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Saturday, October 13, 2012

Library survey on the cards

Denbighshire County Council will be soon be carrying out a survey to find out what  its adult users think of the library service.

Visitors over the age of 16 will be asked to complete a simple questionnaire about usage and satisfaction with their local library, including Llangollen.

A council spokesman said: “Their responses will be used to help in developing the service for the future and therefore we hope that users can support us by taking five minutes to complete the survey during the week.”

The survey will be taking place at all Denbighshire's libraries during the week commencing October 22.

Friday, October 12, 2012

Latest local roadworks notified


 
 
Denbighshire County Council has given details of the following roadworks in the area: 

Hill Street, Llangollen, temporary traffic lights from October 23-25 to allow Dee Valley Water to renew a stop tap. 

Berwyn Street, Llangollen,  temporary traffic lights from October 13-17 to allow Dee Valley water to carry out water works.

Hatchery Lane, from the A539 to the junction opposite Trevor Mill House, Trevor,  road closure from October 15-November 23 to allow drainage works by Dee Valley Water.

Community gardeners planning wild weekend


As part of Keep Wales Tidy’s Wild Weekend, Llangollen Community Garden is planning a special activity on Saturday, October 27.
Members will be building enhanced habitat zones using material found on their site to create brash piles.
Brash piles are great for wildlife and will help mark out some of the areas on site.
A group spokesman said: “If you like wildlife, or just want to help, this will be a great weekend to get involved.”

* Members of the Community Garden.
The community garden sits in a easily accessed location close to Plas Newydd.
It has been set up with the aim of providing an opportunity for local people, groups and schools to grow their own food and engage with nature.

It is also hoped that as the practical and positive project develops, links within the community will be strengthened.

Produce from the garden will be shared out amongst those involved, and any surplus donated at the time.

The first few working sessions meant establishing access and beginning clearance, as well as making plans for the future.

Planting will start next year, but currently the area is very overgrown so there is still a large amount of clearing to be done.

Working sessions run every Saturday morning from 10am-noon and are also organised for evenings during the week.

Access to the site is restricted to these working sessions.

The spokesman added: “We would love to hear from anyone who might be interested in getting involved with the garden. Perhaps you would like to help clear the site? Or perhaps you would be interested in helping to design or plant the garden?

To find out more or attend one of the sessions get in touch with the group by e-mail at info@llangollengarden.co.uk, or visit the website at www.llangollengarden.co.uk

Top chef heading for Llangollen festival

 
 
Wales’ top television chef Dudley Newbery (pictured above) will be a man on a mission when he stars at a leading food festival in Llangollen.
 
Dudley will be making an impassioned plea to people to buy and enjoy locally produced food.
 
His good food crusade brings him to Hamper Llangollen 2012 on Saturday and Sunday, October 20 and 21.
 
Also starring at the popular food festival will be two other celebrity chefs, Graham Tinsley, from ITV's Taste the Nation and a former captain of the Welsh Culinary Team, along with the ever popular Dai Chef, who is returning to the event after an absence of several years.
 
This year's festival is being supported by the rural development agency, Cadwyn Clwyd, whose contribution came via the Rural Development Fund for Wales 2007-2013, which is funded by the European Agricultural Fund for Rural Development (EAFRD) and the Welsh Government.
 
According to Dudley, the festival was the ideal showcase for locally produced food.
 
He said: “I want to encourage people to shop locally and to be creative with the ingredients. A lot of people cook the same things every week, whether its rice or pasta. But it doesn’t have to be like that."
 
Dudley’s love of good food goes back a long way.
 
“I was just one of these kids that was hungry all the time so I started cooking for myself,” he confessed.
 
But he didn’t just rustle just any old beans on toast type meal as a youngster.
 
The chef, who will be demonstrating at this year’s Llangollen food festival, was a dab hand at chicken in a sherry sauce at the age of 12.
 
“Sometimes I would cook for my family, but normally I was starving so I’d cook my own supper,” says Dudley who grew up at Ynysybwl, near Pontypridd.
 
He was fortunate, he says to have been taught cookery at school.
 
“That helped a lot as well,” he says. “I don’t know what minister it took to realise that it’s important that children learn to cook because it’s been an obvious thing over the years. It’s an essential life skill.”
 
