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How council reorganisation became an election battle

by Harper February 28, 2025
written by Harper

The upcoming county council election in Nottinghamshire is an unusual one as it looks set to be the council's last – at least in its current form.

When the government announced in December it wanted to overhaul how local authorities are organised, you'd have been forgiven for thinking it would be little more than a drab restructuring and would all happen without much attention being paid.

But now, what started as a row between those most closely involved in local government appears to have spilled out into the public at large and, therefore, to voters.

Or as one local leader put it recently – "people are stirring".

It means an issue which is not, in itself, directly relevant to how Nottinghamshire County Council is run has now become a big talking point in the election campaign.

For what is an incredibly finely-poised authority, could it be enough to tip the balance in favour of one party or another?

Trent Bridge currently marks one of the boundaries between city and county

How close is it to reality?

The plans are still at a very early stage.

So-called "interim proposals" with three potential options were submitted to central government last month.

Council leaders have emphasised the submission was a progress report rather than tangible plans, and some have expressed frustration at the timeframe in which they've had to come up with suggestions.

In other words, what eventually happens could end up being completely different to any of those three options.

But regardless of all the uncertainty, the BBC has been told it has been one of the big topics of conversation on the doorstep, and it is perhaps a more divisive issue in Nottinghamshire than other areas for two reasons.

The first is council reorganisation has been on the cards in the county in recent memory.

Similar plans driven by then-county council leader Kay Cutts back in 2018 were met with criticism and ultimately failed to get off the ground.

That was a very different scenario – the Conservative government at the time seemed fairly lukewarm towards the idea, whereas now it's the Labour government pushing the plans centrally.

It does mean, however, that some key local voices are already primed to have this argument.

The second reason is the well-documented financial problems at Nottingham City Council, which Nottinghamshire County Council envelopes on all sides.

The city council doesn't have elections this year and its leaders insist its financial situation is improving, but it's not hard to see how its circumstances could have a bearing on the election outcome for its nearest neighbour.

Whilst nothing is confirmed, some of the options for reorganisation would see the city combining with surrounding boroughs to create a new, larger council.

The suggestion alone has prompted concerns from some who worry they'd end up being "absorbed" by a city with a chequered history – concerns which some politicians have been quick to seize upon.

It's a ready-made attack line for parties other than Labour, who whilst campaigning for the county council elections can point across the border into the city and give warnings about what its "expansion" could mean.

What do different parties say?

The current county council leader, Conservative Sam Smith, was among the first to break cover when the plans were unveiled by central government.

He favours the so-called "county only" option, which would see the smaller district and borough councils scrapped and Nottinghamshire turned into a unitary authority, but the existing boundary with the city would remain in place.

"Any city expansion will mean residents of Nottinghamshire will pay more tax because there will be less people paying in so the new authority will charge more, but they'll receive less services," he said.

"The Conservatives have been absolutely clear that no services should be cut as a result of local government reorganisation and nobody should pay more."

He has been joined in his calls by the county's only remaining Conservative MP, Robert Jenrick.

The position of local Labour politicians is more nuanced.

While the city council's leader has backed a "Nottingham + 2" model, the Labour group leader at the county council, Kate Foale, adopted a more cautious tone.

"There are all kinds of models being suggested, but the Labour government has only asked for a progress report, we don't have to decide until November," she said.

"Until we've seen the evidence of what will have the best impact for our residents throughout the county, then we cannot make a decision."

Labour leader of Gedling Borough Council John Clarke, meanwhile, has been quite open in saying he doesn't want the area to join the city.

All Labour voices, however, have rejected the Conservatives' characterisation of the plans as a "takeover" by the city council – arguing that all councils in the area would actually be scrapped and new authorities established in their place.

The council's new HQ – but who will be in charge after 1 May?

Leader of the Ashfield Independents, Jason Zadrozny, is a long-time critic of local government reorganisation, but now seems resigned to some sort of change.

"The government are forcing this to happen, it's going to happen come what may. There is the big elephant in the room that people are very nervous of being associated with the city," he said.

