When voters go to the polls this Thursday (May 22) they will be asked to cast a vote to elect four Members of the European Parliament to represent the whole of Wales.
Voters will only have one vote to cast and there will be 11 registered parties listed on the ballot paper.
The candidates will be elected by proportional representation so voters will not vote for individual candidates.
Voters are reminded to take their poll card with them to their designated polling station (which is printed on the card) and hand it to the Presiding Officer or one of the Poll Clerks on duty.
Even if a voter has mislaid the poll card, he or she will still be entitled to vote providing they are registered.
A voting mark should be in the form of a cross placed in the box adjacent to the party they wish to vote for. Voters should then place the marked paper in the ballot box.
Polling stations will be open from 7 am until 10 pm.
Each of the 22 local authority areas in Wales will conduct their own counts on Sunday, 25th May. This is because voting in parts of mainland Europe takes place on that day.
When they have completed their counts, Local Returning Officers will inform the Regional Returning Officer for Wales, Bryn Parry-Jones, of the result of the count in their area.
The result for the Wales electoral region will then be declared by Mr Parry-Jones on Sunday evening at Fishguard Leisure Centre.
Local results cannot be announced before 10 pm as this is the time that polls close in some parts of Europe.
* For more information, go to the website: www.aboutmyvote.co.uk and also www.denbighshire.gov.uk or you can join the debate on Twitter using hash tag #EPE14.
Latest events and comments from the town of Llangollen in Denbighshire, North Wales, UK. EMAIL: llanblogger@gmail.com
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Tuesday, May 20, 2014
Monday, May 19, 2014
Appeal after sexual assault
Police are investigating a sexual assault which occurred overnight between 10pm on Friday, May 16 and 2am Saturday, May 17, in the Rhosllanerchrugog area near Wrexham.
The victim, a woman in her 20’s, accepted a lift from a passing vehicle on Market Street in Rhos which had two male occupants. It is believed that the victim was then assaulted.
Officers are keen to speak to anyone who saw a vehicle in suspicious circumstances either in Rhos, on rural roads or at secluded locations between Rhos and Bangor on Dee during this time.
Detective Inspector Jon Jones said: “We are appealing to anyone with information regarding the incident to contact us. We are especially keen to speak to anyone who may have seen a vehicle acting suspiciously in the Rhos area, a woman getting into a vehicle in Rhos or anyone who saw a vehicle parked in an unusual location for that time of night in the rural area around the B5426 Bangor Road between Rhos and Bangor on Dee.”
DI Jones added: “Equally, I would ask anyone who has any information that could assist us with the investigation to contact us on 101 quoting reference number R072918 or anonymously via Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.”
KLS says "hang fire on cottage hospital's future"
* The traffic "pinch point" on the A539 approach to town.
A COMMUNITY group has asked Denbighshire County Council to hang fire on deciding the future of Llangollen’s former cottage hospital until the town’s planned new health centre is opened.
Martin Crumpton, chair of Keep Llangollen Special (KLS) recently wrote to Denbighshire planning chiefs voicing his organisation’s concern that should the cottage hospital be redeveloped while the proposed health centre fails to materialise, Llangollen would be “permanently and irrevocably be left with nothing, just the GP surgery which for years has been chronically short of space for its 9,000 registered patients.”
He also outlined KLS’s concerns about pedestrian access to the new health centre, planned for the site of the derelict River Lodge, off the A539.
He received a reply from Iolo McGregor, Corporate Improvement Officer, Business Improvement & Modernisation, which said: “In order to improve the pedestrian route to the proposed health centre, we have identified a couple of locations where pedestrians will be able to cross the road in order to avoid the section of Mill Street with no pavement.
“Each crossing point will consist of dropped kerbs, tactile paving and a ‘build-out’. A build-out is where the road is narrowed on one side by extending the pavement out to the centre line of the road thereby halving the distance that pedestrians will need to cross.
“Build-outs also force traffic from one direction to give way, thereby also creating a traffic calming effect, which will reduce speeds and thus further improve pedestrian safety.
“Additionally, should users not wish to walk, during the times when the new facility will be dealing with patients, there are currently four buses an hour operating between Llangollen town centre and the hospital site. Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board has agreed to provide shelters for passengers using the bus.”
