Friday 19 April 2019

We want your campaigning stories!


The University of Leicester is helping to organise a Journey to Justice Festival in October at Attenborough Arts Centre. Journey to Justice is a charity aiming to use education to inspire future activists. They have created a travelling exhibition about the US civil rights movement and in every city they visit, they also try to showcase local stories about social activism. 
The University is researching stories in Leicester and they want to include a local story about environmental justice. One of the organisers came to our April meeting to ask for our help. So, if you've been involved in environmental campaigning in Leicester, tell us one (or more) of your stories! We're interested in any environmental campaigns - it doesn't matter how long ago they happened. Here are some questions to get you started:
  • When did this happen?
  • What were you campaigning for?
  • What did you do for your campaign? 
  • Who helped?
  • What happened as a result of the campaign?
If you've got photos or leaflets to accompany your story, we would love those too (images of leaflets would be fine - no need to send originals). Please email us with your stories: leicesterfoe@gmail.com Let us know whether you are happy for us to pass on your contact details to the University researchers and then you may see your story included in the exhibition!

Tuesday 2 April 2019

Launch of the Healthy Air Manifesto

We held a photo opportunity outside Leicester Town Hall, at 5.30pm, on the 2nd of April, to launch the updated version of the Healthy Air Manifesto for Leicester. The manifesto sets out proposals for improving Leicester’s air quality.  The launch is timed to coincide with the start of the campaign for the local elections on the 2nd of May. To highlight the extent of the problem we wore face masks, including, in some cases, proper gas masks.

Air pollution has been shown to greatly increase people’s likelihood of developing lung disease, heart disease, strokes, dementia and even depression.  It has also been shown to adversely affect lung development in growing children and to impair cognitive development.
Leicester has particular problems with air pollution due to the layout of its roads and due to lying in a bowl, which traps polluted air; and last year the World Health Organization identified Leicester as having some of the worst levels of air pollution in the UK.  Some progress in improving Leicester’s air quality has been made in recent years, but Friends of the Earth believe that much more still needs to be done.   
Malcolm Hunter, a spokesperson for Leicester Friends of the Earth said:
“Air pollution has wide ranging effects on people’s health and contributes towards hundreds of extra deaths a year, in Leicester alone.  Urgent action is needed and we are therefore calling on all candidates in the forthcoming local elections to commit to implementing those policies in this Manifesto that are within the City Council’s power to implement and to lobby central government to act on those that are not.”