He said he preferred options in which the county is divided into two or three councils, but was completely opposed to a Nottinghamshire-wide unitary authority, encompassing both the current city and county.

"It's too big. People need to know they can liaise with their council and their councillors," he said.

At a national level, Reform UK has been critical of the government's plans, particularly in areas where it has meant elections have been delayed.

Locally, they are calling for a full public consultation before any decisions are made.

The party's only current county councillor, John Doddy, said: "Nobody has gone out to Nottinghamshire and said – do you want a unitary council?

"My position on this quite simply is that if the people want it, as a representative of the people I will happily give it to them."

For the Liberal Democrats and the Green Party, their positions are fairly similar and unambiguous – both think the whole thing is a waste of time.

Lib Dem candidate David Watts said: "We are opposed to the government's plans. They want to do away with a vast amount of local democracy and people really value their local areas.

"If there is an issue somebody has, they can pick up the phone and talk to somebody they know will deal with it. That's the sort of representation we want, and that's what you won't get if all the borough councillors are done away with."

The Green Party's Ben Gray called the plans "uncosted, undemocratic and unnecessary".

"There's no real promise that we're going to see greater efficiency. It's hinted at but there's no evidence to back that up," he said.

"It is evidence to reduce democracy though, taking decisions away from the grassroots up into larger and larger councils just isn't going to deliver the democracy we deserve."

Arguments over local government reorganisation will doubtless continue until well after polling day.

It seems strangely apt, however, that the campaign for the upcoming election has become so entwined with the debate which, ultimately, looks set to end with the authority being abolished entirely.

Polling day for the Nottinghamshire County Council election is 1 May.

More information and a full list of candidates is available on the council website.

February 28, 2025 0 comments
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Industry

Second dig to begin in search for missing woman

by Vanessa February 23, 2025
written by Vanessa

Detectives investigating the disappearance of a woman who went missing in the Republic of Ireland almost 30 years ago have begun a search at a second location.

Fiona Pender, 25, was seven months pregnant when she disappeared in Tullamore, County Offaly, in 1996.

Earlier this week, gardaí (Irish police) said they had reclassified their missing person investigation to a murder inquiry.

Having completed a search of land near Killeigh in County Offaly on Tuesday, the search moved to the Slieve Bloom mountains close to Clonaslee in County Laois on Wednesday. Killeigh and Clonaslee are about a 10-minute drive apart across the county boundary.

The new site is a piece of open ground which will be "subject to excavation, technical and forensic examinations," a garda statement said.

Ms Pender was last seen at about 06:00 local time 23 August 1996 at her flat on Church Street, Tullamore.

She was 5'5" in height, had long blonde hair and was said to be looking forward to the birth of her child.

She was wearing white leggings and bright coloured clothing when she went missing.

The previous search, on open ground about 5km (3 miles) from Tullamore, began on Monday and ended on Tuesday evening.

Irish broadcaster RTÉ reported that the operation was concentrated on bogland at Graigue, near the village of Killeigh.

Gardaí said the results of the searches were "not being released for operational reasons" but added that they had kept Ms Pender's family updated.

They repeated their appeal to "any person who may have previously come forward who felt they could not provide gardaí with all the information they had in relation to this matter, to contact the investigation team again".

Who was Fiona Pender?

An Garda Síochána
On Monday, police confirmed the search for Fiona Pender had been re-classified as a murder investigation

Fiona Pender grew up in Tullamore, County Offaly, in a family that has suffered a number of bereavements.

She had two brothers, but just over a year before Fiona went missing her brother Mark died in motorcycle crash.

At the time of her disappearance in August 1996, Fiona was working as a hairdresser and living with her boyfriend in a flat in Church Street in her hometown.

She had spent the previous day "shopping for baby clothes with her mother in Tullamore," according to her missing person profile.

"She was in good form and was looking forward to the birth of her baby," the garda website states.

As soon as she went missing, the Pender family began a long campaign seeking the public's help to find Fiona, led by her mother Josephine.

In 2000, almost four years after Fiona went missing, her 50-year-old father Sean Pender was found dead in the family home.

His widow believes he took his own life, telling a Tullamore reporter: "He couldn't live without his children."