Mr Crumpton was told by the planners that the future of the cottage hospital and the possibility of the health centre failing to go ahead were matters for the health board and not the county council.
He has now written back to the council, saying: “The public consultation for planning application 03/2014/0472 (demolition of the cottage hospital) ends soon – June 3 - and we’ve only just been informed of the measures proposed to make access to the planned health centre build along Mill Street safe.
“Our evaluation of those measures casts doubt on the viability of the new primary health centre which, in turn, makes the need to retain the cottage hospital important and urgent, if not imperative.
“We ask you to withhold the Decision Notice on PA
03/2014/0472 until the new health centre has been completed.
“If, having evaluated our concerns, your intention is to
permit the redevelopment of the Riverside Lodge then we ask for a sensible,
precautionary compromise - construct the traffic-calming measures first or at
least simulate them with cones and temporary lights.
“This approach has the virtue of finding if a different
approach is needed, or even if there is another solution.
“That stretch has been identified as unsafe and if our fears
turn out to be unfounded they would have to have been constructed anyway, so
there’s no additional cost involved.
“If the measures fail and have to be removed then the costs
will only run into thousands rather than the millions at risk in building a health
centre which patients can’t reach safely.”
The planning application for the old cottage hospital calls for redevelopment of the site by way of the demolition of existing buildings and the erection of six social housing units with associated access and parking provision.
KLS has a number of concerns about pedestrian access to
the new health centre site, including:The planning application for the old cottage hospital calls for redevelopment of the site by way of the demolition of existing buildings and the erection of six social housing units with associated access and parking provision.
·
Night-time visibility
of the build-outs.
·
18-wheelers, emergency
services and tourist coaches being unable to drive through a narrowed carriageway.
·
Deliveries of
locomotives by wide flat-loader to Llangollen Railway becoming “impossible”. It
says the railway shares this concern.
·
The proximity of Wern
Road, the new pedestrian crossing and the northern end of Castle Street at the
bridge to t.he beginning of the pinch-point on Mill Street means it would take
no more than six queuing cars to gridlock Llangollen and might lead to the A5 also
being blocked, fears KLS.
Sunday, May 18, 2014
New team is turning tide of rural crime
* Police and Crime Commissioner for North Wales, Winston Roddick,
with Sergeant Rob Taylor.
A special police taskforce is turning the tide of rural crime in North Wales - and "setting a benchmark" for the UK.
The dedicated team was set up six months ago by North Wales Police at the request of Police and Crime Commissioner Winston Roddick and it has seen a dramatic reduction in the number of countryside offences.
These include such diverse offences as livestock rustling, theft of farm machinery, badger digging and stealing rare birds eggs.
Since the North Wales Police Rural Crime Team was introduced the number of rural incidents has been recorded on a daily basis.
After peaking in October at 116, they have been dropping steadily with 72 in January, a fall of nearly 40 per cent.
Winston Roddick said: “During my campaign for the post of Police and Crime Commissioner I visited livestock markets and met farmers and members of the rural communities and without exception they pointed to how much crime was taking place in the countryside.
“These offences ran into millions of pounds and this reinforced the view expressed to me that we should dedicate more resources to combating rural crime.
“Even though the countryside is sparsely populated it contributes an enormous amount to the Welsh economy so it is entitled to effective policing and when I took that to the Chief Constable it was accepted immediately and acted upon immediately.
"Since then the Rural Crime Team has made an excellent start and they are setting a benchmark for the rest of the UK. Their work is attracting a great deal of interest from other forces.”
The team is headed by Sergeant Rob Taylor who has four full-time police constables distributed across North Wales and they are supported by a network of PCSOs and special constables.
Natural Resources Wales are partnering North Wales Police in the venture and it has been warmly welcomed by the rural community including the farming unions.
Sergeant Taylor said: “There wasn’t a dedicated crime team for the countryside although many years ago there used to be a farm liaison officer and a lot of farmers told me they regretted the loss of the position.
“But now we have a task force and the results speak for themselves and we have had very positive feedback nationally so that we are seen as a benchmark of best practice and have had other forces from England and Wales showing interest in what we do.
