Redcar not by the Sea

Tax Payers wall to protect Redcar from the sea. Another Redcar and Cleveland Council failure.

Another Brick in the Wall

Sea defences which do not defend the wall which stops visitors viewing the sea

Oh, and finally ...

Hub and Vertical Pier visitors cannot take shelter out of the weather it rains as much inside as out

So what's this all about?

This is Redcar Cleveland Dot Com, an insight of the workings at Redcar Town Hall by Redcar and Cleveland . an expose of Redcar Council, Councillors and Officers who fight amongst themselves and other Local Authorities in taking control of children. There is money to be made for councils and their respective Social Services Department and Officers in the fight over children. The modus operandi of Local Authorities appear to be similar... make false malicious and vexatious accusations against Parents Friends and Family then use the Courts to gain children seizure orders. Money is gained for Social Workers in bonuses and payments this is a scandal which needs investigation.

The account given below represents a widely-held understanding of what happened in Cleveland. However Beatrix Campbell's 2023 book 'Secrets and Silence' contains new information drawn from official records now publicly available to clarify the truth about 'Cleveland' itself. And about the harm to children of its legacy through the period since then. The Cleveland child abuse scandal is a wave of suspected child sexual abuse cases in 1987 in Cleveland, England, many of which were later discredited. In that year, a large number of child sexual abuse allegations followed the use of a new and controversial diagnostic test by paediatricians at the Middlesbrough Hospital. A total of 121 children were removed from their parents as a result. In 1988, the Butler-Sloss Inquiry into the cases concluded that most of the diagnoses were incorrect; 94 of the children were subsequently returned and the two paediatricians involved were criticized.

Cleveland Child Abuse Scandal Wikipedia

The madness of Local Authorities Social Services departments Money for Old Rope