West Yorkshire Trading Standards News Alert

Dear all,

Please find below a link to the West Yorkshire Trading Standards Newsletter Scam Alert. This weekly alert will outline trending fraud patterns during the current COVID-19 pandemic and what we can do to stay protected. Unfortunately there has been an increase in reports of scams, doorstep Crime and business complaints all relating to the COVID-19 pandemic here in West Yorkshire. This news alert will give you an indication of the current situation here in West Yorkshire.

Newsletter: WYTS news alert issue 3 17.04.2020

Last week, (06/04/2020 – 12/04/2020) WYTS had 103 COVID-19 complaints and queries. A further 47 intelligence reports were submitted through our intelligence database relating to COVID-19 during this time period.

‘Lockdown Words’ by Oliver Cross

“THE three-day week happened between January and March, 1974, as I’ve just found out from Google, although I was 24 at the time and should have been able to remember it without consulting something that hadn’t yet been invented.

But things that seemed tremendously memorable at the time can fade. I could remember that the three-day week was daily described as unprecedented and historic and that it had something to do with the price of oil, the wages of miners and Mr Heath and Mr Wilson.

The only image that has stayed with me, though, is of an impromptu visit to a pub in Liverpool. There was a power cut that night and the pub was running entirely on candlelight and pre-electronic tills (the introduction of electronic tills having been followed a few weeks later by the introduction of  Google  – or so it seems  when you get to my age).

The pub was heaving with Liverpudlians loudly displaying their sadly   unquenchable spirit under difficult circumstances, as is their wont. It was a kind of Jimmy Tarbuck Hell and I think the trauma of it may have caused me to confuse the Three-day Week with the Winter of Discontent (1978-9), or some other event which we thought would change our lives for ever, although we’ve since forgotten exactly why.

It would be good if we could, a few decades hence, absorb the coronavirus crisis  into that list of things we can look back on with equanimity, which is to say  a laugh or a shrug.

But this, with  a few exceptions – football on the  Somme, the Blitz Spirit or Guy Fawkes Night  for example –  this isn’t appropriate when it involves the deaths of many people, particularly you or me.

I  TALKED a few days ago about my glum and paranoid  cat Kitty, who has now become the only cat on the block not alarmed by some suggestions that cats should be put in lockdown as a coronavirus precaution.

Kitty only ventures outside as a result of being thrown through the back door or because we are enjoying the garden sunshine and she wants to check we’re not plotting something behind her back.

Even then, she doesn’t get too close, having decided unilaterally that a safe distance between herself and other life forms is roughly 2 meters, or 6.561 feet.”

Oliver Cross, Caring Together member kindly sharing a little more with us all. 

‘Anagram Riddles’

Anagrams are words that contain the same letters but arranged in a different order. For example, act is an anagram of cat. The answers to the clues below are anagram pairs.

Example A part of your body.

Arm

A male sheep.

Ram

 

1.

 

A short sleep during the day.

 

Something to cook with.

2. An animal that people ride. The place where land meets sea.
3. Something you bake. Hair on your face.
4. A place to see art. Something that makes you sneeze.
5. Another word for jump. Another word for white.
6. An animal that lives in a pack. Move like water.
7. A dogs feet. An insect that stings.
8. A place to wash dishes. What covers your body.
9. The past tense of leap. Something to serve food on.
10. A sour fruit. A juicy fruit.

 

‘Morrisons dedicated phoneline for Vulnerable Customers and Essential Groceries’

The phone line is now live for vulnerable customers to use which will result in an order being delivered the next day. It is a limited menu of 45 key essential items. Or the food boxes can now be ordered by phone as well as online
0345 611 6111 then option 5 for the list or option 4 for food box
Payment for the essential grocery list would be by card on the doorstep

‘A message from PCSO Sam Pemberton ‘

No photo description available.

“Hello everyone, first of all I hope you are all well.

For those of you who I’ve not yet met, I am a Police Community Support Officer, with 11 years of service, working predominantly in the Woodhouse and Little London area of Leeds. I have met many people through Caring Together and delivered a number of crime prevention talks to their regular groups. I have also enjoyed many social gatherings over the years and especially love the ones with tea and cake!

We are currently working a little differently, whilst still trying to deliver our messages. Social media, such as Facebook and Twitter, is a useful tool at this time, and lots of other information is also available online.

It’s been a trying few weeks with the changes that we have had to endure. I understand the emotional and physical impact that this pandemic is having on people. Looking out for each other with a wave (from a safe distance) and making phone calls does make a massive difference to someone who is normally used to lots of social contact. Hopefully by taking the necessary measures around social distancing, and for some, 12 weeks of shielding, we will continue to stay well and keep safe. Staying in doors will help to stop the spread of the virus and play a part in protecting the healthcare system and save lives. 

I look forward to a time when we can all sit together with a cuppa for a proper chat. 

I have added some links that you may find useful but if you have any other concerns please the Caring Together team.

