11/02/2013 Inside Out North East and Cumbria


11/02/2013

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In the next half an hour we go beneath the covers of the bedroom

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tax to discover why some northerners are facing sleepless

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nights. What is bothering us is a dead line. Get out of here or pay

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�27 extra a week. We discover how counting sheep in the North is not

:00:24.:00:30.

adding up. I had gone at 7 o'clock in the morning to feed them and

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there were only two left. And how for some of our young footballers

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taking a penalty means time in jail. The only way I was getting it was

:00:42.:00:47.

through crime and the crime it was selling drugs. Stories from the

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heart of the North East and Cumbria, Critics call it the bedroom tax,

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the under occupancy charge kicks in in April as part of the Government

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shake-up of the benefits system. Opponents say it will force

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thousands of households in the North into poverty and tear

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families apart. Tonight I am opening the door on complaints from

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one community. It is a miniature scene of what is going on across

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the North. All told in the factories I worked about 30 years.

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I worked a 40 hour week because I did not want to get anything off

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the state. I have never signed on in my life and tell my husband died.

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Tudhoe Moor, a council estate in Spennymoor, County Durham. Sue

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Brannigan's family has lived in this house since the 1950s. Her

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four children grew up in it and her husband Peter died in it. Sue is

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bracing herself for the Government's new under occupation

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charge or her bedroom tax which kicks in in April. It affects

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people in social housing. Your benefits will be cut if you have

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more bedrooms it than you actually need. That sounds fair in principle,

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but is it? We have up four bedrooms. How many people live here? Just me,

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it is too big for me. Because Sue has got three spare rooms bedroom

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tax will hit her hard. I get �71 a week. I have �8 water rates to pay.

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�27 bedroom tax and that will leave me with �35. What is bothering us

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is a deadline. Get out of fear or pay �27 extra a week. So what are

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the rules? One person or a couple needed just one bedroom. They will

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be charged an average of �13 a week if they have more. Suppose they

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start having babies, a boy and a girl. The Government expects

:03:11.:03:16.

children under 10 to share, so the family needs of two bedrooms. But

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if the children are the same sex, they share a bedroom until they are

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16. They leave home. Mum and dad only need one bedroom again.

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Pensioners alike grandad can have whatever house they like, they are

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not affected by the tax. Ironically Peter Brannigan was a pensioner,

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but Sue is not. Not only has she lost her husband, but because she

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cannot afford to keep her home, she is going to lose that as well.

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is easy saying to somebody, can you shift house? But it is another

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thing to say, leave your home. this about saving money? It is

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about what is affordable. We have a housing benefit bill that is

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frankly out of control. We can afford to support people in the

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bedrooms they need, but not to fund extra bedrooms. It makes perfect

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sense. If you are in a big house, it makes sense to come in with a

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rule that pushes you to think about moving. No, I do not think anybody

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should be told what size house they should live in and if they do not,

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they will have so much ripped off their benefits. We pay for rent. It

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is only since my husband died on the bathroom floor that I have been

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plunged into this mess. Housing associations have told us bedroom

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tax cannot work in the north. They say people who rely on benefits

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will either mood miles from home or end up a lot poorer. -- move.

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party is over for benefit skivers. I did not go to that party. It is

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slander and propaganda. Sue's son Michael lives across the street and

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is facing a hit from the bedroom tax as well. How many rooms? It is

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a two-bedroom house and I occupy one bedroom and the other bed it is

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for my son who I get once a fortnight. Is that a spare room?

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it is occupied, it is for my son. But the Government does not see it

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that way, so Michael has to pay for the spare room. The suggestion is

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the work more, you take in a lodger, or you move. What is your chance?

