Parents Drinking Causes Harmful Consequences on Scotland’s Children

Bottle www.12steptreatmentcentres.com

By Jennifer Flett

ChildLine issued a new worrying report this week stating that in the last year 230 children in Scotland have called the charity help line about their parents’ drinking, with 87% claiming physical abuse as a consequence.

These figures demonstrate a different aspect of Scotland’s ongoing problems with alcohol, as they establish calls are disproportionately twice as high as anywhere else in Britain.

Spokesperson Alison Wales for ChildLine said of the new report;

“What we know about already is that kids continue to call about it and since a study in 2005 issued by Edinburgh University, where alcohol was found to be the biggest concern for children, the situation has not got better.

“Since the report, we now know that there are hidden children who are not likely to have talked about problems because of how chronic the situation is for them and it’s the crucial aim of ChildLine to voice their concerns to get the message out there.”

Government agency Scottish Health Action on Alcohol Problems (SHAAP) worked in conjunction with ChildLine to complete this full in-depth report.

 Dr Evelyn Gillian, director of SHAAP and co-author of the study highlighted the consequences on children in this situation in saying,

“The degree of emotional stress experienced by children is taking away from their childhoods especially in cases where they are having to take on more responsibilities within the family.”

 In addition to Dr Gillian’s comment, Alison Wales spokesperson from ChildLine underlined a prevalent issue concerning attitudes to drinking;

 “ There is a lot seen in the media about young people drinking, a lot of negative press. In reality children and young people phoning in about parents drinking habits is heard much more consistently.

“Alcohol has been marginalized in terms of young people and binge drinking, especially in Scotland and our relationship with SHAAP is important in allowing society to look at the broader issues at hand.”

This September the Scottish Government unveiled new licensing laws in supermarkets, pubs and clubs, targeting the price of alcohol in hope of minimizing excessive alcohol consumption. 

The report recommends that to accompany new laws better education is needed in schools to teach the social aspects of alcohol abuse within a family, including family break-ups, bereavement and job loss and not just health effects.

Along with education another important factor in addressing the issue is to create more services for children and young people to turn to which are age appropriate and able to cater for the “hidden” children who may be at substantial risk because of limited options.

 Tam Baillie, Scotland’s Commissioner for Children and Young People, emphasized;

“The Government has to take the appropriate steps in tackling alcohol misuse as a matter of urgency because this impacts children more than drug misuse does in Scotland.”

Scotland’s New Eco-hotel Recycles Former Red Light District

Click here for a video tour of this Glasgow icon's £25m makeover

By David Henderson

Seaweed baths and solar panels. Underwater heat pumps and rainwater harvesting. It sounds like utopia for eco-campaigners but the green dream is reality. And it’s in Glasgow:  the city’s first eco-hotel. The five star Blythswood Square.

Blythswood Square. Glasgow's New Boutique Hotel

Blythswood Square. Glasgow's New Boutique Hotel

25 million pounds has been invested in transforming the former Royal Scottish Automobile Club building into a splendid boutique hotel and spa where they promise to be kind to mind, body, soul and the environment. 

The spectacular sandstone building, constructed in the early years of Queen Victoria’s reign, has been completely transformed, well, recycled and now re-used an eco-hotel. Even the location and the name have been treated to makeovers. Until recently the name ‘Blythswood Square’ had altogether different connotations for Glaswegians. It was infamous for being the city’s red light district. Now?  The ten feet high fence erected around the perimeter of the Square’s central gardens to keep the prostitutes and punters out, has been torn down. The lawn in the former no-mans land in the middle of the square is now used for lunchtime picnics by financial and media sector workers. Where there was once an eerie silence, there is the buzz of conversation and the sound of laughter.  “Are you interested in any business” has a different meaning in ‘ra Blythswood’ now. Urban recycling.

When BSQ was built in 1823, Glasgow had a population of over one million. The  then Second City of The Empire choked in the smoke and smog created by heavy industry. Dealing with environmental problems in Blythswood Square then meant using a shovel and a bucket to clear up after the horses. How the world had changed by the time Townhouse bought the building in 2006.

“Our vision for Blythswood Square was to retain the essence of this landmark historical building and safeguard architectural features whilst bringing it into the 21st century using the most sustainable methods possible,” says chairman Peter Taylor. 

He’d already designed his own home to be eco friendly by the time work on the hotel started. His carbon footprint doesn’t make an impact; BSQ certainly does: “We felt a responsibility to ensure that this wonderful hotel met the environmental standards for our low carbon future so we closely managed and reduced the carbon emissions and chose to work with suppliers who also had the same commitment to protecting the environment, approaching these kind of large scale projects with a clear sustainability strategy not only benefits the environment but it also creates better business performance”.

