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Resistance to change in the lifesaving work of the Samaritans | Letters

1 day ago
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Unlike Peter Ormerod (I was a Samaritan – I love Samaritans.But for the sake of all who take those calls, it must change course, 29 July), I am a still Samaritan, and spent several hours last Tuesday on the phone to some extremely distressed callers.I did that from what was formerly the front bedroom of a ramshackle Edwardian terrace house, which has room for just two workstations.The words “call centre” have been widely used to depict the charity’s proposed shift to larger, more modern branches.I wonder how many readers who work in comfortable, modern offices housing 20 (or even more) desks would consider themselves marooned in an inhuman “call centre” (or “regional hub” as Ormerod labels them)?Because Ormerod is no longer a Samaritan, he perhaps has not had access to the FAQs for volunteers, which note that nobody will be asked to work on their own.

As many readers will experience daily, digital technology allows teams to work together when they are not in the same physical space.Change is really hard.I worked for the Guardian in the 2000s, when it moved from a poorly converted old factory building in Farringdon to brand-new premises in King’s Cross (“the middle of nowhere”, as it was labelled by some staff); from holding back news stories for the next day’s paper, to publishing them first on the website; from keeping the tech team separate from the editorial team, to having them work alongside each other; and from air-freighting copies of the paper to countries where fewer than 100 copies per day were sold, to not doing that.All these changes were stoutly resisted, particularly by some (not all) longer-serving staff.I wonder how many of these changes would strike today’s Guardian staff as destructive of the spirit of the enterprise?Tim BrooksGreat Bourton, Oxfordshire Having read the article by Peter Ormerod, I have to confess that I felt panic.

Many many years ago when I was a single mum with a baby, few friends and no family, I called the Samaritans in the middle of the night,I was not suicidal, but I did feel as if I could no longer cope, that I was breaking apart,Bless the woman that answered my call; she chatted to me for quite some time, was at no point judgmental and gave me strength to go on,Many years later, I was unemployed, so I volunteered at my local Samaritans, went through their training and shadowed existing staff,There is no way that volunteers should be asked to work from home.

There may be some nights when the only calls you get are from troubled individuals seeking self-gratification, but it is possible that the next call you take will be from someone about to cut short their life, or maybe no one speaks but you can hear in the background awful sounds of abuse.Once that call has finished, you need to be with someone who can empathise with you and help you put it from your mind so you do not take it home with you.This cannot be done when working from home.Samaritans should not put volunteers’ own mental health at risk – it is hard enough as it is.Ilona NotleyNorwich I volunteered with the Samaritans for 12 years across two branches.

I left on the day that I found myself getting too emotional about two consecutive calls.Up until then I had never left a branch with a call hanging over me.Any difficult call and you get to debrief with the other Samaritans on your shift.This was essential, talking to a real person, face to face over a cup of tea, in a private room.I met and chatted with Chad Varah, the Samaritans founder, in a dinner queue at a conference.

He was impressed that I was a younger volunteer; I was impressed with the way he was still a slight irritant to the then “management”.His attitude that you should never put the phone down on callers – even sex callers – was correct.My fellow volunteer, Karen, said she had never put the phone down on anyone: she just treated them like any other caller in crisis and either they would put the phone down on her in frustration; or, as frequently happened, they turned into genuine callers – men (it was nearly always men) who were lonely, unloved, sad.I gave talks to a variety of organisations and schools about what we did.I was keen to encourage more transparency about the Samaritans (the thinking then was that you should not tell people you were a Samaritan in case a caller called up and got you, someone they recognised).

This decision to close branches in favour of remote working is shortsighted.I think I should still be worried about the management even now.I’m sure Chad would be thinking the same.Colin KerriganHaslemere, Surrey I have volunteered for Citizens Advice for many years in several small offices at several different times in my life.I am retired now, have skills and experience to offer, would dearly like to use them again for Citizens Advice but the only options are to work in a large noisy impersonal phone hub or to take calls from home.