He takes a swipe at the recent fashion for teaching food technology in schools instead of cookery.
 
“You can learn food technology later on, you need to learn the basics first – hands on. Kids need to know why things work.
 
“I love working in schools. Kids love it, they love to taste things.”
 
When it comes to personal choice of food Dudley likes nothing better than a good old traditional roast.
 
His Last Supper would be“a nice roast rib of beef, potatoes cooked in beef dripping, proper beef gravy and Yorkshire pudding…”
 
“I like to eat exotic food, I like to eat food that’s been well prepared with a lot of skill. But that’s a special occasion.
 
“At the end of the day everybody likes to eat good tasty home-cooked food. The influence is changing in restaurants now. They’re getting their acts together and serving food that people don’t cook at home any more.
 
“It’s unbelievable, really. Years ago everybody knew what a shepherds’ pie was because they had it once a week made with leftovers from the Sunday roast. But now they have no idea."
 
Robert Price, Cadwyn Clwyd's agri-food project officer, is thrilled that Dudley will be sharing his knowledge and enthusiasm at this year’s festival.
 
He said: “I’m a big fan of Dudley because not only is he an exceptionally gifted chef he is an eloquent champion of fine food.
 
“Thanks to a whole host of indigenous companies, North East Wales is rapidly establishing a reputation as a centre of excellence for high quality cuisine.
 
“The food festival is a perfect shop window for the companies who form the backbone of our rural economy.
 
"The location of the Pavilion is absolutely spectacular - I can't imagine that any other food festival in the UK has a more beautiful setting."
 
For more information about Hamper Llangollen 2012 visit www.llangollenfoodfestival.com

Thursday, October 11, 2012

ITV documentary filmed in town is screened


* Scenes for the documentary are shot outside the Cottage Hospital.
ITV Wales political editor Adrian Masters, right, interviews campaigner
Martin Crumpton. 

Llangollen featured in a TV documentary on the theme “who runs Wales” earlier this week.
The half-hour Wales This Week programme on ITV on Tuesday evening focused on exactly who holds the reins of power to control the country.
The show’s presenter, ITV Wales political editor Adrian Masters, suggested that many people were unsure of the answer.
That included Martin Crumpton of Berwyn, who is well known for campaigning against the plan by Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board to close Llangollen Cottage Hospital and eventually replace it with a new health centre, possibly on the site of the former River Lodge.
Asked by the TV man how he found out who was behind the plan, he said it helped that he had developed a good rapport with the press.
“They can give you a huge amount of information and contacts, “ Mr Crumpton said.
He added that in the fight against the closure plan, “the only weapon we’ve got is strength of public opinion” and that this was “the only thing that influences politicians.”
He went on: “They don’t like it when you shine a light on them.”
Asked directly who he thought does run Wales, he replied: “A conglomerate, no one person – not even Carwyn Jones.”
After taking evidence from various campaign groups in other parts of Wales, Masters concluded that, despite the Welsh Government, the source of all power, not just in Wales but across the UK, was still the Chancellor of the Exchequer who holds the purse strings of government.
The group set up to fight the hospital closure proposal, Keep Llangollen Health Services, has a public meeting at The Hand Hotel next Monday (October 15) starting at 7pm.
This will feature speakers, the organisation of letter writing and a discussion on the next steps in the campaign.

Llan worker recalls horror of Hillsborough


* “Kelly” Davies still sees the image of a young boy dying right next to
 him on the Hillsborough terraces.
 
