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24 September 2014
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jim davidson.

State of Yarmouth
Does Great Yarmouth need a revamp? Is it fine as it is? Talk about the seaside resort.

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I was born in Yorkshire and every year when I was a little girl we would all go on holiday to Great Yarmouth. And I loved it! Then about 4 years ago my mum decided that we were going to move to Yarmouth and I have to say that in the 4 years I have lived there, Great Yarmouth has gone from bad to worse.

There is nothing for the locals to do in the winter when all the tourists have gone. There is graffiti and rubbish all over the place. There is no employment! But having said all this I do still get excited in the summer when the place is buzzing with tourists and although I miss Yorkshire I don't regret moving there at all.

KELLY, GORLESTON

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I have been holidaying in Yarmouth since my birth, in 1960, and will always have special memories, it has got a special atmosphere which I can't explain, but it does need a bit of investment. South Denes could have a marina built, smart shops, holiday apartments, exciting bar/cafes, all it takes is one person to set the ball rolling.

Come on this what Great Yarmouth needs and should expect in the 21st century. Cheers to one fine town.

JOHN BROOKS, MANSFIELD

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I love Great Yarmouth, it is a top place and has a brilliant atmosphere of a traditional seaside holiday resort. What exactly is everyone complaining about? They say it has nothing to offer but I really can't see the difference between Yarmouth and many other places in Britain. Perhaps this attack should be directed at the whole of the British coast. I have already booked my five nights at Great Yarmouth and I really can't wait! Leave Yarmouth alone!!!!!!!

TRUDI, SHEFFIELD

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The thing that really annoys me about Great Yarmouth is that the way the council repeatedly goes on about how they will be improving the seaside resort. For example the dualling of the Acle Straight, the new outer harbour, the roofing of the Pleasure Beach, a new multi-million pound cinema complex, and recently there are plans to build a cutting-edge casino. All these things never seem to happen and are just forgotten about over time. And that is why Great Yarmouth will always be known as a joke.

ADAM, GREAT YARMOUTH

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I have just read what Jim Davidson said about Great Yarmouth does it need a revamp? I think that money should be ploughed into the market and Broad Row, invite new local businesses to open shops at a low cost on rent for a year and a low business tax. This way there would be more ventures in these places.

JENNY OXBOROUGH, SOUTHTOWN

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Me and my family have been to GREAT Yarmouth two years in a row and have had a fantastic time, despite the weather. Although the weather wasn't great, we found loads to do for ourselves and also our two-year-old daughter. The place looked clean enough to me and all the beaches we went on - Yarmouth, Gorleston and Hemsby - were lovely and clean and tidy. All that leaves me to say is, well done GREAT Yarmouth. Keep up the good work and we'll be back a few more times.

CLAIRE, OXFORDSHIRE

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Steve in Liverpool, you're talking rubbish. Great Yarmouth may have lost its 'greatness' years ago, but compared to Liverpool, it's beautiful. Liverpool has got to be the most depressing place on earth!

SAMANTHA, GREAT YARMOUTH

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Yes, it does need a revamp: it's shabby and depressing. I'd rather go to Hunstanton.

ANGI, DEREHAM

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I think Yarmouth is a great place - it may seem tacky and cheap, but I have been going there for many years and it is great fun. I must admit that some things could be improved - for instance the beach is a mess and litter is all over the place and the far end of Yarmouth should be improved. Then maybe it wouldn't have the reputation it has been given!

BECKY COLMAN, NORWICH

The trouble with Great Yarmouth is that it doesn't know what it what it wants to be - a holiday resort or a hive of port activity? A new visitor approaching down the Acle Straight is greeted by, on the left, a collection of boarded-up hotels, garage forecourt and 19th century homes. On the right is a set of railway tracks and platforms. I know trains have to go somewhere. Arriving from the A12 visitors are greeted by unused overgrown allotments and a new Tesco construction site. Has anyone noticed that the Acle Straight at Acle, looks more like a cart track than an approach to a holiday resort?

STEVE PETERSON, HEMSBY, GREAT YARMOUTH

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So, Cherie from Sheffield thinks that Great Yarmouth is a great place..."and so what if it's tacky?" Well, that just about sums it up, doesn't it? The only sort of people to praise Great Yarmouth with all its "Tacky Finery" are people from...wait for it..... Sheffield!! I rest my case. Yep, Great Yarmouth does need help!

STEVE, WATERLOO, LIVERPOOL

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My friend and I are really looking forward to our trip to Great Yarmouth in the summer. Who cares if it's tacky. I went there a couple of years ago and have nothing but great memories - so there Jim Davidson.

