North Wales Police have this afternoon issued a statement about a fatal incident not too far away from Llangollen.
It reads: "At 12.10pm on Saturday, November 30, police were alerted by the Ambulance Service that a cyclist is believed to have come off his bike on Lon Cae Glas, a country lane in Llanbedr Dyffryn Clwyd, Ruthin.
"The Ambulance, Air Ambulance and police attended the location and the man, who is believed to be from the Stockport area, was pronounced dead at the scene.
"Inquiries are currently continuing to establish the full circumstances of the incident.
"Anyone with information is urged to contact North Wales Police on 101 quoting ref no P195897."
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Sunday, December 1, 2013
County's quest for extra parking spaces in Llan
County council officers are looking at a plan to create
extra spaces for vehicles by removing some of the recycling bins from the
Market Street car park.
More details on how register, he said, can be found on the Cymdeithas website at: http://www.taiclwyd.com/find-a-home/take-the-first-steps-to-affordable-home-ownership/
The idea was revealed to members of Llangollen Town Council
by local county councillor Stuart Davies at their monthly meeting on Tuesday
evening.
Cllr Davies regularly attends town council meetings to give
updates on matters of relevance going on at county level.
Looking at the issue of local parking, which is controlled
by the county council, he said the aim was to double the present number of
spaces available in the town from 400 to 800 in the next two years.
County officers, he explained, were investigating a number
of ways of achieving this, including creating more spaces at Market Street.
“Our officers have been looking at the situation with the
recycling bins there and at times some of these are either empty or only a
quarter full,” he told members.
“If we took away, say, half of the bins it would mean we
could free up more car parking spaces.
“It we can free up 10 spaces that means the extra revenue
would amount to about £6,000 based on each space bringing in from £450 to £600
a year.
“We could then possibly get matched funding from the Welsh
Government to do things with locally.”
The Mayor, Cllr Bob Lube, said that although around 75 extra
parking spaces would be created at the planned new health centre, he feared
that because the Welsh NHS was not allowed to charge for parking these would be
“pinched” by people who were not patients or staff.
Cllr Davies replied that county council officers were
looking into this situation with a view to finding a solution.
* Cllr Davies also gave a short summary of the county
council’s current financial situation.
He explained that Denbighshire was looking to make a cut of
just over eight per cent in its budget, which had been brought about by the
county not having as large a population as had been thought, and was
consequently losing about £2 million of government support.
Cllr Davies also revealed how it had been suggested that
because of the financial situation community councils such as Llangollen Town
Council might be asked to take on responsibility for providing more services
than at present.
He said: “Llangollen Town Council pays for things like CCTV,
Christmas lights and flowers out of its precept (part of the council tax
apportioned to community councils) but there are some towns elsewhere in the
county that don’t do that, so we might be asking community councils to take on
more services in the future.”
Asked by Cllr Tony Baker about the provision of low-cost
housing in Llangollen, Cllr Davies said county officers were currently looking
at potential sites where these might be built.
He added that among the sites being investigated “in and
around town” was one with garages on it.
He also spoke of his concerns that not enough people were
putting down their names on the affordable housing register, which is
administered by the Cymdeithas Tai Clwyd organisation in Denbighshire,
Flintshire and Wrexham. More details on how register, he said, can be found on the Cymdeithas website at: http://www.taiclwyd.com/find-a-home/take-the-first-steps-to-affordable-home-ownership/
Saturday, November 30, 2013
Christmas Festival brings out the crowds
Hundreds of people thronged the town centre today for the annual Christmas Festival.
llanblogger brings you the following pictures kindly supplied by Linda and Phil Thane.
llanblogger brings you the following pictures kindly supplied by Linda and Phil Thane.
Return to Forbidden Planet is rocket-powered hit
A rockin’ spaceship crew gave a toe-tapping audience a
tuneful trip from Llangollen to another galaxy last night.
… I think.
