where
people
are
actually
going
to
come
to
direct
on.
So
that
is
where
we
have
to
work
with
the
police.
A
This
was
discussed
at
our
tactical
group
yesterday,
which
we
work
on
with
police
and
other
agencies
and
tomorrow
is
being
escalated
up
to
the
strategic
group,
because
we
are
very
concerned
that
our
ability
to
be
able
to
do
this
is
being
limited
by
the
legal
powers
that
we
have.
We
are
looking
at
other
alternatives
in
relation
to
the
legal
powers.
A
Okay,
so
it
burns
off.
So
I'm
going
to
try
and
go
through
some
of
these
and
I'll
come
back
to
some
other
issues.
Shortly,
what's
going
on
with
the
pool
stadium,
it
belongs
to
people
of
paul,
so
the
paul
stadium
is
currently
on
a
lease
to
the
current
organization
stadium
uk
that
lease
will
run
for
a
considerable
period
of
time
that
stadium
has
not
reopened,
and
it
is
probably
for
them
to
decide
and
tell
us
you
know
when
they're
going
to
reopen
that
facility.
A
However,
if
you
look
at
the
plan
for
paul
that
was
established
in
2019
just
before
we
formed
as
bcp
council,
you
will
be
aware
that
the
area
around
the
stadium
is
within
the
local
plan
for
redevelopment.
That
redevelopment
does
include
a
stadium,
but
it
also
includes
housing,
retail
and
other
other
other
facilities.
A
But
as
with
all
planning
processes,
it
is
for
developers
to
come
forward
with
their
ideas.
So
there
is
nothing
to
stop
you
or
me
from
putting
forward
a
planning
application
on
a
piece
of
land
that
we
either
own
or
don't
own,
but
we've
got
an
idea
for
and
ultimately
we
are
in
that
position
where
you
know.
A
Yes,
the
stadium
is
supposed
to
go
on
that
site,
but
it
is
possible
that
if,
if
the
the
developer
said
well,
actually
we
can
actually
do
something
different
with
the
site,
but
we'll
provide
you
with
the
stadium.
It's
a
bit
like
in
my
ward.
We've
got
some
tennis
courts
where
people
said
they're,
not
in
the
great
place
for
tennis
courts,
necessarily
because
they're
quite
shaded
and
the
rule
is
if
somebody
decided
to
build
on
those
tennis
courts.
A
They'd
have
to
provide
other
tennis
courts
within
the
community
to
make
sure
that
it
was
mitigated.
So
the
the
local
plan
requires
there
to
be
a
stadium
and
it
should
be
staying
on
that
site.
But
in
the
event
that
a
development
opportunity
came
up-
and
someone
said
to
us-
we
can
build
you
a
great
stadium
and
we
can
develop
this
site,
then
that
would
be
for
the
planning
department
to
decide
if
that
was
appropriate.
A
So,
yes,
we
want
to
keep
the
stadium.
There
are
no
current
plans.
I'm
not
aware
there's
a
planning
application
in
at
the
moment,
but
anybody
is
allowed
to
put
in
a
planning
application
at
any
time.
Why
can't
we
tow
every
car
parked
on
a
path
when
it's
hot
well
paul?
So
we
can
park,
we
can
tow
any
car
that
is
obstructing
the
highway
or
obstructing
the
pavement.
A
If
a
car
is
parked
completely
on
a
pavement
and
it
is
blocking
the
ability
of
people
to
pass,
then
we
can
remove
it
in
the
same
way
as
we
can
remove
it.
If
it's
blocking
the
road
causing
an
obstruction
or
causing
a
danger.
However,
we
cannot
remove
a
vehicle
if
it
is
not
dangerous
or
obstructing.
So
if
it's
partly
or
if
it's
fully
on
the
pavement,
but
the
pavement
is
wide
enough
for
somebody
to
get
past
it,
then
we
legally
cannot
tow
it
away.
A
So,
at
the
end
of
the
day,
it
is
about
the
judgment
of
our
planning,
our
sorry,
our
senior
parking
officer.
You
have
to
decide
whether
it
meets
the
legislation,
because
if
we
tow
away
a
vehicle
that
is
not
deemed
to
be
dangerous
or
causing
a
direct
obstruction,
then
we
actually
would
be
breaching.
