Mayor’s week: 29 July – 4 August 2016

Mayor’s week: 29 July – 4 August 2016

Recent stories in the Worcester News and elsewhere about people being abused simply because they look or sound “foreign” to their abusers have made depressing reading. As a local councillor and Mayor, I represent all our residents, whatever their places of birth or ancestry, and try to encourage people to reach out to and value people with a different heritage.

The party last week at the Horizon Community Centre in Midland Road was a great way to celebrate diversity and Lynn and I were delighted to attend and support it. Over 100 people, including lots of children, celebrated the Muslim festival of Eid by sharing food and conversation. Children jumped on bouncy castles and their angelic-looking faces were painted, transforming them into Spiderman and other heroes. Well done Worcester Community Trust (WCT) for providing this happy event.

The Mayor & Mayoress at the Horizon Centre's Eid party
The Mayor & Mayoress at the Horizon Centre’s Eid party

Much of the most valuable work in our city is done by volunteers, who give up a few hours of their time, not for payment, but to make life better for others and WCT could not exist without them.

Other people volunteer to read and record stories from the Worcester News so that blind and partially-sighted residents can enjoy what sighted readers take for granted. Every week, Worcester News & Equipment Services for the Blind makes over 200 copies of a two-hour recording session produced by a team of volunteer readers. These are delivered free of charge to subscribers’ homes so that they and their friends can listen to the news. I enjoyed being a guest reader last week and helping this superb service.

I also enjoyed welcoming to the Gulidhall the first of four groups of students from China, hosted by our University.

It was a real pleasure to open the newly refurbished London Road Post Office. My friend Councillor Jabba Riaz has worked extremely hard to ensure that this valuable community facility, under threat of closure, now has a secure future.

Mayor’s Week: 22 – 28 July 2016

Mayor’s Week: 22 – 28 July 2016

Worcestershire people are rightly proud of our musical heritage and of Edward Elgar, the famous composer who was born and lived in this area. The three choirs of Hereford, Gloucester and Worcester cathedrals have been keeping this heritage alive for the past 289 years by staging the world famous Three Choirs Festival every year in one of these three cathedral cities. This festival of choral music is the oldest choral festival in the world and this year’s event opened in Gloucester cathedral on Saturday July 23.

I was honoured to represent Worcester by processing in state from Gloucester Guildhall to the Cathedral, accompanied by our mace bearers and sword bearer in their resplendent uniforms. A sizeable crowd seemed to be enjoying our procession as we moved along the pedestrianised shopping streets in the glorious sunshine.

Inside the cathedral, we joined bishops and clergy representing all three cathedrals for the opening service of the festival. The Three Choirs Festival Chorus, joined by Gloucester cathedral choir and youth choir, were accompanied by the Royal Welsh College of Music and Drama Symphonic Brass and Percussion and Jonathan Hope on the organ. They filled the enormous space with superb and uplifting music.

On Tuesday, 50 members of the Pax Christi Chorale arrived in Worcester from Toronto for a brief tour of our city before their lunchtime concert in our own Cathedral. I was delighted to welcome them into the Mayor’s Parlour before they headed to the Elgar Birthplace Museum and then to Gloucester to join the Three Choirs.

They will return to Worcester’s Three Choirs Festival in July 2017, which promises to be as excellent as ever.

I also welcomed visitors from our French twin town Le Vesinet, and Bologna, Italy and opened the Zip Yard, the latest shop to appear in The Shambles.

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Mayor’s Week: 15 – 21 July 2016

Mayor’s Week: 15 – 21 July 2016

The highlight of the week was our invitation to start Cancer Research UK’s Race for Life. Around 2,000 ladies formed a sea of pink as they gathered on Pitchcroft ahead of the race, to warm up and hear encouraging words from the stage. Most participants had either been afflicted by cancer themselves, or knew someone close to them who had. There were fond memories of those who passed away, but determination to help Cancer Research UK raise money so that diagnosis and treatment can be improved.

Mayoress Lynn has been successfully operated on to remove a cancer within recent weeks, so she was pleased to share her own story and encourage the runners.

Race for Life

Last Thursday was St Swithun’s Day, when rumour has it that any rain on that day will be followed by 40 days and nights of further downpours. There was an odd shower, but we have had wonderful dry and sunny days in the following week. Since former Mayor Jo Hodges began the tradition in 2000, there has been an annual procession of the mayor and councillors from the Guildhall to St Swithun’s Church for a special evensong service.

This wonderful ancient church is used for worship only rarely, but is open to the public for organ recitals in summer and restoration work is planned so that visits will be even more enjoyable in future. We were made most welcome by Raymond Fowler from the Friends of St Swithun’s and Rev Brian Gant who lead the service. Afterwards, we shared a magnificent cake with the rest of the congregation.

We opened the Worcester Referees Society summer fete and visited others hosted by Dines Green School and the Horizon Centre in Midland Road. Visitors to the Mayor’s parlour included Dr. Liu Peng, the Deputy Director of China’s International Business School, and groups of children from Hollymount and St Barnabas primary schools.

 

Mayor’s Week: 8 – 14 July 016

Mayor’s Week: 8 – 14 July 016

One of the scariest things to be asked to do as a primary school child is to make a speech in front of an audience of class-mates and teachers. But self-confidence grows with practice, and is an important life skill. For this reason, The Rotary Club of Worcester has been running its Junior Youth Speaks competition in Hollymount and St Barnabas primary schools for several years.

So I was delighted to be invited to judge the St Barnabas competition and faced the very difficult decision of choosing the winners from six excellent finalists. Well done to all the prize winners and participants both here and at Hollymount.

Worcester has now been a Fairtrade City for ten years and – as the councillor who proposed this to the council a decade ago – I was extremely pleased to welcome Anthony Wood and other members of the Worcester Trade Justice Network, whose hard work and determination brought this about, to a special reception in the Mayor’s Parlour. Buying Fairtrade products means that some of the poorest workers in the world are not exploited, but paid fairly, so they can feed and educate their children. How well this idea fits my theme of “No community left behind”!

Photo (L to R):  Anthony Wood, Chair of the Worcester Trade Justice Network; Cllr Paul Denham, Mayor of Worcester; and three pupils from Our Lady Queen of Peace primary school:  Oliver Carney (aged 11); Daisy Hooley (aged 10) and Gabriel Coprada (aged 11).
Photo (L to R): Anthony Wood, Chair of the Worcester Trade Justice Network; Cllr Paul Denham, Mayor of Worcester; and three pupils from Our Lady Queen of Peace primary school: Oliver Carney (aged 11); Daisy Hooley (aged 10) and Gabriel Coprada (aged 11).

The mayoress, my wife Lynn, and I thoroughly enjoyed RGS The Grange speech day, celebrating the success and achievements of their pupils.

I was also able to tour St Richard’s Hospice with its chief executive Mark Jackson. We are extremely fortunate to have this superb service here, which supports those facing life-limiting illnesses and their families with amazing care and compassion, often in their own homes.

Two groups of language students from Italy toured the Guildhall and I was delighted to welcome them. Lynn and I also visited ASPIE, which supports people with Asperger’s Syndrome. This condition is poorly understood by most of us and ASPIE provides space and activities to make friends with others experiencing the same condition.

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