International Women’s Day: ‘Give to Gain’

 

Sunday Brunch featured soundbytes from the above ‘Sussex & Surrey Soapbox’ podcast episode…. to skip chapters click on the 3 horizontal lines (left in the above player). Have your say via WhatsApp (bottom right) or join the conversation in our Facebook Group HERE.

On International Women’s Day 2026, this roundtable with special guest Maggie Chen (Founder of GIC, www.girlsincharge.co.uk) goes far beyond celebration. Under this years IWD theme “Give to Gain,” the panel explores what equality really looks like — at work, at home, and in the everyday moments that shape confidence and opportunity.

From career-defining champions who opened doors, to uncomfortable debates about whether progress has gone “too far,” the conversation doesn’t shy away from tension. The group unpacks the gender pay gap, unconscious bias, networking advantages, and the often-invisible mental load women carry at home.

Stories of quiet advocacy — someone “sending your name into a room you’re not in” — reveal how small acts of generosity can transform careers and lives. At the same time, the discussion challenges partners, families, and workplaces to rethink roles, responsibility, and recognition.

Is equality about identical outcomes? Is feminism creating friction? Do men feel pushed out? And what does it truly mean to “give” in order to gain — as individuals, couples, and communities?

This is an honest, multi-generational conversation about respect, responsibility, and the role of partners in building a more balanced future. 

10 Key Points:

1. International Women’s Day is more than a checkbox.
It should spark action that lasts all year, not just symbolic recognition.

2. “Give to Gain” isn’t just about money.
It’s about advocacy, visibility, time, mentorship, and emotional support.

3. Career-defining champions matter.
Having someone advocate for you in rooms you’re not in can change the trajectory of your life.

4. The gender pay gap is complex.
Legal equality exists, but cultural patterns — networking habits, caregiving roles, self-selection — still influence outcomes.

5. Networking advantages aren’t neutral.
Informal, after-work networking often benefits men more due to differing home responsibilities.

6. The invisible mental load is real.
Women frequently carry the cognitive burden of planning, anticipating, and managing household life — even when tasks are shared.

7. “How can I help?” can feel like another task.
Delegating help adds to the mental load; shared ownership works better than reactive assistance.

8. Equality conversations create discomfort — and that’s part of growth.
Some men feel blamed; some women feel overdue recognition. Honest dialogue is necessary.

9. Appreciation may matter as much as redistribution.
For many, feeling seen and valued is as important as dividing chores evenly.

10. Respect is the foundation.
Whether at work or at home, progress depends on mutual respect, partnership, and shared responsibility.

Roundtable Featuring: Maggie Chen (guest), Georgie Lucas, Micaela Leal, Jacq Inwood, Maureen Jones & James Tidy. Host: Clive Hilton. 

Are Weekend Trains a Rip-Off? A Train Driver Tells the Truth

 

Sunday Brunch featured soundbytes from the above ‘Sussex & Surrey Soapbox’ podcast episode…. to skip chapters click on the 3 horizontal lines (left in the above player). Have your say via WhatsApp (bottom right) or join the conversation in our Facebook Group HERE.

Are weekend trains in Sussex and Surrey actually fit for purpose—or are passengers being short-changed? In this lively roundtable, a train driver pulls back the curtain on why weekend rail travel feels so broken.

10 key aspects we tackle:

  1. Why weekends feel worse than weekdays
    Delays, cancellations, diversions, overcrowding—listeners’ lived experience clashes with “acceptable” official stats.
  2. The engineering works problem
    Weekend closures are constant, but poor coordination turns necessary maintenance into total network chaos.
  3. Staffing myths vs reality
    It’s not drivers “pulling sickies”—Sunday working contracts and rostering rules leave services fragile.
  4. A fragmented rail system
    Too many companies, too many silos—operators, Network Rail, leasing firms and contractors all passing the buck.
  5. Fares that feel like a rip-off
    UK rail tickets are expensive and painfully complex, leaving passengers confused and overpaying.
  6. Victorian infrastructure in a modern world
    Outdated tunnels, ageing signalling and underinvestment make the system fragile—and weekends pay the price.
  7. Will renationalisation fix anything?
    Great British Railways promises joined-up thinking, but nationalisation alone isn’t a magic wand.
  8. Automation vs human presence
    Driverless trains might be efficient—but what about safety, reassurance, and antisocial behaviour onboard?
  9. The reality of being a train driver
    Extreme shift work, high responsibility, health impacts—and why drivers defend their pay and conditions.
  10. What would actually make trains better
    Longer turnarounds, smarter planning around major events, real coordination between companies, and putting passengers first.

Bottom line: Weekend trains aren’t failing by accident—they’re the product of a complex, underfunded, poorly joined-up system. The question is whether the next phase of rail reform starts to fix it… or just rebrands the problem.

Roundtable Featuring: Stephen Pritchard (Train Driver), Georgie Lucas, Iqbal Khan, Aga Es, Jacq Inwood, James Tidy and Maureen Jones. Host: Clive Hilton. 

Two senior ambulance workers sacked for sexual misconduct

Two senior members of staff at South East Coast Ambulance Service have been dismissed for sexual misconduct.

Both had positions that brought them into contact with student paramedics.

Secamb chief executive, Simon Weldon said in a letter sent to staff, it was “particularly disappointing” as both individuals held leadership roles.

A spokesperson for Secamb, “We take the safety of colleagues extremely seriously”.

Streetlight replacement scheme to start in West Sussex

A major programme to upgrade approximately 64,000 streetlights to energy‑efficient LED technology is due to begin in West Sussex.

The £24 million programme, which begins this month, will take place over the next 4 years.

It will also introduce a new Remote Monitoring System, enabling improved management of street-lighting performance, quicker fault detection and reduced maintenance requirements.

It is expected to reduce annual energy consumption by more than 10.7 million kWh, cut carbon emissions by around 1,633 tonnes of CO₂ and generate significant financial savings.

Crawley to honour those who died during the pandemic

Crawley Borough Council will be joined with community groups, faith leader and residents to honour those who died during pandemic on the National Day of Reflection.

The event will take place this Sunday at 11am in Memorial Gardens and will include reflections, performances, readings and prayers.

Cabinet member for Community Engagement and Culture, Councillor Sue Mullins, says the service is about “honouring those we lost and recognising the enduring strength of the people of Crawley”.