The unbearable sadness of the Welsh valleys
Many parts of the UK
have suffered from the decline of heavy industry, but the Welsh valleys
are a grim emblem of the despair that lack of work can create, writes
Mark Easton for The Editors, a programme which sets out to ask
challenging questions.
It is a journey I have been meaning to make for years. To
Blaenau Gwent in the valleys of South Wales. To proud old colliery towns
like Cwm, stretched out along the River Ebbw.From the window of the bus snaking up the valley road, one is struck by how the rich joyous beauty of the landscape contrasts with the poverty and melancholy of the people who scratch out a living in these parts.
The numbers tell a long and sad story of decline. "We are top of every league you don't want to be top of," a man tells me. Poverty, sickness, worklessness - Blaenau's name is always among the worst.
Blaenau Gwent
- County in south-east Wales, lying to the south of the Brecon Beacons
- Michael Foot's former constituency
- Towns include Abertillery, Brynmawr, Ebbw Vale and Tredegar
Many of the people of Blaenau appear to have given up on God. A decade ago less than a quarter of people here said they had no religion - now the census shows it is over 40%.
At the other end of the street is a vast flat space - empty, save for two iron wheels buried in the ground. Even weeds don't grow here.
A century ago, 2,400 men worked at the Marine Colliery. The miners and their families had come to the valleys from hundreds of miles around - some had literally walked to the valleys, drawn by the prospect of employment.
All that remains are silent industrial gravestones. Among the terraces that once housed the workers are numerous boarded up shops and clubs. The town, like the mine, feels abandoned.
The story of Cwm is the story of these valleys. When the site of the former Ebbw Vale Steel Iron and Coal company was finally flattened in 2002, the reason communities settled here was extinguished.
And no-one has ever come up with a viable Plan B.

Why "valley boys" have not given up on Welsh community
Take the town of Blaina - a once thriving industrial community, now dying. "If it's not closing down, it's already closed," says Anita Banks, a local councillor.
She shows me the Blaina Action Plan, agreed a couple of years ago after a long consultation. It is full of high priority schemes to improve the town, but a walk down the High Street reveals that almost nothing has happened. The county council tells me funding has still to be agreed.
One of the plan's urgent priorities was "to create artwork on hoardings to brighten up boarded shops". A metaphor perhaps.
Shuttered shops in Blaina
“Start Quote
Last year more than 8,000 people wanted a job - but there were just 300 vacancies”
"The jobs simply aren't here," says a man nursing a pint in an almost deserted working men's club. "But try telling that to the people at the top and they just don't want to know," he concludes bitterly.
A quarter of working-age adults are on benefits - male unemployment is more than double the British average. Among the economically inactive, the students and the homemakers and the sick, a far higher proportion in Blaenau Gwent say they would like employment than across the country as a whole. These communities are desperate for work.
Official figures show that last year more than 8,000 people wanted a job. But there were just 300 vacancies. And most of those were low wage temporary positions.
The Blaenau Gwent Regeneration Programme was published in 2002 after the closure of the steelworks in Ebbw Vale with much fanfare and razzamatazz.
Ebbw Vale in 1966
There is a new hospital and a college on the giant scar that was the steel complex in Ebbw Vale. A new leisure centre is almost complete. But where once 14,000 men earned their living each day, precious few actual jobs have been created.
These are communities marooned when the economic tide went out.
“Start Quote
Each month almost 10,000 prescriptions are issued for anti-depressants”
A local employment scheme called JobMatch was hailed as the new hope for the valleys only a couple of years ago. But this JobMatch, it turns out, is now also out of a job.
"Why don't you leave?" I ask some unemployed men in their 50s. "Because we are valley boys," comes the reply. "This is home." The green, green grass…
And where would they go? Often with few if any qualifications and no savings, the idea of leaving family and friends for somewhere unknown, without a place to live and no guarantee of employment, does look ill-advised.
Resilience is failing.
There are fewer than 60,000 adults in Blaenau Gwent. Each month almost 10,000 prescriptions are issued for anti-depressants. It is a statistic so shocking it is hard to comprehend.
Blaina, a once thriving industrial community
Janice first started taking pills for her nerves almost 40 years ago. "When you haven't got the money to go out and even if you could you haven't got the bus fare to go anywhere, the depression sets in," she says.
