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‘Loyal friend': Cockburn receives key to city on 50th anniversary of first folk fest appearance
‘Loyal friend': Cockburn receives key to city on 50th anniversary of first folk fest appearance

Winnipeg Free Press

time2 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Winnipeg Free Press

‘Loyal friend': Cockburn receives key to city on 50th anniversary of first folk fest appearance

A sprawling crowd gathered Saturday afternoon at the Winnipeg Folk Festival's Big Bluestem stage to witness Bruce Cockburn receive the city's highest honour. In a brief ceremony prior to the legendary Canadian musician's concert, Mayor Scott Gillingham presented Cockburn with the key to the City of Winnipeg. 'He has inspired and influenced countless artists, poets and entertainers; his lyrics have stirred us and soothed us and challenged us,' Gillingham said from the stage, alongside festival executive director Valerie Shantz. 'Today, we celebrate Bruce Cockburn as a loyal friend of the Winnipeg Folk Festival for 50 years.' Mike Sudoma/Free Press Files Bruce Cockburn, pictured performing at the Burton Cummings Theatre in 2023, was presented with the key to the City of Winnipeg Saturday afternoon at the Winnipeg Folk Festival Those in attendance gave a standing ovation and cheers of 'Bruuuuuuuuce' rippled through the large daytime crowd. Previous recipients of a key to the city include ballerina Evelyn Hart, hockey player Jonathan Toews, musician Gene Simmons, among others. Cockburn, 80, performed at the first folk festival in 1974 and made his most recent appearance in 2017. The 13-time Juno Award-winning singer-songwriter and guitarist is a member of the Order of Canada and an inductee into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame. 'Thank you for the recognition, thank you for the hospitality that I've experienced over all these years, it's been a pretty good run,' said Cockburn, who was born in Ottawa and first travelled west in a campervan with his wife and dog in 1970. 'The people (of Winnipeg) were so hospitable and so friendly and it opened up a whole life, really, because the travel that that was the beginning of became a huge part of everything I've done since.' Seated on a stool at centre-stage, Cockburn tuned his guitar and told stories between the music, which included Mama Just Wants To Barrelhouse All Night Long (a song he played at the first festival five decades ago) and Lovers in a Dangerous Time. The crowd, one of the largest this reporter has seen at a daytime stage, was quiet and captivated during the set, standing for a second ovation once Cockburn wrapped. The sky was sunny and smoky during the third day of folk fest. While the air quality had improved considerably from the dense wildfire smoke hanging over grounds Friday, many festivalgoers continued to wear masks while taking in the day's music. Amy Attas flew in from out of town to attend the festival with family. 'I live in B.C. now and when it's this bad, I don't usually go outside,' she said of the smoke. 'I'm wearing a mask because it feels like a good balance.' Attas didn't expect the festival to cancel events, but had hoped for more communication about the conditions on Friday and Saturday, when the air quality health index was hovering around 10 — the highest health risk level, during which Environment Canada recommends the cancellation of outdoor activities. The festival had put out three weather updates related to the air quality between both days. 'I don't know if there's anything they could do. I hope they're protecting the performers, especially the older performers,' Attas said. Dennis Kakoske was also visiting from out of town and expected to see fewer people and more masks. 'I thought it was really going to kill the attendance because it was so bad,' he said of the air quality. 'I'm surprised that people are kind of taking it in stride… even young kids don't have masks on.' Kakoske also didn't expect the event to be cancelled. Eva, a volunteer who asked not to use her last name, decided against camping with friends at the festival when she noted the air quality Thursday night. Every Second Friday The latest on food and drink in Winnipeg and beyond from arts writers Ben Sigurdson and Eva Wasney. 'I've been struggling with my asthma and the wildfire smoke for a few years,' said Eva, who was wearing an N95 mask, had packed extra asthma medication and had made safety plans with friends in case of an attack. 'It definitely takes me a while to recover from being outside, even with the mask on.' She uses four different apps to monitor smoke conditions hour-to-hour and was unable to complete her volunteer shift Friday, when ratings were the worst she had ever seen. Eva also didn't expect the festival to cancel. 'It's a difficult call for the festival to make, but I think having an indoor space for people to recover from the air so they can get back to the city safely would be helpful,' she said. '(And) it would be good if there was more of a consensus about being out in the wildfire smoke.' If you value coverage of Manitoba's arts scene, help us do more. Your contribution of $10, $25 or more will allow the Free Press to deepen our reporting on theatre, dance, music and galleries while also ensuring the broadest possible audience can access our arts journalism. BECOME AN ARTS JOURNALISM SUPPORTER Click here to learn more about the project. Eva WasneyReporter Eva Wasney has been a reporter with the Free Press Arts & Life department since 2019. Read more about Eva. Every piece of reporting Eva produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press's tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press's history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates. Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber. Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.