So
there
are
very
strict
rules
about
who
we
can
tell
away.
We
can't
tow
away
everybody
who
is
parked
on
a
double
yellow
line
that
does
not
meet
the
threshold.
A
A
Each
weekend
is
that
we
have
two
vehicles
that
can
do
it
and
they're
pretty
much
busy
all
day
starting
in
the
morning
right
the
way
through
the
day,
a
tow
away
is
authorized,
they
come
and
they
move
it
away,
and
then
they
get
their
next
one.
So
that
is
the
capacity
as
someone
who
drives
the
cycles.
Can
you
congratulate
the
council?
So
it's
moving
so
fast.
Have
travellers
got
a
place
for
themselves?
Can
we
enforce
it?
Sarah?
No!
Actually
they
don't,
there's
a
real
confusion
around
travelers.
A
I
want
to
go
into
it
for
too
long
because
we
have
talked
about
this
several
times
before
travelers
who
have
settled
here
but
choose
to
live
in
a
in
a
traveler
site,
so
what
we
would
describe
as
a
settled
traveler
community.
We
are
required
to
have
a
site
and
we
do
have
a
site
that
site
is
at
manning's
heath.
That
is
well
looked
after
it's
well
managed
years
ago.
There
were
some
incidents,
they
are
in
the
past
and
they
are
resettled
meaningful,
contributing
members
of
the
community.
A
His
children
go
to
school
and
his
people
have
jobs
and
they're,
great
and
they're
part
of
who
we
are,
and
they
have
the
vote,
and
we
have.
You
know
we
welcome
them
in
our
community.
A
However,
there
is
also
a
right
for
people
who
are
from
a
traveler,
gypsy
and
romani
background
to
to
travel
and
those
people
move
around
the
country
for
all
or
part
of
the
year
and
as
a
local
authority,
we
should
have
a
site
for
them
to
stay
out.
It's
called
either
a
transit
site
or
a
temporary
stopping
place.
A
The
police
also
can't
use
section
62
powers,
which
requires
somebody
to
immediately
move
on
to
the
temporary
traveling
place,
because
we
don't
have
one
they
could
use
their
discretionary
section,
61
powers,
but
the
threshold
for
harm.
There
has
to
be
evidence
of
crime
and
activity
caused
directly
by
those
individuals
in
that
space
or
something
like
park
next
to
a
school,
where
it's
having
direct
impact
and
for
the
police
to
use
those
powers.
A
It's
very
rare
for
them
to
use
those
powers,
because
their
view
is
quite
understandably
that
if
we
have
not
actually
done
our
side
of
the
bargain
by
having
a
traveling
site
for
people
to
go
to,
then
just
because
people
don't
want
them
in
red
hill,
carp,
red
hill
park
or
at
beach
road
or
wherever
else
that
that
we
can't
make
them
move
on,
because
we
have
not
provided
a
site.
A
If
or
when
we
provide
a
site,
then
those
powers
will
be
able
to
be
used
instantly
and
people
will
be
moved
on
immediately.
But
without
those
powers,
the
council,
as
the
land
owner,
cannot
invoke
section
61.
They
can
invoke
a
court
order
and
they
regularly
do
invoke
a
court
order.
Paul
park
travellers
had
a
court
order.
Red
hill
had
a
court
order,
but
very
often
what
happens
is
that
people
will
move
on
before
the
court
orders
date,
because
they
know
that
the
court
will
say
move
on
you're
causing
a
disruption.
A
So
we
are
in
a
difficult
situation
in
the
because
we're
not
doing
our
side
of
the
bargain.
We
have
to
comply
with
the
law
ourselves.
There
is
a
consultation
that
we've
submitted
to,
as
most
councils
have
with
government.
It
is
due
to
go
through
parliament
as
well
to
be
discussed
in
parliament
during
the
next
parliamentary
year
starts
in
september,
runs
through
next
july.
We
have
no
idea
what
that
piece
of
legislation
might
look
like.
That
is
for
your
mps
really
to
comment
on.
