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Food for London Now: Our new kitchen in Tower Hamlets can be part of London’s positive Covid response Justin Byam Shaw
It was my ten year old son, Felix, who inspired me to start the Felix Project, with his typically generous response to seeing hungry children of his own age at a football tournament.
This morning 70,000 London children went to school hungry. I am expecting that our own research will shortly show this 2019 figure to be far higher. Child hunger in the Capital has soared over the past year, as unemployment has risen, following the Covid pandemic. One of my enduring memories of the last year is of a woman at a community kitchen in Hammersmith, stuffing her lunch into her coat pockets for her children.
BBC News
Published
image copyrightCompass
The company behind the controversial free school meals that sparked an outcry in January has apologised again. The quality and quantity of some food parcels fell short of our usual high standards, said Compass, which owns Chartwells, the school meal supplier.
The meals led to a row when one mum posted a picture of them on Twitter.
Compass investigated the meals and said it had now taken several corrective measures .
They include improved supply chain processes, additional guidance and resources for workers, and stronger quality assurance checks.
Chartwells has also been providing breakfasts to all children currently receiving a lunch parcel from it since 25 January.
The accusations of image theft came a day after another widely-shared example in which Mail Online was alleged to have taken a Covid and sepsis survivor’s images from Facebook without permission.
She has since said the pictures were “syndicated and sensationalised without my knowledge or permission from a local article” and that she is in discussion about compensation. The article about her has since been removed.
Following these back-to-back incidents Press Gazette has looked for some clearer guidance on what is a grey area for many journalists and publishers.
Are images on Instagram, Facebook and Twitter copyrighted?
The law is clear: Government guidance states the “vast majority of images on the internet are likely to be protected by copyright, so it is only safe to use it if you have specific permission to do so…”
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