I have not been a Coventry City supporter since 1953 when they played at Highfield Road where the atmosphere was great and the ground was always full with fans.
From what I read about Sisu they are not interested in Coventry supporters or the club.
All they seem to be interested in is profit and taking over assets, they give me the impression all they wanted was to buy the Ricoh on the cheap by not paying the rent.
I believe the idea behind their method was the Ricoh Arena could go into administration then they would have put in a bid to buy it for a knock-down price.
When John Mutton got the agreement of the full council to put in ?14million this stopped Sisu in their tracks.
Why have Sisu not been submitting their accounts to Companies House? The Football League failed to look after the football fans of Coventry City with supporters? views.
I think Sisu should be stopped from using the title name ?Coventry? for the football team as they will no longer play in the boundary of the city.
The Ricoh Arena should be the ground, so why doesn?t the supporters? club get an agreement to start up a new City football team and play in a lower league then build a team that will carry ?Coventry True Blues? into the better leagues? I am sure all the fans would give the club its full support.
I do hope Coventry and Warwickshire planning departments will not give Sisu permission to build another football arena in our areas on any land they purchase to prove we can stand by our supporting fans who come first.
John Bevan,
Buttermere Close,
Binley.
?
Beware Tories bearing gifts. What they are really bearing is their teeth!
As Jeremy Hunt does the media rounds castigating hospitals and Labour alike, think about what his and the Tories real motives are.
While no one can argue about death rates in hospitals, one has to look a little deeper and consider the wider determinants which make up often complicated data
GP performance, lack of end of life care in the locale or delays in discharge can all skew figures and paint a false picture. And that?s precisely what the government are doing. Why? So they can ?cure? the NHS. What utter hypocrisy!
While money isn?t everything, in 1997 the government spent ?33bn per annum on the NHS. When Labour left office in 2010, the annual spend was ?104bn. Not everything was perfect we know, but it was better than the Tory days of two-year waiting lists, patients waiting on trolleys in corridors and crumbling buildings.
Today, we do have an NHS to be proud of and one we must defend. What do you hear talked about today? Failing NHS! Nothing to do then with the ?4bn ?reorganisation? of course is it?
Jeremy Hunt is doing what the Tories always wanted to do. By convincing the public that the NHS is ?broken?, they will then come up with a miracle cure. It?s like Munchausen by proxy but for the NHS!
Councillor Jim O?Boyle,
(Lab, St Michael?s),
Coventry City Council.
?
Ido not know all the details of the proposal to allow short-term parking on double lines mentioned by Duncan Gibbons (Telegraph, July 30). It seems, however, intrinsically dangerous.
We all want our city centres to flourish, but double yellow lines are there to reduce dangerous and inconvenient parking. A proposal allowing that to be ignored for 15 minutes would obviously be impossible to enforce. It would make things still more difficult for the disabled, especially the visually impaired.
If the lines are no longer needed in some places, they should be removed. My own family has been much affected by road accidents, and one thing is crystal clear. Safety comes first.
Councillor David Skinner,
(Con, Westwood),
Coventry City Council.
?
MY daughter and I attended the Caribbean Festival and had a wonderful time.
With so much doom and gloom about it was nice to attend such an upbeat event that really was a great day out for all the family.
My granddaughter particularly liked the steel band while her brother tried his hand at some rapping.
It would be nice if the day could also include a carnival leading up to the Memorial Park, much like Notting Hill.
All in all a great day that really does show what a great city Coventry really is.
Even the rain could not dampen the party, and as one stall holder told me, it was just liquid sunshine.
Phyllis N Bembridge,
Argyll Street,
Ball Hill.
?
SCIENTISTS agree fish feel pain and suffer, just as other animals do, yet they are regularly left to die slowly on the decks of ships, are bled to death, or even gutted alive.
Farmed fish also suffer. They often die from disease or injury before they can be slaughtered.
It may be difficult to empathise with a fish, but they are sentient creatures and deserve to live without pain and suffering. Therefore, I urge your readers to stop eating them.
K Harvey,
Hillfields.
Source: http://www.coventrytelegraph.net/news/coventry-news/coventry-telegraph-letters-july-31-5397029
pga tour tiger woods alex rodriguez megan fox Ariel Castro Snowden Lauren Silverman
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.