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Saturday, August 18, 2012

Browsers flock to toy and train sale at Pavilion


* People browse for bargains on the stalls.



* Examples of every form of transport was on sale at reasonable prices.



* One stall offered a range of Dr Who goodies.

Over 300 file in before lunch

A host of transport, including trains, boats, planes and cars, lined up inside Llan's Royal International Pavilion today (Saturday).
But finding space for them all was no problems as they were all scale models of the real thing.
Traders and browsers from across a wide area turned up to enjoy the annual North Wales and Llangollen Toy and Train Sale.

Visitors were able to cast their eyes over tables offering items from some of the top names in the toy world, including Dinky, Corgi, Matchbox, Britains, Efe, Lledo, Hornby Trains, Bachmann, Lima and many more.

Items on sale ranged from just a few pounds to rare crafted pieces costing over £600.
Organiser Chris Dyer, from Somerset, said the event was well attended and that around 300 people had bought tickets before lunch.

Chris added: “We all look forward to our annual effort at Llangollen, with its wonderful setting and great value, and our bookings from traders have been very heavy.
“The excellent parking facilities and the great in-house cafĂ© all help the show, and this year for the first time in many years we did not clash with Thomas weekend on the Llangollen Railway, which suits the age profile of most of our customers.
“The sale has been another success and we are already trying to arrange a date for next year's event."

AM calls for "joined-up thinking" over Olympic training

* Ken Skates AM.


Assembly Member Ken Skates has called for more joined-up thinking in training the local Olympic athletes of tomorrow.
Mr Skates said the medal haul achieved by North East Wales athletes like Tom James, Chris Bartley and Jade Jones proved that shared access to elite training centres in the North West of England had been crucial to their success.
The Clwyd South AM said more thought needed to be given to developing elite training venues in North East Wales as well as giving talented young athletes greater access to world class training and support over the border.
Both the Welsh and UK Governments have said they want to capitalise on the success of the games and the AM said a cross-border strategy to develop elite sport in Wrexham, Flintshire and Denbighshire would pay dividends.
Mr Skates said: “The huge success of our athletes from North East Wales at the Olympic Games has been an inspiration to us all. Many of them use training venues in the North West of England such as Jade Jones who trains at the GB Taekwondo Academy in Manchester on the World Class Performance Programme.
“The Welsh and UK Governments have both signalled the importance of future sporting success and to re-working their strategies for sport to encourage success at the Rio games in 2016. We need to think about how we can improve our sporting infrastructure in North East Wales and make it easier for local athletes to benefit from the facilities and training that can breed further success.
“A large part of this should be seeing the cross-border links that have developed and strengthening them. As a cross-border region including the North West we have some of the best cycling, rowing, martial arts, curling, skating, canoeing, sailing, climbing and football venues in Britain.
“All of our future medal winners need to train at world class venues and where they can be developed or enhanced at places such as Glyndwr University or the Racecourse I will be encouraging us to do that. However we also need to utilise the facilities on our doorstep across the border too.
“This will not only benefit our future Olympians from North East Wales but also help us attract talented young athletes from the North West of England to train here. As far as participation in sport is concerned, the border is irrelevant and co-operation is critically important.
“I would encourage councils, sports organisations and governments to work together more than ever before on facilities that people on both sides of the border can use together.”
Mr Skates said a regional strategy for elite sports development should be examined, with North East Wales working with Cheshire, Merseyside and Manchester.
A Wales North East/England North West strategy could deliver enormous improvements for the development of elite and grassroots sport.

Friday, August 17, 2012

Transatlantic couple board the Wedding Belle


* Kristie and Duvain on the platform.


* The steam engine with its special nameplate.