“We have a number of offences being dealt with by the courts including a string of stolen quad bikes, one of which we traced to Bolton and the theft of pheasant feeders near Bangor and we’re currently investigating badger baiting offences in the Holywell area while we also work with the RSPCA on cruelty cases.
“We use intelligence-led policing and make use of data which we analyse so that we put resources where they’re needed and when they’re needed.”
FUW Meirionnydd county executive officer Huw Jones said: “Investment in tackling rural crime is a great boost for the farming economy and has enhanced the safety of rural and isolated communities.
“Winston Roddick has consulted closely with the farming community and with us in the FUW, and we appreciate the close liaison.
“He has attended livestock markets such as Dolgellau on several occasions, attended FUW meetings and he has listened carefully to our views and taken our concerns on board.
“We congratulate Mr Roddick and his team on their successful strategy to tackle rural crime in North Wales and are hopeful that they will carry on keeping our rural communities safe.”
Sgt Taylor added: “The drop is encouraging, however these are very early days and there is still a lot of hard work ahead for the team and our partner agencies.
“This isn’t a solo effort and we rely so much on our farming unions for their support and also our colleagues at the NRW for their invaluable assistance.
“We have hit the ground running with the new team and we still have a long way to go, however we have a detailed structure and a plan to work to and we are optimistic that this will pay off and reduce crime in our rural communities and increase public confidence.”
North Wales Police’s Rural Crime Team officers can be contacted via the North Wales Police system by dialling 101 or by e-mailing direct to the team Ruralcrimeteam@north-wales.
Saturday, May 17, 2014
Plas Newydd is open for the new season
* Plas Newydd is open to visitors again.
Llangollen’s own stately home is open for a new season.
Details of Plas Newydd’s latest season were given by its
manager Kevin Pennington, heritage team leader for Denbighshire County Council
which looks after the attraction, at this week's meeting of Llangollen Chamber of
Trade and Tourism.
The meeting was held in the small gallery building close to
the house, which was once the home of the legendary Ladies of Llangollen.
He said Plas Newydd was open from April until September 30
and closed only on Tuesdays.
Opening times are 10am until 5pm with last admissions at 4pm.
Entrance fees are £5.50 for adults and £4.50 concessions,
with a 10 per cent discount for groups such as coach parties of 15 or more.
Mr Pennington explained that because space inside the house
was limited talks on its history are given by guides outside the front entrance
leaving people to explore inside at their own pace.
A significant boost to attendance figures had come recently,
he said, when parties from cruise ships docking at Liverpool started to be
brought over to visit Plas Newydd.
There were also regular groups of visitors from historical societies.
Another feature of Plas Newydd, said Mr Pennington, was the
on-site tearoom, which is also open from April-September.
This has 32 covers outside in the courtyard and a further 25
inside and offers a menu including plenty of home-made food.
He told chamber members: “It’s not just about getting people
to Plas Newydd but also getting them to return.”
He then invited them to join him on a guided tour of the historic building.
Friday, May 16, 2014
Details of bus services changes from Sunday
Llangollen county councillor Stuart Davies has passed on details of bus service revisions affecting Llangollen from Sunday.
The information, from the county council, says:
"Some bus services in Corwen and Llangollen change on and from May 18th, principally owing to decisions by Wrexham County Borough Council to withdraw some of its bus subsidy.
"We have a new timetable book dated May 24th (to coincide with the majority of changes, outside Llangollen).
"Here in the meantime is a summary of the Corwen & Llangollen changes:
Service 5 Llangollen - Wrexham (Mondays to Fridays)
The 0740 Corwen to Llangollen section is withdrawn and this bus will commence from Llangollen at 0800. Corwen passengers may catch the X94 at 0735.
There are additional journeys at 0638 from Vauxhall Industrial Estate to Llangollen and at 0700 from Llangollen to Wrexham at 0700.
Service 5A Wrexham - Llangollen - Chirk (Sundays & Bank Holidays)
The section of route between Llangollen and Chirk is WITHDRAWN. It is replaced by a new Sunday/Bank Holiday timetable for the 5A/C that sees a broadly half-hourly service between Llangollen and Wrexham between 1000 and 1900. There are no services after 1900.
