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Wednesday, February 6, 2019

Youth Parliament member wins AM's support

A teenager recently chosen as her area’s first ever Welsh Youth Parliament Member has been backed by her local AM Ken Skates.

Talulah Thomas, 17, (pictured) will represent Clwyd South after being elected as one of the 60 inaugural members of the newly formed national body in November.

The Welsh Youth Parliament aims to empower young people to identify, raise awareness of and debate the important issues to them, and will work directly with the National Assembly to make young people’s voices heard by those with the power to make change.

“The political future of Wales rests with our youth, and our nation's young people must be engaged to ensure progression,” said Talulah, who lives in Llangollen and attends Ysgol Morgan Llwyd in Wrexham.


“I would encourage discussions within schools by starting an all-inclusive committee that will highlight the issues that are important to young voters, as their views are most important to me. I hope that this will reflect politics as an essential element of everyday life and create a bridge between the voices of young people and the Senedd.”

Talulah added: “I’m studying through the medium of Welsh, therefore will also be focusing on the importance of keeping the Welsh language going amongst the youth of Clwyd South.”

Assembly Member Ken Skates contacted Talulah after her election and the pair met last week to discuss their shared priorities for the area, which include increasing youth participation in politics and improving mental health education in schools.

Mr Skates said: “Mental health is a subject close to my heart, and I’m pleased to hear it’s high up on Talulah’s agenda. Good mental health so important, particularly for our young people, which is why I was delighted this week to see the Welsh Government commit an additional £7.1m to help protect, improve and support the mental health of young people in Wales.”

The Welsh Labour AM added: “Having met Talulah I’m confident she’ll do a fabulous job. I’m looking forward to working with her and helping her however I can.”

Tuesday, February 5, 2019

Plas Madoc gets major gym facility upgrade


Plas Madoc Leisure Centre in Acrefair has refurbished its large gym facility.
The centre, which is operated by Splash Community Trust, was reopened in December 2014 thanks to the actions of local people after the council closed the site as a cost-saving measures.
During this time the charitable trust has secured major upgrades to the site to boost it’s long-term viability, such as new boilers and a new roof as well as improvements to the café and sports hall.
The gym will be repainted and have a new floor laid in preparation for all new CV equipment to be installed.
The kit will be state of the art provided by Life Fitness and will provide users with the very best experience in fitness with access to large 21” touch screen monitors, providing access to Netflix and other online streaming services.

Denise Chadwick, general manager, said: “This major investment by the Splash Community Trust is a real statement about our commitment to the long term future of Plas Madoc Leisure Centre.
"Tthe new kit will provide a real bonus to our current membership and hopefully attract new members to the facility."
The gym will reopen on Saturday February 9.
* Anyone interested in  joining can contact the centre on 01978 821600, or visit its website at: www.plas-madoc.com

Monday, February 4, 2019

Twenty Club prepares to stage poignant new play




Llangollen Twenty Club Amateur Players are well into rehearsal for a world premiere play, Dinner with Otto, written by Tom George and directed by Lyn Aston. 

After it's initial showing at Llangollen Town Hall,  the play will be going on professional tour.

Dinner with Otto is set in March 1919 after the conclusion of the bloodiest conflict in history.

It tells the story of a young soldier Ben,  returning  home to his mother and friends after witnessing the atrocities of war, and now having to live with a deep sense guilt, and hopelessness for his future. 

Otto Schultz, whom he killed during the fierce battle, died slowly, on the end of Ben’s bayonet and during the time that Otto was dying the two young men realised that in other circumstances they could have been friends.

Otto asked Ben to write to his mother and told him that he will keep a seat for him at the dinner table in Hell, as that is surely where they will both end up.

Ben had promised to protect his friend, Aled, but Aled was killed, further adding to Ben’s sense of guilt.

Aled’s mother forgives him, which leaves Ben feeling even more wretched.  

His mother realises that he has many other secrets that will affect the future course of his life.
The play has a very dramatic, and to some, surprising end, but, according to director Lyn Aston, is sure to keep the audience on the edge of their seat, "willing this sad and haunted young man to survive and deal with the trauma that impact of any war has on the returning soldier. A must see piece of exceptional writing, brought  to life by a very talented cast."
* Tickets are available from:

Mair Bowen Tel:01978 822759

Courtyard Books Tel: 01978 869394

Gwyn Davies Butchers, Llangollen

Jenni's Llangollen

Online: www.skiddle.com

Sunday, February 3, 2019

Llan-written novel gets its release




A Llangollen-based author has produced a new novel set in Lincolnshire – although he says that it was largely written at a popular café in town.