A
A
You'll
be
aware,
we're
still
one
of
the
areas
with
the
lowest
number
of
coveted
cases
in
the
country
our
if,
if
the
people
on
the
beaches
were
bringing
covered
with
them,
our
staff
who
were
working
on
the
beaches
would
probably
still
would
probably
be
contracting
the
virus
they're.
Not
it's
not
our
place
to
restrict
the
number
of
people
allowed
on
the
beach.
It's
a
public
place.
It's
not
a
private
space,
it's
not
our
space.
A
I
find
it
quite
offensive
when
I
hear
people
saying
stop
those
people
coming
here
using
our
beaches,
we're
lucky
to
live
here.
Ultimately,
if
people
choose
to
travel
which
they're
allowed
to
do
and
they
choose
to
drive
down
here
to
a
public
space
and
they
pay
to
park
in
a
public
car
park
or
they
catch
the
bus
or
the
train
and
they
walk
to
the
beach.
It's
not
our
beach.
It's
a
public
beach.
A
We
don't
have
private
beaches
in
this
country
and
apart
from
places
like
derby
door,
which
is
private,
they
therefore
have
the
right
to
close
the
beach
if
they
wish
to,
because
they
own
the
land,
it's
public
land,
it
will
remain
public
land
and
there's
really
no
issue
around
stopping
people
going
to
the
beach.
If
you
don't
like
lots
of
people
on
the
beach,
then
the
whole
purpose
of
the
beach
app
is
that
you
find
a
quieter
beach.
I
could
recommend
you
lots
of
other
beaches.
A
You
might
want
to
go
to
that
are
probably
here
beyond.
If
you
want
a
quiet
beach,
but
ultimately
it's
not
our
job
to
stop
people
coming
to
the
beach.
Actually,
if
people
stop
coming
to
the
beach,
your
council
services
won't
be
happening
because
we
rely
heavily
on
those
tourists
to
actually
provide
an
income
for
the
council.
A
12
percent
of
people,
plus
more
than
one
in
10
people,
are
directly
employed
by
the
tourism
industry.
Another
10
or
so
are
involved
with
the
hospitality
industry
and
we'd
be
a
very
overweight
population.
If
our
hospitality
industry
was
being
completely
supplied
by
the
local
residents,
we
need
tourists.
That's
what
we
are
we're
a
tourist
town.
That's
why
lots
of
us
chose
to
live
here,
because
it's
beautiful.
We
have
no
right
to
turn
other
people
away,
and
there
is
nothing
to
suggest
that
this
area
makes
people
more
likely
to
contract
coved.
A
If
you
can't
social
distance,
that
is
your
own
personal
responsibility
to
live
to
somewhere.
Where
you
can
it's
not
the
council's
responsibility
to
make
sure
you
have
a
ring
around
you,
okay,
so
drugs
and
addicts,
unfortunately
housed
in
many
hmos,
seems
to
go
hand-in-hand
with
permissions
granted
for
hmos.
A
We're
really
really
worried,
if
I'm
honest
about
the
new
planning
laws
that
are
coming
in,
that
are
going
to
take
a
lot
of
powers
away
from
councils
and
allow
developers
to
build
what
the
heck
they
like
without
the
protections
that
we
have
from
the
current
planning
system.
So
I
will
just
caveat
what
I
say
by
careful
what
we
wish
for
in
terms
of
drug
use.
We
can't
actually
dictate
whether
someone
is
a
drug
user
or
not
in
terms
of
whether
they're
allowed
in
a
property.
A
A
You'll
know
that
we've
got
a
consultation
out
at
the
moment
around
selective
licensing,
that
selective
licensing
will
allow
us
to
actually
have
a
licensed
list
of
everyone
who
is
a
landlord
in
areas
where,
particularly
there
are
things
like
hmos
to
ensure
that
the
properties
are
being
well
managed
and,
and
the
people
who
are
living
in
them
have
reasonable
living
status
because,
frankly,
the
disgusting
state,
some
of
these
properties
are
in.
You
wouldn't
put
your
worst
enemy
in.
A
So
I
think
we
have
to
respect
the
fact
that
if
you
put
somebody
in
a
really
disgraceful
conditions,
they're
hardly
likely
to
to
to
find
themselves
wanting
to
turn
their
lives
around.