Service X5 Corwen - Ruthin/Denbigh
No change
Service 64 Llangollen to Llanarmon DC
Service revised from 10 to six departures per day Mondays to Saturdays
Service 91/95 Melin y Wig - Corwen - Llangollen/Wrexham
No change
X94 Barmouth - Corwen - Llangollen - Wrexham
No change
Service 97 Llangollen - Pengwern
No change following revision to service on and from April 28th.
98 Llangollen - Rhewl - Pentredŵr
No change
The information, from the county council, says:
"Some bus services in Corwen and Llangollen change on and from May 18th, principally owing to decisions by Wrexham County Borough Council to withdraw some of its bus subsidy.
"We have a new timetable book dated May 24th (to coincide with the majority of changes, outside Llangollen).
"Here in the meantime is a summary of the Corwen & Llangollen changes:
Service 5 Llangollen - Wrexham (Mondays to Fridays)
The 0740 Corwen to Llangollen section is withdrawn and this bus will commence from Llangollen at 0800. Corwen passengers may catch the X94 at 0735.
There are additional journeys at 0638 from Vauxhall Industrial Estate to Llangollen and at 0700 from Llangollen to Wrexham at 0700.
Service 5A Wrexham - Llangollen - Chirk (Sundays & Bank Holidays)
The section of route between Llangollen and Chirk is WITHDRAWN. It is replaced by a new Sunday/Bank Holiday timetable for the 5A/C that sees a broadly half-hourly service between Llangollen and Wrexham between 1000 and 1900. There are no services after 1900.
Service X5 Corwen - Ruthin/Denbigh
No change
Service 64 Llangollen to Llanarmon DC
Service revised from 10 to six departures per day Mondays to Saturdays
Service 91/95 Melin y Wig - Corwen - Llangollen/Wrexham
No change
X94 Barmouth - Corwen - Llangollen - Wrexham
No change
Service 97 Llangollen - Pengwern
No change following revision to service on and from April 28th.
98 Llangollen - Rhewl - Pentredŵr
No change
Thursday, May 15, 2014
Legend's great-nephew to sing in Sweeney Todd
The great-nephew of one of Wales’s greatest singers is to sing with alongside operatic great Bryn Terfel at this summer’s Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod.
Thirty years ago Terfel was inspired and helped by the legendary Sir Geraint Evans and now Berwyn Pearce, 26, (pictured right) is hoping to follow in the footsteps of his great-uncle, Sir Geraint Evans and carve out a musical career.
His big break comes this July after being called in as a late replacement for one of the starring roles in Sweeney Todd, the Demon Barber of Fleet Street, the curtain-raiser to this year’s Eisteddfod in Llangollen on Monday, July 7.
Bryn Terfel heads a star-studded cast which also includes Carmarthen tenor Wynne Evans, Gio Compario of the Go Compare TV ads, and top soprano Shan Cothi.
And taking the role of the young sailor, Anthony Hope, who falls in love with Todd’s daughter, Johanna, is Berwyn, a Welsh-speaker from Cilfynydd, near Pontypridd, home village of Sir Geraint, a miner’s son who died in 1992.
He was a star of the Royal Opera House and, like Bryn Terfel (pictured left), a bass-baritone who performed in the great opera houses of the world in roles such as Falstaff and Figaro.
Bryn Terfel, who sang at Sir Geraint’s memorial service, said: “He was an inspiration to young Welsh singers like me and he helped me when I first started out. It’s fantastic that I may now also be able to help Berwyn along the way as well and I’m really looking forward to it.”
It had looked a case of so near and yet so far for Berwym, a teacher at Cwmderwen Primary School, in Blackwood, in Gwent, who had been short-listed for the role of Anthony at auditions in Cardiff.
He reached the final auditions, attended by Bryn himself, but just missed out to another young tenor, Tom Hier, from Merthyr, who has had to drop out because of final year college commitments at the Guildford School of Acting.
Now he’s got his chance and he’s thrilled at the prospect: “I’m over the moon,” he said: “I’ve come off the bench and got my chance.
“I got down to the last two and didn’t get the part and that was worse than getting turned down in the first round but then I was told that the part was mine because Tom couldn’t make the main rehearsals.
