Tag Archives: Tescopoly

Tesco squatters evicted

I stood in the cold bright sunshine watching No Tesco squat protestors being removed from the roof by baillifs.

It took  all of yesterday as many of the squatters had secured their bodies to the premises.

About 200 supporters stood vigil too, cheering and clapping them.

Some had a sound system (which blared out Ghost Town at one point, aptly), a musician played Klezmer on a clarinet.

A disturbing spectacle played out on the roof of the old Jesters comedy club which Tesco wants to turn into its sixth supermarket within a mile.

I don’t want a Tesco in Stokes Croft.

It’s a funky up-and-coming area with some of the best food shops and cafes in Bristol.

Herbert’s Bakery, the Radio 4 award-winning Thali Cafe, the Radford Mill organic farm shop, Licata the family-run delicatessen, Galliford’s late night corner shopBell’s diner, The Bristolian and Cafe Kino are some of the local businesses that would be at risk.

Supermarkets kill local business and the character of local communities.

There are two main strands to this protest.

1) The No Tesco in Stokes Croft campaign which has already collected over 4,000 signatures.

2) The squatters, who have been occupying the old Jesters comedy club since February after hearing about Tesco’s plans.

I admire the squatters for putting their lives on the line for a just cause.

I am not saying they are perfect.

For instance, a protestor in a Halloween mask squirted liquid at a balliff.

I thought: surely that is not in the Gandhian spirit of passive resistance?

I felt moved to turn to a nearby policeman (one of 70 including several on horseback) to explain this was not non-violent direct action as I understood it.

The policeman said he sympathised. He had not wanted a Tesco in South Bristol. (Local Bedminster residents successfully saw off Tesco but now has Sainsbury’s to contend with).

Another protestor had attached himself to the top of a tripod.

The baillifs used a blue cherry-picker with a crane to get him down.

When they were not looking, he slid down the tripod and onto the arm of the crane, hugging it with his body, trying to skate its length.

But a bailliff grabbed him from behind, and five joined him. He tried to shuffle down the crane’s arm. They kept yanking him back and it must have hurt – he yelled with pain.

Of course the baillifs succeeded. It was six against one.

This is the way society is structured. The law of the land is upheld by physical force.

And the law is not always fair or correct.

In my view the planning laws need to be changed to protect local shops.

The protestors were using their bodies to express a need to change the status-quo.

Two other protestors had their arms in a barrel of concrete. The baillifs assessed the situation (see above) then used an electric hacksaw to remove them, as the Daily Mail reported.

As the tripod man was escorted to the ground, a section of the crowd chanted: “Let him go.”

The mounted police surged forward. I smelled horse manure on the ground.

Most of the squatters were not arrested. Four face charges for public order offences, according to the BBC.

“The police let them go, bless them,” one of the supporters said.

The BBC video clip has highlighted the most dramatic bits, natch – there is also a quote from yours truly.

Meanwhile Tesco has one more planning hurdle to negotiate and the No Tesco in Stokes Croft campaign – along with 100s of others taking place all over the UK – continues.

Still time to add your signature to the Bristol City Council petition.

PS A few blogs ago I announced I was standing for the Green party in Bishopston. Last week I withdrew from standing. I am currently a full-time carer; I just did not have the capacity to do it properly. Huge decision. Hard to make. Feel relieved. Green beliefs means respecting nature’s limits – I had to respect mine!

No Tesco in Stokes Croft

Last night’s meeting 

About 200 gather in Stokes Croft, Bristol to discuss the shock-news of Tesco opening a soulless supermarket in the area.

Not so fast, o supermarket giant – the local people of Stokes Croft want a say.

Local communities need local shops, not another soulless chain that swallows resources.

The intended site is a comedy club – they must be joking, as the campaign headline on Facebook says.

The area Tesco has chosen to site its 32nd supermarket in Bristol is Stokes Croft near St Paul’s.

The home territory of The People’s Republic of Stokes Croft which trials new ideas and celebrates creativity.

The very opposite of Tescopolis.

Supermarkets kill local business. The small shopkeeper does not survive.

The tragedy is Stokes Croft is an increasingly happening place.

Take Canteen, which serves seasonal and local food at affordable prices, hosts great music nights and is designed by award-winning architect, George Ferguson, above newly-reclaimed office space at Hamilton House run by Co-Exist.

Tesco’s planning application to change the use “from stand-up comedy venue to shop” was done under another name last November.

The minimum of public consultation took place – no responses were received – so no one knew until last week that Bristol County Council had given Tesco permission to set up shop.

Not even St Paul’s Unlimited, the body set up by Bristol City Council “to provide an open, accountable, community-led organisation to advocate and lobby for the community of St Paul’s”.

There is still time to stop the supermarket which by the way already has a Metro Express five minutes from the proposed site.

According to Rachael Marmite of the Planning Club (she knows her stuff …and how to explain it in plain English), the Bristol City City Council planning officer said:

“An inordinate amount of (responses) could rescind change of use.”

So lots of responses are planned, including surveying local traders and neighbours, petitions, lobbying councillors and a pledge bank.

Find out the latest at the No to Tesco in Stokes Croft campaign website.

And get general campaign material and advice from Tescopoly.

The people of Stokes Croft want a meaningful consultation.

Being a creative community, expect some street theatre along the way.

“If we all make an effort, it will be easier to achieve,” says co-organiser, Claire, at the first meeting last night.

“Every little helps,” added someone else in the audience, to laughter.