Right Honorable Tony Blair, Prime Minister [from the letter received during the conference]: 'Everything we do in our everyday activity, in our work and leisure involves some element of risk. Risk is an inescapable part of our lives. The challenge for all of us, both within and outside Government is to manage risk in a way which gives us the necessary protection we need without constraining what we do beyond a level that is justified. I very much welcome your conference today as a vital contribution to this debate. I hope that you will enjoy what I am sure will be a very stimulating and productive'
Councils embrace risky play
Thursday, 28 May 2009
Councils embrace risky play
By Joe Lepper Children & Young People Now 26 May 2009
Councils are ignoring the so called "compensation culture" and investing in more adventurous play equipment as part of the £235m England wide revamp of play facilities.
Latest research by the Local Government Association (LGA) has found councils are keen that new playgrounds focus on fun and excitement rather than "wrap children in cotton wool."
The government is looking to see 3,500 new or revamped facilities built by 2011 as part of the investment.
Of these, 500 have opened and, according to the LGA, equipment already being bought includes giant climbing walls, tree houses and zip wires.
LGA chairman Margaret Eaton said: "Children playing outside, getting grass stains on their clothes, twigs in their hair and grazing their knees, is a fundamental part of growing up. Children need the opportunity to have adventures and let their imaginations run free."
She added that this sense of adventure has also extended into play schemes, with the research showing activities on offer now include more unusual pursuits such as circus skills and surfing.
The Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents has welcomed the LGA's findings. Peter Cornall, its head of leisure safety, said: "Parents have to accept that their children may get injured and that bumps and grazes are not serious and are all part of growing up."