Brian Berry
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Age | 90 |
Date of birth | February 16,1934 |
Zodiac sign | Aquarius |
Born | Sedgley |
Dudley | |
United Kingdom | |
H index | 78 |
Known for | Quantitative revolution |
Job | Actor |
Movies/Shows | Werewolf Rising |
Halloweenight | |
Monster Movie | |
Splatter Beach | |
Razorteeth | |
Black Mass | |
Peter Rottentail | |
Hellspawn | |
Official site | brianjlberry.com |
Awards | Victoria Medal |
Education | University of Washington |
University College London | |
Nationality | American |
British | |
Edited works | Urbanization and Counter‑Urbanization |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 1405027 |
Contemporary urban ecology
Geographic Perspectives on Urban Systems: With Integrated Readings
Long-wave rhythms in economic development and political behavior
America's utopian experiments
Theories of urban location
Chicago: Transformations of an Urban System
The Geography of Economic Systems
The Global Economy in Transition
The World's First Cities
Essays on Commodity Flows and the Spatial Structure of the Indian Economy
The changing shape of metropolitan America
The Human Consequences of Urbanisation: Divergent Paths in the Urban Experience of the Twentieth Century
The impact of urban renewal on small business
Land Use, Urban Form and Environmental Quality
The open housing question
The Rhythms of American Politics
Comparative Urbanization: Divergent Paths in the Twentieth Century
The Global Economy: Resource Use, Locational Choice, and International Trade
A bibliographic guide to the economic regions of the United States
Commercial Structure and Commercial Blight: Retail Patterns and Processes in the City of Chicago
Economic Geography: Resource Use, Locational Choices, and Regional Specialization in the Global Economy
Sisson. Yankee Heritage: A Sisson Ancestry (with 257 Connecting Lines)
The Shapleigh, Shapley, and Shappley Families: A Comprehensive Genealogy, 1635-1993
Market Centers and Retail Location: Theory and Applications
John Littleton of Accomack County, Virginia, His Family and Descendants
The Social Burdens of Environmental Pollution: A Comparative Metropolitan Data Source
Berry Redux: Genetics, Genealogy and Ancient History
Inner City Revitalization: Incidence and Limits
Working Materials on the U. S. Urban Hierarchy and on Growth Center Characteristics, Organized by Economic Region
Aaron's Ancestry: Claunch, Littleton and Connecting Lines
KONDRATIEFF WAVES: Cycles, Crises, and Forecasts
Parks. Rufus Parks Pedigree: 17 Centuries of One Family's Ancestry
Chicago Commercial Reference Handbook: Statistical Supplement to Commercial Structure and Commercial Blight
Northern Neck Families: Ancestors of Susan Frances Chapman, Alexander, Chapman and Pearson Plus Connecting Lines, Including the Balls, Macraes and Washingtons
Ancestry of Fanny Barnes and Her Husband Thomas Knight: Family Relationships in Connecticut, Massachusetts and Long Island, 1620-1820
Urbanization and Counter-Urbanization
Brian Berry Life story
Brian Joe Lobley Berry is a British-American human geographer and city and regional planner. He is Lloyd Viel Berkner Regental Professor in the School of Economic, Political and Policy Sciences at the University of Texas at Dallas.
Schools struggle over RAAC crumbling concrete measures
... Brian Berry, chief executive at the Federation of Master Builders said: " Local builders tend to have full schedules months ahead, so may struggle to cater for the scale of the issue facing schools, like putting up portable classrooms at speed, to ensure children don t miss lessons...
Labour could require solar panels for new builds, hints Ed Miliband
... Brian Berry, chief executive of the Federation of Master Builders, said Mr Miliband s comments were " laudable, " but added any new requirement would have to bear in mind the impact on the " cost and viability" of new homes...
A wave of tool theft spurs hi-tech security systems
... Where are these tools going? " says Brian Berry, chief executive of the Federation of Master Builders...
Prison officers 'voting with their feet' amid jobs surge
... Brian Berry, chief executive of the Federation of Master Builders, said: " Small, local builders are also facing lengthy delays, with 89% having to press pause on work because of skills and materials shortages...
Construction safety is 'broken', say fire chiefs
... “We are carefully considering the responses to our consultation and respond in due time Brian Berry of the Federation of Master Builders said: Our members, the vast majority of work in the domestic repair and maintenance, or the small home Builder, are know that quality and safety must be Central to the construction projects...
Schools struggle over RAAC crumbling concrete measures
By Emma HarrisonBBC News Online
Schools affected by unsafe concrete are battling to secure surveys, while temporary classrooms could take months to build, The Bbc has been Told .