Perth library trials social worker program to help people in need
Perth library trials social worker program to help people in need

ABC News

time08-06-2025

  • General
  • ABC News

Perth library trials social worker program to help people in need

Libraries have always been sanctuaries. They're cool in summer, warm and dry in winter, have free wi-fi, comfortable seats and plenty of entertainment. But when librarians at Success library in Perth's south noticed a teenage girl spending long hours in the library each day, they wanted to help. "Librarians are very passionate about helping people," Cockburn Libraries adult services coordinator Deb Rigby said. "She wasn't at school and she didn't want to be at home because she was suffering from domestic and family violence and she didn't want to leave when the library was closing." Ms Rigby said the cost of living crisis had also brought more people to the library in search of free resources and internet, entertainment and to connect with community. "Librarians and library staff realised that a lot of people had unmet support needs and all they needed was some help in finding the right services and support for their needs," Ms Rigby said. "And they felt that they didn't perhaps have the training needed." The idea for a pilot project was formed. Ms Rigby said it was common for libraries in the US and UK to have social workers stationed in the library. But without funding, they had to think outside the box. With support from Cockburn Integrated Health and Communicare, two students from Curtin University have set up a desk in the library. It's tucked just inside the entrance and is staffed by the students a couple of days a week. Social work students Jenara Lane and Amber Proudfoot said they had so far been able to help dozens of people. "It's a drop in style service," Ms Lane said. "It's accessible to everybody, anybody who uses the library space can come in just have a chat with us, they might be looking for resources, they might need a support service perhaps and be looking for a referral. She said people saw libraries as safe spaces. "It is one of the few spaces left where you can go and feel comfortable and not feel obliged to purchase anything." Ms Proudfoot said similar programs had started in South Australia, Fremantle and Melbourne. "A lot of these supports are set up in a very clinical setting and that can be quite daunting for people to go into, whereas in the library setting everyone is accepted, it's a very culturally safe space for people to attend, it's free, it's warm, it's inviting," she said. The students have access to a quiet room, where they can go with a client to have a confidential chat. Success Library hopes to keep the program running, but libraries are already struggling with funding. WA Local Government Association (WALGA) president Karen Chappel said public libraries promoted social cohesion and wellbeing. "The shift in community expectations and needs is placing pressure on our public libraries, and while the services have changed, funding has not," Ms Chappel said. WALGA wants the state government to provide an extra $30million over four years to restore library funding to pre-2013 levels. "The State Government provides support for public libraries through the provision of funds for library resources, however this is out of step with the needs of modern libraries and is falling behind what is required," Ms Chappel said. Deb Rigby said the service was a natural extension of what the library already offered. "I think that it could be a model for other local governments to adopt," Ms Rigby said.

Edinburgh must not kill off the golden goose that makes its fortune
Edinburgh must not kill off the golden goose that makes its fortune