The newly-formed Llangollen Musical Theatre Group is
currently staging its version of jukebox musical Return to the Forbidden Planet at the International Pavilion.
And the Friday night performance was a pretty rocket-propelled
affair.
The plot of the piece is about as thin as the atmosphere on
Mars and hinges on the spacecraft SS Albatross being unexpectedly marooned by a
storm of asteroids on the planet Dillyria.
There the crew meets up with mad scientist Doctor Prospero
and his pretty young daughter Miranda for whose affections there is intense competition
between the Albatross’s upstanding skipper, Captain Tempest, and resident chef,
Cookie.… I think.
Still, the plot hardly matters as the funky spaceship is
just a vehicle for presenting a whole solar system of amazing tunes.
There are over 30 of them, ranging from the deeply soulful It’s a Man’s World to the poppy Teenager in Love and from the plaintive Go Now to the iconic rocker Great Balls of Fire.
Every one of them was a stonking hit and you could see the
10-strong cast were having as much fun belting them out as the audience was in
hearing them.
Of course, they couldn’t have managed it without the
services of an excellent nine-strong band equipped with everything from
keyboards to saxophones.
Every one of the cast put their heart and soul into their
parts and the profusion of musical numbers.
Justine Bradley made a sassy Gloria, the spaceship’s science
officer, while Nico Decourt was a loveable robot named Ariel.
Cookie the cook was powerfully portrayed Stuart Dillon and
wasn’t fazed at all when his electric guitar failed to fire up at one point in
the action.
He simply busked it by singing the rest of the segment and
there was nice touch right at the end of the show when he was allowed to do it
all again, this time with a fully serviceable instrument.
Geth Foulkes made a splendid Captain Tempest who sucks on a
pipe – luckily minus tobacco - throughout the production to help create the
right commanding presence.
Lucas Howson played Bosun Arras to perfection and one of the
most powerful voices in the show came from consummate rocker Bill Hughes.
Jo Potts made a great Miranda who goes from plain little
girl to high-heeled vamp in an Act Two costume and character transformation.
Linking the action and providing some powerful musical
back-up were Jillian Handley and Leonie Kirby as the Damage Control Crew
members and Tracey Rawlinson as the Navigation Officer.
Return to the
Forbidden Planet was a credit to director Paul Brown, musical director
Nigel James and producer Katherine Brown.
Sets – especially the electronic bits – were brilliantly
masterminded by a team headed by Josie Ashcroft, who also had a creative hand in
the eye-catching costumes.
The show’s on again tonight (Saturday, November 30) and I
understand there may be a few tickets left.
Friday, November 29, 2013
Chain Bridge tenders go out for early 2014 start
* Tenders have now gone out for restoration work on the Chain Bridge.
Llangollen councillors have been introduced to the two new officers who will help drive forward the project to revive the Chain Bridge.
This summer it was announced that the long-awaited £465,000
restoration of the famous bridge, which has been closed for safety reasons for
the past 30 years or so, could go ahead after the final slice of necessary cash
came in the form of a £350,000 boost from the Heritage Lottery.
At the Town Council meeting on Tuesday, councillors met Sam
Jones, who will be project co-ordinator, and Laura Black, who will be heritage
officer.
Both said they were now working to spread the word of the
project to local voluntary groups and businesses and, hopefully, to get as many
people involved as possible.
They added that the project now had its Facebook and Twitter accounts.
Town clerk Gareth Thomas told members that tenders for the
work had recently gone out to six likely contractors and bids were due to be
received just before Christmas.
He said it was hoped that the contract would be let in
January, with work on the bridge possibly starting the following month and
being finished in May or June next year.
There will then be an official re-opening event later in the
year.
Mr Thomas added: “Hopefully, we will get a favourable tender
and be able to get the right team to work on this important project.”
He explained that an issue had been identified with the
water supply to the nearby Chainbridge Hotel being carried over the River Dee
on the bridge but said talks would be held with its owner Seamus O’Keeffe to
ensure the supply is maintained.