* The 96 people who died are never forgotten.
llanblogger special report 

POSSIBLY the most iconic picture of the Hillsborough disaster shows an prone figure being carried away from the killing zone of the terraces by a group of Liverpool fans using a torn-down advertising hoarding as a makeshift stretcher.
That man is John Kelvin Davies - known to everyone simply as “Kelly” – who has worked at Dobson & Crowther in Llangollen for the past 40 years.
But although that dramatic scene which has been shown across the world so many times perfectly sums up the sheer horror of that day in April 1989, it is not the image that has lived with him across almost a quarter of a century.
Instead, the picture which still comes back to haunt Kelly in his nightmares is that of  the young lad he saw die right next to him as he himself fought for breath in the appalling human crush of the Leppings Lane terraces that sunny spring afternoon.
The afternoon that saw the deaths of 96 match-goers who had turned up to watch the FA Cup semi-final between Liverpool and Nottingham Forest.
And recent news that West Yorkshire chief constable Sir Norman Bettison, one of the senior police officers closely associated with Hillsborough and its aftermath, had announced his retirement brought the memories tumbling uncomfortably back for Kelly, now a thoughtful 56 year old still dedicated to the cause of securing final justice for the ones who  never made it home from the Sheffield Wednesday ground.
Although Kelly, who lives in Rhosymedre and is a machine operator at the envelope factory, rarely now speaks of his traumatic experience, he agreed to relive his own close brush with death so that people will perhaps have a better understanding of what happened.
As a lifelong home and away Liverpool fan, Kelly, then 33 and married with a four-year-old son, just had to be at the match that day.
As usual when going to his beloved team’s away games, he had arranged to travel with a group of nine fellow Liverpool devotees from Oswestry – the same lads he still goes to matches with to this day.
They headed across the Pennines in a minibus and arrived in Sheffield at about 11.30am, a little early because they had arranged to meet some fellow Liverpool fans from Newcastle in one of the city’s pubs for a quick drink before kick-off at 3pm.
But the Oswestry crowd soon discovered this wasn’t going to be possible because the local police had requested all the pubs near to the ground to close in a bid to prevent any pre-match trouble.
According to Kelly, this helps illustrate how far from the truth were later claims that the Liverpool fans were drunk before they got into the ground and therefore themselves brought about what happened to them.
He said: “We’d had a couple of cans on the bus coming over but that’s all. There was no way we were drunk and the same goes for all the Liverpool fans I saw before the match.”
Kelly recalled how, unable to get into any pub, he and his mates headed into the ground at about 2pm.
“Of course, there were hundreds going in but, at that stage, no crush,” he said.