Eamonn Griffin (pictured) says he penned most of the book, entitled East of England, in M'Eating Point on Berwyn Street, although it doesn’t mention Llan at all. 

The noir-ish thriller was published last week by an organisation specialising in crowd-funding called Unbound.

The book's available from Amazon, Waterstones, Hive and all other book retailers (online and offline) in paperback and ebook format, and locally may be ordered via Courtyard Books in Llangollen (an online purchase via Hive may be configured to support that shop too).
 

A synopsis of the story says:

Dan Matlock is out of jail. He’s got a choice. Stay or leave. Go back to where it all went wrong, or simply get out of the county. Disappear. Start again as someone else. But it’s not as simple as that. 


There’s the matter of the man he killed. It wasn’t murder, but even so. You tell that to the family. Especially when that family is the Mintons, who own half that’s profitable and two-thirds of what’s crooked between the Wolds and the coast. And who could have got to Matlock as easy as you like in prison, but who haven’t touched him. Not yet.


And like Matlock found out in prison, there’s no getting away from yourself, so what would the point be in not facing up to other people?


It’s time to go home.


East of England blends a rural take on the noir thriller with a fascination with the British industrialised countryside that lies east of the Wolds, between the Humber and the Wash. Unlit byways rather than the neon-bright and rain-slicked city. A world of caravan parks, slot machines, and low-rise battery farms.


The flatlands of the east coast; decaying market towns and run-down resorts, and the distant throb of offshore windfarms. Where the smell you’re trying to get out of your clothes is the cigarette taint of old phone boxes and bus shelters, and where redemption, like life, is either hard-earned or fought for, one way or another.   


Author Eamonn Griffin was born and raised in Lincolnshire. 

He's worked as a stonemason, a strawberry picker, in plastics factories (everything from packing those little bags for loose change you get from banks to production planning via transport manager via fork-lift driving), in agricultural and industrial laboratories, in a computer games shop, and latterly in further and higher education.


He’s taught and lectured in subjects as diverse as leisure and tourism, uniformed public services, English Studies, creative writing, film studies, TV and film production, and media theory. He doesn’t do any of that anymore. Instead he writes fulltime, either as a freelancer, or else on fiction. 


Eamonn has a PhD in creative writing with the University of Lancaster, specialising in historical fiction, having previously completed both an MA in popular film and a BSc in sociology and politics via the Open University. He really likes biltong, and has recently returned to learning to play piano, something he abandoned when he was about seven and has regretted since.

East of England is published by Unbound Digital. ISBN: 978-1789650143

Review copies are available via Netgalley at: https://www.netgalley.com/catalog/book/155755

For details of the book, go to: https://unbound.com/books/east-of-england/

Saturday, February 2, 2019

County asks people to complete online transport survey


The county council is urging Llangollen residents to take part in its latest online fact-finding exercise.

The Denbighshire Transport Survey, developed in partnership with Denbighshire Voluntary Services Council (DVSC), aims to gauge the interest and feasibility of the development of an integrated community transport hub in the county, and how to most effectively provide a range of transport options across the region.

People can complete the survey online over the next month. 

Here’s the link for the English - https://www.surveymonkey.co.uk/r/XWKYQX3



Kia ProCeed: Silly name but a real looker



* The new Kia ProCeed - from the side and (below) rear. 



Kia ProCeed launch report by Steve Rogers


KIA has opened its 2019 campaign with a real bobby dazzler.

Meet the new ProCeed, the range topper that has taken Ceed in a whole new direction with a bold shooting brake design.

Until now ProCeed - yes it still has the silly name - has been a three-door hatch. That market is virtually dead but rather than scrap the hatch it has been reinvented and the result is stunning.

This is essentially an estate car, a rival even to the Ceed Sportwagon, but it is lower and longer than its sibling with a swooping coupe style roof and steeply raked tailgate.

No-one in the sector which is bossed by Ford Focus, Vauxhall Astra and VW Golf has anything like it so watching how Proceed develops is going to be interesting.

Only the bonnet and front wings have been carried over from Ceed while improved dynamics have spiced up the handling which becomes evident when driving the GT model with its 201bhp 1.6 litre petrol engine, but more on that later.

