January 8th, 2010
The New Year always brings an opportunity to make predictions and promises about the future. It is also, certainly as far as I’m concerned, a time for retrospection. I recently had the opportunity to wallow in personal nostalgia through a kind invitation to appear on the TAPED Radio Puffin Island Discs show. Following the usual format, I had to choose five favourite songs, a favourite DVD, a book and a luxury item to accompany me on my castaway paradise. For the record, my selections were:
Songs:
1. Norwegian Wood - The Beatles
2. When the Levee Breaks - Led Zeppelin
3. Jacky - Marc Almond
4. Sit Down - James
5. Killing the Blues - Robert Plant/Alison Krauss
Book:
Bonfire of the Vanities - Tom Wolfe
DVD:
The Wire
Luxury Item:
A saxophone
You will see that I have chosen discs representing each of the decades in which I have been listening to popular music, and I am sure you will agree that it is an outstanding selection. You can hear the whole programme at www.tapedradio.co.uk. Any feedback is welcome.
2010 has enjoyed an interesting start, with the adverse weather conditions presenting all sorts of challenges. I am very proud of the way CAIS staff have risen to the occasion in ensuring the continuity of services. Provision of meals to the homeless has been maintained at a time when it has most been needed. Other staff have found themselves snowed in at residential units and have cheerfully worked around the clock. With this spirit of commitment and resourcefulness, I believe 2010 bodes well for CAIS and, just maybe, the country in general.
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November 12th, 2009
Being with CAIS has given me the opportunity to make new friends in other organisations. In the past few weeks I have had the chance to visit a group called TAPE in their Old Colwyn facility. TAPE offers a wide range of opportunities for service users to get involved in multi-media creative arts. They offer sessions in creative writing and song composition. They make plays and films. They also embrace a collection of experienced and new musicians who come together in all sorts of groups to record and perform. The whole set-up is simply fantastic. People who never thought they had an ounce of talent suddenly realise that they can sing and play with the best. I have witnessed some extraordinary performances.
As well as the music and arts work, TAPE has recently launched its own on-line radio station. I was very flattered to be asked to participate in one of its early broadcasts by giving my “Thought for the Day”. You can tune in at www.tapedradio.co.uk. I have also recorded with them my favourite music and reminiscences for their “Puffin Island Discs” programme. I will share my selection with you soon.

TAPE combo “The Wild Stallions”
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October 19th, 2009
Out and about with outreach workers Tracey, Gail and Elen
Some 30-odd years ago I walked the beat around Ardwick Green in Manchester. The area was a haunt of many homeless men and women who frequented the city centre by day and used a number of nearby official and unofficial shelters by night. It is fair to say that they brought with them a number of problems for the neighbourhood; shoplifting and scrap metal were the principal sources of income, and drunken brawls were frequent and bloody. I got to know many of them. Their stories were often interesting - and harrowing - and they would welcome the opportunity of chatting with whoever would listen, even a fresh-faced policeman.
There are marked differences in attitudes to the homeless across the UK, from public bodies, communities and individuals. Sometimes there is sympathy, sometimes an assertion that homelessness is a lifestyle choice, and sometimes sheer contempt. What is your attitude to the Big Issue seller?
In my experience very, very few individuals actually want to live on the street. People often end up there on the back of unemployment or family breakdown. Sometimes offenders released from prison have no alternative provision and quickly drift back into criminality. There are pathways out of the horror, but the journey needs the assistance of a friend or two. I recently spent an evening with the CAIS outreach team, which seeks to offer that support to the homeless of Wrexham. The extent of the phenomenon of homelessness in Wrexham and throughout Wales will probably be a surprise to many. Rest assured there are people, largely invisible, who have no home, no friends, no income and no sustenance. Many of them will misuse both drugs and alcohol. I observed the team dispensing very welcome food and hot drinks to a regular group of clients who have come to trust the service. Some of the food is donated by local hotels and companies. The team was accompanied by health workers who were there to offer counselling and care for the many ailments which inflict people living rough.
