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More shared bathrooms in student accommodation under new design guide going to Cabinet
More shared bathrooms in student accommodation under new design guide going to Cabinet

Irish Independent

time5 days ago

  • Politics
  • Irish Independent

More shared bathrooms in student accommodation under new design guide going to Cabinet

Higher Education ­Minister James Lawless will bring a memo before the Cabinet to formally note the design guide for state-supported student accommodation, developed after a construction cost study two years ago. The new design standards will include higher bed capacity in the purpose-built student accommodation, with greater use of twin rooms. There will also be more communal kitchens and shared bathrooms, which will replace the reliance on individual en suites. The design guide will look to help faster delivery and procurement savings in student accommodation development. The guide had stakeholder input from groups including experts, planners and students. It is hoped the new designs will encourage a more sociable experience for students. There will be ongoing engagement with the Department of Housing to integrate the design guide into Section 28 planning guidelines, which will see planning decisions made consistent across the country. It is expected that further refinements will be made to the guide. The new design guide comes as measures to protect students from rent increases in the new rental market system are yet to be fully agreed. Last week, when announcing that all current tenancies were to be brought in under a Rent Pressure Zone (RPZ), Housing Minister James Browne confirmed that students in private rental accommodation will not have additional protections in the new rules. Concerns were raised in relation to students who rent for a limited period for the academic year and for trainee doctors who regularly move around the country. Those groups could be subject to increases in rent on a regular basis under rules to be brought in on March 1, 2026, which will allow landlords to reset rents to market rates when a tenant voluntarily leaves, or every six years. While students in the private market will not have additional protections, Mr Browne confirmed last week that measures will be brought in to support students in student-specific accommodation. Those measures have not been finalised yet.

New plans to favour twin bedrooms and shared bathrooms in student accommodation
New plans to favour twin bedrooms and shared bathrooms in student accommodation

Irish Daily Mirror

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • Irish Daily Mirror

New plans to favour twin bedrooms and shared bathrooms in student accommodation

New national design standards for student accommodation will see twin bedrooms and shared bathrooms favoured over 'individual ensuite units'. Higher Education Minister James Lawless will bring the Design Guide for State-Supported Student Accommodation for 'formal noting' to Cabinet on Tuesday morning that will introduce new 'national design standards' for new student accommodation. They were developed following a 2023 Residential Construction Cost Study. It is understood that the new model will include 'greater use of shared facilities'. This will include twin rooms, communal kitchens and shared bathrooms, replacing the 'current reliance on individual ensuite units.' Sources stated on Monday evening that the plan was devised following extensive stakeholder input from students, providers, planners and experts and 'aims to balance quality, affordability, and delivery at scale'. They stated that it will 'support higher bed capacity, faster delivery, and procurement savings' and 'encourage a more sociable, integrated student experience'. There will be collaboration with the Department of Housing to integrate Section 28 planning guidelines. Public Expenditure Minister Jack Chambers, meanwhile, will warn Cabinet ministers of their responsibility to ensure value for money is prioritised in how they spend public funds. A memo to be brought to Cabinet will set out the responsibilities of individual ministers to ensure value for money, as well as the legislation that underpins decision-making. A full and comprehensive review of the Public Financial Procedures, the set of rules around which set out accountability for public expenditure across the civil and public service, is also underway. Minister Chambers will remind ministers that value for money is about securing efficiency and effectiveness in the use of public resources to deliver enhanced public services, living standards and infrastructure for the country. Elsewhere, Tánaiste Simon Harris will bring the heads of the 'Israeli Settlements Prohibition of Importation of Goods Bill 2025' to Cabinet. The proposed legislation would ban trade with the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT) by rendering any import from the OPT an offence under the Customs Act 2015. The provisions of the Customs Act 2015 – including powers of entry, inspection, search, arrest, seizure and forfeiture of goods – will apply to the importation of goods from Israeli settlements in the OPT. The Tánaiste has said that he is open to considering the inclusion of services, as proposed in Senator Frances Black's Occupied Territories Bill. If approved by Cabinet, Mr Harris' Bill will be sent to the Oireachtas Committee on Foreign Affairs and Trade for pre-legislative scrutiny. The Tánaiste has said that legal clarity is needed on whether or not it is possible to include services and that he has asked the Attorney General to advise on this. Separately, the Tánaiste will also ask ministers to approve the continuation of up to 13 members of the Defence Forces participating in the UN-authorised NATO-led International Security Presence in Kosovo (KFOR) for a further 12 months. Ireland has participated in KFOR since August 1999. Taoiseach Micheál Martin, meanwhile, will seek approval for a 10-year roadmap to enact the Dublin City Taskforce's recommendations. The Taoiseach will seek approval to set up a 'Special Purpose Vehicle' under Dublin City Council to drive the implementation of this roadmap. While that is being set up, a Project Management Office will be established by the council to commence this work urgently. A detailed Integrated Area Strategy for Dublin City Centre will leverage public funding and private investment to regenerate key sites and tackle vacancy and dereliction. The GPO complex will be revamped as an 'ambitious' flagship project, with cultural, retail and office elements, funded under the National Development Plan (NDP). The Taoiseach will also update Cabinet on the progress report of the Implementation Group on Conveyancing and Probate. This group is tasked with cutting the time it takes for people to legally sell and buy property, and for the probate process after someone dies. He will advise that the Implementation Group's work will continue for another six months, based on progressing the recommendations and projects identified. Health Minister Jennifer Carroll MacNeill will bring the Patient Safety (Licensing) Bill 2025 to Cabinet. Sources stated that a licensing system will drive greater patient safety protection and monitoring of standards by providing a legislative basis for the oversight and governance of care. It will apply modern regulatory methods and risk-based approaches to the hospital sector and will provide for standardised care. Elsewhere, Energy Minister Darragh O'Brien will update Cabinet on an SEAI report on retrofitting. It will state that the Government has invested €1.2 billion in SEAI-supported energy upgrades across 186,000 homes and 156 community energy projects. In 2024, almost 54,000 property upgrades (up 13% year on year) were completed, while over 21,800 BER B2 upgrades (up 24% year on year) were completed.

