:00:00. > :00:08.Hello. Tonight Inside Out East Midlands is at the Eagle Centre
:00:08. > :00:12.Market in Derby. Coming up in the next half hour: High stakes roulette
:00:12. > :00:16.at your local betting shop — is it creating a new generation of
:00:16. > :00:20.gambling addicts? It's the crack cocaine of the
:00:20. > :00:22.betting industry — at my worst I could lose a month's salary in a
:00:22. > :00:30.couple of hours, it was horrendous. With tough times on our high street
:00:30. > :00:38.are parking charges the real reason shoppers stay away. Geoff Burch
:00:38. > :00:43.investigates. Look at this. It is devastation. I
:00:43. > :00:46.cannot see an open shop. And how Harry finally got recognition for
:00:46. > :01:06.the wartime miners who were forced to dig for coal.
:01:06. > :01:11.Nowadays if you visit your local betting shop, chances are you'll
:01:11. > :01:15.find as many people playing on a high stakes gaming machines as
:01:15. > :01:19.you'll see betting over the counter. Here in the East Midlands we spend
:01:19. > :01:23.about one and a half billion pounds a year on those machines and one man
:01:23. > :01:28.from Derby is so concerned about them he's launched a national
:01:28. > :01:31.campaign to get them scrapped. Which is interesting because millionaire
:01:31. > :01:39.Derek Webb made all his money from gambling.
:01:39. > :01:45.It's a world of high rollers and high risk but nowadays you don't
:01:45. > :01:51.have to dress up like James Bond to gamble casino style, just head down
:01:51. > :01:56.to your local betting shop. I've been playing roulette on a fixed
:01:56. > :02:04.odds betting terminal. There are four in there, four over their and
:02:04. > :02:06.down the road another four. These machines now bring in at least as
:02:06. > :02:12.much money as traditional over—the—counter betting and that
:02:12. > :02:18.our 1400 of them in the East Midlands. We were not allowed to
:02:18. > :02:21.film the playing on one. That may be because they've become very
:02:21. > :02:29.controversial and that's partly down to one man's campaign.
:02:29. > :02:33.This is the name of the game. Derek Webb feels right at home in a
:02:33. > :02:38.casino. He has made millions from gambling, not by playing that buy
:02:38. > :02:48.inventing one called three card poker. It is dramatic. This was the
:02:49. > :02:54.first game introduced into British casinos and it has settled in and
:02:54. > :02:59.become the leading game. Selling the right has earned Derek tens of
:02:59. > :03:09.millions. It means he can split his time between his house in Derby and
:03:09. > :03:14.a home in Las Vegas. But now this poacher has turned gamekeeper. Derek
:03:14. > :03:19.is funding a campaign against fast play high—stakes roulette machines
:03:19. > :03:24.on the high street. It's called the campaign for fairer gambling. Sarah
:03:24. > :03:27.because according to Derek there's a big difference between playing
:03:27. > :03:33.roulette on a machine and sitting down at a table. Here, heavy has
:03:33. > :03:38.their own chips and puts their bets down and you would have social
:03:38. > :03:44.interaction between the players. The dealer would spin and it would take
:03:44. > :03:51.a minute or two minutes to get the resolution. That is the difference
:03:51. > :03:59.to a machine like this. This is a regular casino machine, you can play
:03:59. > :04:03.£2. The player on the faulty machine can bet £100 every 20 seconds so it
:04:03. > :04:13.is a different experience to the live casino table. £100 every 20
:04:13. > :04:16.seconds cost Roger Radler his marriage and his job. He used to
:04:16. > :04:23.work in the city as a business development manager but that was
:04:23. > :04:28.before he got hooked on roulette. This is the walk I took sometimes on
:04:28. > :04:38.a daily basis. Minute after minute, hour after hour, four bookmakers. I
:04:38. > :04:45.went from one to the other. I have not been here for a while. I'm
:04:45. > :05:00.shamed just... I do not recognise myself, I am into my recovery now.
