Easterhouse minister sees revamped church as oasis in troubled times
December 1, 2009 by localnews · Leave a Comment
Easterhouse Baptist Church recently celebrated the opening of its £320,000 annexe with a week of services and open-door events to introduce community leaders, neighbours and congregation to the facility.
The extension to the landmark church, which sits at the junction of the M8 motorway and Westerhouse Road, adds a substantial kitchen and dining/function area, a brightly decorated, well-equipped crèche and a general purpose hall.
Minister Sandy Weddell, who arrived in Easterhouse as a trainee in 1979 and succeeded Jim Martin, threw open the doors of his church to guests including John Mason, Westminster MP for Glasgow East, who attends Sandy’s services and Glasgow Baillieston MSP Margaret Curran.
Looking back on a decade-long campaign to extend the church, Sandy observed that it was the determination of his congregation that brought the plan to fruition.
‘By and large, people just gave and gave,’ he said. ‘Once we firmed up our costs, people just started giving.They did diets, sponsored walks - we’ve had everything under the sun … it’s been sacrificial giving in some cases.
‘We have our ordinary offering, but we also have folk who have convenanted large sums of money for this.’
Such was the Baptist congregation’s determination to succeed that 72% of the funding for the new annexe was raised from within. Other finance came from the wider Baptist fellowship, as well as sympathetic trust funds and foundations.
In all, the church raised nearly £380,000 for the extension and remedial work to the original building.
While the Baptist community in Easterhouse celebrated its 50th anniversary this year, Sandy sees his renewed church as an opportunity for the area rather than a legacy of his ministry.

Minister Sandy Weddell wants his revamped church at the heart of his community
very soon, churches might be one of the very public facilities in an area.
The church runs a mother-and-toddler group. It employs a full-time children’s worker, Christine Brown. A breakfast club and a 12-step programme are also part of it does.
However, a lot of good initiatives weren’t ‘sexy’ enough for government funding, Sandy complained. ‘They don’t attract the help they need.’ But churches like Easterhouse Baptist are keen to help in any way they can.
Those schemes are at the heart of changing a community and ‘scratch where the people itch’, he said.
‘There might be a time when you can’t afford to open schools for lets. That’s quite conceivable. I see places like this as an oasis that can be used by different groups and it’s my hope that, eventually, this will become a place for the entire community.’
Dauntless captain grants honours to Clyde shipyard workers
December 1, 2009 by localnews · Leave a Comment
Clyde shipyard workers David Connelly and Joe McEwan have been honoured by the captain of HMS Dauntless for their work on the Type-45 destroyer.
The Dauntless, which was built at BAE Systems Surface Ships in Govan, recently entered service with the Royal Navy and has travelled from her home waters on the Clyde to base in Portsmouth.
He said: ‘It’s a real honour to receive this award from the ship’s captain. Joe and I have worked on Dauntless since her first steel cut back in 2004 and have an enormous sense of pride in the ship.
‘We’re about to embark on the delivery voyage to hand her over to the Royal Navy, which will mark the final stage in our current role, and it’s great to know that now we’ll always be welcome back on board.’
Adaptability is key as BT Connection helps keep Momentum wired to the web
November 30, 2009 by localnews · Leave a Comment

BT's James McClafferty tests his keyboard skills at Momentum's Yoker offices
By Alan McCrorie
Staff at Momentum Scotland, the volunteer network which helps people meet the challenges of living with disability, delivered a sobering message along with their thanks to BT after the telecoms giants gifted the group with a laptop and free internet access for a year.
Momentum, who run their Adapt & Assist service to help those with serious spinal injuries access computers and the internet, were made the award by BT Community Connections and are one of 6,000 groups to have benefited from the scheme since 2000.
Assistive Technology Co-ordinator, Garry Ryan, and Volunteer Co-ordinator, Doug Ross, told a gathering at Momentum’s Yoker offices that a disability may only be the beginning of a person’s problems unless their world is adapted around them in order to help them cope.