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would take David Cameron in to see how he likes it. You want David

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Cameron as a lodger? Yes I want him to live in the real world. Tudhoe

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Moor is an example of what is going on in the North East. It is the

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same in these flats. 60 people will have their benefit reduced. One of

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them is 19 year-old Jade Widdowson who suffers from ADHD, but her life

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is on the up. I have been here three-and a-half weeks. It is my

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first home, it is my rules, and it is easier as well. But there is

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this extra money you have to find. I know, it will be a struggle, but

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I know my mum will be there to help me if I need it. There are a lot of

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things we expect people may look to do. One of the things may be to pay

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the extra for the bedrooms and a lot of people will look to work or

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work more to afford to do that if they cannot already. I was talking

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to one of the Government ministers and I said how are people supposed

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to find the extra money? He said work more. It is easy for somebody

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to say. I am not allowed to go to work because of the sea because of

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my mental health. For them who can go to work, they are lucky, I wish

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I could. But there is another reason why the Government is

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bringing in the bedroom tax. will give people like us more

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chance to get a bigger home. Albert and Melanie Jacques lived on the

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Tudhoe Moor estate as well, but their three-bedroom house is not

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big enough. When we first came here, it was all right, but we started to

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grow. We are going to have six children. You manage, because you

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have to. Overcrowding like this is very rare in the North East. It is

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far more likely you will have spare bedrooms. But there is a problem, a

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chronic shortage of smaller houses. The numbers do not add up. That

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type of property does not exist across our patch in any great

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number. There is not the property available for people to downsize to.

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We have heard it is the same across the North. We looked at his snap

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shot. Lower than in County Durham has 1400 affected by the tax, but

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just four bedsits free. Redcar has 2500 properties, which under your

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criteria would be under used. They have just won a one-bedroom

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property for them to move into. When you look at the number of

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people affected in the North East, the surveys that have been done so

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just a quarter of people will want to think about downsizing. That

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compares with the number of new, social Letts there have been in the

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most recent year recorded. Basically we are going to have

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people coming to housing associations saying they cannot

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afford to pay the under occupation tax, please move me, and we have

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not got anywhere else to move them to. But they will have to pay the

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tax all the same. There is a shortage of small flats, housing

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associations for most of them down. Sue Brannigan is finding it

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impossible to find a flat near her family and friends in Spennymoor.

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Middleton, Teesdale, Horden, Eshwinning, Stanley, Blackhall,

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absolutely nothing. There is one in Spennymoor. If thousands of people

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like Sue have to move away from the places they had lived all their

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lives, what effect will that have quality of life on our street and

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our communities? We are all in it together. We have obligations not

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just to ourselves and families, but our communities. The Government is

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on about community spirit and they are breaking us apart. My sister

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lives down there and my brother lives over there and I live here.

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The families on this estate are all like that. We have a Government

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that does not look at people individually. All they want to do

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is reduce the deficit and they will do that in any way they can. Do you

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have a spare room in your house? actually do have a spare rib in my

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house. Is it not reasonable for everyone to have a spare room?

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difference is there are some people who are being supported by

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taxpayers and the question is how much should the taxpayer Sant of

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those bedrooms? People do not realise what is happening. There

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will be a lot of civil unrest. you think it is like the poll tax?

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It is worse than the poll tax. What you saw with the poll tax and the

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riots last year, it will be three times as bad. Sue is depressed and

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is still grieving over the death of her husband and does not do with

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the bedrooms full of memories. These go back to the 70s. I really

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should throw that out. That was a kids when he was eight. These are

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small memories as well. I just do not think it is fair for anybody to

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tell you when to... I think it is sad that I have these memories.

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few have a few, go to the website. -- If you have a view on the

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stories, go to the block. Still to come: How rising prices at

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the butcher's brought a bonanza for rustlers. They take our sheep away

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for winter grazing and we went back and a month later we found 32 had

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been stolen. One of the most shocking statistics I have heard

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recently is that there are 129 former professional footballers in

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prison. The vast majority are under 25, young men whose lives have hit

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a downward spiral after being released by clubs that did not

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think they would it make the grade. We asked football manager Phil

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Brown, who served his time with Hartlepool, to find out what is

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being done with lads who do not realise their footballing dreams.

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Every young lad who plays academy football plays to dream. Dream

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about playing at great stadiums, Old Trafford, St James' Park, or

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displays. And who can blame them? There is nothing quite like the

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experience of playing in front of a full house at fantastic arenas like

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this. But sadly, pour over 98% of them, that dream at one ever come

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true. That is when the harsh reality kicks in. We all think we

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are going to make it and very few think it is not going to happen. I

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was one of the fortunate ones. are a Premiership club and you have

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to find the best, so there is going to be a large amount of fall-out.