:05:00. > :05:04.What was I doing? Look at the opening hours, nine until nine. I
:05:05. > :05:10.spent from nine o'clock in the morning until 9:30pm. Now compete in
:05:10. > :05:16.therapy and trying to help other addict with eight warts and all
:05:16. > :05:20.website about what to him. It is the crack cocaine of the gambling
:05:20. > :05:25.industry. You can get your high every 15 seconds and you are losing
:05:25. > :05:29.huge sums of money. I lost a month salary within a couple of hours that
:05:30. > :05:36.is horrendous. Professor Jim Orford is an addiction expert. He says
:05:37. > :05:42.high—stakes fixed odds betting terminal is should never have been
:05:42. > :05:47.allowed on the high street. They are different, gambling machines are
:05:47. > :05:53.like addiction machines. They really doing coverage you to keep on
:05:53. > :05:57.playing. And many of the people in the gambling industry, if you talk
:05:57. > :06:02.to them and get them off the record, they admit essentially what they
:06:02. > :06:07.want is to get people in front of the machines and keep them there as
:06:07. > :06:12.long as possible. Games machines have been here for ten years and no
:06:12. > :06:19.evidence has been produced to show the machines cause problem gambling.
:06:19. > :06:30.Today, Derek Webb is taking his campaign to London. We are going to
:06:30. > :06:35.Thames Magistrates Court, there's a magistrates between Newham Council
:06:35. > :06:38.and Paddy Power. New have refused a licence to Paddy Power saying the
:06:38. > :06:43.borough has too many betting shops and the machines mean these are no
:06:43. > :06:47.longer traditional bookmakers. In a betting office you would be placing
:06:47. > :06:51.bets, if you want to place a bet on the horses of the dogs or football,
:06:51. > :06:59.that's all right but if your income comes from other means which it does
:06:59. > :07:04.mainly from gambling machines, it should not be allowed. Paddy Power
:07:04. > :07:08.has appealed and they win the argument and their licence in
:07:08. > :07:12.court. It is seen as a test case and puts the campaign in the media
:07:12. > :07:17.spotlight. The campaign is continuing, we need to stop the most
:07:17. > :07:22.harmful and Dick differential forms of gambling in Britain from growing
:07:22. > :07:26.on the high street. Within a few hundred yards you can see most of
:07:26. > :07:33.the main high street betting shops names. Councils have been watching
:07:33. > :07:40.the new case including Lester's deputy mayor. The law is
:07:40. > :07:44.restrictive, local government finds itself with few powers to stop this
:07:44. > :07:49.growth in betting shops and machines being placed on the high street. I
:07:49. > :07:52.want to see a planning category introduced for betting shops. We
:07:52. > :07:57.need local councils given powers to stop the growth in betting shops and
:07:57. > :08:02.to keep these high—stakes high risk machines off the high street.
:08:02. > :08:06.Councils were with the machines are responsible for an increase in
:08:06. > :08:10.anti—social behaviour. When panorama investigated last year, they filmed
:08:10. > :08:15.frustrated customers turning violent, staff felt threatened.
:08:15. > :08:22.People go berserk, kicking the screens, smashing it, trying to tip
:08:22. > :08:29.it over. They are picking up chairs, throwing things because they have
:08:29. > :08:33.lost their money. (BLEEP). Somebody came up with a pickaxe because they
:08:33. > :08:40.said we dropped his money. It is frightening. The most disgusting
:08:40. > :08:44.thing is when people spit on the machines. Some of these people are
:08:45. > :08:49.almost proffering at the mouth. Adrian Parkinson used to work as a
:08:49. > :08:53.regional manager and remembers the machines being introduced. He now
:08:53. > :09:00.works with the campaign. Managing these machines, I got calls about
:09:00. > :09:06.machines being smashed up because customers lost so much money, its
:09:06. > :09:13.impact not just on his back pocket but the wife and kids and all of the
:09:13. > :09:16.issues from that. The Department for Culture, Media and Sport have asked
:09:16. > :09:21.the responsible gambling trust for more research into whether the
:09:21. > :09:24.machines are addict. That is due next year. The industry says they
:09:24. > :09:32.are reacting to concerns about customers playing too long and
:09:32. > :09:36.losing too much. The industry will introduce in the autumn a new code
:09:36. > :09:42.for responsible gambling which will set out a range of measures that
:09:42. > :09:47.operators will help people with gambling and minimise harm. The
:09:47. > :09:53.important thing is betting shops in Nottingham employee 170 people, it
:09:53. > :09:59.is creating jobs when big retailers go and that is real people losing
:09:59. > :10:03.real jobs. Derek says until stakes are reduced and play slow down, the
:10:03. > :10:12.campaign will continue. I am not anti gambling, but this is clear,
:10:12. > :10:15.the evidence is in, this is the most addictive form of gambling in
:10:15. > :10:28.Britain and we need to get the government to act.