The Herald Scotland

time03-06-2025

  • Business
  • The Herald Scotland

Edinburgh must not kill off the golden goose that makes its fortune

A prominent lawyer and judge, Cockburn was also an early heritage conservationist. In 1849 he wrote 'A Letter to the Lord Provost on the Best Ways of Spoiling the Beauty of Edinburgh' in which he outlined his fears for the future. 'Edinburgh is not exempt from the doom that makes everything spoilable,' he said at the time, urging the citizens of the city to take an interest in their civic surroundings and to hold local officials to account. The Cockburn Association was formed 21 years after his death to carry forward his concerns and passion for Edinburgh. The success of the Cockburn Association over 150 years lies in what you cannot see. Read more Thanks to its campaigning, there is no dual carriageway through the Meadows or skyscraper over Haymarket, no shopping mall beneath Princes Street or high-rise hotel looming over George Street. Civic amenities such as Inverleith Park, Corstorphine Hill and the Water of Leith Walkway were the result the Cockburn's efforts. The demolition of the First New Town was averted and historic buildings like Moubray House in the High Street conserved. With Unesco World Heritage Site status in place since 1995, the past has been protected, but what about the future? ​I became President of the Cockburn Association this year at pivotal moment for the city. Recent years have seen growing dissatisfaction about over tourism and creeping development. The population of Edinburgh is rising fast and could soon catch up with Glasgow. Some believe it could reach 750,000 in the next 20 years. But where will those people live and work and how will they move around an Old Town and New Town where history is baked into the cobblestones? Those are some of the questions authors Cliff Hague and Richard Rodger set out to answer in a new book published by the Cockburn Association. 'Campaigning For Edinburgh' lays out two possible visions for the future. One has overseas investors throwing up buildings wherever they want as deregulation opens up the city to market forces with a 24-hour party zone attracting even more revellers from all around the world. In the other, removing VAT from repairs and maintenance leads to a conservation boom with old, empty buildings carefully repurposed based on the wants and needs of the citizens rather than consultants or developers. Edinburgh already faces a housing emergency with more children in temporary accommodation in the city than in the whole of Wales. The priority for those kids is not architecture or heritage, they just want a home, but it's our job to ensure the myriad housing projects now taking shape around the capital are of the best possible quality and standard for them. Crucially, these places need to be communities with heart and soul and the facilities to live meaningful lives, not just dormitories for workers to eat and sleep. Edinburgh should not be pickled in aspic, with locals moving about simply as extras in a heritage theme park for visitors. But if the next few years are not carefully managed, progress risks killing the golden goose that attracts people in the first place. The architect behind the controversial W Hotel project promised it would be 'expressive… and make people happy'. Despite all the objections it went ahead. Once built, it was then named the worst new building in the world. That's not an accolade anyone wants. The revelation this month that Edinburgh is now the most expensive city-break destination in Western Europe prompted more negative headlines. But the answer is not to relax short-term let restrictions or build more cheap hotels. The solution is to manage numbers and the 5% visitor levy coming next year will help do that. The revenue also provides an opportunity to invest in the civic realm or to employ an army of workers to clean the streets, remove graffiti and pick up litter… all paid for by the tourist tax. There is a lot to be optimistic about. Management of the Old Town is already better with short-term let restrictions rejecting 90% of applications. Council plans to cut traffic volumes are also welcome provided they come with continued investment in transport alternatives. The Cockburn Association is always looking to support what is right for Edinburgh. The reborn Jenners site and the exciting new Dunard Concert Hall are two current projects we've backed with enthusiasm. More than anything, we need bold vision, based on sound heritage and architectural principles rather than the latest trend on Tik Tok . Princes Street remains an eyesore and visual proof of the decay and death of retail. The ambition that led 26-year-old James Craig to design the New Town is required now to revitalise that key thoroughfare and to guide where we go from here. Edinburgh has never been more popular but much of that popularity comes down to what has been s0 carefully protected and preserved. Over the past 150 years a lot of battle have been fought over Scotland's capital and a lot of lessons learned. They should provide the blueprint for the future to protect Edinburgh's beauties for the next generation. Stephen Jardine, President of the Cockburn Association​, is a journalist, broadcaster and presenter. He has worked for the BBC, Scottish Television, GMTV and Radio Tay.

How Edinburgh was saved from skyscrapers – and why the fight continues
How Edinburgh was saved from skyscrapers – and why the fight continues