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Football academies sign up boys as young as eight, but can release

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them at any point. Some get very close, possibly a full-time

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contract at 18, but the ones to go all the way are exceptionally rare.

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For those who do not, the disappointment can be shattering.

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You think it is the end of the world and you may be start knocking

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that. Football should do a lot more for them when they came out of the

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game. Michael was a promising young ended, he turned to crime. It was a

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mind set and I was thinking, I should have that, and I want it.

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The only way I was getting it at that time was through crime and the

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crime I was involved in was selling drugs. Michael was a rising star

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with the Liverpool schoolboys and eventually played for Tranmere. But

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when he walked away from the game, he walked into trouble. Drug

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dealing landed him in prison for seven years and that is when he

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realised the full extent of football's problems. I know some

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people at all different levels and some of them are actively involved

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in dealing with drugs. I know the ones who have been caught.

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fully reformed he has set up an organisation designed to help young

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players whose football dreams have come to a premature end. Based at

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Liverpool University, it already has the backing of the Professional

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Footballers' charity, the Ministry of Justice and Liverpool City

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Council. I want it to be a safety net. If a lad goes to Liverpool and

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he goes to what still, and he does not end up getting another team he

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comes to us and we interact with him and getting a coaching course,

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a construction course, getting a job. We could offer a bit more,

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showing them real-life and what will happen if they go down another

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avenue. Jamie Carragher has just announced his retirement after a

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fantastic career. He used to play Sunday League football with Michael.

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But while Michael was in jail, Jamie was winning England caps and

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the Champions League. Jamie is backing the project and invited

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Michael to talk to some of Liverpool's brightest young stars

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about the pitfalls that could lie ahead. Did the seniors sit down and

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give them advice? Yes, that happens. That is my job, the experienced

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players. But you do not want them to think that you think they are

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not going to make it, but the statistics show that it happens.

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The standard is so high, they have got to be thinking about things

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like that. It is always in the back of my mind that if you come to the

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end of the contract, you are not going to make it and you have got

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nothing else left to do in life. There are some players who are not

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making it and coming out of football. For too long, many young

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footballers ignored their education while chasing their dreams, but

:17:41.:17:51.
:17:51.:17:52.

nowadays, clubs are more aware of We have to put things into context.

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What do I mean by context? We think we've got a responsibility to

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develop them holistically, so it's not just the football side of

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development, but it is them as people as well. We organise a day

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release programme which is for everybody now, down to under 10-

:18:05.:18:10.

year-old. As part of that day, we, as well as coach on the football

:18:10.:18:13.

side, they also receive an hour's English and an hour's maths, to

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replace and to support the work they do in school. Have you ever

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thought about a plan B? I'd like to think that I would go to another

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club but it is always in the back of my mind when it comes to that

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time and it is quite scary, I suppose. I think about it a lot.

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You've just got to stick with it because this helps you in case you

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don't make it as a football player. You can also go on to further

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education if anything else. academy is rightly proud of the

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players who have made it through the ranks and into the first team

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but there are also 11 who were not given contracts, who have gone on

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to university, with five more currently studying in America. The

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vast majority will not do either and they need to be prepared for

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the inevitable. It is a great opportunity for them. While they

:19:03.:19:13.
:19:13.:19:13.

are in here, embrace it, enjoy it. But it could come to an end. We've

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got to educate the parents so that when he walks through the door, he

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won't necessarily in �1 million. Enjoy what you're doing now but it

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might not continue. This might not be the kind of place that most

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young lads have in mind when they talk about living the dream but

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this is the sort of ground that most professionals come to work.

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Even playing at this level is beyond the vast majority of who

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aspire to be a professional. If you are released by a Fleetwood,

:19:43.:19:52.
:19:53.:19:53.

Rochdale, a Hartlepool or a Carlisle, you still need a plan B.

:19:53.:19:56.

Jamie Milligan was released when he was younger but he is back in

:19:56.:20:00.