Neither are possible for me – the former is too distant and too noisy and stressful, the latter is emotionally terrifying.So Citizens Advice has lost me.Samaritans will lose many like me if it follows its current plans.Cathy HillSheffield
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UK car drivers: share your memories and photos of your convertible

According to a new study, convertibles have dwindled to a 25-year low with only 16 new models for sale across the UK’s most popular car manufacturers. SUVs are taking the rap for the decline of convertibles in Britain as people move towards favouring bulkier vehicles.Data from CarGurus UK found that in 2024 there were only 12,173 new convertibles registered in the UK compared to 94,484 in 2004. One of cinema’s most iconic cars is probably the 1966 Ford Thunderbird convertible that Thelma and Louise drove on their their adventures.We would like to hear from people who have, or previously had, a convertible

1 day ago
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OpenAI in talks on share sale that would price it above Elon Musk’s SpaceX

OpenAI is reportedly in early talks about a sale of shares held by current and former employees that would value it at half a trillion dollars, overtaking Elon Musk’s SpaceX.If the transaction goes ahead, the value of the ChatGPT developer would rise by about two-thirds, from $300bn (£225bn).Musk’s rocket companyis currently worth $350bn and is reportedly circling a $400bn price tag in a new fundraising.Bloomberg, which first reported the OpenAI talks, said existing investors, including Thrive Capital, have approached the company about buying employee shares. Other investors in OpenAI, which is based in San Francisco, include the Japanese investment company SoftBank, which led the $300bn financing, and Microsoft

1 day ago
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Lib Dems call for urgent regulation of YouTube ads after wave of scams

The Liberal Democrats are calling for urgent regulation of YouTube advertising after scams including deepfakes, impersonated public figures and fraudulent investment claims were found to be spreading on the platform with little oversight.The party said YouTube’s adverts remain largely unchecked by independent regulators, despite new data from Ofcom showing the platform has overtaken ITV in weekly UK viewership and continues to dominate children’s media consumption.Among the recent scams onYouTube was a series of ads using an AI-generated voice and likeness of the consumer champion Martin Lewis to promote a cryptocurrency scheme, despite Lewis having no involvement. The videos, which have drawn thousands of complaints on Reddit and X, mislead users into thinking they are receiving financial advice from a trusted source.Other viewers have reported false product claims, scam diet pills and fake competitions

2 days ago
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OpenAI takes on Meta and DeepSeek with free and customisable AI models

OpenAI is taking on Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta and Chinese rival DeepSeek by launching its own freely available artificial intelligence models.The ChatGPT developer has announced two “open weight” large language models, which are free to download and can be customised by developers.Meta’s Llama models are available on a similar basis, and OpenAI’s move marks a departure from ChatGPT, which is based on a “closed” model that cannot be customised.Sam Altman, OpenAI’s chief executive, said the company was excited to add to a stack of freely available AI models “based on democratic values … and for wide benefit”.He added: “We’re excited to make this model, the result of billions of dollars of research, available to the world to get AI into the hands of the most people possible

2 days ago
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Tech’s trillion-dollar binge, Palantir’s empire and women’s privacy under attack

Hello, and welcome to TechScape. This week, tech companies are spending amounts of money that stretch the limits of the imagination. Donald Trump’s administration is spending more money with data analytics and surveillance firm Palantir. And women on both sides of the Pacific face the extreme difficulty of keeping intimate moments private online.In last week’s edition of the newsletter, my colleagues wrote about the upshot of Google’s earnings call: lots of money earned, but, more importantly lots of money spent on AI

2 days ago
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Tesla shareholders sue Elon Musk for allegedly hyping up faltering Robotaxi

Tesla shareholders sued Elon Musk and the electric vehicle maker for allegedly concealing the significant risk posed by company’s self-driving vehicles.The proposed class-action suit, which accuses Musk and Tesla of securities fraud, was filed on Monday night. Tesla conducted its first public test of its self-driving taxis in late June near the company’s headquarters in Austin, Texas. That test showed the vehicles speeding, braking suddenly, driving over a curb, entering the wrong lane and dropping off passengers in the middle of multilane roads. The National Highway Transit Safety Administration (NHTSA), the main transportation regulator in the US, is investigating the Robotaxi’s pilot test

2 days ago
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Liquid butt lifts targeted in clampdown on England’s cosmetic ‘wild west’

about 22 hours ago
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Scientists find link between genes and ME/chronic fatigue syndrome

1 day ago
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Resistance to change in the lifesaving work of the Samaritans | Letters

1 day ago
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Despite RFK’s funding block, mRNA vaccines are too impressive to ignore

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Verbally abused children more likely to have poor mental health as adults, study finds

2 days ago
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Funding for English youth clubs aims to keep children off smartphones

2 days ago