Professional and private lives can collapse, Doug explained. One in six people who become disabled lose their jobs while the incidence of divorce rockets and, for some, isolation threatens – all this and more on top of lives that have changed beyond recognition.
Garry said: ‘Simply being able to do their own shopping online and communicate with others via email or social networking sites can help ease the challenge of living with a disability.
‘By learning new skills and working with members of our volunteer team we can boost confidence and social inclusion.’
He also explained the use of such devices such as the head mouse, where a camera mounted on the screen will track a dot attached to the user’s forehead or spectacles, allowing the computer to interpret movements of the head and cue the computer.
BT Scotland’s Senior Partnership Manager, James McClafferty, gamely volunteered to work a voice recognition programme, and joined John Roberston, Glasgow North West MP, Co-Chairman of the All-Party Communications Group and former BT manager, in struggling to operate a keyboard that resembled the controls of a melodion.
‘This is what it’s like to live with disability,’ said Garry, looking on. ‘Everything changes completely.’
Mark Longhill, the Chairman of the BT judging panel who made the award to Momentum, tested a remarkable retina-based mouse control programme, while a sip and puff switch, which controls the mouse with the mouth, was also demonstrated.
Carmyle computer class turn hi-tech tecs
November 27, 2009 by localnews · Leave a Comment
Pupils in primary six and seven at Carmyle Primary School who have ventured into the realms of crime scene investigations made a big breakthrough with their case when they asked a policeman for help.
The young sleuths are taking part in a six-week course that challenges their imaginations and equips them with the IT skills they’ll need in the years ahead. It also offers them a peek into the world of real crime fighting beyond the sets of television series such as CSI.
While the children learned how to examine fingerprints, hair samples, identify tyre prints and use digital microscopes, they also had the chance to question Constable Steven Docherty of Shettleston Police Office about his day-to-day work. Questions about DNA were high on their agenda as they put Steven through his paces – without the good cop, bad cop routine.
The course is the brainchild of ComputerXplorers, an educational franchise company which operates in 20 countries and offers information technology courses to children aged from three to 13.
John McGill, who set up ComputerXplorers South West Scotland earlier this year, said: ‘We’ve taken the pupils through some of the steps that the CSI investigators go through, fingerprinting, powder analysis, digital photograph analysis, and dental imprinting. With that, the kids have a great time. They bite into a piece of fruit and someone guesses who bit the fruit by looking at dental imprints in styrofoam plates.
‘The first analysis is with the eye,’ John explained. ‘To deduce who bit the the apple – and it’s not a serious crime – requires analysis of top and bottom teeth. We use digital imaging as well, and the whole point of our classes is to bring technology into the fun experience. We’re training kids for job that don’t yet exist but it’s clear technology is going to be a huge part of that.
‘It’s a real core life skill we’re trying to teach them through the fun, and through the educational aspects of CSI and forensics.’
Not everyone is good at sports, John said, so learning collaboration and presenting to peers in his class means that children can enjoy their creative side.
Headteacher Linda Logue said: ‘This class has been very popular and after consultation with parents, we hope to be running another in January.
‘The children are very motivated and actively engaged in every session, learning information and communication technology and problem solving skills without realising it.’

Rebecca Macrae and Lewis Reid, both 10, at the scene
Giving it Wellie in breast cancer fight
November 27, 2009 by localnews · Leave a Comment
Staff, friends and clients of a beauty salon have stepped out to show their support for Breakthrough Breast Cancer in a sponsored walk which raised some £2,500.
More than 30 people and two canine friends took part in the five-kilometre walk organised by Ellen Conlin Hair and Beauty at Mugdock Country Park in Milngavie.
The team, which drew volunteers from salons in Hyndland and Giffnock, braced the wet weather and swapped heels for Wellington boots to raise money for the pioneering charity which aims to save lives through research, campaigns and education.