League football with Fleetwood. He has already got a business set up

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for when he eventually retires. When you do get released, you're

:20:04.:20:09.

thinking it is the manager's fault, the coach's fault. But as I get

:20:09.:20:14.

older, and realise it is my fault. My advice to lads would be look

:20:14.:20:17.

into doing something while you're still playing because it can end

:20:17.:20:21.

tomorrow. It is advice that his manager endorses. There is only so

:20:22.:20:25.

much that you can do, as a sport. Individuals have to take

:20:25.:20:28.

responsibility for their lives and it is a two-way street. You need to

:20:28.:20:33.

be offered help and it is up to you whether you take it or not. One of

:20:33.:20:37.

the newest players is Gerard Kinsella, Michael's younger brother.

:20:37.:20:40.

He was released by Everton and then got a serious injury as he was

:20:40.:20:44.

about to sign for Plymouth. He was in danger of going down the same

:20:44.:20:48.

path as his brother. I had nowhere to go, no football to go to. I

:20:49.:20:53.

started knocking around with the lads by ours. They were not up to

:20:53.:20:57.

much good so it could easily have happened. I was associated with

:20:57.:21:06.

those people. I should have been in football. It was Michael who

:21:06.:21:08.

intervened, getting him a part-time job and some qualifications. That

:21:08.:21:12.

was all through On Side. It has given me an education, it has put

:21:12.:21:21.

me through a personal training course. Level two, level three. If

:21:21.:21:24.

the football doesn't work out, I've got something to fall back on.

:21:24.:21:28.

inevitable that the majority of young lads will not make it to be

:21:28.:21:31.

very top but it is a long way down. It's encouraging to know that at

:21:31.:21:34.

last, there are plans to catch those who fall. It is certainly

:21:34.:21:44.
:21:44.:21:49.

You might have thought sheep rustling was an old-fashioned crime

:21:49.:21:58.

but in fact, cases have more than doubled since 2010. It's thought

:21:58.:22:01.

that the rise in the price of lamb has made selling on stolen animals

:22:01.:22:04.

destined for the dinner table more lucrative and as Toby Foster

:22:04.:22:07.

discovers in the countryside, it is a battle to stay one step ahead of

:22:07.:22:17.
:22:17.:22:18.

The north of England boasts mile upon mile of stunning countryside.

:22:18.:22:21.

As well as beautiful views it provides a living for those who

:22:21.:22:26.

raise animals and work the land. But this vast countryside also

:22:26.:22:29.

provides a great hiding place for people who aren't so keen on an

:22:29.:22:32.

honest day's work. The thieves who are targeting farmers and their

:22:32.:22:42.

stock. We took our sheep away for winter grazing. We went back a

:22:42.:22:46.

month later to take them away and we found 32 of them had been stolen.

:22:46.:22:51.

Martin Mitchell is a hill farmer in County Durham. All his sheep were

:22:51.:22:54.

insured but the loss of them is more than just financial. Not all

:22:54.:23:04.
:23:04.:23:05.

sheep are the same. The sheep on your moorland, they will stay on

:23:05.:23:09.

the land you own. You couldn't just go out and buy sheep and put them

:23:09.:23:12.

on that fell. They would wander off and stray. You wouldn't see them

:23:12.:23:15.

again. Martin's animals disappeared without trace. He's now rebuilding

:23:15.:23:20.

his flock and stepping up security especially during the winter months.

:23:20.:23:23.

Thefts might be easier during long, winter nights but this is a year

:23:23.:23:30.

round problem. In the last two years, cases of rustling have more

:23:30.:23:34.

than doubled and it's a costly business. That's �800 of my money

:23:34.:23:42.

that's just been taken from me. Kevin Wilson knows what's it's like

:23:42.:23:46.

to be on the wrong end of the rural crime wave. He farms out of the

:23:46.:23:48.

small village of Blubberhouses in North Yorkshire but rents fields

:23:48.:23:55.

all over the county to graze his sheep. We go round on Sunday

:23:55.:23:59.

morning checking stock. I realised that a vehicle had been through a

:23:59.:24:06.

gateway. In this field, there were 200 feeding lambs. I gathered the

:24:06.:24:09.

lambs up in the field, counted them and realised approximately 10 had

:24:09.:24:19.

gone missing. Amazingly, within a few days, the police had tracked

:24:19.:24:29.
:24:29.:24:32.

down his sheep. It was in that area between those trees and the river

:24:32.:24:35.

where they were recovered. It was less than two miles as the crow

:24:35.:24:38.

flies from where they'd gone. It was an isolated spot. Down there,

:24:38.:24:47.