CHERIE, SHEFFIELD

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I am now working at Haven Bridge House and can see over the whole of the town. From that distance it looks ok. We need better road links and better links to the continent to increase our tourist trade. It is probably quicker to get from Holland than it is from Norwich with the Acle Straight. Don't let us forget we are European and closer to Holland than we are to Wales. Talk about improving the seafront is all it seems to be - talk. Come on, invest and let's get Yarmouth great again!

SIMON KETT, HOPTON

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Although pleased that Great Yarmouth has secured cash to improve the area, I don't want to get too excited. If the council can't even clear the litter up, a couple of "re-generated" buildings aren't going to help (unless they are going to be used as a street cleaners' base). Here's an idea. Use some of the extra council tax charge to catch the animals don't know how to use a bin and send them to work at the above mentioned street cleaners' base! Get the basics right first. Who wants to go on holiday to a town which resembles a landfill site?

CHRIS PARKER, GORLESTON

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I agree with many of the comments on this page in reference to Great Yarmouth's decline over recent years. The fact is though, it is similar to so many other resorts up and down the country. Morecambe, Weston Super Mare, Southend - they've all declined. Blackpool is going to go the same way unless the new "Las Vegas" theme scheme takes off and at last revitalises the town. Brighton has blossomed and boomed, and other resorts can too. What Great Yarmouth lacks though, is a council with a vision towards the future. Imagination is something they lack, and I can say that having worked for council there. Road and rail communications don't help either. It takes so long to reach Great Yarmouth from everywhere, and the A12 needs dualling all the way to Ipswich to link it to the rest of the major road network, as does the A47. I lived in the town for four years, and experienced three different periods of unemployment. The wages are poor, jobs generally basic and opportunities rare, unless you wish to work in the oil industry. Great Yarmouth needs a good clean, new ideas implemented and a new image to attract more to the town than the current 'kiss me quick' holidaymakers mainly from London and the Midlands.

MARK COLLINSON, LIVERPOOL

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I moved to Great Yarmouth in 1981, at the age of six, and spent the majority of my life living there, until I moved back to my birthplace, Liverpool - to study at university. I have read the comments with great interest; a lot of them are derogatory towards the town - and I would tend to AGREE with them! Growing up, Great Yarmouth was always a depressing place in the winter... nothing to do, boarded up shops, vandalism and rife unemployment...Needless to say that I escaped at the earliest opportunity to a more vibrant and up and coming place. Most of my friends from school, did not return from university either. Surely that says something about the town? It's a shame that Great Yarmouth is not somewhere that people want to come home to. I agree with the person who commented on the shabby guesthouses, and the person who commented on the state of the town centre. Yes, the centre of the town is what most visitors see before the dazzling-scaled-down version of Blackpool's majestic golden mile. Yes, the rows are quaint and a reminder of days gone by - but tidy them up and bring them into THIS millennium! Another of the things that angered me when I lived in that LOVELY resort was that when the town "closed down" for the winter - the locals seemed to be forgotten about, as if the town only existed as a summer holiday venue.

STEVE, WATERLOO, LIVERPOOL

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They also need to improve their leisure facilities!!!!!!!!!!!!

JIM BOB, GREAT YARMOUTH

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I love to take my children to Great Yarmouth, but over the past two years it's turned into a right tip. Jim was right, let's pump some cash into Yarmouth before it's too late.

M VINCENT, NORWICH

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We have just opened a new guesthouse in Great Yarmouth. Jim Davidson needs to come and see premises like ours to see what the future of tourism in Yarmouth is like. This is the most exciting time to be involved in tourism in Yarmouth. Opportunities abound and major plans are afoot to regenerate the whole industry. If he put as much energy and money into the tourist industry in Yarmouth as members of the Great Yarmouth Tourist Authority do, then perhaps we could work together instead of crying to the 成人论坛. I challenge Jim to come to Maluth Lodge and eat his words!!!

PAUL RUTH, GREAT YARMOUTH

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I wrote humourously that in order to improve Great Yarmouth, they should "make it warmer". However I realize that this is a serious subject to at least the people who live there so I thought I would add another perspective. How does one make a town like Yarmouth, which is clearly way off the beaten track with no direct road connection from the heartland of Britain, more attractive? It is cold, windy, drab having little in the way of architectural beauty (unlike, say, Harrogate) or crass commercial facilities like Blackpool. But perhaps to the people who live there it really shouldn't matter. When one can hop on plane and be in sunny warm paradises such as Majorca in a couple of hours for a few pounds, why would one want to spend the few weeks one has for a holiday in Yarmouth? Tastes change and seaside resorts like Yarmouth are being left behind. In this country (I am writing now from the US) many areas that had fallen on hard times have resorted to opening gambling casinos and the kind of people who frequent casinos frankly don't give a damn about the environs as long as they can assuage their addiction to gambling. Is this a possiblity for Yarmouth? Seriously though, I believe Yarmouth should just accept that it is now a back water, clean the town up to make it a pleasure for the inhabitants and occasional day tripper and find other means for employment other than the tourist industry. Hoping for better things to come along will only postpone the inevitable. I do wish the very best for the town and its people, the salt of the earth.