Scotsman

time24-05-2025

  • General
  • Scotsman

How Edinburgh was saved from skyscrapers – and why the fight continues

Sign up to our daily newsletter – Regular news stories and round-ups from around Scotland direct to your inbox Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... What do you want Edinburgh to look like in 2050? That's the question posed in a new book celebrating this year's 150th anniversary of the Cockburn Association. Scotland's oldest conservation charity was established to continue the work of Lord Cockburn, who called for the preservation of the beauties of Edinburgh in the face of those who believe 'everything can be valued in money'. So much changes, yet so much remains the same. When you look around Edinburgh today, the work of the Cockburn Association is in everything you don't see. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad There is no motorway through the Meadows or underground shopping mall the length of Princes Street, no high-rise hotel on George Street or skyscraper towering over Haymarket because of battles that were hard fought and won against developers and planners down the years. If you want to see what Edinburgh might have become, just take a trip to Glasgow. Edinburgh would still be recognisable to people who lived there in the 19th century (Picture: Andrew Milligan) | PA Preserving the past, looking to the future 'But the past is a foreign country, they do things differently there', as novelist LP Hartley once said. Preserving what went before is one thing but Edinburgh needs to have a future as well as a past. That's why I agreed to become the president of the Cockburn Association as it reshapes for the challenges of the future. In their new book, authors Cliff Hague and Richard Rodger set out two competing visions of what the city might look like. In one, Edinburgh development runs rampant with Chinese and Middle Eastern investors throwing up high-rise buildings wherever they can, as deregulation allows revellers to party non-stop in the city centre. In the other, an Edinburgh model emerges where decision-making is led by citizens, based on lived experience rather than the view of consultants or investors. VAT is stripped from repairs and maintenance leading to a building conservation boom with empty churches and shopping centres repurposed for housing, community hubs and youth centres, the tram network spreads throughout the city, and local neighbourhoods thrive. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The difference between the two really comes down to intervention. When people do nothing, market forces will always dominate. However if we want the best possible outcome, then we have to roll up our sleeves and help shape our own future. Every day is a school day Experience shows us Edinburgh's future is most likely to be somewhere between the two extremes. Holding back commercial forces is incredibly difficult as the controversial W Hotel project proves. Built with American pension fund money, it overcame all objections with the architect saying'it is communicative, it is expressive and it is supposed to make people happy'. Instead, it topped a poll as the worst new building in the world. However, every day is a school day and there are lessons to be learned from that project as well as from all the developments that are turned down and every attempt to commercially exploit what should be free public space in the city centre. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad

Convicted OAP back behind bars for dangerous driving in electric wheelchair on busy road in the dark
Convicted OAP back behind bars for dangerous driving in electric wheelchair on busy road in the dark

Scotsman

time23-05-2025

  • Scotsman

Convicted OAP back behind bars for dangerous driving in electric wheelchair on busy road in the dark

A convicted child sex offender is back behind bars - after he was caught erratically driving an electric wheelchair along a busy main road. Sign up to the daily Crime UK newsletter. All the latest crime news and trials from across the UK. Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to Edinburgh News, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Robert Cockburn, 78, was spotted riding his electric wheelchair in the dark without any lights or reflective materials on the coastal road between Port Seton and Aberlady in East Lothian. Cockburn was said to have driven the power chair at 'grossly insufficient speeds' while swerving across the carriageway into the path of oncoming vehicles. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Motorists were forced to take evasive action to avoid colliding with the pensioner as he repeatedly attempted to re-enter the roadway during the dangerous incident on Monday this week. The police were alerted to the situation and Cockburn, from Port Seton, East Lothian, was arrested and charged. Electric wheelchairs can typically travel at speeds between four and eight miles per hour. The OAP spent the night in the cells and appeared from custody at Edinburgh Sheriff Court on Thursday where he pleaded guilty to a charge of culpably and recklessly operating the electric wheelchair in the hours of darkness. Sheriff Francis Gill remanded Cockburn in custody and deferred sentence for social work reports to next month. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Robert Cockburn, 78, was spotted riding his electric wheelchair in the dark without any lights or reflective materials on the coastal road between Port Seton and Aberlady in East Lothian, on Monday, May 19. | Alexander Lawrie Cockburn first hit the headlines in 2017 when he refused to use his mobility scooter on the pavement and regularly held traffic up by trundling along the B1348 road between Port Seton and nearby Longniddry. The retired bus inspector defied angry motorists by claiming he was not breaking any law and that the police were powerless to stop him travelling on the busy road. In 2023 Cockburn was jailed for 212 days when he admitted to a series of sexual offences - including exposing himself to children - carried out over a 14 month period. The pensioner flashed his genitals to women at a supermarket and asked adult men for sexual favours when he repeatedly attended at a public toilet in Musselburgh, East Lothian. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The pervert also exposed his genitals to two schoolboys aged 12 and 14 and asked them to perform a sex act in him at the same public convenience. He was handed an ASBO banning him from entering any public toilet building in East Lothian, but after his release from prison last year he soon began breaching the order. Cockburn was seen within the public convenience near his home in Port Seton where he would sit on the toilet in a state of undress with the door open so members of the public could see him. A second incident at the same location soon after saw the repeat offender smear faeces on the walls of the toilets. He also deliberately watched men while they urinated at toilets at the capital's Waverley train station and exposed himself to women at a dental clinic in Prestonpans, East Lothian. Sentence had been deferred on several occasions for the possibility of Cockburn being re-located to a care home but the court was told no facility was prepared to accept him as a resident. He was eventually caged for eight months and placed on the sex offenders register for 10 years in September last year.

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