Bride is from Fort Worth, Texas


There was a definite transatlantic flavour to an event at Llangollen Station this afternoon (Friday).
After being married at the nearby English Methodist Church just a little earlier Duvain Ashe-Kenny took his new bride Kristie for a train ride on the world-famous steam railway through a rain-swept Dee Valley.
Kristie, 34, is from Fort Worth, Texas and the 39-year-old Duvain hails from Denbigh, although he is originally from Liverpool.
The couple, who will now make their home in the US, met three years ago at a Thanksgiving Day party in Keller, Texas.
Because Duvain was living in Wales at the time they conducted a long-distance romance.
On the 3pm train from Llangollen, which bore a “Wedding Special” nameplate on the engine, they were accompanied by friends and relatives who occupied a specially reserved carriage.
The newlyweds, who later enjoyed a wedding reception at the Royal Hotel, chose Llangollen for their big day as Kristie can trace her roots back to the area.
The bride wasn’t the only visitor from across the Atlantic today.
Earlier, 89 American and Canadian passengers from the cruise ship Prinsendam, which docked at Liverpool, boarded the 1pm train for a trip along the line to Carrog.

llanblogger man's Moors Murders memories


* Ian Brady.
Late update (Saturday):
We are sad to note that Keith Bennett's
mother, Winnie Johnson, died yesterday
following a long illness.  

Llanblogger editor Phil Robinson gives his personal recollections of the Moors Murders – a case which is sensationally back in the headlines today after it was revealed killer Ian Brady may have finally revealed details of where one of his victims, 12-year-old Keith Bennett, is buried.

Any mention of the Moors Murders takes me right back to Manchester in the mid-1960s.
Because that is the place where I was born and spent the early part of my life.
More specifically I came from Gorton – now a fright of urban decay full of social problems almost indistinguishable from other inner suburbs of that sprawling north western metropolis, but back then a tough but reasonably pleasant self-contained and close-knit satellite town on the edge of the city.
Gorton is the place notorious for its association with the Moors Murders when, from 1963-66, local girl Myra Hindley and her Glaswegian boyfriend Ian Brady went on a killing spree comparable in its awfulness with the homicidal crimes of Jack the Ripper around 80 years before.
The evil pair were responsible for the murders of five youngsters who were sexually tortured before being killed and buried on Saddleworth Moor, just a few miles outside Manchester in the foothills of the Pennines.
Pauline Reade, 16, disappeared on July 12, 1963, and John Kilbride, 12, was snatched in November the same year.

Keith Bennett was taken on June 16, 1964, after he left home to visit his grandmother.

Lesley Ann Downey, 10, was lured away from a funfair on Boxing Day 1964, and Edward Evans, 17, was killed in October 1965.

Brady was jailed for life at Chester Assizes in 1966 for the murders of John, Lesley Ann and Edward.

Hindley was convicted of killing Lesley Ann and Edward and shielding Brady after John's murder, and jailed for life.

In 1987 the pair finally admitted killing Keith and Pauline. Both were taken back to Saddleworth Moor to help police find the remains of the missing victims but only Pauline's body was found.

Keith’s body was never found – to the devastation of his mother Winnie Johnson who has fought a 40-year battle to persuade both of her son’s killers to reveal where his body lies.

Greater Manchester Police are now investigating whether Brady has written a letter to be opened on his death revealing the location.

Jackie Powell, 49, who was appointed Brady's mental health advocate in 1999, was detained in south Wales on suspicion of preventing the burial of a body without lawful exercise.

But detectives examining documents seized from Ms Powell's home have so far found no evidence to suggest Brady disclosed the location of Keith's body. And Ms Powell has since been released on bail pending further inquiries.

Unlike the Ripper killings, there was never any reign of terror when it came to the Moors Murders during which people waited in fear for the next victim to be claimed.