A governor of a closed school Told The Bbc none of the engineers suggested by the government were available.
And One firm said building some temporary classrooms could take months.
Schools Minister Nick Gibb said the government was acting to keep children safe in the full or partial closure of some 156 schools in England.
Schools are returning from their summer break This Week , But The Risk posed by collapse-prone reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete (RAAC) has resulted in full or partial closures and some pupils are learning online.
A list of schools affected by crumbling concrete will be published " before Friday" Mr Gibb said.
Education Secretary Gillian Keegan said on Monday there could be hundreds of schools affected.
Hina Robinson, chair of governors and parent of a child at Wyburns primary school in Rayleigh, Essex, Told The Bbc that The Department For Education had provided some phone numbers of engineers But none were available for remedial work.
" The focus is on 'how can we get children back into learning in a building of some sort', " Ms Robinson said, adding some children will return to online learning until a space can be found.
She Said online learning was " very difficult for The Children , " But even those who were able to be on site face disruption as " classrooms are Set Up in places that aren't meant to be classrooms".
Joshua Wedgewood, a student at St Leonards Catholic School in County Durham , is learning online as his school is temporarily closed because of RAAC concrete concerns.
He Told BBC Radio 4 's Today programme it was like being back in the Covid pandemic, saying: " On a screen it's just not Real Life , it's isolating, it's being stuck inside your home. It's not nice. "
James Saunders , is a head teacher at Honywood School in Essex, where about half of The Rooms are unusable due to RAAC.
He Told BBC Radio 5 Live that he has explored the option of setting up marquees outside The School as " they're quicker to Set Up than a mobile classroom".
He Said The School will be putting a proportion of its students back onto remote learning using methods employed during Covid.
Schools concrete crisisThe boss of the Wernick Group - which provides portable buildings - Told The Bbc the current situation was " akin to What Happened at The Beginning of Covid" when hundreds of test centres were Set Up around the UK.
David Wernick said: " Clearly emergency action needs to be taken and classrooms are required throughout the UK. "
Kieran Webberly, of Wernick, estimated a " simple" temporary building would take " days, a couple of weeks maximum" to construct, But a " bespoke modular" two-storey temporary building would take about six months to build and cost about £1. 2m.
Brian Berry , chief executive at The Federation of Master Builders said: " Local builders tend to have full schedules months ahead, so may struggle to cater for the scale of the issue facing schools, like putting up portable classrooms at speed, to ensure children don't miss lessons. "
'World-leading response'Meanwhile, safety consultant, Damini Sharma, said RAAC could be present in more buildings including social housing, courts and hospitals But was potentially difficult to detect because it was often covered.
She Told Bbc Breakfast that RAAC was was a very lightweight, porous material that was used predominantly from the 50s to the 80s" and " not really suitable for permanent structures".
The Information about the lifespan of The Material was not available when it was first used, She Said .
The Head of the spending watchdog, The National Audit Office, accused the government of taking a " sticking plaster approach" to carrying out essential maintenance on School Buildings .
Gareth Davies said the " unflashy" job of repairs has been neglected.
But schools minister Mr Gibb said the response to The Crisis had been " world-leading".
He Told Bbc Breakfast that the government was waiting on questionnaires sent to schools to see how prevalent RAAC concrete was.
" We started these questionnaires in March 2022, the vast majority of schools have responded and have not identified RAAC in schools, " He Said .
" From those surveys we now know that 156 schools have RAAC and in 52 of them we've already taken action, where it was regarded as critical. "
Mr Gibb said the government was " proactively seeking more evidence about RAAC" and has discovered more schools containing The Material in The Process .
He added that had resulted in new guidance where even non-critical RAAC had been Taken Out of use.
The Minister added his department bid for 200 school refurbishments a year in 2021 - But the Treasury only funded 50.
" The Treasury has to take into account all The Other bids from across Whitehall, " He Said .
He Said that since Rishi Sunak became Prime Minister an additional £4bn had been allocated in revenue funding for schools in England, which meant £59. 6bn will be in the budget next year, a " record amount".
However, Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said it was " unforgivable" that children were missing the start of term because of potentially unsafe buildings.
" Children are not at school today because of The Action the government has failed to take in relation to schools, He Said .
" It is a metaphor, frankly, for their sticking plaster politics: never fixing The Fundamentals , always sticking plasters. "
On Monday, Education Secretary Gillian Keegan as she expressed frustration at a lack of gratitude for the handling of The School building crisis in England.
She made the comments just after finishing an interview with Itv News while the camera was still filming.
A No 10 source Told The Bbc those comments by Ms Keegan were " wrong" But in a follow-up interview Ms Keegan apologised for her " choice language".
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com