:10:28. > :10:44.Still to come tonight, the story of the Bevin boys: Across the country
:10:44. > :10:47.one in seven shops stands vacant. In the East Midlands the latest figures
:10:47. > :10:50.actually show an improvement. But the picture's so patchy it might not
:10:51. > :10:53.feel like things are getting better where you live? Inside Out's
:10:53. > :10:56.business guru Geoff Burch has been exploring the winners and losers as
:10:56. > :10:59.some shopkeepers battle to survive. Nottingham prides itself on being
:10:59. > :11:04.one on the UK's top shopping destinations. So when a national
:11:04. > :11:07.survey of empty shops announced the city had a thirty per cent vacancy
:11:07. > :11:20.rate, double the national average, it came as a bit of a blow. These
:11:20. > :11:23.figures were disputed, a huge row kicked off and a task force was set
:11:23. > :11:29.up to try to fill these empty shops. It is a year on, over a quarter of
:11:29. > :11:33.the shops are still empty and Nottingham is right at the bottom of
:11:34. > :11:38.the heap when it was the most big arrest town in England. What about
:11:38. > :11:43.the smaller towns, the dozens of high streets, how are they holding
:11:43. > :11:46.up? I've come to Matlock to meet two local business experts. Anna and
:11:46. > :11:52.Dina run a company which helps independent shops set up and expand
:11:52. > :11:58.across Derbyshire. I'm hoping they can give me an insight into what's
:11:58. > :12:05.happening on our high streets. Welcome! To me, the East Midlands is
:12:05. > :12:13.a dramatic example that there's nothing in them middle of boom and
:12:13. > :12:19.bust. They are beating the trend or fallen under it. What is the story?
:12:19. > :12:25.There is a mixture. If I go up to the high Peak of Derbyshire, Buxton,
:12:25. > :12:29.once the famous spa town lost its way and they realise they have to
:12:29. > :12:34.get on the front foot and get away from the status complaining about a
:12:34. > :12:38.supermarket in town who might provide car parking so they are
:12:38. > :12:45.waking up and coming good. In the far side of Nottinghamshire and I
:12:45. > :12:51.think Grantham, again, widest simile large chains pull out, it has set
:12:51. > :12:57.the traffic away to the edge of town or shopping centres. In Matlock it
:12:57. > :13:07.is a thing. It is wonderful but it could have taken a dive. One of the
:13:07. > :13:12.reasons they could have taken a hit is because Sainsbury's opened. It
:13:12. > :13:18.was a tale of two towns. The traders came together and worked together to
:13:18. > :13:22.make sure that actually that wasn't going to happen. They were
:13:22. > :13:28.determined, positive, they form a limited company said that it really
:13:28. > :13:33.did feel like a business. Not one by the council, not run by the traders,
:13:33. > :13:37.the jointly coming together, collaboratively, and also asking the
:13:37. > :13:44.locals what they wanted. It turned out top of the list was parking
:13:44. > :13:49.charges. With the help of these ladies a solution was found. When
:13:49. > :13:55.you buy something in one of the participating shops you get your car
:13:55. > :14:00.parking cost refunding. What makes the difference between a high Street
:14:00. > :14:06.boom and a high Street bust? To find out I want to compare to Derbyshire
:14:07. > :14:15.town 's, both similar in size, both built on coal and heavy industry.
:14:15. > :14:18.First up, Ilkeston. The top half of the time isn't bad, there is a
:14:18. > :14:26.market square and the sandbox but look at this, it is devastation. I
:14:26. > :14:31.cannot see an open shop. In a recent survey 18% of shops they can, it is
:14:31. > :14:38.like 100%. There is a vacant pub, newsagents, everything is empty.
:14:39. > :14:46.Whose bright idea was it to board the shops up with luck paint? It has
:14:46. > :14:53.gone downhill a lot in the last couple of years. Empty shops. Plain
:14:53. > :14:58.and simple. There is nothing, no where to buy clothes, shoes,
:14:58. > :15:02.nothing. Unless you like Tesco. It is like one of those American ghost
:15:02. > :15:08.towns, the gold has been mined, the minerals have been taken, all you
:15:08. > :15:13.want if the skull of a dead cow and we will have completed the whole
:15:13. > :15:17.scene. I'm meeting Dave Thorpe, who is head of the Chamber of Trade. He
:15:17. > :15:21.claims his is the oldest shop in the town. Thorpes opened 125 years ago.
