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Council accomodation in Lincoln: Waiting list and empty home statistics revealed!

December 23, 2009 shanecroucher Leave a comment

Eighty-nine council homes, owned by Lincoln City Council, remain empty at Christmas, despite a large number of applicants on the waiting list.

A freedom of information request has revealed the number of applicants per unoccupied council property is just over 40 to 1, as the figure for the waiting list currently stands at 3,576.

Twenty-one of the empty properties are undergoing major repair and thirty-two are undergoing general repairs. Thirty-four are ready to let, while a further two are housing tenants whose homes are being rebuilt or refurbished.

Nearby Nottingham City Council have 12,990 applicants waiting to be housed by the council, with 946 empty properties. The ratio of list applicant to empty home is much better than Lincoln’s, at nearly 14 to 1. Nottingham City Council are also investing £1,040,000 in building new council homes.

However, Lincoln City Council have not invested in building new properties for many years, instead choosing to spend money on maintaining and enhancing their current properties. They have no future plans to spend on building new council homes.

Alister Williams, Lincoln City Council’s housing portfolio holder, did not respond in time before publication.

A new tactic from the Lincolnshire Echo and some thoughts

December 8, 2009 shanecroucher 3 comments

I’ve just had someone from the Lincolnshire Echo knock on my door. They offered me the print version of the paper for half price over the next five weeks, including delivery. Are they really trying the hard sell? Is this where they see the future? Luring people in with cheap deals, in the hope that they’ll continue to buy the paper after the five-week period.

No doubt they’ll hook a few punters, but is this an answer to the problems facing local newspapers? It seems like a very superficial way of attempting to change their fortune, without actually applying any large or serious changes to they way they operate.

The Lincolnshire Echo is a daily newspaper which tries to cover the whole county. The trouble is, they’re under-resourced, which will make it difficult to do that. Rather than having to scrape stories together for a county-wide daily operation, would changing to a weekly paper that is Lincoln-centric do better?

This would cut their printing costs significantly. It would also make their news more focused, and allow for more time to be spent investigating and researching stories. The team could comprise as follows:

Editor, sub-editor, two reporters covering the city and county councils, an education and health reporter, two court reporters, three general reporters whose coverage would include residents meetings, a photographer, two sports reporters.

With one issue a week, the Lincolnshire Echo would be able to cut down on stories that just fill space. This, alongside the time to enable reporters to work on their stories, will generate much better content. I reckon that Lincoln residents would much rather pay £1.20 a week for one large and relevant newspaper, than fork out 40p a day for a couple of good stories but mostly dross.

Now, a problem arises if there’s a big news story that crops up during the week. However, the website can be used to publish very basic copy, which gives an outline of the story. The one print issue each week could then be used for analysis and in-depth reports, giving the reader a comprehensive understanding of the story, the facts, any background information etc.

As for the content from the newspaper being put up on the website; have a pay-wall. It doesn’t have to be expensive, but if you start giving quality content on a once a week basis, people may actually pay a subscription to view your content. Obviously, the key to making people pay is making your content worthwhile. That’s what I think the Lincolnshire Echo can do by making their content focused solely on Lincoln, and giving themselves the time to put together a quality once a week newspaper.

What about those who don’t want a subscription, I hear you cry?  Put a voucher in the newspaper which has a unique code, allowing a week’s access to the stories. That way, they get a week’s access to the website as a reward for buying the paper itself. If you don’t buy the newspaper, then you pay a subscription.

With sport, which is popular locally, have a two-person team offering running updates on a separate but affiliated blog, to which access is included with the subscription. The newspaper can focus on features and analysis, whereas the news and gossip can all be online. Making sport worthwhile, in my opinion, revolves around the sports reporters being charismatic and well-liked by the local clubs and teams, on top of being locals themselves, ensuring a passion and genuine interest in local sport. If the Lincolnshire Echo can find a couple of locals who fit that, then they’re laughing.

I think that such a large shift in what the Lincolnshire Echo is, effectively turning it into the Lincoln Echo, would be a very positive shift. It would allow for cheaper running costs and a higher quality of stories and coverage. Of course, having quality content is fundamental to making your paper profitable, but I think the Echo can achieve this.

Crime figures in the West End of Lincoln have fallen compared to last year

November 8, 2009 shanecroucher Leave a comment

When comparing September 2008 to September 2009, we can see a significant reduction in crime:

Violence against a person saw a drop from 48 offences to 29. Acquisitive crime, which includes theft and burglary, fell 50% from 24 to 12. Anti-social behaviour fell too, with 53 incidents this year compared to 73 in 2008. There were no sexual offences committed in September 2009, with one occurring in September 2008.

However, there was an increase in criminal damage, which rose 32% on September 2008’s figures, from 25 to 33 incidents.

The total number of offences saw an 18% reduction, comparing 173 in September 2008 to 142 in September this year.