We
also
have
to
remember
that
people
who
are
drug
users
are
very
often
struggling
with
with
things,
and
we
need
to
make
sure
the
support
is
there
and
that's
where
our
homeless
approach
is
working
really
really
well.
A
We
do
have
had
a
situation
in
the
last
few
months
where
we've
had
to
house
a
lot
of
people
very
quickly
and
that
has
meant
having
to
put
people
in
where
there
is
availability
of
rooms
at
a
low
cost,
because
obviously
we
don't
want
to
make
sure
that
the
council's
cost
from
housing
those
people
is
very,
very
high.
A
We
have
moved
a
significant
number
of
those
individuals
on
over
75
people
who
were
temporarily
housed
have
been
moved
on
and
there
are
plans
in
place
for
the
others
in
terms
of
drug
abuse.
You
have
to
report
drug
dealing
and
things
like
that
to
the
police.
That
is
not
a
council
matter.
You
know
our
anti-social
behavior
officers
will
will
intervene
where
they
can,
but
crimes
should
be
reported
to
the
police.
A
Then
you
end
up
with
a
situation
where
we
talk
to
the
police
and
say:
we've
got
a
problem
because
you
never
come
to
this
area
and
they
say
well,
there's
no
record
of
crime,
there's
no
record
of
anti-social
behavior,
because
people
aren't
reporting
and
I
get
that
when,
when
you
phone
up
and
people
back,
why
do
we
always
do
this
anyway,
because
nobody
holds
a
phone
like
that?
Do
they
when
you
phone
up
the
police
and
they
don't
come,
then
it's
pretty
demoralizing.
A
So
what
I
would
suggest
that
you
do
if
you
have
incidents
of
drug
dealing
and
social
behavior
any
sort
of
crimes,
please
report
it
and
if
you
don't
want
to
sit
hanging
on
one
on
one
and
it
can
be
a
pain,
go
on
their
website,
go
on
the
dorset
police
website
and
report
it.
It
says
it
takes
20
minutes.
It's
never
taken
me
more
than
seven
or
eight
minutes
to
report
a
crime
or
an
incident
on
there.
It
will
ask
you
for
who
the
victim
is.
A
If
you
don't
know
the
victim,
it
doesn't
let
you
move
on,
that's
a
pain
and
I'm
going
to
report
that
to
them,
but
just
put
something
in
the
box.
You
need
to
report.
If
you
report,
then
they
can't
ignore,
and
actually
the
police
need
to
know
what
true
state
of
crime
and
social
behavior
is,
so
they
can
allocate
resources
more
fairly.
You
know
they
cannot
know
what
you
don't
tell
them,
and
that
is
true.
Also
when
you
know,
when
we
see
things
happen,
we
need
to
be
reporting
them
too.
A
What
are
we
going
to
give
single
moms
with
parents,
kids,
better
housing,
kids
shouldn't
be
in
flats
with
no
gardens.
I
don't
think
we
should
be
saying
that
flats
are
necessarily
not
no
good
for
people
with
with
children.
You
know
there
are
millions
of
people
who
live
in
flats
that
don't
have
a
garden
and
they
they
bring
their
children
up
beautifully
and
their
children
do
very
well.
You
know
we
simply
cannot
build
houses
with
gardens
for
everybody.
It's
just
not
going
to
happen.
A
You
know
if
we
have
to
build
10,
000
houses
and
every
one
of
them
has
got
to
have
a
garden
and
a
picket
fence
around
it,
or
even
if
we
only
have
to
build
six
thousand
of
them,
because
the
rest
of
them,
you
know,
are
single
people.
We
would
pave
over
everything.
You
know
there
are
going
to
have
to
be
people
that
live
in
flats
when
people
are
being
housed
by
the
council.
We
house
according
to
absolute
need.
A
You
know
our
job
as
the
council
is
not
to
give
everyone
a
house
it's
to
give
people
who
have
no
other
means
of
obtaining
housing
a
last
chance
option
it
isn't
to
to
provide
for
everybody.