:15:21. > :15:26.I've been warned, he doesn't pull any punches about the state of his
:15:26. > :15:30.High Street. In making this programme we have
:15:30. > :15:32.asked the local MP and a whole host of other people including our
:15:32. > :15:39.Erewash Partnership if they could make a comment, and they are very
:15:39. > :15:44.difficult to get a hold of. Of course, there are a lot of people
:15:44. > :15:47.with fingers in this pie. We have made various proposals like on the
:15:47. > :15:53.use of the empty Woolworths, on the empty leisure centre they have, we
:15:53. > :15:58.get no response. They did actually agree it was a good idea, but
:15:58. > :16:01.nothing happened. David has got a simple solution, something he offers
:16:01. > :16:06.on a small scale outside his own store. It's free parking, to stop
:16:06. > :16:12.shoppers heading out of town to the retail park. What is their reply
:16:12. > :16:15.when you look them straight in the face, Councillor X, why can't I have
:16:15. > :16:21.free parking? Because we can't afford it. Are you a lone voice or
:16:21. > :16:26.do the people of Ilkeston feel this? Does anybody understand what you are
:16:26. > :16:30.saying? Oh yes, I get them in here all the time, I don't want to be
:16:30. > :16:35.arrested for incense to riot, but if we were French we would have broken
:16:35. > :16:40.the town hall windows years ago. He is a very shrewd, clever
:16:40. > :16:45.businessman, also a very angry man. He's quite right, Ilkeston is dying
:16:45. > :16:50.on its feet. The council have got to do something. David's thing is
:16:50. > :16:54.parking, is it parking, is it something else? Something has to be
:16:54. > :17:03.done or this town isn't going to survive. I do think a lot of the
:17:03. > :17:06.councils could do more for Ilkeston, definitely. There is a lot of
:17:06. > :17:11.potential here, and we need the help. It just needs somebody with a
:17:11. > :17:14.bit of foresight to see what it could be, we have got a few
:17:14. > :17:18.specialist shops coming in which is nice. I noticed, tattoos! I am going
:17:18. > :17:23.to have one on my bum. Oh, lovely. Show us that one!
:17:23. > :17:29.I have arrived at my second chosen town, Swadlincote in South
:17:29. > :17:34.Derbyshire. Despite being similar to Ikleston in many ways it has half
:17:34. > :17:37.the number of empty shops. We need to keep things in perspective, this
:17:37. > :17:43.ain't no Regent Street, but things do look better. It has got just the
:17:43. > :17:46.same roots as Ilkeston, mining, heavy industry, but somehow here
:17:46. > :17:49.things seem to be looking up, they are facing the same challenges, the
:17:49. > :17:53.same recession that we are all facing, yet the dynamism of the
:17:53. > :18:02.people who run this place are really making great changes, look at the
:18:02. > :18:06.place, it is alive. I am meeting the man from the council who is in
:18:06. > :18:10.charge of the changes. There is a new retail park, not out of town but
:18:10. > :18:15.connected to the old high street by a pedestrian link. They have also
:18:15. > :18:17.created a cultural quarter to promote tourism and they have
:18:17. > :18:24.encouraged big manufacturers to set up shop and employ hundreds of local
:18:24. > :18:28.people. It is kind of a benign dictatorship, you even moved the
:18:28. > :18:31.market, didn't you? Yes, I did, it was important to take it from where
:18:31. > :18:35.it was not successful to where them would feel they had a better chance
:18:35. > :18:41.to be successful, outdoors, in the traditional way. All of these things
:18:42. > :18:45.have been successful but it does take one person to say this will
:18:45. > :18:47.happen. As the Chief Executive I am given that power by my members but
:18:47. > :18:53.it takes my members, the local politicians, to be brave to allow me
:18:53. > :19:03.to push this forward and we have always planned for the future.
:19:03. > :19:07.Besides Swadlincote's ongoing master plan he has a killer weapon up his
:19:07. > :19:12.sleeve, possibly the most contentious issue with town shoppers
:19:12. > :19:16.across Britain. People don't just pop into the supermarket, load the
:19:16. > :19:19.car and clear off. No. They do that because the clock isn't ticking,
:19:19. > :19:24.there is no parking charge. The notice you are standing in front of,
:19:24. > :19:29.six hours free parking. The whole town is predicated on free parking.