Back then we knew absolutely nothing of the heinous crimes until after the killers were caught, immediately following the slaying of Edward Evans at a council house in Hattersley to which the couple had moved following the demolition of their slum home in Gorton.
But that didn’t stop the rumour mill turning at full speed as soon as the arrests were made – hardly any of the wild stories being true it later transpired as the full and ghastly tale unfolded at the trial.
Fact was much stranger and horrific than fiction.
I remember it all so clearly because at time my family and I lived only a few terraced streets away from where the murderous couple were based and I was well within the age range from which they were selecting their victims – that selection taking place within a small radius of the area where I played and went to school.
My mother worked with the mother of Pauline Reade and shared her sorrow when her daughter first went missing.
When I look back there is a definite “there but for the grace of God ….” feeling about it all.
When I started work as a reporter on the local paper the murderers had been behind bars for just a couple of years and the subject was still a hot topic of conversation around the office.
A tale often told by my colleagues concerned the local unpaid freelance who was first to dash in and tell the news editor that a string of child murders had taken place and were being linked to a local couple.
Notorious for his flights of fancy, he wasn’t believed and was only proven right when the regional and national press broke the story soon afterwards.
I was reacquainted with the case when a paper for which I later worked for asked me in 1987 to cover the return of Myra Hindley to lonely Saddleworth Moor to give guidance to the police on where some of the bodies had been buried.
She came in by helicopter and it was quite a scrum trying to get anywhere near what was happening, I recall.
Who knows whether there is any foundation to the latest twist in this long-running and dreadfully sad saga.
But I hope there is if only for the sake of Winnie Johnson.    

* There is another Llangollen link with the Moors Murders.
At the trial at Chester in 1966, Brady was represented by Emlyn Hooson QC, later to come Lord Hooson.
Between 1987 and 1993, he was the President of the Llangollen International Eisteddfod.



 

Ambulance service under pressure from 999 time-wasters

The Welsh Ambulance Service and Emergency Departments (ED) across Wales are coming under sustained and unusual pressure this summer due to inappropriate 999 calls, Wales’ Acting Chief Medical Officer and the Medical Director of NHS Wales, Dr Chris Jones, has warned.
A combination of increased 999 call volumes and a rise in attendances at Emergency Departments has caused increased pressure over the past few weeks.
The NHS in Wales has released details of a number of inappropriate calls made to the 999 ambulance service in recent months.
They include:
  • A Woman who dialled 999 after being bitten on the finger by a hamster;
  • Two separate 999 calls recently for males with hangovers following a night out;
  • Afternoon calls where patients have injured themselves the night before but didn't feel it at the time as they were under the influence of alcohol. As the alcohol has worn off they found themselves in pain so dialled 999;
  • A woman phoned 999 saying she had a bad hand wound and was bleeding badly. A 999 ambulance crew arrived to find she'd had a minor scratch on the hand by her cat and was worried it might get infected;
  • A man had been to the GP in the morning and had been given ointment to rub on his back. He later phoned 999 and said he had a back problem. A crew turned up and he answered the door. Crew asked 'we thought you had a back problem?', to which the man replied 'I have. I haven't got anyone to rub this ointment on my back!'
  • A crew responded to a member of the public who said he was ill with stomach pains at pub in the centre of Cardiff. The crew conveyed him to UHW only for him to jump out at A&E and say 'thanks for the lift mate' and he ran off never to be seen again!
Dr Chris Jones explained that not everyone attending emergency departments or calling 999 are emergencies.
He said:
“ We are seeing a growing number of inappropriate emergency calls to the Ambulance service. A 999 call should only be made in the event of a serious medical emergency, such as when life is in immediate danger. All emergency health services are very busy and patients should only attend Emergency Departments (A&E) if they are very badly hurt or if they become very seriously ill.
“Patients have a role to play in helping ease this current pressure on emergency services by Choosing Well. This ensures patients will get the best treatment, and allows busy emergency NHS services to help the people who need them most.
"I'd urge people who need NHS care and are unaware of which service to access to consider using other services, such as NHS Direct Wales, by downloading the new, free Choose Well app for the iPhone, contacting GP out-of-hours services or visiting local pharmacies to self care at home."

Group seeks answers over Llan health shake-up


* Mike Edwards

llanblogger exclusive


Community group Keep Llangollen Special have called for a meeting with local health chiefs to seek answers to a number of vital questions surrounding the proposed closure of the Cottage Hospital and its replacement with a new health centre.

Group chair Mike Edwards has issued the following statement, which llanblogger bring you here, unedited:     

As Chair of Keep Llangollen Special a constructive Community Group I would like to
comment on recent speculative comments about the proposals recently published by Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board in relation to rationalisation of their services across the whole of their area.