The architectural features of Blythswood Square were retained, whilst exploiting the latest in green innovation has helped reduce the carbon footprint by a massive 43 per cent, when compared to buildings of a similar age and size. Green technology has be embedded in the new design: rainwater harvesting (and what a harvest there is to be reaped in Glasgow), renewable energy supply, geothermal grid (solar panels), a percentage of water will be drawn from the ground.

John Stocks, manager of the Carbon Trust in Scotland, congratulated the hotel’s eco-investment: “Blythswood Square is an excellent example of what can be achieved by specifying low carbon. The redevelopment of the building has successfully incorporated low carbon design principles, whilst being able to retain the grandeur of the original building. It will not only bring financial savings through the low carbon design solutions implemented, it will also deliver a more pleasurable environment for guests who will undoubtedly benefit.”

Entering a competitive boutique-break-and-business market in Glasgow, BSQ has its enemies close – main rival, The Malmaison Hotel, is just 500 yards away on West George Street. With 100 rooms, the new hotel is around one third bigger than the long established ‘ Mal’.

Blythswood Square is the fifth addition to the portfolio of The Town House Collection. It is the boutique hotel chain’s first venture outside Edinburgh since being set up in 1990. Existing properties: The Bonham, Channings, The Howard and The Edinburgh Residence are established leaders in the capital’s chic town house hotel culture.

 For Glasgow City Marketing Bureau, BSQ represents a massive expansion of the city centre’s boutique hotel sector; a “trophy” build. The Bureau’s chief executive, Scott Taylor enthuses about how Glasgow has acquired some of Edinburgh’s chic by luring the Town House Collection along the M8 motorway.

“We are delighted to welcome home one of Scotland most celebrated and modest entrepreneurs, who has helped shape the hotel industry beyond recognition. “Peter Taylor’s decision to invest in Scotland’s largest and most vibrant city speaks volumes about where Glasgow is heading, and its competitive position on the global stage. Blythswood Square is unique and will become a landmark trophy hotel for Glasgow, and one of the city’s newest style icons.”

In its former incarnation, The Royal Scottish Automobile Club had to be seen to be believed. In the club’s latter years, my bank had a branch located on the first floor. Passing through the grand Greek-style pillars of its main entrance was like passing through a time portal and being transported back to the days when one third of the globe’s surface was shaded pink. Elderly men with handlebar moustaches snoozing on leather couches. More energetic club members sat awake. Only just. They all wore blazers. Most of those adorned with a row of military decoration. Some had a very long row of medals. Gins all round. Cigars too. Large ones. God forbid if your mobile phone rang. If looks could kill. These were men of a generation which knew how to use a bayonet. Anyway, they’ve gone now. Passed into history with The Empire they served.

Now the smell of mothballs has been replaced by the smell of scented candles. (Oh, and case you were wondering the ladies of the night have been shunted off into a ‘controlled area’ a few blocks away).

Blythswood Square bedroom. Spacious and stylish.

The penthouse has a decadent rooftop hot tub which will raise eyebrows and, you would assume, a chill.  The rooms have a mixture of original features and contemporary bespoke furniture and floorings. White marble bathrooms are a luxury from a bygone era, an era when the Scottish banking system was more solid than stone. This is a place to relax and forget the credit crunch.

The Royal Scottish Automobile Club’s ballroom has been transformed into the hotel’s main 120-cover restaurant and cocktail bar, grand in scale and in detail.  It’s intended to be a relaxed setting – gone is the stuffiness of the previous tenant – a place to enjoy delicious seasonally chosen and locally sourced food from award winning Executive Head Chef, Dan Hall.

It’s an amzing transformation. Bythswood Square has it’s old swagger back…and a style to suit it’s third century of service to Glasgow.

£25 million well spent. The recycled Blythswood isn’t square.

Cheaper Toys Best Sellers In Credit Crunch Christmas

By David Henderson

Santa will be behaving more like Scrooge this Christmas as the credit crunch curbs spending on toys. The festive bestsellers chart is dominated by presents costing under fifty pounds.

Parents are putting value at the top of their Christmas lists. Britain’s toy shops are preparing for reduced consumer spending and children are being warned not to expect their stockings to bulge with gifts as the recession sends a chill through the holiday season.

