| The East End tradition of Salmon smokehouse production |
Olympic fearsCan London聮s
oldest Salmon Smokers survive the Olympic Games? It is widely celebrated
that London is to host the Olympic Games in 2012. They have been staged
in London twice before, the last time was in 1948. As the torch arrived
in the stadium to start the event, it passed under a scoreboard displaying the
Olympic message: "The important thing in the Olympic games
is not winning but taking part. The essential thing in life is not conquering
but fighting well."
Battle for businesses
Now however, on the very site where the great races will be run in 2012
there聮s a real fight going on. Some people have to fight to save their
livelihoods, and those of the people they employ. One such firm
is situated right where the gold medals will be handed out. They have won
many gold medals themselves already though. They are Forman and Son and they are
the purveyors of probably the finest smoked salmon that money can buy.
Sadie Nine visited the oldest smokehouse in the country that was started
by great-grandfather Forman exactly 100 years ago. It is now run by Lance Forman
who says: "We are a 4th generation family business.
People don聮t realise that smoked salmon started in the East End of London;
lots of people think it started in Scotland. My great grandfather was a Jew from
Eastern Europe and they came over mostly to the East End of London and carried
on the tradition of smoking fish as they had at home. "We are still
smoking salmon the same way today. We burn sawdust and the smoke rises up through
a chimney into a kiln where the salmon hang and they just smoke slowly."
But as the smoke rises from their salmon, the Olympic flame comes ever
nearer and brings with it not hope, but dread for this old East End business.
If The Olympics are to take place they and many other businesses in the
area have to be relocated. Relocation plans? The London
Development Agency (LDA), who is in charge of getting London ready for the Olympics,
has slapped a compulsory purchase order on the salmon smokers. Manny
Lewis is Chief Executive of the LDA. He says, "Our overall plan is to relocate
all the businesses by the summer of 2007 and also to make sure that no business
is worse off". | Fears for the future - Lance Forman |
Lance
Forman explains that the company has already had to move from another factory
as they were flooded when the River Lea burst its banks. "To set up
a high tech factory like this one took two years so a quick decision has to be
made," says Forman.
"We found a suitable property but the LDA
said it would be too expensive for us to move there. They are offering us a site
in Leyton which will be totally unsuitable. "Whenever we find sites
we feel are suitable, they find a reason to say it cannot work. This seems at
odds with their continual statement that no business will be worse off."
The small family business supplies some of London聮s most exclusive
shops restaurants and hotels with its smoked salmon. Fortnum and Masons,
Harrods, Selfridges, Claridges and the Savoy are just some of its illustrious
customers. But they still employ mainly local people, many who have been
with the company for many years. Workers' woes Rita
Law has worked at Forman聮s for two generations of this family business: "When
I first started it was all very different. You all mucked in. I sliced, I bagged,
I labelled, and I even took the cheques. Now it is very different, it's all very
high tech."
To survive in a modern world Forman
and Son have had to expand. Because of the lack of apprenticeship schemes in many
of the top kitchens in London, many hotels and restaurants send out for certain
dishes to be served to their customers. Forman聮s now have a fully
working kitchen and supply top class starters to places such as the Orient Express
and the Savoy Hotel. This is where Lance Forman sees the real problem
occurring between the location being offered and the needs of his company.
The London Development Agency is offering him the Leyton site which stands on
the opposite side of the Olympic developments from most of his customers in London聮s
West End. "The four London boroughs have done their own transport
study. It shows there will be a 77% increase in traffic. It will be impossible
not to let my clients down and the minute you do that you have no business." | Lance Forman |
Lance says, "For seven
years while the stadiums etc are being built, the traffic will be appalling. We
will not be able to get through it to make our deliveries and you can聮t keep
700 people on the Orient Express waiting for their starters".
Manny Lewis responds, "The site we are offering is only two miles
away from his present location and will only add a journey time of 10 minutes
to Mr Forman聮s deliveries". But when asked if he had done
a transport study, Mr Lewis said that a study would only take place once Forman
and Son had agreed to a move to the Leyton site. Lance Forman is
convinced the site will be totally unsuitable. The clock is ticking
for the salmon smokers. If something isn聮t sorted out soon the fire could
really go out forever in their kilns long before the Olympic flame arrives. A
feeling that leaves a very bad taste in the mouths of the long serving workforce.
Rita Law says, "If my grandchildren want to go and see some of the
races, I might take them but knowing how it got here I don聮t think ill ever
forget".
Tricky balance Nobody is suggesting
that the Olympic Games shouldn聮t be held on this site in London, nor that
businesses like this should move. But surely it isn聮t that hard for
the powers to be to find the right place for people like these producers of the
country聮s finest smoked Salmon to move too. If celebrating
the Olympics were to be at the cost of losing a little gem like Forman's for ever,
then it would be a price that many Londoners would be unwilling to pay. Links
relating to this story:
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With a payment of 拢10 or 拢20 pounds per game it聮s
clear that referees are only in it for the love of football. On
an average Sunday afternoon, on pitches up and down the capital, thousands of
Londoners take part in non-league football.
This is grass-roots football
played at a level that gives thousands of people the opportunity to participate
in our national sport - and there聮s no shortage of budding David Beckhams.
However there is a shortage of referees that聮s threatening the football
and the development of players聟 because without referees, there is no game.
Freegans You may have heard of the Borrowers and The
Wombles, but what about "Freegans"? These are the latest group
of thrifty people who choose to live off others people's waste and leftovers.
They say they are 'scavengers with a conscience'. They live off things
that would otherwise end up in a landfill. They don't need to do this but
for environmental or ethical reasons they choose to rummage in rubbish for food.
Food critic, Nigel Barden, spent time searching in London's bins to see
their fate. |