Section 28: Death threats and Holyrood's 'first culture war'
Section 28: Death threats and Holyrood's 'first culture war'

BBC News

time7 days ago

  • Politics
  • BBC News

Section 28: Death threats and Holyrood's 'first culture war'

It was rare for politicians to get death threats in former MSP Wendy Alexander says she found herself an "obvious target" during what she describes as the Scottish Parliament's first culture war – the battle to repeal a law commonly known as Section law prohibited schools and councils from intentionally promoting homosexuality or the teaching of "the acceptability of homosexuality as a pretended family relationship"."It was very unpleasant," she says. "There were death threats, which sadly have become more common to politicians, but in those days were mercifully rare. It was really incredibly febrile." Section 28 – known as Section 2A in Scotland – was introduced by Margaret Thatcher's government in 1988 after an outcry sparked by reports about content in school books in LondonAlexander – who is now a member of the House of Lords – describes the law as "pernicious". And 25 years on, she recalls how she and Scotland's "fledgling" parliament would take on the tabloid media and one of the country's richest men. "You could label this as one of the first pieces of culture war legislation," she says."This was something that Mrs Thatcher put on the statute books because somebody didn't like, literally, a storybook, which had children growing up in a gay family."This was a story book that some London borough allegedly used, and this was a chance for Mrs Thatcher to commence a culture war."She adds: "Because it banned local government from promoting homosexuality, what it did was make teachers very, very scared about being able to talk about relationships in schools."They were frightened that they would be accused of promoting homosexuality by virtue of talking to children who were confused about their sexuality or simply talking about the lives they saw around them, if it came up in personal education." In 1997, the UK's new Labour government had pledged to abolish the law. And by 2000, it would fall to Scotland's new parliament to pass the was communities minister in Holyrood's first Scottish Executive when she received a call from Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott."He said: 'Wendy, we are about to embark on our manifesto commitment to abolish Section 28… If you want to repeal on the same timetable as England, you have to start now.'"We announced in the October before, it was then the Queen's Speech in England, that we intended to repeal in Scotland. The consultation we ran was in favour of the repeal of Section 28 in Scotland as well."However, while the majority of MSPs looked likely to vote to repeal Section 28 in Scotland, there were voices outside parliament opposed to the move. In 2000, Brian Souter, founder of the Stagecoach Group, funded the "Keep the Clause" campaign that sought to prevent Section 28 from being by the Daily Record newspaper and several religious groups, the campaign ran a private postal referendum. It received more than 1.2 million responses, with more than 86% respondents voting to retain the after the result in May 2000, Mr Souter addressed MSPs via the media. He said: "We plead with you to respect parents' rights to nurture their children with their own beliefs and values."And we warn you that we will not stand back and allow a politically correct minority to undermine the important position of marriage and determine morality of the majority."The BBC contacted Mr Souter for this article but he declined to comment. Alexander says: "Cardinal [Thomas] Winning at the time accused me of being the greatest threat to Christian unity in Scotland."Of course, the right thing was to try and take the temperature down. We were not interested in a crusade, but I was an obvious target at that time. I was young, single, I wasn't married, I didn't have kids."But we worked to give reassurance around guidelines to schools that fundamentally this was not about sex education, that the sex education guidelines were there, they were adequate.""This was about society, recognizing that you don't honour marriage by denying the reality of other relationships which are equally well established and honourable."In the end, the repeal was passed on 21 June 2000 – with 99 MSPs voting in favour and 17 and Wales would follow suit by repealing Section 28 in 2003."And of course within 10 years, it was forgotten," Alexander says."People, I think, are proud that Scotland became a more tolerant society and of course it laid the foundation for civil partnerships and then equal marriage, which again are well accepted."The Scottish Conservatives had voted against the repeal, but before he became prime minister in 2010, the party's UK leader David Cameron apologised for Section 28, labelling it "offensive to gay people".Alexander says: "I think it's important in these cases to hold your ground but to do so with humility and try and take people with you."And I think looking back we didn't always manage to take the country with us but the parliament stood firm." After the bruising debate over Section 28, Wendy Alexander had a brief stint as Scottish Labour leader. She is currently a member of the House of her personal life, she married and had two children. In 2020, her husband came out as trans and she says they are now amicably to recent debates over trans right, she says: "In society we do have to be very, very careful not to stigmatise small minorities and certainly not weaponize them in a debate. I've watched this in my own family."I think the arc of progress bends long… Section 28 is instructive in the sense that there was a huge orchestrated media campaign of opposition to legislation that had overwhelming support in the elected parliament and that involved distortion."It was classically in the culture wars tradition - magnifying and weaponising an issue that stigmatised a community."Social media just happens to be the vehicle of choice these days. Twenty-five years ago, it was well funded tabloid campaigns funded by PR agencies and business people."I think the lesson is that, I suppose, it says we're all at risk of being intolerant to the minority," she says.