So
we
have
a
limited
stock
of
housing
where
people
are
overcrowded,
so
that
is
they
have
more
people
than
their
bedroom.
So
you
have
a
two-bedroom
property
that
has
got
five
people
in
it,
because
it
should
have
up
to
four
people
in
it
unless
those
three
additional
people
are
all
children
of
the
same
sex
under
10..
A
If
you've
got
a
lot
of
people
in
a
small
property,
you're
going
to
be
banded
at
a
higher
level.
So
you
might
be
a
gold
banding
rather
than
silver
banding,
we'll
move
those
people
through
as
quickly
as
we
can
with
new
housing.
But
on
the
flip
side
we've
got
people
who
are
rejecting
every
time.
We
look
in
putting
a
planning
application
if
we
put
in
planning
applications,
and
then
people
say
we
don't
want
them
around
here
and
we
can't
build
the
houses,
then
it'll
take
longer.
A
Everybody
on
doors
at
home
choice
has
the
opportunity
to
bid
for
properties
that
are
available
and
if
they're
in
the
right
housing
ban
they'll
be
given
housing
much
quicker,
but
we
have,
I
think
it
was
350
families
was
it
more
than
that
at
least
hundreds
and
hundreds
of
families
who
need
a
four-bedroom
property,
we've
just
applied
to
build
team
and
that
problems
we've
got
from
people
complaining
about
that.
A
13
families
that
will
have
a
home
and
hopefully
put
more
people
who
are
living
in
a
bigger
property
will
decide
to
actually
move
to
a
smaller
property,
as
we
build
newer
property
that
they
feel
are
better.
So
I
don't
think
we
should
be
saying
flats
aren't
necessarily
bad
teenagers.
Jumping
from
the
riverborne
witnessing
across
the
bridge
onto
the
other
side,
can
a
safety
net
be
put
up
lawrence?
I
would
suggest
you'd
go
to
the
police
on
that
one.
I
don't
think
a
safety
net
could
be
put
up.
A
No,
that
could
cause
even
more
danger.
I
mean,
ultimately,
if
you
jump
off
the
bridge
into
open
water
and
you
can
swim,
you
can
swim
away.
If
you
jump
off
the
bridge
and
you
can
swim
and
you
get
trapped
in
a
safety
net,
I
mean
you
could
drown.
So
I
I
think
that's
a
real
worry.
I
I
I
don't
think
I'd
be
comfortable
with
that.
I
need
to
actually
try
and
stop
people
from
jumping
in
the
river,
so
I'm
missing
a
lot
of
the
staff
are
about
to
run
out
of
time.
A
Somebody
said
tell
that
to
the
people
I
know
who
died.
Sorry,
I
don't
feel
that
way.
Yes,
it
is
official.
We
are
in
a
recession,
sam,
it's
potentially
one
of
the
worst
recessions.
We're
gonna
have
for
a
long
time,
which
is
why
we
do
need
to
support
our
local
businesses,
including
our
tourism
businesses
and
our
hospitality
businesses,
so
try
and
discourage
tourists
from
this
area
when
those
people
are
providing
jobs
for
us
is
a
really
really
damaging
thing
to
do.
A
Please
leave
a
tip
because
I've
heard
cases
of
youngsters
who
are
on
minimum
wage
working
in
this
horrendous
heat
being
given
pretty
crappy.
You
know
responses
from
from
from
customers
demanding
that
you
know
they
want
their
food
now,
when
these
staff
are
working
in
really
difficult
situations
having
to
social
distance
kitchens
are
having
to
be
reformatted.
A
You
know
businesses
are
having
to
spend
a
lot
of
money
to
make
it
safer
people,
and
then
somebody
that
spent
150
pounds
into
two-pound,
tip
and
you're
like
come
on
guys.
You
know,
you've
saved
a
fortune,
be
fair
to
the
staff
the
same.
If
you've,
given
your
hairdresser,
you
know
the
hairdresser's.
Yes,
some
of
them
are
having
to
charge
a
bit
more,
but
they're
working
in
pretty
tricky
situations,
they're
putting
themselves
at
risk.
A
So
please
do
remember
that
you
know
hospitality
and
the
public's
customer
services
would
really
like
to
have
the
tips
that
people
have
always
given.