Thursday, November 28, 2013
Fears over future of Plas Madoc leisure centre
The Leader is reporting today on fears that Plas Madoc leisure centre, which is used by people from Llangollen, may be earmarked for closure due to cuts at Wrexham Council.
See the full story at: http://www.leaderlive.co.uk/news/128678/fears-plas-madoc-leisure-centre-may-have-to-close.aspx
See the full story at: http://www.leaderlive.co.uk/news/128678/fears-plas-madoc-leisure-centre-may-have-to-close.aspx
Skates backs community hub plan
A plan to use the building in Bridge Street as a
community hub if the HSBC bank moves out next year has won the backing of Clwyd
South Assembly Member Ken Skates.
And he says he will put the idea to bank chiefs when he meets them next week to discuss their proposal to axe the branch next February.
The community hub scheme is the brainchild of local man Mike Edwards who was a member of the team which led the successful bid for Llangollen to win Cittaslow – slow town – status earlier this year.
Mr Edwards says if HSBC is determined to press ahead with the closure against the wishes of local campaigners, the bank building could be acquired on behalf of the people of Llangollen as a community facility housing small businesses, meeting rooms and a café.
Asked by llanblogger for his views on the idea, Mr Skates said: "I'm very pleased Mike is putting together a business case for using the building as a community facility and I will be putting this suggestion direct to HSBC when I meet bank officials next week on December 5.
Explaining his idea, Mr Edwards said: “If the branch does close, the Welsh Government should demand that HSBC provides the building to the community on a medium term lease at a peppercorn rent.
“Cittaslow Llangollen could then investigate the condition of the property and put together a business plan to convert the building into a business and community support hub.
“This might have, say, a cafe on the ground floor with business space and serviced meeting rooms on the upper floors which could be let out to generate additional income.
“That way it's a project which would be self-funding in the long term because it would be generating income not merely soaking up money.
“There may also be space for a residential unit to be used be a caretaker-type individual who would be responsible for providing day to day support for the hub users.
“Some of the accommodation could be available for the use of local clubs and organisations to meet etc.”
Mr Edwards sees the Llangollen community hub being modelled on a similar scheme now successfully at Glyn in Chirk and housed in the former estate office overlooking Chirk Aqueduct.
And he says he will put the idea to bank chiefs when he meets them next week to discuss their proposal to axe the branch next February.
The community hub scheme is the brainchild of local man Mike Edwards who was a member of the team which led the successful bid for Llangollen to win Cittaslow – slow town – status earlier this year.
Mr Edwards says if HSBC is determined to press ahead with the closure against the wishes of local campaigners, the bank building could be acquired on behalf of the people of Llangollen as a community facility housing small businesses, meeting rooms and a café.
Asked by llanblogger for his views on the idea, Mr Skates said: "I'm very pleased Mike is putting together a business case for using the building as a community facility and I will be putting this suggestion direct to HSBC when I meet bank officials next week on December 5.
"If they don't reverse their
decision it is vital that Llangollen is not left with a vacant building or
something that fails to add value to the town's economy and community
well-being."
Explaining his idea, Mr Edwards said: “If the branch does close, the Welsh Government should demand that HSBC provides the building to the community on a medium term lease at a peppercorn rent.
“Cittaslow Llangollen could then investigate the condition of the property and put together a business plan to convert the building into a business and community support hub.
“This might have, say, a cafe on the ground floor with business space and serviced meeting rooms on the upper floors which could be let out to generate additional income.
“That way it's a project which would be self-funding in the long term because it would be generating income not merely soaking up money.
“There may also be space for a residential unit to be used be a caretaker-type individual who would be responsible for providing day to day support for the hub users.
“Some of the accommodation could be available for the use of local clubs and organisations to meet etc.”
Mr Edwards sees the Llangollen community hub being modelled on a similar scheme now successfully at Glyn in Chirk and housed in the former estate office overlooking Chirk Aqueduct.
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