KENNETH JESSETT, USA

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I taught in Yarmouth for 15 years and met some great people in that time - students, parents and colleagues. The people of Yarmouth deserve better. Many factors contribute to the present difficulties: local landlords and public agencies who import poverty and with its extra social problems, the decline of the tourist industry and a measure of insularity in public life. In the mid 90s I set a very bright group of kids the task of making a presentation in French about the Yarmouth Council booklet 'Yarmouth in 2020'. They did well at it - they were very bright youngsters - but they all said to me that they intended to leave Yarmouth as soon as they could, so the document was of little interest to them. It is all very sad.

NIGEL, HONG KONG

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Make it warmer.

KENNETH JESSETT, HOUSTON (EX-NORWICH)

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I have lived in Great Yarmouth all my life, and the town should do something about the litter, dumped cars, teenagers haging about on street corners, buildings that need lots of attention. I think they should look care fully at Market Row and spend money on the town before they spend it on the seafront - after all the tourists see the town before they see the seafront, put the money where it is needed, and not by pretting the sea front so it looks like Las Vegas or Blackpool. Great Yarmouth should be like Great Yarmouth, not like the other suggestions that have been brought. spend where it is needed, not where they would like to spend it.

JENNY OXBOROUGH, GREAT YARMOUTH

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A massive revamp of Great Yarmouth? I'll believe it when I see it. We have heard it all before.

JEANETTE, GREAT YARMOUTH

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Great Yarmouth depends on the tourist trade to survive You have to make the town attractive to tourists fist of all. Brighten up the hotels and guest houses with a coat of paint. Clean up the promenade. Plant the flower beds. Get the pier smartened up and put on good shows. Get the transport problems sorted. There is nothing so depressing as having to queue for an hour to get across Vauxhall Bridge and to see rundown guest houses, hotels etc. If you want the income from tourism, then it is up to Great Yarmouth to make it attractive enough to visit.

JOHN KENDALL, LEICESTER

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It seems that the majority of the people running down Great Yarmouth, now live abroad. I think that they would find most towns in the country have gone down hill since they left their beloved country! It seems that the English Tourist Board would disagree with most comments saying that Great Yarmouth Hotels are a disgrace, as nearly all of Great Yarmouth's Hotels have been awarded NATIONAL AWARDS for QUALITY!!

NICK, GREAT YARMOUTH

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I visit Great Yarmouth every year and I think that it is wonderful there is alot to do during the day and the night. Great Yarmouth is excellent for everyone.

NATALIE, LIVERPOOL

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I visit Great Yarmouth every year and I think that it is wonderful. Jim Davidson is wrong - there is a lot to do during the day and the night. Great Yarmouth is excellent for everyone.

NATALIE, LIVERPOOL

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It seems that the majority of the people running down Great Yarmouth now live abroad. I think that they would find most towns in the country have gone down hill since they left their beloved country! It seems that the English Tourist Board would disagree with most comments saying that Great Yarmouth Hotels are a disgrace, as nearly all of Great Yarmouth`s Hotels have been awarded NATIONAL AWARDS for QUALITY!!

NICK, GREAT YARMOUTH

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I read this forum with a wry smile, most of the people who refer to Great Yarmouth seemed to have moved away. Recently, money has started to come into the town and there are far more people trying to rescue the town than there are trying to destroy it.

Landlords are finding it harder to get clients for their run down shacks due to ever increasing laws and rent help is getting harder. A study has just finished on the seafront its findings I'm sure will be great for the town and hopefully we won't have to listen to Jim davidson go on about yet more money for his beloved pier. One thing will help put the great back into this beloved town and that is people not deserting it and people who do live here pulling together and helping the council.

Don't live on memories, live for the future and help the children enjoy this town how it should be and that is certainly not a kiss me quick resort. Let's go wild, lets go American, lets go theme, lets be brave?

CARL, GREAT YARMOUTHH

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I was born in Yarmouth in 1950 and think I saw the best of it in my teenage years. Yarmouth then, was exciting, vibrant, and, most of all - fun! After meeting my husband (an oil-rig worker) and marrying, we left the country.
I returned in 1994, a few months before my mother died and was shocked to see how the place had gone downhill: windows boarded up and charity shops everywhere, no jobs! Yarmouth will revive again one day, I am sure. I just hope it doesn't take too long!

SANDIE PLACE, AUSTRALIA

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