:19:29. > :19:33.The Chamber of Trade need that margin to encourage people to come
:19:33. > :19:36.in and we are getting visitors with Birmingham accents, from all over
:19:36. > :19:40.the small towns that don't have these national facilities. You are
:19:40. > :19:45.the Dubai of the East Midlands. Standing here in temperatures like
:19:45. > :19:49.this, I am not going to deny it. Hearing it from the head of the
:19:49. > :19:55.local council is all very well, but what do some of the locals say? It
:19:55. > :20:00.is a lot bigger and better than what it used to be. At one point you used
:20:00. > :20:03.to come down here and you wouldn't see anybody walking up and down.
:20:03. > :20:09.Since they've opened a new complex by Morrisons at the top, that has
:20:09. > :20:16.made it a lot better. The changes here have been dramatic. What is the
:20:16. > :20:19.future? Things are difficult in the retail trade, we don't hide from
:20:19. > :20:23.that fact, I certainly think with the investment in the area, and our
:20:23. > :20:27.new developments we have happening, we are very excited. Onward and
:20:27. > :20:31.upward. Absolutely. So this has been a tale of two
:20:31. > :20:33.towns, Ilkeston, struggling to attract shoppers to its high street,
:20:33. > :20:36.and Swadlincote, apparently bouncing back from the recession. Who would
:20:36. > :20:41.have thought parking charges could have such an impact? In my opinion
:20:41. > :20:44.councils need to listen, and in Swadlincote they have listened and
:20:44. > :20:55.they have developed a devastating secret weapon, it is called free
:20:55. > :20:57.parking. The only problem I have is how on earth am I going to get this
:20:57. > :21:10.lot home? This year a group of men were
:21:10. > :21:14.finally recognised for what they did during the Second World War. But
:21:14. > :21:18.recognition came too late for many of the 48,000 Bevin Boys who worked
:21:18. > :21:23.down the coal mines to keep the nation powered during wartime. It
:21:23. > :21:27.was the efforts of the Nottingham man which really made us sit up and
:21:27. > :21:29.take notice. James spent the day down a mine with the remarkable
:21:29. > :21:37.Harry Parkes. Harry first walked into a pit as a
:21:37. > :21:46.freshfaced teenager. He had no choice. It is amazing, it has never
:21:46. > :21:50.changed, the men are just the same. His name was drawn out of a ballot
:21:50. > :21:55.to go down a mine and dig for coal rather than join the forces. Going
:21:55. > :22:07.down for the first time must have been something... It was, and it was
:22:07. > :22:11.a strange experience. Of course, what you think is what is there when
:22:11. > :22:14.we get to the bottom? I haven't a clue. Our cameraman goes to
:22:14. > :22:17.Yorkshire colliery to watch the arrival of a party of Mr Bevin's
:22:17. > :22:21.boys, young conscripts drafted into the mines instead of the Armed
:22:21. > :22:25.Forces. The old newsreel said how it was, but not everybody realised.
:22:25. > :22:31.Because there was no uniform some thought them conscientious objectors
:22:31. > :22:42.to fighting. So there were taunts and suspicions of draft dodging. We
:22:42. > :22:45.have taken Harry Parkes to the National Coal Mining Museum near
:22:45. > :22:51.Wakefield to tell us about that first day down the pit. You think to
:22:51. > :22:56.yourself, how long before this all caves in? You don't have pit sense,
:22:56. > :23:04.you are just a greenhorn and everything is so strange. Scary?
