Bar workers are calling for action- not words.

Police have seen a spike in the number of violent crimes in nightclubs, bars and pubs.

Each weekend hundreds of police call outs are made by pub owners, workers and customers after violence has struck.
They made an estimated 365 call outs each year in Hull alone – with a fraction being dealt with.

Pub owner of The Bowery said it was time that the Humberside police followed the lead of the pub watch.
“We live in a culture were drugs and alcohol tend to go hand in hand these days” says Melanie Craggs. “In the past 10 months we have had to call the police 7 times but fights are over as quickly as they start.”

But bar workers appeared adamant that it was about time something was done to reduce the percentage of violence in their workplace.

Annie Bateson glass collector at The Bowery, said: “Unfortunately it’s something you’re always going to get and its part of the job.” She also said: “it was only last bank holiday where I got caught in the middle of a fight and got punched in the face.”

Even customers are threating about the rise in violence “My son had to be rushed to hospital after having his neck slashed with a bottle during a night out at ATIK in Hull city centre” said Alan Wilson. His son hasn’t been on a night out since.

This week the Humberside police rejected calls from Pub watch regarding the community safety team.

The pub watch scheme has been set up by pub owners and they share any information of any violence that may have occurred and for any customers that needs to be notified. Tis information gets shared between the bar staff and those in the area.

But the Humberside police has said it is committed to helping Hulls violence rates.

Now bar workers are calling for action- not words.

The Clock is Ticking for Coney Street’s Retailing Future

Fourteen shops in York’s premier shopping street have now closed or are set to shut and experts believe this isn’t just a blip and Coney Street won’t be booming anytime soon.

The Swarovski site is one of the several empty stores in Coney Street. Curry’s has also closed, York’s shopping treasure Burgin’s Perfumery closed in July after 137 years. The year-old signs on the former Wallis and BHS site, promising new shops in 2018 are looking not very optimistic.

Andrew Sharp Head of business at the destination management organisation Make it York, said: “High street should be seen as a civic, not a private space. A shared resource in which people come together to create value and shared experience” but “As one of York’s principal shopping street it is disappointing to see the current level of empty shops along Coney Street.”

Owner of Pylones, a shop brimming with unusual and jaunty objects, San Froid, said: “Coney Street just isn’t working anymore, it needs to be more of a social place with a vibrant evening economy and to offer something that neither shopping centres nor the internet can match.”

But shopper Georgia Leeson said: “York’s problem was no different to those found in any other major city up and down the UK, and blamed internet shopping for the closure.”

Local government association has stated: “Our vision for the future of high street is of multifunctional and social places which offer a clear and compelling purpose and experience that’s not available elsewhere, and which meets the interests and needs of the local people.”

The latest official retail figures from the Office for Nation Statistics showed sales volumes were down 1.2% in March
But there has been no official explanation to what is keeping the consumers away from the shops.

Though, internet shopping is making the cost of maintaining a high street presence unviable. The internet is considered to be fast becoming the destination of choice for shoppers.

Superb, Confident cooking from an Argentina Genius in Hull.

Robin Oaks is a steak house restaurant located on Hulls popular Princes Avenue. At Robin oaks they have established themselves as a prime venue for casual dining and relaxed socialising. As you enter the place you are invited with a rustic, vintage and relaxed atmosphere and its almost like dining in your own living room but with waiter service and great quality food.

The menu offers a wide variety of mouth-watering starters. I had grilled tiger prawns accompanied by a chimichurri sauce and mixed leaves, while my friend tried the pressed belly pork served with sugar snap puree and a pork jus, garnished with crispy onions. They were exquisite. The main course consisted of chicken supreme served on a bed of dauphinoise potatoes with rich chicken jus, bacon savoy cabbage, and sugar snap puree and garnished with crispy carrots, which really thrilled us.

The divine menu also includes a vast array of steaks, from sirloin and rump to filet and gammon steak. However the restaurant also cater for vegetarians, vegans and people who are gluten free. It’s not just a place for steaks.

All the products were fresh and the dishes had the warmth of home-made food. The chef takes great care in selecting the best quality ingredients. The restaurant also caters for all tastes providing a large selection of the best wines of the region, which are pricey but worth sampling.

What a pity that the service does not accompany the high quality of the cooking. You can hardly get a smile out of the waitresses. Thankfully to the owner and host, a middle age charming man is always around willing to exchange some kind words with all his clients.

Despite the high price of the food and the not so attentive waiter’s service, I had a pleasant dining experience with food of the most exquisite flavours. For this reason I highly recommend going to the Robin Oaks Steakhouse.