Luckily for children, Santa’s sack won’t be completely empty; value and quality presents are selling in big numbers. “Pocket money-priced toys are making a big comeback this year, so we are in for an affordable, family-orientated Christmas this year,” predicts Gary Grant, chairman of  The Toy Retailers Association.

Ben10 set to be a credit crunch Christmas bestseller

Ben10 set to be a credit crunch Christmas bestseller

Ben10 to the rescue! The children’s hero battles aliens on TV and now tackles…the global recession. Priced at an affordable, the Cartoon Network favourite features on the toy sellers’ ‘Dream Dozen’ presents list. If your child would rather play with a cardboard box than Ben10’s Alien Force Action Cruiser,  there’s always a pink palace for pre-school TV favourite Peppa Pig, toy hamsters and Transformers. Lego is on this years best seller list over three decades after it first built it’s reputation with Britain’s children.

 
 
 
                                         CHRISTMAS 2009′S DREAM DOZEN TOYS
  • Bakugan Battle Pack, Spin Master (RRP £19.99) Battle Strikers starter Set, Mega Brands (RRP £9.99)
  • Ben 10 Alien Force Kevins DX Action Cruiser, Bandai (RRP £29.99)
  • GO GO Pets Hamsters, Character Options (RRP £9.99)
  • GX Racers Tightrope Terror, Flair (RRP £22.99)
  • Kidizoom Multimedia Digital Camera, V-Tech (RRP £49.99) 

    Click to view an episode of Peppa Pig

     

  • LEGO Games Minotaurus, Lego (RRP £17.99)
  • Monopoly City, Hasbro (RRP £24.99)
  • Princess Peppa’s Palace, Character Options (RRP £39.99)
  • Sylvanian Families Caravan, Flair (RRP £44.99)
  • Transformers Movie 2 Voyagers Figures, Hasbro (RRP £22.99)

A lucky dip of hi-tech and traditional toys is expected be left gift wrapped under the nation’s Christmas trees: “The toy industry has turned the latest trends into up-to-the-minute concepts to provide today’s kids with innovative and creative toys. The top toys demonstrate how forward-thinking and pioneering the toy industry is. This year’s list also reveals a trend towards nostalgic characters and brands which have been updated with a modern twist. Consumers are reverting back to heritage brands which last longer than the Christmas season,” revealed Grant. As toy and games technology gets cheaper, the hi-tech presents have come done in price at a time when consumers crave value for their money.

‘Ben10’s appearance in the Christmas Dream Dozen toys list follows 2008’s success when the character’s 10” and 15” action figure was named Toy of the Year. That title was first awarded in 1965 when it went to the James Bond Aston Martin die-cast car; Action Man, Sindy and Spirograph also had success in the sixties. The early 1970’s saw the arrival of Lego, Playmobil and the Peter Powell stunt kite soared to the top of the sales charts in 1976. The eighties started with back-to-back successes for the Rubik’s cube. Star Wars toys, Transformers and Sylvanian Families were also popular with the children of Thatcherism. The 1990’s was the decade of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Nintendo and Thunderbird’s Tracey Island. Kids TV show ‘Teletubbies’, featuring strange gurgling furry puppets, won Toy of the Year in 1997 followed a decade later by ‘In The Night Garden’, another kids tv show featuring strange gurgling furry puppets. Maybe it’s the sherry…

Children should be dreaming of a green Christmas, with eco-presents increasing in popularity as Britons become more switched-on to earth issues. Children’s gift website Spotty Gift Boxes predicts that parents will dig deep into their pockets for a worm farm. The worms could crawl to the top of the pile and become the website’s number one seller this year!

Computer Worm. Worm farm is online seller

The good news is that the Earthworm Nursery costs just £17.99; the bad news is that you have worms in your home! Children learn about the full life cycle of the worm and can observe them hatching from their cocoons and growing into full length wrigglers. Yes, all in the comfort of your own home. Your clean home.

Once the worms are safely outside, then why not leave the kids outside playing with their toy gardening tools, another popular choice this year?   This Christmas, think of the environment. Think of the fresh air. Think of the mud. Think of the new hall carpet.

The top selling toy in the run-up to Christmas is a one kids can enjoy weeks before Santa even jumps aboard his sleigh! Internet super power Amazon is enjoying a pre-Christmas rush for the LEGO City 7687 Advent Calendar. Costing £14.99, it’s dearer than a chocolate calendar, but it’s kinder to milk teeth! There aren’t many internet shopping days left until Christmas and you’ll need to buy your advent calendar 24 days earlier – opening night is December 1!

 

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