Methinks the lady is – as we say hereabouts – a bit of a Workie-Ticket.
The Skin
1)HER POLITICAL VIEWS ARE UKIP ….
Exeter Express & Echo 6.11.03 I WON'T VOTE FOR A PARTY WHICH SUPPORTS HUNTING - After much consideration, I had decided some months ago that the UK Independence Party most closely reflected my views about how Britain should be governed but I was horrified to read, in one of David Challice's numerous letters, Points of view, October 28, that his party supported hunting…. Therefore, I and many of my friends who had seriously been considering voting for the UKIP in the next election will not be doing so now purely because of its support of hunting… Miss Sylvia Hardy, Barrack Road, Exeter (letter)
Source:
http://64.233.183.104/search?q=cache:xKPiLv90__EJ:www.newshound.org.uk/Hunting%2520Bill%2520November%25202003.htm+%22Sylvia+Hardy%22+Conservative&hl=en&ie=UTF-82) SHE’S USING THE SYSTEM…
'The only thing that is going to make any difference is direct action,' says 71-year old single Exeter pensioner Sylvia Hardy. She is paying £13 less a month on council tax than she is being asked for because she simply cannot afford it.
Her costs are going up far more quickly than her pen sion. Her water rates are up 9 per cent, the bus (she can no longer afford to keep a car) charges 5 per cent more on fares this year and her pension as a retired council worker has gone up by less than 2 per cent.
She is down to £5,000 in savings (to cover all emergencies), has taken equity release on her flat, is 'beginning to think twice before going out for friends for lunch', thinks there could easily be more hefty council tax and other rises next year and feels she must make a stand now.
She will not get the new pension credit as she is just over the limit. She has tried everything else including writing to her MP, Ben Bradshaw, the deputy leader of the House of Commons, who gave her the official government line but no help of practical use.
She is perfectly prepared to go to prison. 'I have no family. I'm not going to be upsetting anyone. The thought of getting a prison record at 71 does not worry me.' She has already been threatened with sanctions by Exeter City Council - the loss of her right to pay by instalments - and, under the likely timetable, would be up before a Magistrate's Court by late summer.
Magistrates do not wish to send pensioners like her to prison, particularly if she is seen as wanting to prove a political point. They would almost undoubtedly try a suspended sentence first. But she could push them over the edge if she did other things, like refused to pay Magistrate Court fines or if she obstructed bailiffs.
Source:
http://investorsassociation.org/forums/printthread.php?s=971a0ff7acf8129748556231fb95d87a&threadid=62913)
SHE’S AN EX –COUNCIL EMPLOYEE WITH A CHIP ON HER SHOULDER
DAVIS: Tax can evidently be trouble. Britain has a long and illustrious history of tax rebels.
Sylvia Hardy here is keeping it going. She used to work for the council and is now facing court action for not paying her
full council tax.
What's your income, annually or weekly or…
SYLVIA HARDY: My weekly income from all sources, net income is £263 and that sounds a lot but it depends on what you've got to spend money on. I have a medical condition which means that my body can't
tolerate processed foods, so my food bills tend to be higher than some people's because I've got to have organic food and other natural foods.
….
You don’t think you're making their life a little bit harder by making a big noise and…
SYLVIA HARDY
Devon Pensioners' Action Forum
Well we're having to, aren't we, because nothing was going to happen if we sat back as we did before, just write the odd letter or whatever and grumble. But now it's obviously having some impact because both central government and local government are putting their thinking caps on to try and find some fairer way
of getting the funding they need to provide the services, and I don’t think that would have happened if our
campaign hadn't started, quite frankly. A bit like the suffragettes. I'm sure women wouldn't have had the
vote today if it hadn't been for the suffragettes.
Source:
http://64.233.183.104/search?q=cache:609E6MqPAdgJ:news.bbc.co.uk/nol/shared/spl/hi/programmes/panorama/transcripts/thetruthabouttax.txt+%22Sylvia+Hardy%22+Conservative&hl=en&ie=UTF-84) AND SHE GETS A LOTTERY GRANT FOR HER “WORK” …
Tax Protesters Win Lotto Cash
Lottery bosses are defending a decision to award a grant of nearly £5,000 to a militant group of elderly council tax campaigners. Devon Pensioners' Action Forum - which has run a high-profile campaign, particularly in Exeter, against council tax rises and called for more generous pensions - has been handed £4,837 by the Awards for All fund.
Pensioners with the group have appeared in court in recent years for refusing to pay all their council taxes.
And Exeter campaigner Sylvia Hardy, among the most prominent members of the group, is set to go to prison for refusing to pay all the charge.
The 73-year-old was given a 56-day suspended committal order in June by city magistrates to pay her outstanding tax of £63.71.
If she does not settle the bill, she will be sent to jail for seven days later this month.
Awards for All - a lottery grants scheme aimed at local communities which awards grants of between £500 and £5,000 - is not permitted to issue cash to political groups.
But it said it was well within its rights to give the campaign group lottery money.
According to the scheme, the grant has been awarded to allow the DPAF to set up an administrative section to help it create and send out its newsletter.
Lottery Awards for All senior awards officer Steve Barriball said: "We are able to fund organisations such as the Devon Pensioners' Action Forum.
"The group is a forum for older people in Devon and provides information to its members on a range of issues."
Albert Venison, chairman of the forum, said: "Some people may criticise us for receiving this lottery grant, but how else are we supposed to get funding?
"We have in the past applied for funding from other sources but they have turned us down by saying we are a campaigning organisation.
"Although we are a campaign group we are non-party political. We have members who are members of a number of political parties.
"We have Labour supporters, Conservative supporters and UKIP supporters.
"The purpose of our campaigning is to try to give older people a better quality of life by having better pensions and lower council taxes."
As well as carrying out a council tax non-payment campaign, the group has also organised protests and taken its calls for lower council taxes to the Prime Minister.
http://www.casinotimes.co.uk/casino-news/2005-08/lotto-060805.htm