Scams https://www.goodhousekeeping.com/uk/consumer-advice/a31702083/coronavirus-scams-fraud/

https://www.actionfraud.police.uk/alert/coronavirus-scam-costs-victims-over-800k-in-one-month

Report a crime https://www.westyorkshire.police.uk/report-it

General Crime preventionhttps://www.westyorkshire.police.uk/advice/10-principles-crime-prevention/10-principles-crime-prevention/10-principles-crime-prevention

Social distancing https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/covid-19-guidance-on-social-distancing-and-for-vulnerable-people/guidance-on-social-distancing-for-everyone-in-the-uk-and-protecting-older-people-and-vulnerable-adults

Facebook www.facebook.com/wypleedsnorthwest

Twitter www.twitter.com/wyp_leedsnw

Best wishes to you and you families. Stay safe.

PCSO Sam Pemberton

To report a crime, please ring 101. Always dial 999 in an emergency.

‘Creative Endeavours’

Day to day living in lock down. Our members wanted to share a bit of what they have been up to. For some they have been baking as we have already mentioned. For others its completing sudoku, art work, gardening, listening to the radio, face time with family and friends, writing, being challenged by exceptionally difficult jigsaws and exercise that includes walking from one room to the other. And a few have talked about doing knitting and crafts for others.

One member said she was currently knitting scarves for our bingo box (for when we are back) and sleeves and blankets for premature babies in Leeds.  And another member is knitting outfits for newborns. I have seen some of these items prior to us sadly having to go into lock down and they were beautiful. And finally another of our members is currently whiling away her time making Christmas cards with hand stitched designs for us for later in the year. I have put a picture below of some she had already given us. Everything is made with such care and attention to detail and love. We appreciate this immensely, as I know the community does too. We look forward to seeing the others once things have settled.

‘Self Isolation’

“About five years ago, I wrote the last of my regular columns for the Yorkshire Evening Post and very soon afterwards, I forgot that I had ever been paid to write at all.

Which was strange, because many people enjoy writing for free and I was given the task of filling a whole page, with hardly any limitations or instructions – or indeed advertisements – every Friday for 14 years.

It would have been a dream job if I didn’t find communication of any sort difficult and if I didn’t think that useful explanatory or creative writing – as opposed to self-promotion or preaching –  is entirely about communication.

My hero, Dr Samuel Johnson, thought that a day spent in the crowded streets of 18th century London without speaking or listening to someone new was a day wasted. This was how he came to know virtually everything there was to know at that time and place, and I would follow his lead if I found opening my mouth in the presence of a stranger anything less than challenging.

And it’s not just strangers – adding a few words to the bottom of a retirement card gives me a day’s anguish; meeting a regularly chatty bus driver can cause me to change my bus route and my hair would be a lot tidier if it wasn’t for my (to be fair, usually justified) fear of friendly barbers.

I suppose my condition might be diagnosed as a mildly severe and, since it’s lasted from childhood, chronic case of social anxiety. I prefer to think of it as unforgivable idiocy which shouldn’t be allowed to continue when it’s suddenly become quite clear, as it always should have been, that our survival depends on humans communicating sensibly with each other.

So I’ve decided to return to writing, unpaid and inglorious, just as a matter of duty, although obviously shut-down boredom also played a part.  

When I said earlier that Dr Samuel Johnson was my hero, I wondered briefly how he might have coped with the present crisis. The answer, I think, is very unheroically.

He was prone to severe depression which he overcame by constant conversations and activities; once, after a long night of drinking and talking, he called in at Covent Garden market and decided he could make himself useful by helping the fruit and veg traders to set up their stalls. The traders had never been assisted by a world-class lexicographer before

Our small, fat cat is called Kitty, which is a very inappropriate name because it suggests the kind cute playfulness which most cats, so long as they are awake and fed, can display and which has bought most of them a meal ticket for life.

But Kitty’s background is more that if a social work case than a domestic pet. She was abandoned early in life early and brought herself up, unaided, in our garden shed.

Then one day, during one of her fleeting appearances in our back garden, we noticed that she was heavily pregnant. My partner Lynne, being more socially responsible than me and better at fighting cats, managed to force her to the vet’s, where we were disappointed to find there was no quantity discount for a combined abortion and sterilisation operation.

Kitty has lived with us ever since but under sufferance. The deal is that we feed her while she looks at us with withering contempt.

She has all the symptoms of classic attachment disorder, including fear and mistrust of others, a listless appearance and a reluctance to smile – and I know cats can’t really smile but the friendlier ones at least look like they want to.

Also, normal cats don’t have time to appear listless because they’re too busy sleeping. Kitty seldom sleeps; she behaves like a one-cat GCHQ, always keeping her eyes half-open for plots and dirty tricks.

Still, self-isolation has revealed one of Kitty’s not-so-bad points. As we do our restricted daytime rounds (front room, back room, front garden, back garden, occasional adventure retreats under the stairs), Kitty follows at a slight distance. You might have thought she found our presence reassuring or even comforting, but it’s probably just part of her plotting”

Oliver Cross, Caring Together member