by biscuitman » 01 Dec 2006 00:54
by T.R.O.L.I. » 01 Dec 2006 01:45
STAR CampaignsJerry St Clair Has Martin Salter expressed an opinion on this?
Not yet. However. Martin Salter will be the guest on the Reading 107 phone-in from 6.15 pm tomorrow (Friday), during which time I will be asking him to give his support and/or express his opinion on this.
by shadesrwrf » 01 Dec 2006 08:11
T.R.O.L.I.STAR CampaignsJerry St Clair Has Martin Salter expressed an opinion on this?
Not yet. However. Martin Salter will be the guest on the Reading 107 phone-in from 6.15 pm tomorrow (Friday), during which time I will be asking him to give his support and/or express his opinion on this.
I'm surprised its taken him this long - he's not normally this tardy when it comes to voicing his opinion
Agreed, but whilst standing is illegal no clubs, Chairmen, police chiefs or ground safety officers will break ranks, for obvious reasons. Many have privately expressed support, because everyone seems to realise that the current conflict between crowds and ground authorities cannot go on.
by Gregster » 01 Dec 2006 10:23
STAR Campaignscheeryoleary How can you answer "there are too many variables to be sure" when responding to a question specific to the Mad Stad, yet are able to state "90%+" for away grounds. I don't understand. Perhaps you are including the away matches statistic because hand on heart, you feel that standing at the Mad Stad is highly unlikely.
I can answer that way because there currently are significant unknowns about the future configuration of the MadStad and the timescales for this.
If the MadStad stays unchanged then it is highly unlikely that standing will be permitted, but the MadStad can't stay unchanged - quite apart from the expansion plans (timescale's a big unknown) there has to be changes made to the current disables areas, which are not fit for purpose as currently designed and leave RFC potentially open to litigation. So changes have to be made at the MadStad - the variables are when these changes are made, whether they are made before or after changes to safe standing legislation (and indeed if there are such changes) and whether they are combined or not. There is a potential opportunity for this to happen, but I'm not able to give an estimate of the actual chance with any confidence.Surely it's only a lost cause if people believe it is so and make no effort to do anything about it?cheeryoleary My question is specific to the Mad Stad. You're a representative of the Supporter's Trust At Reading first and foremost. I expect you to represent the interests of RFC supporters and RFC before commiting resources to fighting another organisation's lost cause.
Amongst STAR's policies, decided by the Board of STAR which was elected by its members, is to support the FSF's "Safe standing" campaign which is what I am doing by asking members to contact their MPs. As a leading member of the FSF, helping make their policies, we also don't consider that this is "someone else's campaign."
Everyone has the right to do so if they wish, equally they have the right to ignore this or to debate the issues as we're currently doing. In the same way, I have the right to decide how I allocate my "leisure time." And I use the word leisure in it's loosest sense...
cheeryoleary Does STAR have the backing of the club in this matter?
No idea. Do we need it? Is it relevant?
by Dirk Gently » 01 Dec 2006 15:42
by notloyalenuffroyal » 01 Dec 2006 19:47
by soggy biscuit » 01 Dec 2006 20:43
by Skin » 02 Dec 2006 00:32
Dirk Gently Just for people' information, this an example, frm germany, of what a sfae standing area might acrtually look like.
When it's designated as a seated area the bars are removed and the seats fold down.
by shadesrwrf » 02 Dec 2006 07:37
notloyalenuffroyal We all clamour for a seat on the bus or train so why is everyone desperate to stand up for 2 hours for football?
by Forbury Lion » 02 Dec 2006 12:00
by Jerry St Clair » 03 Dec 2006 13:28
notloyalenuffroyal Can someone please give me a link to somewhere so I can see why people want to stand in a football ground.
by The 17 Bus » 03 Dec 2006 15:30
by Forbury Lion » 03 Dec 2006 17:35
Take your picknotloyalenuffroyal Can someone please give me a link to somewhere so I can see why people want to stand in a football ground.
by Skin » 04 Dec 2006 12:52
Forbury LionTake your picknotloyalenuffroyal Can someone please give me a link to somewhere so I can see why people want to stand in a football ground.
http://www.ive-got-piles.com
http://www.ring-of-fire.net
http://www.one-up-the-bum-some-harm-done.co.uk
by Jerry St Clair » 04 Dec 2006 14:00
by cheeryoleary » 04 Dec 2006 14:57
STAR CampaignsJerry St Clair Has Martin Salter expressed an opinion on this?
Not yet. However. Martin Salter will be the guest on the Reading 107 phone-in from 6.15 pm tomorrow (Friday), during which time I will be asking him to give his support and/or express his opinion on this.
by RIP ELM Park » 04 Dec 2006 17:17
cheeryolearySTAR CampaignsJerry St Clair Has Martin Salter expressed an opinion on this?
Not yet. However. Martin Salter will be the guest on the Reading 107 phone-in from 6.15 pm tomorrow (Friday), during which time I will be asking him to give his support and/or express his opinion on this.
What did he say? Pro or anti-standing for football mathces at Reading?
by Skin » 04 Dec 2006 19:41
Dirk Gently Just for people' information, this an example, frm germany, of what a sfae standing area might acrtually look like.
When it's designated as a seated area the bars are removed and the seats fold down.
by cheeryoleary » 04 Dec 2006 20:11
Skin this German version would be a great middle ground.
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