“As season ticket holders the lads from Oswestry and I got our tickets for the semi-final well before the match.
“I wasn’t supposed to be in the Leppings Lane end at all because I had a ticket for the stand but one of the lads said on the bus coming over he had been to Hillsborough before and was fed up of going in Leppings Lane and asked if anyone wanted to swap with him.
“I said I didn’t mind and we swapped tickets – but for that I wouldn’t have been in that end at all.
“Myself and a close friend of mine from Oswestry, John Bailey, went through the turnstiles and all we could see in front was a big tunnel into the ground.
“We walked along it and turned right into Pen 2 – the one where most of the deaths occurred.
“We took our places on the terraces and then, at about 2.30pm, people really started to pour in and it began to get a bit scary – but not too scary because most of us we were used to being packed in at matches.
“But as more and more came in it did get scary.
“I remember the point when it really came home to me that something was badly wrong was when I couldn’t get my hand down into my pocket for a fag because of all the bodies pressing in on me.”
For Kelly and thousands of others in the jam-packed pen the living nightmare of Hillsborough was now beginning.
He went on: “By then people were screaming and everything.
“We looked over and saw the pen next to ours was virtually empty and some people began to shout out to the police or ground stewards to let us into that one, but we were totally ignored.
“Things then got worse. One minute I was standing with my mate John three quarters of the way up the terraces and the next thing I knew I was on my own and being pushed right up against the fence at the bottom.
“I was stuck there for what seemed like an eternity with the pressure building up on me all the time.
“Most of us couldn’t climb over the fence onto the pitch because it was sort of angled back towards us at the top which meant we couldn’t get over it.
“Thankfully, someone must have seen what was happening and decided to open a small gate leading onto the pitch.
“I’m told by someone who saw it that it was like the cork coming out of a champagne bottle as people just burst out onto the pitch.
“John must have got out that way but I wasn’t close enough to the gate to get through – I was still pinned up against the fence.
“The ones lucky enough to get out were walking over dead bodies at that stage.
“At this point I fell over and what seemed like thousands of people fell on top of me.”
It was then Kelly saw the sight which has lived with him for over two decades.
He recalled: “Down on the ground I remember there was a young lad lying next to me – he was crying and calling for his mum.
“Strangely, although I can still clearly see his face, whenever I have looked at pictures of the 96 people who died I have never been able to recognise him as one of them.
“He died right next to me. I know he died because I saw his lips turn blue.”
Fate then took a hand as Kelly’s mate John, who had been frantically searching for him, found him on the body-strewn terrace.
Kelly was by now too dazed to clearly remember any of what happened next but it was then that a group of Liverpool fans arrived with the advertising hoarding ripped from the side of the pitch.
They placed Kelly on it and carried him out of the hell of the pen to a safe area.
A fireman gave him oxygen and a young female doctor inserted a drip into his arm, which John held aloft to allow the fluid to seep into him.
When Kelly eventually came around he found himself lying in the club gym next to a number of other casualties – some of them dead.
Police officers then helped John to get his mate into an ambulance which took him to the Northern General Hospital where he began receiving treatment for three broken ribs, a punctured lung, a ruptured ligament in his shoulder and extensive bruising.
After 24 hours he felt strong enough to discharge himself and was driven all the way home from Sheffield by a volunteer driver whose name he never knew.
Back in Rhosymedre his wife Barbara and the rest of his family had been desperately worried about him.
Kelly remembers: “She worked in what was then the Kwiksave store in Cefn Mawr and one of the managers, who had heard it on the radio and knew I was there, told her what was happening at Hillsborough.
“In those days nobody like us had a mobile phone so she just had to wait for news.
“It wasn’t until later that night that a priest who had come into the hospital got word to her that I was alive.
“When the Sunday paper came out the next morning it had that picture of someone being taken away on an advertising hoarding.
“My brother-in-law recognised it as me but deliberately kept it away from Barbara because he didn’t want to worry her.
“He then threw the paper away, so I’ve been trying to get a copy of that picture ever since but never managed it.” 
Over in Sheffield that Sunday morning Kelly and fellow survivors had some VIP visitors.
Prince Charles came round the ward followed by then-Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and Home Secretary Douglas Hurd.
Mrs Thatcher didn’t get a very warm reception from some of the injured fans, Kelly recalled.
It was other reports in the press that enraged Kelly and the rest of the survivors.
He said: “I know there were stories in the Sun about Liverpool fans robbing the dead but that’s a load of rubbish.
“I saw nothing like that and everyone I dealt with or dealt with me that day, from other fans to the people of Sheffield, were absolute stars.”
This was contrary to his experience a couple of weeks after the disaster when two officers from West Midlands Police visited his home to take a statement from him about his recollections of the day.
Kelly said: “They didn’t even ask me how I was. All they were interested in was how much I had drunk before the match and if I was drunk.
“In now comes out through the Hillsborough Independent Panel that some of these statements were changed by the police. I was also told by my solicitor some time ago that mine might have been one of the ones changed but I can’t be sure of this.
“Although I got some compensation for what happened to me that day it was not about money and I have never been called to any sort of inquiry or inquest to give my version of things. That is why I am speaking about it now.
“I was off work for six months after it happened and was seeing a psychiatrist for two and a half years because I couldn’t sleep. I was on pain-killers and couldn’t go out.
“I was crying all the time and kept seeing the face of that young lad who died beside me.
“I have been a supporter of the Hillsborough justice campaign since the very first day, still wear a yellow wristband which just says ‘96’ on it and I always have a Hillsborough badge on my coat.”
Kelly went on: “Those of us who were there and survived always knew, like the independent panel reported, that a lot of it was down to bad policing.
“Hundreds of Liverpool fans flooded into the ground when what was usually an exit gate was opened by the police.
“I definitely want to see the inquest into the disaster re-opened. This time there should be a verdict of corporate manslaughter rather than accidental death.
“It was also said at the original inquest that all those who were going to die were dead by 3.15pm but I know that is not true.
“Like many others, I believe there was a cover-up about what exactly happened that day and it is about time after 23 years the record was put right.
“ I know how lucky I was that day and I suppose I have felt guilt ever since about the fact I survived when so many didn’t.” 

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Evidence heard on River Lodge saga


Mike Edwards, chair of Keep Llangollen Special (pictured right), sat in as an impartial observer at Monday’s meeting of the Welsh Assembly’s public accounts committee held at Llangollen Pavilion.
The committee heard evidence from some of those involved about the acquisition and subsequent attempts to dispose of the former River Lodge in Llangollen.   
Mike has written this report for llanblogger:
 
I attended the committee meeting in Llangollen on Monday afternoon which was extremely well attended my members of the public and additional chairs had to be put out to accommodate all interested parties. 

