Mark Easton
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Age | 65 |
Date of birth | March 12,1959 |
Zodiac sign | Pisces |
Born | Bearsden |
United Kingdom | |
Residence | Islington |
London | |
United Kingdom | |
Notable credit | BBC News |
Job | Journalist |
Presenter | |
Education | Peter Symonds College |
Children | 4 |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 425637 |
Oxford Big Ideas Geography 9: Australian Curriculum
SOSE Alive 2
Oxford Atlas Obook
Oxford Atlas Workbook
Oxford Big Ideas Humanities 2
SOSE Alive 3
Oxford Big Ideas Geography Level 5
Oxford Big Ideas Humanities 4
Cross- Platform . NET Development: Using Mono, Portable. NET, and Microsoft . NET
SOSE Worksheets for Multiple Intelligences 2
Geography 7: Australian curriculum
Geo Active: Stage 4 : Global Geography. Worksheets
SOSE Alive: Studies of Society and Environment
SOSE Alive Geography: SOSE alive geography 2 (xii, 196 p. )
SOSE Geography Worksheets for Multiple Intelligences
Humanities Alive 2 + CD-ROM
Humanities Alive: Geography 2 : Level 6 : for Victorian Essential Learning Standards
SOSE Alive Topic Books Antartica
Oxford Big Ideas Geography 10: Australian Curriculum
Society and Environment for Western Australia Multiple Intelligences Worksheets 3
Geography: Year 7 : Australian curriculum / Mark Easton, Maggy Saldais ; contributions by Helen Butler, Kate Mcarthur, Mailie Ross
SOSE Alive 4: Studies of Society and Environment
Geography: Year 8 : Australian curriculum / Mark Easton, Maggy Saldais ; contributions by Helen Butler, Kate Mcarthur
Geography
Oxford Big Ideas Humanities 1
SOSE Worksheets for Multiple Intelligences 4
Geography Level 6: For the Victorian Essential Learning Standards
Oxford Australian Curriculum Atlas F - 2
Britain Etc.
Oxford Atlas
Mark Easton Life story
Mark Richard Erskine Easton is the Home Editor for BBC News broadcasting on national television and radio news. His writing and presenting credits include The Happiness Formula on BBC Two in 2006 and The Crime of Our Lives for BBC Radio 4 in 2007. His first book, Britain etc., was published in 2012.
Pro-Palestinian march ban would be last resort - Met
...By Mark Easton & Sean Seddon, BBC News A pro-Palestinian march due to take place on Armistice Day would only be banned as a " last resort" the Metropolitan Police Commissioner said...
Housing crisis: Could Bristol's back gardens offer a solution?
...By Mark Easton & Hayley ClarkeHome editorWhen John Bennett s relationship temporarily broke down, he found himself homeless...
Charities urge PM to stop using hotels to house migrant children
...By Mark Easton, home editor & Andre Rhoden-PaulBBC NewsMore than 100 charities have written to Rishi Sunak calling for an end to housing child asylum seekers in hotels after about 200 went missing...
How our High Streets changed over the Covid lockdowns
...By Mark Easton and Data Journalism TeamBBC NewsThe full extent of changes to Britain s High Streets after two years of Covid lockdowns and trading restrictions is revealed in analysis by the BBC...
What is austerity and where could 'eye-watering' cuts fall now?
... HousingBy Mark Easton, home editorThe big money in this sector goes on housing benefit - more than £20bn a year - which subsidises rents for both private and social housing tenants on low incomes...
Rwanda asylum plan: Appeal to be heard in court
... BBC home editor Mark Easton says it is expected that could be " whittled down to zero" before the plane is due to take off...
UK government criticised over 'cruel' Rwanda asylum plan
... BBC home editor Mark Easton, reporting from Rwanda, said ministers would face legal hurdles and substantial costs to launch the scheme...
Windrush: 'I'll make sure I get the compensation I deserve'
... Watch BBC Home Editor Mark Easton speak to Fitzroy about his experience...