Managing director of Ellen Conlin Hair and Beauty, Ellen Conlin-Main, said: ‘The walk was a great way to raise money for a very important cause. The team put in a huge amount of effort and it was a great way to bring everyone together out with the salon.
‘Despite the miserable weather, we all had a lot of fun. I would also like to say a huge thank-you to all who supported us, especially our clients and, of course, to the people that made donations. The total we managed to raise was fantastic and I hope that we will able to do something very similar again soon.’
Scarborough makes big splash on the Clyde
November 27, 2009 by localnews · Leave a Comment

Scarborough takes to the Clyde at Scotstoun
The 90-metre long ship, commissioned by the government of Trinidad & Tobago (T&T), is one of three that form part of a £150m contract. BAE will take the vessels from scratch to sea trials on behalf of the Caribbean republic and will provide five years of in-service support.
The UK Ministry of Defence is providing T&T Coast Guard crews with training.
The Port of Spain – the Scarborough’s sister ship – has been launched at Portsmouth. The third ship will be built on the Clyde.
BAE’s Govan operation recently launched HMS Defender – the fifth of six Type-45 destroyers for the Royal Navy.
Holyrood approves three more primary schools
November 27, 2009 by localnews · Leave a Comment
Pollokshields and Garrowhill are two of the latest beneficiaries of the Scottish Government’s £1.25bn schools building programme.
Cabinet Secretary for Education, Fiona Hyslop’s, announcement includes rebuilding projects at Garrowhill Primary in the east of the city and Glendale Primary in the south.
The latest tranche of rebuilding also allows Glasgow City Council to nominate a third school project. A total of 21 primary schools are now part of the programme to replace crumbling post-war buildings with modern facilities.
In September, the Government announced that 14 secondary schools will be rebuilt or modernised.
The Cabinet Secretary said: ‘This Government inherited a legacy of 260,000 pupils in poor or bad condition school buildings and in just two-and-a-half years that number has dropped by over 100,000.
‘We are on track to deliver in excess of 250 new or refurbished schools in the lifetime of this Parliament through £2bn already under way, supported by decisions made by the Scottish Government.’
Welcoming the news of a new Garrowhill Primary, Glasgow East MP, John Mason, fired a broadside at the Labour-led council, saying they had failed in their responsibility to keep schools in good repair.
‘The Scottish Government’s school building fund is meant to provide additional support, but the Labour council really needs to start pulling its weight on schools.’
The rebuilding project will be managed by the Scottish Futures Trust (SFT), a limited company wholly owned by Holyrood ministers, set up to govern infrastructure investment in Scotland, working in partnership with the private sector.
Established last year, the Government claimed the SFT would cost less than public finance initiative deals with the private sector. Infrastructure investment in Scotland over the next 10 years has been put at some £35bn.
Egelstaff claims women’s badminton crown on home turf
November 27, 2009 by localnews · Leave a Comment
By Clare Carswell
Glaswegian Susan Egelstaff was crowned queen of the court on home soil after she won the women’s singles title at the Bank of Scotland International Badminton Championships at Kelvin Hall.
The 27-year-old Scot beat the 2005 and 2006 winner, Ella Diehl of Russia, in two games, 21-18, 21-10, on 22 November, to take her first international title.
‘Ella’s a world-class player with a higher rank than me, so I had to play the best I could,’ the Commonwealth bronze medallist said.
Representing Scotland in the women’s doubles final was Edinburgh-born, Glasgow-based Emma Mason. She partnered Mariana Agathangelou of England, who won the title last year with another Scot, Jillie Cooper.
In the first match of the day, Mason and Agathangelou were beaten in two swift games, 21-16, 21-16, by Valeria Sorokina and Nina Vislova of Russia, who are ranked number 14 in the world.
Cooper and new partner, Samantha Ward of England, were defeated in the semi-finals by their fellow Britons.
The day held a silver lining for Mason, who received the Robert McCoig Memorial Award from Badminton Scotland patron HRH Earl of Wessex, Prince Edward, for the most meritorious performance.