Firstly this document takes quite a bit of absorbing because it extends to 139 pages
covering the Authority wide revised service delivery proposals and only outlines in specific sections how those revisions affect Llangollen.

Therefore before taking a definitive view on these proposals the Group consider they need further information and we have requested a meeting with representatives from BCUHB to find out what exactly is proposed and the timing of these proposals.

We also propose to meet with relevant local stakeholders to confirm that they have been properly consulted and what their views are on the proposals.

We are also speaking with our democratically elected representatives particularly Ken Skates AM, Councillors Rhys Hughes, Stuart Davies and Phil Thane, the latter being a member of Keep Llangollen Special.

I wish to make it clear that Mr. Skates has been helpful in seeking information and clarification from Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board which has enabled us to discover:

1. The Llangollen Community Hospital is likely to close early in 2013 and the Health
Board propose to sell the property;

2. Their Home Enhanced Care Scheme is already apparently progressing well and
BCUHB envisage all health services will ultimately delivered from a new Primary Care Centre;

3. However the Health Board have to submit a full business case to Welsh Government to acquire the former Woodlands Hotel now referred to as Riverside Lodge where they propose to build the Primary Care Centre.

They will also need to obtain planning consent for the development;

4. This means that the Health Board envisage the new health centre would not be open until late 2014/early 2015;

5. The local GP practice would apparently prefer a hospital with beds, but the Health
Board have not been specific that the new centre would include such facilities and refer to in-patient care being provided in Chirk and/or in nursing homes (no locations defined):

The big concern with these proposals is that the Llangollen Community Hospital is likely to close very soon, but the replacement Primary Care Centre will not open until 2015 without allowing for delays in BCUHB's scheme.

It is also of great concern that the Health Board­ seem not to wish to include in-patient facilities which will lead to Llangollen residents (patients and relatives) having to travel out of town to Chirk, Wrexham or wherever.

There is also a fear that services will be lost in the two year period between
closure of the existing hospital and opening of the new Health Centre.

The current Health Centre in Regent Street is conveniently located in the centre of town enabling able bodied patients to walk to see their GP, be it from the A5 or Abbey Road side of town.

Location of a centre at the Riverside Lodge will fail Welsh Governments Planning
Policies in relation to sustainability because it will increase vehicle journeys being located on the edge of the built up area on a busy main road with either narrow or no pavements making it extremely difficult for patients to visit.

If the Health Boards Scheme goes ahead we need assurances that capital receipts from the sale of the hospital and Oakleigh will be re-invested in Llangollen and that these sites will be developed for users which are acceptably to the Community. There will also be a question as to what happens to the existing health centre after the GP Practice moves out and that there are no knock on loss of facilities out of the town centre such as Pharmacy, Dentistry which the Health Board mention may be relocated to the new "Out-of-Town” Primary Care Centre.

These proposals could further endanger the vitality and viability of the existing town centre.

There are many questions to be answered and it is hoped that a forthcoming public
consultation by the Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board will provide Llangollen
residents with acceptable answers. Keep Llangollen Special will keep residents informed as further information is provided and our questions are answered. 

Mike Edwards
Chair Keep Llangollen Special

The full BCUHB report can be seen at: http://www.wales.nhs.uk/sitesplus/861/opendoc/194480
Llangollen Cottage Hospital is referred to on pages 41 and 42.

Thursday, August 16, 2012

BBC broadcasts live from Ysgol Dinas Bran


BBC
BBC Breakfast News was broadcasting live from Ysgol Dinas Bran in Llan this morning as the A Level results were announced.
The reporter stopped one young man as he came into shot and asked him if he was prepared to open his results envelope live on air.
The student, named Chris, seemed a little stunned but agreed to it.
When he tore open the envelope he seemed pleased with what he had achieved and declared they were “good”.
Headteacher Alison Duffy was then interviewed and described the school’s’ results as “absolutely wonderful”.
She said exam boards had this year made this year’s A Level papers harder but that Dinas Bran students had risen to the challenge and done a “fantastic” job.
She added that she and fellow staff members had been talking to parents about the results and looking at different options for what students could do with them.
Student Chris said that with his good set of results he might head for a place at Aberystwyth University.