Housing crisis: Could Bristol's back gardens offer a solution?
By Mark Easton & Hayley ClarkeHome editor
When John Bennett 's relationship temporarily broke down, he found himself homeless.
He was priced out of the housing market and living in a unit in a scrapyard with no running water.
Falling into Bad Habits , John says his life was " quite dark" and isolated.
John says his life has now completely changed, thanks to a Bristol charity.
The We Can Make project builds " micro homes" - Houses squeezed into the smallest of Places - giving people New Hope .
'The Best solution'Hidden in the back garden of Bill Kelly 's 1930s Council House in Knowle West is a modern Counterpart - John's home.
The former bricklayer is the proud resident of A House he helped build from woodchip boxes.
" I never feel isolated now, " says John, 58, who has become Close Friends with Bill, 57.
" It ticks all the boxes. Affordability, sustainability. For me, this is probably The Best solution I could have found. "
Bill had been struggling to look after his old garden, which he described as a " jungle" that he could not manage.
So, We Can Make leased some of The Garden from The Council and John now rents it from We Can Make.
Bill says he is " ecstatic" with the outcome.
" I've still got my garden, and John's got his home. What more could do you want? " he says.
Having experienced homelessness himself before, Bill wanted to give John a chance to rebuild his life.
" We need to help each other. If we don't help each other, we don't get anywhere, " he says.
Transforming the bramble patch at The End of The Garden into John's home has brought Bill a friend, community and a new job.
" I did something for John, and I got something In Return I didn't expect, " he says.
Nearby, Toni Gray and her three-year-old daughter Amancia were living with Toni's parents.
Relationships were becoming strained, as The House was overcrowded.
So We Can Make, run by charity Knowle West Media Centre, helped them design and build a new home for themselves in her parents' back garden.
Eco-friendly solutionsDevelopers hope to ease the housing crisis by building eco-friendly homes in under-used spaces.
We Can Make approached Bristol City Council with a plan for building affordable and sustainable homes - One house at a Time - on small bits of land on the Knowle West estate in south Bristol.
In exchange for The Land on a long lease from The Council , it delivers what it calls social value: affordable homes for rent to members of the community.
Supporters say it could help the government deliver its target of 300,000 additional homes in England each year.
So Far , The Project has delivered two homes - John's and Toni's Houses .
The low-carbon homes are made from woodchip building blocks, which can be slotted together on site.
We Can Make says plans are under way to build more homes in the area.
Community supportMelissa Mean, director of We Can Make, says the community does not feel The Project is being forced on it.
" It's quite striking that the planning applications for The First two homes got over 40 letters of support, " She Said .
" The planning officers almost fell over - usually they get hundreds of letters of complaint. "
Ms Mean says the community is in charge of how many homes are built and what materials they are made from, ensuring that what gets built is welcome.
She says they have had a " brilliant" relationship with Bristol City Council.
The homes are built with The Planet in mind too - using 100% UK timber to build them and powering them with Renewable Energy .
Solar Power and air source heat pumps are used, rather than " dirty gas pumps" says Ms Mean.
" Also, because they're so well insulated, it doesn't take much energy to run them either, " she adds.
" That's great for our residents, because that means low bills. "
Toby Lloyd, a former housing adviser in Theresa May 's government and with The Charity Shelter, has called the idea " brilliant".
He says The Pilot could be replicated across England, utilising under-used spaces identified by local people to create new, affordable homes.
Low density estates like Knowle West can be found all over England.
He estimates that if We Can Make's pilot was copied in other communities, around 250,000 affordable and sustainable homes could be built, in Places people want To Live .
Councillor Tom Renhard, Bristol City Council's cabinet member for housing, also says The Project could be delivered in other communities too.
" I think you can scale it across the country with The Right support to really get behind this, " he says.
" This is about gentle densification, allowing people to stay in the communities they grew up in.
" A safe, stable home sets The Foundation to thrive. "
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com