Bill Cox obituary

A picture


My friend Bill Cox, who has died aged 83, was a youth worker and founder member of the Federation for Detached Youth Work.He worked for more than 50 years in the field, a commitment for which he was appointed MBE in 2014.“Detached” youth work supports young people in their own environments, such as on the street, in parks and in shopping centres.In 1974, after a period of volunteering and training, Bill became a detached youth worker with the Merseyside Youth Association (MYA).In the 1980s he was a senior field worker at the MYA and thereafter he took responsibility for training those working in the voluntary youth sector across the county.

Even after retiring in 2004 Bill continued to support many youth organisations and charities, including the Federation for Detached Youth Work, which he co-founded in 1996, and of which he was made life president in 2002.I joined the board of trustees in 2000 and worked with Bill until 2022, when he took a back seat due to ill health.Born in Dingle, Liverpool, during the second world war, to Elsie (nee Ambage), a bookkeeper, and William Cox, a tank driver in Europe and later a British Rail lorry driver, Bill was the eldest of four children.He attended Dingle Vale secondary modern school then Everard Avenue technical school.In the 1950s he started work as an apprentice silk screen printer.

He also began volunteering at the Queens Road youth club, a so-called “cellar club” where he also formed a band, the Tropics.With Bill as lead singer, the Tropics played in a variety of venues including the Cavern, and produced an EP in the Percy Phillips recording studio in Kensington, Liverpool.Later he became the lead singer of the Plazzy Bags, who also acted as a backing group for the monthly “Singers’ night” at Frames hotel in Liverpool.In 1968 Bill undertook a leadership course at Liverpool Youth Service’s training centre, then in 1970 gained a diploma in youth work at the National College for the Training of Youth Leaders in Leicester, and became the first full-time youth leader of the Rock Church Centre in Liverpool.He continued his professional training at Manchester Polytechnic, gaining a certificate in advanced youth and community studies in 1979.

Bill married Shirley Taylor in 1964.They had two sons, Billy and Tim.The marriage ended in divorce.In 1978, he married Jude Wild, a youth worker, who in 1982 documented their work in a book called Street Mates.Jude survives him, as do Billy and Tim, four grandchildren, Daisy, William, Ellie and Carys, and his siblings, Bryan, Linda and Ann.

recentSee all
A picture

Ofcom delivers relief for Royal Mail at snail’s pace – too late to stop Czech takeover | Nils Pratley

What if Ofcom had cut Royal Mail some slack half a decade ago? What if the universal service obligation (USO), the requirement on the postal operator to deliver nationwide six days a week at a uniform price, had been tweaked before letter volumes fully fell off the cliff?Would Royal Mail’s finances have been in better shape? Would Daniel Křetínský, AKA the Czech Sphinx, not have had an opening to make his £3.6bn takeover bid while the share price was on the floor? Or, if he had pounced, would the board of the International Distribution Services(IDS), the parent, have put up a stiffer fight?We’ll never know, and it’s too late to revisit the takeover tale because Křetínský’s EP Group will be in charge by the spring once the last regulatory boxes are ticked. But one can still wonder how events might have played out differently if Ofcom had got its act together earlier. That is because two features stand out in Thursday’s final proposal. First, the changes are modest

A picture

European Central Bank cuts interest rates to support growth as eurozone economy stagnates - as it happened

The European Central Bank did nothing to direct investors away from the consensus view that it plans to ease interest rates further over the course of 2024. It announced fifth cut in seven months on Thursday.President Christine Lagarde said that ECB policy is still “restrictive”, meaning it is bearing down on growth and inflation. Much of the discussion in the press conference revolved around the “neutral rate” at which monetary policy neither stimulates nor restricts growth. Lagarde suggested that any esimates of that were “premature”, suggesting that the bank has further to go in cutting rates

A picture

Get ahead of the tech curve: aim for Hangzhou, not Silicon Valley | Brief letters

Rachel Reeves is behind the tech curve in proposing to create “Europe’s Silicon Valley” (Report, 28 January). She should surely be considering an equivalent of Hangzhou, home of DeepSeek, the company that knocked $1tn off the value of US tech stocks in a day.John LoweryLondon A “spectacular” vertebra has been “found online” (Report, 28 January). Given the recent changes to Meta, I doubt it was Mark Zuckerberg’s.Dr Jonathan J RossSheffield What’s it like to start your holiday in the airport bar (G2, 22 January)? I fancy myself as a Joan Collins-style traveller, so I have a tiny bottle of champagne from the trolley on the plane (to follow the free whisky samples I drank in departures)

A picture

SoftBank ‘in talks’ to invest up to $25bn in OpenAI

The Japanese investment group SoftBank is reportedly in talks to invest up to $25bn (£20bn) in OpenAI in a deal that would make it the biggest financial backer of the startup behind ChatGPT.The lender is considering putting a sum of between $15bn and $25bn into the San Francisco-based company, according to the Financial Times.SoftBank, whose other investments include the TikTok parent, ByteDance, and the British chip designer Arm, is already an investor in OpenAI and recently backed a funding round that valued the company at $157bn. Microsoft, currently OpenAI’s biggest shareholder, also joined that roundLast week OpenAI and SoftBank teamed up with Oracle to form Stargate, which Donald Trump called “the largest AI infrastructure project in history”. The partnership aims to build datacentres for AI systems, with an initial spend of $100bn

A picture

Ravens kicker Justin Tucker accused of sexual misconduct by massage therapists

Baltimore Ravens kicker Justin Tucker has been accused of inappropriate sexual behavior towards a number of massage therapists, according to the Baltimore Banner.The Banner spoke to six massage therapists at four spas and wellness centers around the Baltimore area. The accusations include claims that Tucker exposed his genitals, brushed some of the therapists with his penis and left ejaculate on treatment tables. Two spas allegedly banned Tucker from returning. One therapist who spoke to the Banner described Tucker’s alleged behaviour as “really degrading”

A picture

World champion Russian pair and US skaters were onboard crashed plane

The figure skating world united in grief after it emerged as many as 14 skaters and coaches, including two 16-year-olds and a married pair of world champions, were onboard the American airlines plane that crashed into the Potomac river in Washington DC on Wednesday night.Flight 5342 collided with a US army helicopter as it prepared to land at Reagan Washington International Airport, leaving more than 60 people believed to be dead. The Skating Club of Boston said six of its members had been on the plane, which had been bringing them back from a development camp that followed the US national figure skating championships in Wichita, Kansas.It named the skaters Jinna Han and Spencer Lane, both aged 16, along with Han’s mother, Jin Han, and Lane’s mother, Molly Lane. A story on Lane’s Instagram account, posted on Wednesday evening, showed the view from an aeroplane window captioned by the airport codes ICT and DCA, corresponding to the journey in question