“My family are absolutely thrilled, especially my mum (Jane Pearce) who is the daughter of Sir Geraint’s sister. She’s like all mums, she takes things harder than I do and she’s more excited when things go well.”
Berwyn, a graduate of the Central School of Speech and Drama in London, remembers visiting his famous great-uncle at his holiday home in Aberaeron before his death in 1992.
He said: “I remember him as an elderly man when we went to visit but I was very close to my Auntie Brenda, Uncle Geraint’s widow, and his family.
“I’m so chuffed for them really and one of the first people we rang was Uncle Huw, Geraint’s son and I’m hoping he’ll be coming to see me in the performance.
“The school where I teach have been great too. They’ve been checking on my progress and they’re delighted I’ve got this chance.
“It’s a brilliant opportunity. I played the part in college and I’d always wanted the chance to do it again because it’s one of the best musicals there is so it’s huge for me.”
He will be playing alongside Lauren Morris, from Solihull, as the star-crossed young lovers and he added: “She’s a lovely girl and it will be great to sing with her.
“That’s one of the great things about this business. You get to meet and work with so many different and talented people.
“It will be incredible to perform with Bryn Terfel, especially because of who my great-uncle was, but that won’t count for anything in the performance.”
Terfel himself chose the three young unknowns – 14-year-old Dewi Wykes, from Llangynhafal, near Ruthin, a pupil of Ysgol Brynhyfryd, will play urchin Tobias Ragg – for Sondheim’s acclaimed show which was first performed in 1979.
They were whittled down from over 80 hopefuls who took part in auditions at the Wales Millennium Centre, in Cardiff, and the Royal International Pavilion, in Llangollen
Terfel said: “It was a wonderful standard, the standard one would expect for Llangollen, and to have Sir Geraint’s great nephew there is a real bonus.
“It’s a one-off performance and I can’t wait. It will be a special day in Llangollen when we perform Sweeney.”
Alongside Bryn making the decision was Eisteddfod Musical Director Eilir Owen Griffiths who said: “Tom was obviously desperately disappointed but the main rehearsal coincided with his graduation production at the end of a three year course.
“But these things happen and it means a wonderful opportunity for Berwyn and that’s just the magic of the business where an understudy can step in and take the first steps to stardom.
“That’s one of our roles at the Eisteddfod, to provide chances for young talent to flourish and there can be no bigger opportunity than to sing alongside a legend like Bryn Terfel.
“It was so close between Tom and Berwyn for the part. Berwyn is a class act and a strong, strong contender who will bring a special performance to the role – he is a good looking young man with a real presence.”
Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street by Sondheim is set in 19th century London and tells the story of the crazed barber who murders his clients and supplies the bodies to his accomplice, piemaker Mrs Lovett.
Sondheim’s multi-award winning classic was first performed on Broadway in 1979 and has since been a regular production across the world and on the big screen in 2007 when superstar Johnny Depp played Todd and Helena Bonham Carter was Mrs Lovett.
Bryn Terfel, who took the role in 2002 in Chicago, is fresh from a performance of it by the New York Philharmonic Orchestra at the Lincoln Center in New York in March when Oscar-winner Emma Thompson played Mrs Lovett.
He said: “That was a fair crack of the whip with lots of blood, playing this man driven by revenge.
“It was very impressive to have Stephen Sondheim there and telling you what he thought of the performance. It’s his favourite work and has been performed all over the world and made into a Hollywood blockbuster.
“It will be special doing it in Llangollen with Gareth Jones there conducting the Sinfonia Cymru and I can’t wait.”
It will be the first time he has performed on the International Eisteddfod stage since he opened the 2006 festival, his first appearance at Llangollen in a decade.
Sweeney Todd will be the curtain raiser to six tremendous days at Llangollen which begin on Tuesday, July 8, with this year’s concerts featuring Dutch jazz diva Caro Emerald, American tenor star Noah Stewart, a new work by composer Karl Jenkins, the Cape Town Opera, the Choir of the World competition on Saturday night and legendary British rockers Status Quo closing the event on Sunday night.
To book tickets and for more information on the 2014 festival go to the website at www.international-eisteddfod. co.uk
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