There are three trim levels GT Line, GT Line S and GT powered either by a 1.4 litre turbo charged petrol or a 1.6 diesel for all but the GT which gets the 1.6 litre petrol.

Inside it's standard Ceed fair with the range topping 8-inch touchscreen controlling the majority of the functions although Kia prefers switches for the radio and heating controls which are ranged clearly across the central console which is just the way I like it.

Although Proceed has a definite sporting edge it is no flaming hot hatch so there is a good compromise between ride comfort and out and out handling.

Make no mistake the car will fly around bends faster than will ever be needed on public roads but at the same time bumps are well cushioned so this is very much a car the family can enjoy.

Cabin space is good and a six footer sat comfortably behind my driver's seat, and in spite of the dipping roofline the 594 litres of boot space is not far behind the 625 litres for the Sportwagon.

Kias have always been generously equipped and that is the case here. Even the 6-speed manual GT Line which opens the range at £23,835 has navigation, heated front seats, heated steering wheel, auto dipping headlights, electronic parking brake and that is just a snapshot. Add an S and there is even more with heated outer rear seats, power adjustment and memory setting for the driver's seat and a powered tailgate.

If the bank balance allows it is worth splashing out £1,100 for the seven speed automatic which is smooth and slick and can be used as a manual either via the gear lever or steering wheel paddles.

Safety features have become the norm and there is no shortage here with crash avoidance braking that includes pedestrians, steering the car within the lane, blind spot collision warning ... I could go on.

In spite of the lack of interest in diesel power Kia is offering the 1.6 litre with its fairly modest 134bhp.

The ProCeed deserves more and you will get it from the more punchy 138bhp 1.4 turbo charged petrol which is nearly a second quicker to sixty (9.1secs) but you will lose out heavily on economy - 42.8mpg versus 56.5mpg for the diesel.

Which brings us to the jewel in the ProCeed crown, the 1.6 T-GDi. For me this is the engine for this car. There is a spiky rawness to it, growling under acceleration and eager to respond at low revs. It is the only model where the performance matches the car's matcho looks. A sprint to sixty takes 7.2 seconds, not as quick as the hottest Golf or Focus.

The folk at Kia say, they are unlikely to go for anything bigger on the engine front so they will not be asking parent company Hyundai for the dazzling 2-litre powering the i30N let alone the i30N Performance.

At least the 1.6 T-GDi has given an added buzz to the Ceed hatch which has identical performance to ProCeed GT and handling to match the hike in power. The new Ceed GT model has hit the showrooms and costs £25,535.

My guess is all eyes will be on its pretty new sister. Aside from Stinger this is the best looking Kia ever. It has a feel good factor and looks the business particularly in profile or from the back. I don't see how it can fail.

* Prices: £23,835 (GT Line petrol manual) to £28,138 (GT auto). GT Line S £28,685.

Friday, February 1, 2019

County approves 6.35% council tax rise

Councillors in Denbighshire have agreed the budget for the next financial year.
At a meeting in County Hall, Ruthin, members were asked to formalise the budget and agreed that council tax levels should increase by 6.35% in the next financial year.  This will address current financial pressures in Children’s and Education Services, social care, highways and environment.
The 6.35% equates to an additional £72.24 a year for a Band D property, or £1.52 a week.
Savings of £5.6 million were identified by services directly and these have been found through a wide range of cuts and efficiencies in functions that support the Council, with the services offered directly to the public being protected as much as possible.
Councillor Julian Thompson-Hill, Cabinet Lead Member for Finance, said: “It is our duty as councillors to make sure that the budget balances at the end of the financial year and the uncertainty over the levels of settlements in recent years has made our jobs a lot harder.
“Significant real terms funding reductions to local councils in Wales have continued whilst costs continue to grow. Schools and social care represent the most significant elements of the Council’s budget and the costs of these is growing beyond the resources available.
“While the council will always endeavour to be more efficient to save money, given savings of over £35m have been made in the last six years, it is no longer possible to address the funding gap through efficiency savings alone and a careful balance between service savings and local taxation has to be struck.
“The Council also expects to need to find £7 million in savings in 2020 and £4.5 million the following year.  That means that tough decisions are needing to be made and further cuts are predicted over the coming years. However, we are making a commitment to continue to provide the best services possible for the residents of Denbighshire.
Information about council tax, how the money is allocated and the benefits available to Denbighshire residents will be included in the Your Money booklet, which will be available on the Council’s website