HEARTENING

Patients with damage due to heart attacks are being offered a £10,000 procedure by a charity whereby their own stem cells from their bone marrow are extracted and injected into their hearts, to improve heart function and energy levels, and extend life expectancy, a treatment not currently available from the NHS.

Heart Cells Foundation was started by London businessman Ian Rosenberg in 2003, after he was given two months to live and had to travel to Germany for the procedure. He died, having had three extra years, in 2006 and the work of his charity is continued by his wife Jenifer Rosenberg OBE.

DON’T CARE THEN?

The Care Quality Commission (CQC) has published new guidelines aimed at preventing care homes from punishing residents whose relatives complain by restricting or even banning visits from relatives, or evicting the patients.

The guidelines, published last month, follows a case in Somerset in 2012 where a son was prevented from visiting his 93 year old father, who died three months later, and a case at an Essex care home where an 86 year old was evicted after her children complained of poor care there.

BITING THE DATA BULLET

The Royal National Lifeboat Institute (RNLI) will be the UK’s first major charity to adopt “opt-in” rules on how it communicates with its donors, though it expects to lose £36 million in donations over five years by doing so.

The rules forbid charities from cold-calling potential donors – they have to wait for donors to contact them and opt in to a relationship. The RNLI expect to lose around 500,000 from the 2 million donors on their database. Continue reading

ROYALTY FOR SALE?

The Centrepoint charity for young homeless people, a favourite of Prince William, has been accused of “crude hustling” following allegations that they promised wealthy donors special access to the Duke of Cambridge at this year’s annual Centrepoint Awards event at Kensington Palace in return for a donation of £40,000+. Kensington Palace has declined to comment on the allegation.

The evening featured Craig David, Phil Collins, Ellie Goulding and Dirty Vegas and was hosted by celebrity top-ranker Jonathan Ross.

GARY ON THE BALL

The fostering charity TACT has apologised for falsely claiming that a man in his late thirties arriving in Calais as a “child refugee” was an interpreter.

Published doubts about the age of the “child” drew criticism from football pundit Gary Lineker who ranted unintelligently that such treatment of “young refugees” was “hideously racist and utterly heartless” proving to many that he should stick to selling football and crisps.

Event Organisers Update November 2016 ISSUE 146

LOOKING FOR… A thought-provoking piece about networking in Conference News by one of its columnists Richard John caught our eye. “Cut to the chase” proposed that …

MORE WHITE-KNUCKLE FUN Another malfunctioning themepark ride has made the headlines, following the Smiler crash last year at Alton Towers. This time it’s at …

EXETER HOTEL DESTROYED The four star 53-bedroom Royal Clarence Hotel in Exeter was completely destroyed by fire last month, which was thought to have started …

FIRM’S COLLAPSE AT CUMBERLAND A dispute over building works that ran three months behind schedule at the Cumberland Hotel, Marble Arch forced a Leeds …

THE RICHMOND, LIVERPOOL The Richmond Hotel Liverpool, in the city’s business district and a short stroll from Lime Street station, is independently owned and was …

TRINITY HOUSE Organisers looking for exclusive use of elegant conference rooms in the heart of historical London will want to know about Trinity House, on Tower Hill in …

GRANGE CITY HOTEL Also in the area is the Grange City Hotel, located opposite Trinity House in Coopers Row and with many of its 307 guest bedrooms offering views of the …

COME AND NETWORK Free networking sessions for anyone in the events industry are held by Citizen Event at the Grace Bar and Restaurant, 42, Great Windmill St, London …

TO GO Another good exhibition for those wanting to keep up with food trends is Lunch, held at the Business Design Centre, Islington in September and focussing on food to go …

CARAVAGGIO Those who admire the dramatic and cinematically lit art of the Italian painter Caravaggio can enjoy a current exhibition, Beyond Caravaggio running at …

TWILIGHT’S LAST GLEAMING One of the truly riveting and under-rated political thrillers of the 70’s, Twilight’s Last Gleaming, deals with the reasons why the truth about  …

LOOKING FOR…

A thought-provoking piece about networking in Conference News by one of its columnists Richard John caught our eye.

“Cut to the chase” proposed that much time at event industry networking sessions could be saved if organisers of such events used matchmaking software to identify what each delegate was actually looking for, and published this information on delegate’s badges, so that delegates didn’t waste valuable time networking with people who couldn’t supply what they wanted. Continue reading

MORE WHITE-KNUCKLE FUN

Another malfunctioning themepark ride has made the headlines, following the Smiler crash last year at Alton Towers.

This time it’s at Dreamworld on Australia’s Gold Coast where a raft on the Thunder River Rapid ride flipped over when it was travelling on a conveyor belt throwing two children clear and killing two men and two women. Tragically the children thrown clear saw their mothers die.

The park is operated by Ardent Leisure which has suffered criticism for wanting to reopen a few days later and for using PR-talk that they had “reached out” to the victim’s families, which they hadn’t.

Over the last ten years the park has won a clutch of awards from Queensland Tourism, for what it’s worth.

EXETER HOTEL DESTROYED

The four star 53-bedroom Royal Clarence Hotel in Exeter was completely destroyed by fire last month, which was thought to have started in the adjacent fine art gallery. Everyone was safely evacuated and 120 firefighters battled to save it.

It was the first property in England to be called a hotel, back in 1769, and hosted such notables as Admiral Nelson, Franz Liszt, Beatrix Potter, Thomas Hardy, Clark Gable and Gary Cooper. Paintings destroyed in the Castle Fine Art Gallery included works by Bob Dylan and Rolling Stones guitarist Ronnie Wood.

The hotel’s current owner Andrew Brownswood, who bought it in 2003 for £4.5 million has pledged to rebuild it.