Hull’s year of culture: ‘We look at our city in a new light’

Hull, best known as the home city of poet Philip Larkin, beat Leicester, Dundee and Swansea Bay to be named European City of Culture 2017.

The Yorkshire city was praised for showing a “real understanding” of what the title was about after submitting a bid around the theme “a city coming out of the shadows.”

The real story of Hull’s year as City of Culture is how it’s transformed the lives of the local people.

In May 2016, Brenda Sparks and her daughter Abbie Longley saw an ad for volunteers for Hull UK City of Culture in the Hull Daily Mail. “We fancied giving it a go,” she says. “Though we didn’t think for a minute we’d be picked.”

Nevertheless, they applied for it, and soon afterwards – somewhat to their amazement – they were invited to an interview, given uniforms to try on, given flyers/brochures, and photographed.

“We were so shocked that they wanted us. We thought they’d want someone more … professional, someone who knew what they were doing.”

How did being chosen make you feel? “Excited,” says Abbie. And it was catching. Now Abbie’s daughter, Lucy Nicole, wanted in, too. “I began to suffer badly from fear of missing out,” she says. “When they went to KCOM Stadium to do a lap in their uniforms to hand out flags, I was jealous. So I signed on as part of wave two.”

Abbie and Lucy, who are both shop assistants, have always been keen theatregoers, though as Abbie notes, this wasn’t something she grew up with.

“We were a working-class family,” she says. “We went to museums- they were free. But the theatre was too expensive.” Brenda, though, worked as a cleaner until her retirement, for which reason it is fair to say that it is on her that the last year has had the most transformative effect.

“I’m 72,” she says. “I looked after my children, and helped out with my grandchildren, I looked after my mum, who suffered from dementia. I worked at Hull University for 46 years, until I was 68. So when this came along, I thought ‘right, I’m going to do something for myself’. Someone said to me: ‘You’re doing it for the people of Hull, not yourself,’ which is true, in a way. But oh, it has brought me out of my shell. When I was a child, art was just a picture on the wall. Now I go to Humber Street Gallery every week, and I love it.”

Once 2017 arrived, every day was an opportunity. “We rarely get to volunteer for the same event,” says Abbie. “But that’s great because afterward, we pool in the information, telling each other what’s worth seeing. It’s costing us a fortune.” They have amazed themselves with things they’ve wanted to try. For instance: opera. “I was a meeter and greeter at a 45-minute taster session Opera North held at the University,” says Lucy. “And I liked it so much, I booked tickets for us to see L’Enfant.”

Pop superstars and world-class dancers are just a few of the highlights of City of culture that wowed the trio. The highlights seem endless. There have been more than 2,000 events, exhibitions, and cultural activities at more than 250 venues. The year has won over most of those who didn’t think the words “Hull” and “Culture” belonged in the same sentence, as well as helping the local economy and going some way to reinvent the city’s image.

Made in Hull was the highlight so far for Brenda, the opening event of 2017 set the bar so high. “I think it’s still to be beaten,” says Brenda. “We knew there was going to be light and sound spectacle telling the story of Hull, but I don’t think anyone had imagined it could be so powerful and emotional. The atmosphere in Queen Victoria Square was electric.”

Radio 1 Big Weekend & Academy is Lucy’s biggest highlight so far. After the terrible events in Manchester, there was a chance that this wouldn’t go ahead. But the Big Weekend brought together champions of music in such a difficult time.

“It was simply incredible to have global pop stars right on our doorstep,” says Lucy. “Katy Perry astonished me and I don’t think I’ve ever been at a gig where everyone seemed so united. It was only days after the Manchester bombing, and when she asked everyone in the crowd to touch the person next to them, people joined arms and sang along, including the police officers right behind us. Incredibly moving.”

Freedom Festival has been an event held in the city for a few years but the meaning behind Freedom Festival had pretty much been lost. Until this year, different themes of freedom were back at the heart of the performances, debate, and discussions. Therefore making it Abbie’s highlight so far.

Abbie says: “The essence of the festival had found its way back home, bringing it colourful street performances and crowded streets over the weekend.”

One of the biggest successes of the festival has been, in their minds, Back to Ours, a series of events designed to spread culture outwards from the city centre, taking over shopping centres, housing estates, schools, and gyms. “Black Grape played in front of an Iceland supermarket, and Badly Drawn Boy was at the Freedom Centre on Preston Road,” says Brenda. “And much has been cheap or even free,” says Abbie. “In the summer, people would spend all day with their kiddies playing in the new fountains outside City Hall. They’d bring packed lunches.” What you give, you get back. Hull has shown its citizens a measure of kindness and devotion, and as result, they’re loving it right back.