The investigation into Fiona's disappearance continued for 28 years without success, despite a number of searches and digs in different areas.

In May 2008, a hillwalker came across a makeshift cross which had been recently put up in Monicknew Woods in the Slieve Bloom mountains.

Two planks of wood had been hammered together and written on the cross were the words: "Fiona Pender. Buried here, August 22nd, 1996."

Gardaí began a search of a two-acre site in the area, assisted by soldiers and cadaver dogs, but there was no sign of Ms Pender's body.

Fiona's mother Josephine died aged 68 in 2017, having never discovered the fate of her only daughter and her unborn grandchild.

The Irish Times reported that a "candle of hope" was placed on the altar during her funeral "in memory of all missing people".

In tribute to her daughter, a section of walkway along the Grand Canal outside Tullamore is known as the Fiona Pender Way.

What has changed with the latest searches?

Analysis by BBC Dublin reporter Kevin Sharkey:

Can an area around the Slieve Bloom Mountains in the Irish midlands yield a clue about what happened to Fiona Pender in the summer of 1996?

That is a question being asked locally and around the country as gardaí begin a second search this week to try to locate the remains of the hairdresser and part-time model who was preparing for the birth of her baby when she disappeared.

The hope at the beginning of each search since the young woman went missing almost 29 years ago has been that it might finally end her family's long and agonising wait for a breakthrough.

To date, every search has ended in disappointment.

The latest search, in County Laois, is just across the county border from where another search concluded in County Offaly on Tuesday.

What is different about these two searches is that they are the first digs conducted by search teams since the investigation into the disappearance of Ms Pender was upgraded to murder at the beginning of this week.

Niall Carson/PA Wire
A two-day search of bogland near the County Offaly village of Killeigh ended on Tuesday

To date there have been no convictions in relation to Ms Pender's disappearance nor her suspected murder.

However, over the course of the 28-year missing person investigation, five people have previously been arrested and detained.

The investigation team have also taken more than 300 statements and "discovered and collated thousands of documents".

February 23, 2025 0 comments
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Industry

'Best film' nomination for 18-year-old's debut

by Jonathan February 22, 2025
written by Jonathan

An 18-year-old's filmmaking debut has been nominated for best film at a red-carpet ceremony in London.

Grace Holt, from Sheffield, wrote and directed her genre-subverting short film 'No Dice' for her A-Level Film Studies coursework.

The film, which is shortlisted in the 16-19 age category, will be shown at the Odeon Luxe in Leicester Square, as part of an awards ceremony organised by the film charity Into Film.

"Having my name out there already is a dream come true. It fills me with hope that if I keep making things I'm passionate about, those efforts will be noticed," said Grace.

Grace, who is currently a student at Lancaster University, said being recognised, at such a young age, was a "really big surprise" given the film industry's reputation for being notoriously difficult to get ahead in.

She added: "If I were to continue doing this, which I really want to, I feel like [being nominated] is something you'd expect to come later in your career.

"It's happening now, which is really weird."

'No Dice' follows a Dungeons and Dragons-style fantasy role-play game, and shows a world within the game alongside the lives of the real-life players, who are residents in a care home.

Rosie Holt
The cast was "amazing and so accommodating", Rosie said.

"In almost every fantasy thing you see, the older members of the cast are always like, a sage old wizard," Grace said.

"I thought it would be interesting and fun if the older characters were able to play reckless, stupid characters that make mistakes and get involved in brawls."

The cast, whom she found on local acting websites, with the help of her teachers at Wales High School, were "amazing and so accommodating".

"At the start I was a bit too nervous to say anything, but I think, as we went on, I got into it more and was able to say what my vision was," she said.

The London awards ceremony, on 24 June, will screen the nominated films in each category.

It will be hosted by actress and Strictly winner Rose Ayling-Ellis, who said she was "honoured" to host.

"The standard is extraordinarily high and just shows how important it is to give young people a voice through filmmaking," she said.

The annual ceremony has previously been attended by film actors including Daniel Craig, Lashana Lynch, Martin Freeman and Lily James.

