A4E one step away from an Appeal Tribunal
Tonight Declan hit the roof! He came home to see on Channel 4 the woman who owns the employment agency - A4E - which gave him an absolute nightmare yesterday. Not a chance! In the first ten months of our tenancy we had four TV blow-outs. Our brand new fifth TV has been a virtual write-off from day one (see blog of of 2 June More electronic harassment? Fifth TV rendered useless; this blog contains a shocking photo of MI5 whistleblower David Shayler who lived for a couple of years in one of the rooms below us); but tonight, unprecedentedly, it is a total write-off. Only two TV channels, neither one watchable ... no Channel 4! Our live-in landlady Belinda McKenzie (see an article in the New Statesman stating that Belinda’s house “doubles as the hub of the British and Irish 9/11 Truth Campaign” here) has just promised Declan that tomorrow morning she will make enquiries about linking our flat to the cable TV network in the house. He is a little bit cooler now!
The woman who owns A4E is Emma Harrison. When Declan had his second formal interview at our A4E branch yesterday afternoon in respect to his job searching - we've only been with A4E two weeks! - little did he know that in less than two hours A4E would be one step away from an Appeal Tribunal. This letter from Declan to the manager of the A4E branch where he was ambushed yesterday went to Harrison by registered post this evening:
It never seems to stop with Jobcentre Plus, an executive branch of the Department for Work and Pensions. Declan currently has them before the Information Commissioner for a double breach of the Data Protection Act 1998 (see blog of 21 June Department for Work and Pensions double breaches the Data Protection Act: Letter to the Information Commissioner), and before the Independent Case Examiner for failing to take timely and appropriate action to consider his request for access to a Starting a Business course that would enable him register NAC as a company limited by guarantee (see blog of 25 July Declan replies to the Independent Case Examiner). And, of course, this was the Department which forced us to live rough on the streets of London for more than 2 1/2 years because Declan failed to “sign on” TWO DAYS BEFORE he was due to do so on 29 September 2006 (see blog of 6 May Department for Work and Pensions rewrites our history).
An Appeal Tribunal ... sounds good to me!