I was the only out lesbian MP for 13 years - here's how Parliament has changed
I was the only out lesbian MP for 13 years - here's how Parliament has changed

Metro

time22-06-2025

  • Politics
  • Metro

I was the only out lesbian MP for 13 years - here's how Parliament has changed

When Dame Angela Eagle decided it was time to come out publicly as gay, there were two people she knew she needed to tell first. That wasn't simply out of courtesy. It was because the year was 1997, and the reaction to the news from the media had the potential to be explosive. A general election had just resulted in a landslide victory for Tony Blair. Eagle – a Labour MP since 1992, covering the final stretch of Conservative power that lasted 18 years – became a junior environment minister. The landscape for LGBTQ+ Brits was tough, typified by the Section 28 law against 'promoting homosexuality' and the devastation of the Aids epidemic. Caustic homophobia was common in the media and broader culture. Making things harder still, there wasn't much precedent for a gay politician. There had been only two openly gay MPs before, Maureen Colquhoun and Chris Smith – and only the latter had come out publicly by choice. Smith, who became the new Culture Secretary under Blair, was the first of the two people Eagle decided to tell. She needed advice. 'It took me ages to get a cabinet minister to go out for a meal with me in the evening, where I could talk to him about how he did it and what I should be doing,' she told Metro. 'We knew each other well, and we were having a nice time in this restaurant, and we got all the way through to past the sweet, and I'm thinking, 'How do I, how do I just…' 'In the end, I was thinking, 'Angela, it's taken months for you to get this bloody meeting to ask him his advice, and now here we are, we're nearly at the end of the meal, and you still haven't.' With thousands of members from all over the world, our vibrant LGBTQ+ WhatsApp channel is a hub for all the latest news and important issues that face the LGBTQ+ community. Simply click on this link, select 'Join Chat' and you're in! Don't forget to turn on notifications! 'So in the end, I just said it, and he was gobsmacked and pleased and happy to help and talk and things like that.' It took less time for Eagle to tell the second person: her boss, Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott. 'I got 15 minutes, and I told him, and he said, 'Tell me something I didn't know already, love.' 'And he said, 'Can I give you a hug?' And I said, 'Yes,' and he gave me a hug.' After a final chat with New Labour supremo Peter Mandelson, she gave an exclusive interview to Suzanne Moore of the Independent ('I didn't want to do it in the Guardian, because I thought they were all a load of public school blokes', she said) and that was that. Eagle returned to her Wallasey constituency in Merseyside for publication day, so she handle things with her local party. After all the anxiety, their reaction was 'very positive'. 'They did a vox pop [series of interviews with the general public], the local media, and they couldn't find anyone that criticised me. So when they said that, that's when I burst into tears,' she said. Astonishingly, Eagle spent the next 13 years – Labour's entire period in power – as the only 'out' lesbian in the House of Commons. Over that time, she picks out her role in proceedings for the civil partnership bill, her support for gay adoption, and her opposition to the watering-down of anti-LGBTQ+ discrimination laws in Northern Ireland as proud moments in Parliament. It's now thankfully hard to imagine a gay MP having to seek the advice of Deputy PM Angela Rayner before coming out, for fear of backlash. In fact, Labour's 59 openly LGBTQ+ MPs make up 'by far the largest party cohort of any parliament, anywhere in the world', according to PinkNews. Her current role, as minister for border security and asylum, puts her in touch with some of the most vulnerable LGBTQ+ people on the planet, asylum seekers fleeing persecution for their sexuality. Eagle said: 'I just think it's much better that everybody feels that they can be out now. And so that is part of a change that I'm glad to played a part in.' She added: 'I think people are well aware, given some backtracking particularly on trans rights in a lot of democracies, that there is a backlash going on about equality issues and LGBT rights, and we've got to make sure that we are there to carry on the fight.' Metro's interview with Eagle took place before the Supreme Court's ruling on the application of the Equality Act for trans men and women. She declined to comment when contacted afterwards, due to her role as a government minister. Last year, Metro revealed a gay man from Bangladesh had his UK asylum application refused after a judge told him he was only 'trying to pass' himself as gay. Asked about that story, Eagle said: 'It's very, very difficult to assert something that often you've had to hide. More Trending 'We just have to hope that caseworkers know the right way to approach these sensitive issues, and there isn't a cliched view and that they can make a sophisticated decision that everybody wants to support. 'I can't involve myself in individual cases, because we can't as ministers, but we've got to make certain that there's an understanding of what the issues are in some places where you really can't be gay acting, because you'd be killed.' For the last three years of the previous Parliament, Eagle sat as co-chair on the All-Party Parliamentary Group for Global LGBT+ Rights. Her experience there meant she knows 'very well' the struggles people face around the world, she said, adding: 'So I don't ever take progress for granted. We have to keep winning the arguments.' Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@ For more stories like this, check our news page. MORE: I told my date my sexual preferences and was immediately ghosted MORE: Last 'LGBT free zones' in Poland are finally scrapped – what happens next? MORE: I'm allowed to date other women – my partner isn't