Mason, who snapped her Achilles 18 months ago said: ‘For any Scottish player it’s a great honour, especially coming back from such a long injury. It’s good to know others appreciate how hard it was to come back.’
Scotland’s best chance of glory in the men’s finals disappeared in the third round, when Sourabh Verma of India defeated the ninth seed, Glasgow’s Kieran Merrilees.
A Scot to watch for the future is Glasgow’s Kirsty Gilmour, who at 16-years-old reached the third round of the women’s singles and displayed great flair in her win against Audrey Bonneville of Canada.
Glasgow welcomed more than 250 badminton players from 30 nations to the five-day event, which began with qualifiers on 18 November.
During the championship week, more than 3,000 Scottish schoolchildren received specialist badminton coaching as Kelvin Hall’s indoor running track was converted into the venue for the Bank of Scotland Play Badminton Carnival.
The Deputy Championship Director, Colin M Atkinson, said: ‘The carnival is hugely important. It’s one of the main reasons the championships are such a success and gives the children the opportunity to play at a major sporting arena.’
Peer scheme could create 11,000 lifesavers
November 27, 2009 by localnews · Leave a Comment
Glasgow could have thousands of lifesavers in its schools if a ground-breaking partnership between the city’s education services and the British Heart Foundation (BHF) takes off.
Secondary school pupils are being taught simple life-saving skills and are taking those lessons into primary schools as part of an innovative peer tutoring scheme.
The programme, which is backed by the Scottish Ambulance Service, St Andrew’s First Aid and the Glasgow/BHF Heartstart initiative, was showcased at Garrowhill Primary in the East End, with seniors from Bannerman High School acting as mentors.
Pupils will learn, then pass on, emergency life support skills which cover cardiopulmonary resuscitation and how to deal with bleeding and choking.
Under the guidance of Paramedic John Gallacher, colleague Anne Harrison, who is Community Resuscitation Development Officer, and John Breen, Bannerman High Employability Officer, two dozen pupils were taken through three emergency scenarios and asked to put what they had learned into practice.
The lessons, which dealt with conscious, unconscious and cardiac arrest casualties, are built around simple but effective routines.
Jonathan Findlay, Glasgow City Council’s Executive Member for Education, said: ‘Our aim is to have S4 pupils and P6 trained up in life-saving techniques – that is nearly 11,000 young Glasgow people who will be able to help out if faced with a life-threatening emergency.’
Garrowhill Headteacher Richard Buchan said: ‘

Paramedic John Gallacher supervises training
We’re always looking for ways to make learning real and meaningful and, rather than doing a worksheet, the children are hands-on and using a life-saving skill.
‘I also think the peer tutoring is a really good link to have. They are really good role models for our children and are raising aspirations as well in terms of what our pupils can hope to achieve when they go to S5. Hopefully, they’ll become buddies themselves and pass on their knowledge and skills to younger pupils.’
John Breen said: ‘We have six primary schools that feed into Bannerman, and I would like to see all P6s trained. It will take a lot of time but once it starts it’ll be far easier to roll out across all the schools.’
River City duo pull together for SCIAF’s festive gift drive
November 25, 2009 by localnews · Leave a Comment
River City stars Libby McArthur and Deirdrie Davis have lined up behind aid agency SCIAF’s festive Real Gifts campaign to deliver gifts to transform the lives of people in poverty.
The actresses – who play sisters Gina Rossi and Eileen Donachie in the television soap – hope SCIAF’s Christmas message will make a real difference to thousands of lives.
The Real Gifts can be the chickens, goats or seeds steering a family towards self suffiency. Or the Real Gift could provide safe, clean water and a first step on the ladder to education for children. Gifts can also be vital tools and medicines. Real Gifts can be ordered online at www.sciaf.org.uk/realgifts

Libby McArthur and Deirdrie Davis pull a festive cracker for SCIAF