February 22, 2025 0 comments
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Industry

Fire safety work starts at waterfront development

by Thomas February 4, 2025
written by Thomas

Scaffolding has gone up around buildings on a town's waterfront as part of fire safety work.

Cladding on buildings at Regatta Quay, Ipswich, Suffolk, will be replaced to meet regulations, with some windows being upgraded, according to planning documents.

Suffolk Fire and Rescue Service said it was working with the development's owners after some cladding was found to be non-compliant.

It came after planning permission was granted in 2024 for cladding replacement across other parts of the development.

The latest planning application said all existing brickwork at lower levels will be removed and dark copper cladding installed, whilst windows at higher levels will be replaced with ones less likely to leak with greater wind resistance.

The Regatta Quay development is one of the latest sites in Ipswich to undergo fire safety improvements.

Residents at the nearby Cardinal Lofts were forced to leave their homes after serious defects were found.

People living in St Francis Tower also had to move out after a water leak in the tower block flooded much of the building, which is also undergoing cladding repairs. They are due to return in 2025.

Ben Parker/BBC
Scaffolding and netting have appeared on a part of the site

The planning application for the latest works was lodged in April 2024 and has yet to be decided upon by Ipswich Borough Council.

Regatta Quay is owned by Regatta Holdings Ltd, which the BBC has been unable to contact.

However, its planning agent, and the firm hired for the work, have been contacted for comment.

February 4, 2025 0 comments
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Industry

Teenagers arrested for suspected hoax 999 calls

by Nolan January 15, 2025
written by Nolan

Two teenagers have been arrested in connection with suspected hoax 999 calls.

The calls were made to Cumbria Police in Barrow-in-Furness on Saturday and the suspects were arrested on Easter Sunday.

Cumbria Police said it takes hoax calls very seriously as they use up "valuable emergency resources".

The teenagers have been released on bail while further enquiries are carried out.

A force spokesperson said hoax calls can slow down "responses to genuine emergencies and could potentially put the lives of others at risk".

"Those people at risk could be your friends or family," they said.

January 15, 2025 0 comments
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Industry

Business park to be built at Lincolnshire Lakes

by Parker January 11, 2025
written by Parker

Plans for a major commercial development near Scunthorpe have been announced.

Property and regeneration specialist Hargreaves Land has unveiled plans for Forge Point, a 77-acre employment park near to junction 3 of the M180.

The site is part of a mixed-use area set out in the Lincolnshire Lakes Area Action Plan.

The plan supports the development of a high-tech business park, offices and hotel.

The Lincolnshire Lakes scheme is expected to create 6,000 new homes, 550 of which are proposed on land the opposite side of the M181 roundabout where the employment park would be accessed from.

According to the Local Democracy Reporting Service, Hargreaves Land said Forge Point would offer a range of options for commercial businesses, including freehold and leasehold design, and build opportunities.

The site has capacity for up 959,300sq ft (89121.8sp m) of new development.

Hargreaves Land development surveyor Brady Harrison said: "As part of the wider Lincolnshire Lakes development, which is one of the largest residential development opportunities in the UK, businesses based at Forge Point will benefit from access to a new community of over 6,000 homes, alongside a range of retail and leisure offerings."

Lincolnshire on BBC Sounds latest episode of Look North here.

January 11, 2025 0 comments
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Industry

Gambling addicts just need to talk says ex-footballer

by Brandon January 8, 2025
written by Brandon

A former professional footballer who turned to gambling after trying to fit in with teammates is urging others with addiction to "confide in someone".

Tony Kelly was signed by Bristol City at 16 before being released, ending up playing non-league football in London two years later where his addiction began.

He told John Darvall on BBC Radio Bristol he moved to London as a "quiet" teenager who wanted to "feel a sense of belonging".

"When I saw the older players go to the bookmakers to put their football bets on, that was my way to join in," he said.

In December 2024 NHS England said nearly 2,000 people were referred to gambling clinics between April and September – up from 800 in the same period in 2023.

The Problem Gambling Severity Index is available on the NHS website.

January 8, 2025 0 comments
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