Tories will remember this assisted dying vote
Tories will remember this assisted dying vote

Spectator

time21-06-2025

  • Politics
  • Spectator

Tories will remember this assisted dying vote

'I judge a man by one thing, which side would he have liked his ancestors to fight on at Marston Moor?' So said Isaac Foot, the Liberal MP and father of Michael. For some Tories, both in and out of parliament, Friday's assisted dying debate will carry a similar weight in judgements of character. Some 80 per cent of Tory MPs voted against Kim Leadbeater's Bill at Third Reading, with 92 against, 20 in favour and five registered abstentions. Of the 25-strong new intake, elected last year, just four backed Leadbeater's Bill: Aphra Brandreth, Peter Bedford, Ashley Fox and Neil Shastri-Hurst. Social conservatives note that the Tories were much more aligned on assisted dying than Reform, which split by three votes against to two in favour. Only six MPs backed both this measure and Tuesday's abortion liberalisation vote: Brandreth, Shastri-Hurst, Luke Evans, Kit Malthouse, Andrew Mitchell and Laura Trott. A striking number of senior Tories were among the 20 who supported assisted dying including Rishi Sunak, Oliver Dowden and Jeremy Hunt. Six shadow cabinet members backed it too including Mel Stride, Victoria Atkins and Chris Philp. 'That's the end of his leadership hopes', remarks one opponent. Among those who opposed assisted dying, there is praise for Kemi Badenoch. The Tory leader had previously supported the concept in principle before coming out strongly against Leadbeater's Bill in November. Her argument centred on the legislative process: that insufficient time was dedicated to the Bill and that MPs ought to serve as scrutineers, not campaigners. Her robust stance since then has impressed begrudging internal critics. 'She did do a good job', admits one MP who backed a rival candidate. Friday's vote showed Badenoch's thinking to be firmly in-line with the majority of her own MPs on this issue. There is frustration among some of her supporters that if twelve Tory proponents had changed their mind, Leadbeater's Bill would have been sunk. Perhaps, in time, assisted dying will become accepted wisdom in Tory circles. Those in favour cite its public support and point to the party's history of belatedly backing 'progressive' measures. In March 2003, it was a minority of modernisers who disregarded Iain Duncan Smith to back scrapping Section 28. Within five years, one of them, Boris Johnson, was standing for Mayor of London. Within ten, a Tory PM was championing same-sex marriage. But for those still reeling and angry from yesterday's vote, it certainly doesn't feel that way today.

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