They
need
them
just
as
much
as
ever,
and
if
they've
been
furloughed
and
they're
used
to
having
an
income
that
has
an
element
of
tipping,
then
during
the
time
they've
been
furloughed
they've
been
on
80
of
their
basics,
so
they've
been
they've,
probably
been
doing
worse
off
than
a
lot
of
other
people.
A
Shortly
lee
are
all
the
toilets
open
beach,
goers,
yes,
they
are.
Our
toilets
are
open
from
seven
in
the
morning
until
ten
at
night,
generally,
some
of
the
quieter
areas
close
at
seven.
If
the
toilets
are
closed,
when
you
go
by
it'll,
be
because
they're
being
cleaned,
they
are
typically
cleaned
at
least
three
page
day
which,
but
you
think
we
can
to
keep
them
as
hygienic
as
we
possibly
can.
A
Our
park
toilets
are
generally
open.
If
toilets
are
closed,
it's
probably
because
there's
been
vandalism
or
or
mechanical
failure.
We
had
toilets
at
cafe
river
because
three
of
the
hand
washing
units
had
failed,
and
obviously
we
can't
allow
people
to
go
in
there
if
they
can't
actually
hygienically
wash
their
hands.
So
that
is
a
factor.
So
please,
you
know,
bear
with
that
in
mind.
A
There
is
no
excuse
for
people
urinating
or
defecating,
where
they
should,
because
our
toilets
are
open
and
if
people
camp
on
the
beach,
it's
not
our
ability
to
keep
the
toilets
open
at
three
in
the
morning,
so
that
they
can
go
and
have
a
wee.
They
shouldn't
be
on
the
beach
in
the
first
place
so
and
our
staff
shouldn't
have
to
deal
with
it
the
next
day.
So
just
a
quick
final
word
to
all
of
those
people
who
are
due
to
receive
their
a
level
results
on
thursday.
A
Good
luck,
it's
been
horrible
for
you.
I
get
that
same
is
true
for
gcse's
next
week,
I'm
not
quite
sure
when
school
is
going
to
be
because
of
holidays
and
things,
but
a
level
results
this
week.
Gcse
results
btec
results
over
the
next
week,
or
so
I
know
it's
been
really
tough
for
the
kids.
It's
been
really
tough
for
the
parents.
A
That's
going
to
be
disappointing
for
those
of
you
who
were
using
your
box
as
a
stepping
stone
to
where
you
were
going
to
be
in
in
june,
so
I
really
hope
everybody
gets
where
they
where
they
need
to
be
our
service
called
ansbry
is
available
for
you.
A
If
you
need
it,
clearing
will
be
busy
on
thursday
for
those
people
who
decide
they
actually
did
want
to
go
to
uni
or
they
perhaps
haven't
got
the
results
they
want.
Please
don't
give
up.
You
know
you
can
make
a
good
life
for
yourself
if
things
go
wrong
at
certain
periods
of
time.
You
know
it
is
a
moment
in
time,
but
I
keep
my
fingers
crossed
for
all
of
you
and
I
will
just
remind
you
if
you
have
got
smallish
issues
to
do
with
potholes.
I
know
it's
a
big
issue
for
you.
A
If
it's
in
your
street,
but
if
you've
got
potholes
street
lights,
bins
not
emptied
no
fly
tipping.
Please
please,
please,
please
use
the
website
to
report
it.
It
gets
it
straight
into
our
work
streams.
The
staff
are
able
to
pick
things
up
on
their
routes.
If
you
send
an
email
to
comms
department
and
then
they
have
to
send
an
email,
an
email,
an
email,
it's
actually
a
lot
quicker
if
you
just
go
and
report
it.
A
A
They
should
be
the
ones
that
are
actually
picking
up
problems
that
are
occurring
in
your
area.
So
I'm
going
to
call
it
a
day.
At
that
note
lovely
to
see
you
all
again,
please
don't
remember
drink
lots,
don't
leave
dogs
and
children
and
sick
people
in
hot
cars,
because
it's
really
really
dangerous
make
sure
you
keep
hydrated
and
keep
going
with
the
sun
cream.