The suicide rate in Wales increased by 30% between 2009 and 2011.
The further you go up the valley, the poorer and more isolated people become. Waundeg is at the very top.
There are no shops in Waundeg and the bus to town stops at 6pm. There are children who've never been more than a mile or two from their front door.
When I ask how many youngsters go to university from the estate, Diane tells me that she remembers someone going to college to do hairdressing. "No, I can't think of anyone who has been to university," she tells me. Diane has lived in Waundeg for more than half a century.
Poverty is endemic. One nearby school keeps a box of shoes for children who arrive without anything suitable on their feet.
In 1938 schools provided donated shoes - as they do today in the valleys
The boxes contain cereals, biscuits and baby food. "Some of the adults eat the baby food when it gets really tough," Ceri confides.
"Two please!" says Ray, in the queue for a box. "One for me and one for my brother."
"Do you really need these?" I ask. "I couldn't get by without them," he says.
It is the women of Waundeg who are fighting back. They have managed to secure an empty house as a community centre and are doing what they can to counter the deprivation.
"Quite a few of the kids were telling us they were just having bread and jam when they got home from school," Diane says. "So we set up a grub club to give them a hot meal."
The centre is overflowing with young children and community spirit. But one cannot help but feeling it as a fight against the odds.
In one room at the centre there is a bank of computers, donated by a project a few years ago. The idea was to give schoolchildren and their families vital access to the web. But the computers are no longer connected to the internet. The money ran out 18 months ago.
The plan is to host motorsports at the Circuit of Wales
Planning permission for the project may be given in the next few weeks - but people are trying not to get too excited.
They remember the big electronics factory scheme that promised 6,000 jobs a few years ago. Today the complex employs 38 people - and half of those are security guards. They remember the countless projects and initiatives that came and then went. The action plans with no action.
I fear they are close to exhausting the once thick seams of hope that supported these beautiful valleys.
BBC News: The Editors features the BBC's on-air specialists asking questions which reveal deeper truths about their areas of expertise. Catch up on BBC iPlayer or BBC World News.
Article written by Mark Easton
Mark Easton
Home editor
@BBCMarkEaston via Twitter
Home Office unveils G8 Statement on legal highs committing signatories to share information for 'evidence-based measures'.Comments
All posts are reactively-moderated and must obey the house rules.
All posts are reactively-moderated and must obey the house rules.
Features & Analysis
-
How JFK's 'Ich bin ein Berliner' speech gave a city hope
Loud and clear
-
Obesity is now a disease in the US. Should it be?
Weighty debate
-
Twenty-four hours of news photos around the world
Day in pictures
-
The man behind Serena's success BBC Sport
Coaching a champion
Elsewhere on BBC News
-
Can Georgia integrate fully with the West and make friends with the Kremlin after the 2008 war?
Rebuilding relations
Programmes
-
The fight to stop the ancient city of Pompeii crumbling away from neglect
Fast Track
Ads by Google
Flats in Bangalore : Bren
2/3BHK(1400/1700sqt)@75L.300m from Total Mall,Sarjapur Rd. Call Now!
www.bren.com/FlatsInBangaloreWork Work From Home Us
5 New jobs today. Apply now! Work Work From Home Us
jobrapido.com/work+work+from+home+usBuy Apartment @ Bangalore
New/ReSale 1/2/3/4+ BHKs For Sale. Starting @ Rs 20 Lacs- Explore Now!
CommonFloor.com/Bangalore/Apartment
How JFK's Berlin speech gave a city hope
When can you legally travel without a passport?
Why are the French feeling so gloomy?
Snowden 'has not entered Russia'
Comment number 649.
KIM2 Minutes ago
Comment number 648.
Mark_from_Manchester1 Minute ago
If the Welsh want to spend their money promoting their language and making documents, signs etc bi-lingual then that's fine.
But then I'm not complaining about a lack of resources and companies not wanting to go there to do business though.
It's all about choices. The Welsh chose theirs, but don't like the outcome and don't want to change either, so how can we help them?
Comment number 647.
AdrianU27112 Minutes ago
How pedantic.....
I speak first hand about the locality in which I grew up .... No Welsh was spoke or taught in schools back in the day
Comment number 646.
Redex2 Minutes ago
Comment number 645.
Victory_Parts3 Minutes ago