It is hard to say how many homeless individuals exist in the Wrexham area; some use various shelters, some rely on acquaintances in an endless round of “sofa-surfing”, some make do outdoors. The team can deal with around 30 clients in an evening; most of them are local in origin, but it is also likely that some are from further afield, including recent immigrants. The team estimates that around 10 young Poles are homeless in the area. Whatever your views on immigration and asylum seekers, it seems unlikely that the aspirations of any individual coming to North Wales from abroad will encompass ending up hungry and alone, with no roof over their head.
As we experience the first frosts of winter I suspect demand for services to the homeless will increase, particularly as the economic downturn continues. We can ignore the problem - or deal with it.
Clive Wolfendale
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October 8th, 2009

Blogging was a regular feature of workplace routine during the last three years of my previous job. I know that the pieces sometimes bored, occasionally irritated and even, once or twice, enraged the readers. I also know that a surprising number of people (from all over the world) tuned in and that my ramblings, now and then, provided a little food for thought - and provoked the odd smile.
As any serious blogger will tell you, turning out a regular and worthwhile text is not easy. The muse is not always favourably disposed and, in the grand scheme of things, there’s always something more important to do. On the other hand, blogging represents an opportunity to those charged with some sort of responsibility to communicate, on their own terms and in their own way, with those whom they work with and for. So I was very much in two minds, on taking up my position with CAIS, about whether to continue with the exercise. I had all but decided to save myself the grief until I came across 39 year old Mao Xinyu, youngest general in the 2.5-million-strong People’s Liberation Army of China. He is blogger, lauded by the People’s Daily website for producing the “most attention-grabbing” blog of the year. http://blog.people.com.cn/blog/s/92732 So, if there’s room in the blogosphere for the grandson of Chairman Mao, I guess there’s room for me. I’m now three weeks into my role with CAIS and, as with any new job, there’s a lot to learn and to do. I’ll share at least some of the journey with you. For starters, let me try to explain why I’m here. Well, I spent 33 years policing the urban sprawl of Manchester and, latterly, the greener pastures of North Wales. During that time I saw the lives of countless individuals and families blighted by the effects of drug and alcohol addiction. As a police officer I believe I did my best to bring justice to those who preyed on the weak and vulnerable and to ease the lot of victims both of criminality and addiction. However, I have always been conscious that this is, at best, just a sticking plaster on some of the acute diseases that inflict our society. Working with CAIS therefore presents, for me, an opportunity to make a more profound impact on the scourge of addiction. In Wales, there has never been a better time to be involved in this work. The Welsh Assembly’s Substance Misuse Strategy articulates a progressive but realistic programme for the next ten years. http://wales.gov.uk/topics/housingandcommunity/safety/publications/strategy0818/?lang=en Here are some of the awful facts, taken from the report, that make this work essential.
Summary of Harms
- Alcoholic liver disease is responsible for around 1,600 hospital admissions per year.
- Over 54,000 incidents of violent crime in Wales in 2006-07 were linked to the consumption of alcohol.
- The health service cost in Wales of problem drug use has been estimated at £17.6 million per year.
- The total economic and social cost of Class A drug use in Wales has been estimated to be around £780 million, and drug related crime accounts for 90 per cent of this.
- 20 per cent of Welsh adults admit to binge drinking.
- 30,000 bed days are related to the consequences of alcohol consumption.
- As many as 129,000 recorded crimes in Wales in 2006-07 were drug related.
- The estimated health service cost in Wales of alcohol related chronic disease and alcohol related acute incidents is between £70 million and £85 million each year.
- The economic and social cost of alcohol and Class A drug misuse in Wales is estimated to be as much as £2 billion each year.
The title of the WAG report is “Working Together to Reduce Harm”. Let’s see what we can do.
Clive Wolfendale
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