The first witness was Mr Pol Wong, who is chair and chief executive of Powys Fadog the not for profit community organisation who had intended to use the River Lodge (former Woodlands Hotel) as a local facility to run martial arts and other courses which Mr Wong  said were beneficial to peoples's health and welfare. 

Mr Wong outlined to the committee a lengthy saga of his organisation endeavouring to lease the property and stated that initially the organisation had received a great deal of support from the Welsh Government and had reached an advanced stage of agreeing terms and conditions for Powys Fadog to acquire the a lease of the premises. 

He also mentioned that there had been negotiations with Clwyd Alyn Housing Association for them to develop part of the site for social housing.

Mr Wong said he was initially very happy with discussions and assistance he had received from officials from Welsh Government, but became frustrated at the length of time each step in the process had taken. 

Powys Fadog had drawn up a business lan for the project and costed the planned refurbishment works to the property, but these costs kept increasing as the delay on finalising the acquisition of the building by Welsh Government and agreeing the lease dragged on. 

Suddenly the Welsh Government withdrew from the project, but did not formally advise him why and then failed to communicate with Powys Fadog. 

He said he was not advised of apparent legal problems which had arisen and he had actually been living in part of the premises as a caretaker to prevent vandalism, but was then locked out and made homeless. 

Mr Wong was also questioned about the appointment of Amanda Brewer, a Welsh Government official, as a director and company secretary to Powys Fadog.  

He said that he had been advised that Amanda was authorised to take up this role and that she was very experienced in dealing with community projects and able to bring skills to the organisation which they did not have. 

The next witness was Amanda Brewer, who was a chartered surveyor with the Welsh Government (WG) and originally with the Welsh Development Agency (WDA) which was absorbed into the Welsh Government.  

She outlined to the committee the history of the project as far as her involvement was concerned, which included initial discussions with Powys Fadog and the acquisition of the property by Welsh Government from a third party.  

She pointed out that there had been some confusion when the WDA was absorbed into Welsh Government Departmental structure and felt that staff were not briefed fully about changes in policies and procedures adopted by WG.  

She also said that the acquisition of the property took place at a time when the property market was buoyant and that the purchase was completed to enable the department to spend that year's financial allocation and that, although an informal valuation was obtained from the District Valuer, a formal report was not received until after the acquisition was completed.  

She said that it was quite common for the Land Division to undertake entrepreneurial acquisitions which had a risk factor attached to them. 

Amanda Brewer then gave evidence in relation to a possible conflict of interest that she had by joining the board of Powys Fadog and stated that this had been authorised by her line-manager and his superior.  

She also said that it was common for Welsh Government staff to be encouraged to donate their skills and experience to community organisations and that following her appointment as a director and company secretary of Powys Fadog she had withdrawn from negotiating the terms of the transaction, which were passed over to a colleague.  

She then limited her role to that of project manager, but did admit that she had sent e-mails on behalf of Powys Fadog to other Welsh Government Departments using her Welsh Government e-mail address.  

She said that it was department policy to allow staff to use their work e-mail address for a "handful" of private non-Welsh Government correspondence.  

Amanda was asked by one of the committee members if she felt that she had been made a scapegoat and she agreed with this and said that she could go further by saying that taking action against her was the only way the project with Powys Fadog could be cancelled by Welsh Government.  

She had been subjected to disciplinary action which had resulted with her been dismissed from her post. 

The final witness of the day was Mr Gareth Hall, former director of economy and transport at Welsh Government who was head of the department in which Amanda Brewer was employed.

Mr Hall denied that staff had not been properly briefed about changes in policy and procedures when the WDA was absorbed into Welsh Government.  

He also claimed that he had been advised categorically by senior members of his staff that Amanda Brewer did not have a "conflict of interest" and said since he managed such large department he accepted the assurances he had been given.  

He said that later when he became aware of issues with this transaction it became clear to him that Amanda Brewer did have a conflict of interest and he initiated disciplinary procedure which resulted in her being dismissed.

Mike Edwards