Every animal has to be tagged. what happened to the thieves who

:24:47.:24:53.

stole them? They did a flit, they'd gone the following morning.

:24:53.:25:03.

have sheep become such a popular target for thieves? Particularly

:25:03.:25:07.

now we are seeing rustling, because the price of meat is going up. When

:25:07.:25:10.

you've got hard times and food costs going up, you have

:25:10.:25:12.

effectively all this food into countryside fairly lightly

:25:12.:25:20.

protected. You would expect the rustling situation to increase.

:25:20.:25:23.

Stolen sheep are ending up on our dinner plates but there is a

:25:23.:25:29.

warning for anyone who thinks black market meat is a bargain. Some

:25:29.:25:32.

people think it may be very tempting but what is the hygiene

:25:32.:25:42.

situation? It's not as good a deal as you perhaps might think. Mark a

:25:42.:25:45.

is off to Clitherow market to follow up reports of sheep thieves

:25:45.:25:51.

trying to do business there. wondered if you could check your

:25:51.:25:54.

computer records to see if this individual has carried out any

:25:54.:26:04.
:26:04.:26:04.

transactions here. We had one over the top... Mark compares notes with

:26:04.:26:07.

a colleague from Lancashire police who hit the headlines with their

:26:07.:26:10.

first conviction for sheep rustling in a hundred years. We traced them

:26:10.:26:14.

to County Durham and then we got them on a DNA. Then back to a small

:26:14.:26:19.

village called Chipping. And those sheep belonged to farmer Robin Dean.

:26:19.:26:27.

When did you first notice you were missing 55 sheep? I'd gone at seven

:26:27.:26:30.

o'clock in the morning to feed them. There were only two left in the

:26:30.:26:37.

field! So I immediately knew there was something amiss. So you phoned

:26:37.:26:41.

the police. Did you ever think you'd see your sheep again? No, I

:26:41.:26:45.

have to admit I didn't really. Even though they were in lamb, I thought

:26:45.:26:51.

they'd be slaughtered and used for meat. If that had happened there'd

:26:51.:26:59.

be no trace of them. And that's where DC Elaine Smalley comes in.

:26:59.:27:02.

Officers attended a farm in Durham where Mr Dean was able to identify

:27:02.:27:08.

his sheep. That led to the arrest of two people for the theft of them

:27:08.:27:12.

but one of the people was maintaining that he'd bred them. So

:27:12.:27:16.

what we did was we DNA-ed the sheep which proved that they'd been bred

:27:16.:27:20.

at this farm. Were you surprised when the police suggested dna

:27:20.:27:24.

testing? Yes, I was actually. It was quite funny that we had to go

:27:24.:27:31.

to those lengths. I think he thought I was bonkers but I

:27:31.:27:34.

explained it was something we had to do to get that to court so that

:27:34.:27:44.
:27:44.:27:44.

someone would be brought to justice as a result of the theft. Over in

:27:44.:27:48.

North Yorkshire, Mark does make an arrest and a man is charged but a

:27:48.:27:53.

few months down the line the case is dropped at court. And neither of

:27:53.:27:55.

the two thieves who stole Robin Dean's sheep received custodial

:27:55.:28:05.

sentences either. These sentences, for stealing �15,000 worth of sheep,

:28:05.:28:07.

there'll be some farmers who think those sentences are nowhere near

:28:07.:28:10.

stiff enough. That's right. Having spoken to some of the farming

:28:10.:28:13.

community, they've said, will that deter would-be sheep thieves? I

:28:13.:28:23.
:28:23.:28:23.

think not. It's always at the back of your mind when you leave stock

:28:23.:28:27.

in a field. You think maybe, will they be there when we come to load

:28:27.:28:31.

them back up? You have to keep your fingers crossed and hope you are

:28:31.:28:41.
:28:41.:28:42.

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