:23:04. > :23:09.Absolutely. You were really scared. Remember, there is hundreds of feet
:23:09. > :23:12.of rock above us. Then comes some advice on mining given by
:23:12. > :23:16.experienced instructors. They will learn a lot, not least how a
:23:16. > :23:19.coalminer lives as well as works. The safety lamps are issued and the
:23:19. > :23:25.party prepares to descend into the dark labyrinth of tunnels deep below
:23:25. > :23:28.the surface. It was a dangerous job. Some of these young men would have
:23:28. > :23:32.died underground. They'd all had dreams dashed by war. Harry Parkes,
:23:32. > :23:35.who had been at school with Alan Sillitoe in Radford, left there to
:23:35. > :23:39.work as a cinema projectionist in Nottingham when the call—up came he
:23:39. > :23:52.had not expected to be forced to dig for coal. If you didn't want to go,
:23:52. > :23:58.they threw you in jail, no appeal, no trial, and you stayed there until
:23:59. > :24:10.you changed your mind. So I went. We felt slave labour, in a way. One
:24:10. > :24:16.banged his head. He hasn't got pit sense. Look at this. This is from my
:24:16. > :24:23.day. That was your snack, or rather you lunch. It just fitted a loaf,
:24:23. > :24:27.slice of loaf. I had a jam sandwich and if it was a high day, I would
:24:27. > :24:31.perhaps have a piece of cake which was rare in wartime. This has got a
:24:32. > :24:36.bit squashed but this was the bottle that held water, it is called a
:24:36. > :24:40.Dudley, it had a cork in the top, and so when you had your snack you
:24:40. > :24:44.sat on the floor opened your tin, had a drink of nearly cold water and
:24:44. > :24:58.that was 15 minute break in a seven and a half hour shift.
:24:58. > :25:04.The enforced labour went on years into peacetime. There was no
:25:04. > :25:09.recognition for the Bevin Boys' war effort either. Not for 70 years,
:25:09. > :25:14.until a badge was awarded in 2008 to those who'd lived long enough. It
:25:14. > :25:22.was a survivor's badge, and if you died before the date of issue of the
:25:22. > :25:26.badge, you got no recognition. The families have got no recognition,
:25:26. > :25:32.they have got nowhere to go to remember their loved ones. I'm
:25:32. > :25:37.sorry, I have lived with this for 70 years in my mind.
:25:37. > :25:40.Harry was the inspiration behind a campaign to get and design a
:25:40. > :25:47.memorial. Joan Taylor was the instigator of Harry's plan. Bevin
:25:47. > :25:52.Boys are forgotten people, they were, in fact, conscripted. A lot of
:25:52. > :25:55.people don't realise that. They think they were conscientious
:25:55. > :25:59.objectors and they have never had a proper recognition that they did
:25:59. > :26:02.their part as conscripts for the war effort and it is about time they
:26:02. > :26:07.were properly recognised. This is the wartime roof support. Harry's
:26:07. > :26:16.knowledge of life underground remains. There is today enthusiasm
:26:16. > :26:20.at what he finds. Because being a Bevin Boy changed his path in life.
:26:20. > :26:23.He carried on in mining, and was later a university expert on the
:26:23. > :26:29.industry. Knowledge he is keen to share still. You lowered those, you
:26:29. > :26:33.push that conveyor over with the ram on the floor, and the back of the
:26:33. > :26:51.ram was held steady because it was trapped between the floor and roof.
:26:51. > :26:58.They don't do half the things they should have done for Bevin Boys.
:26:58. > :27:04.They have been the forgotten heroes of the war. This memorial I think
:27:04. > :27:07.says a lot in its simplicity. It is the design Harry and I wanted,
:27:07. > :27:10.something simple but gives that message. And now he has shared the
:27:10. > :27:17.story of the Bevin Boys acknowledged by royalty, at the National Memorial
:27:17. > :27:21.Arboretum. It has given the Bevin Boys the right to stand tall, just
:27:21. > :27:29.like our monument, and say I was a Bevin Boy. And for that, is the
:27:29. > :27:48.answer to all my hopes and dreams for the last 70 years.
:27:48. > :27:57.Thank you. Thank you. Today, was the first day of my experience as a
:27:57. > :28:01.Bevin Boy. I went through everything, from going down the
:28:01. > :28:04.shaft to the sudden what I thought was a rush, the supports, the men
:28:04. > :28:14.that we've been with, it has brought back so many memories. Not bad
:28:14. > :28:16.memories, but just experience. I think, it made me in a way, it
:28:16. > :28:32.altered my life. The remarkable Harry Parkes sharing
:28:32. > :28:37.his memories. Thanks, Harry. If you missed any of tonight programme you
:28:37. > :28:39.can go to the BBC iPlayer. On next week's Inside Out East Midlands, the
:28:39. > :28:43.story behind the long—running battle in the smallest county, the gloves
:28:43. > :28:50.are off in Rutland. Is free—speech really being muzzled?