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Saturday, October 5, 2019
Friday, October 4, 2019
MP says fight goes on for pension equality
Clwyd South MP Susan Elan Jones (pictured) and
other members of the All-Party
Parliamentary Group on State Pension Inequality for Women have pledged
to carry on fighting for women affected by the increase in their state pension
age after a High Court ruling.
Yesterday (Thursday) the High Court rejected
claims that increasing the state pension age for women born in
the 1950s discriminated against them on the grounds of age and sex,
and that the government had failed to appropriately notify those affected.
However, Labour MP Carolyn
Harris and former Conservative Government Minister Tim Loughton, co-chairs of
the All-Party Parliamentary Group on State Pension Inequality for Women, said
the All Party Group would continue to use all means available – including private
members’ bills – “to seek justice for all the women affected”.
In a written statement the
politicians said the cross-party group’s continued aim was to deliver on a series of measures proposed
in April 2018.
The measures include:
- making a non-means-tested
pension credit available to all women aged 63 and over from the day it is
approved until they reach state pension age, which won’t be backdated.
- equalising women’s pensions,
so that everyone receives a full state pension (£159 per week) regardless of
the number of years of National Insurance contributions accrued.
- extending pension credit for
those worst affected who have no other income or private pension available to
them and are suffering financial hardship.
Plans to increase the state
pension age were first announced in the Pension Act 1995 but these changes were
accelerated as part of the Pension Act 2011.
Susan Elan Jones MP said: “Pension fairness matters
hugely for ordinary people from our local area. I’ve worked very closely with
many constituents who’ve been affected by these pension changes. I remain
committed to working in Parliament with other MPs across the political spectrum
who want a fair, common sense solution for women born in the 1950s.”
Keddie wins town council seat
Paul Keddie yesterday won the vacant seat on Llangollen Town Council.
Results were:
Paul Keddie (Independent) - 293
John Palmer - 276
Gillian Robertson (Independent) - 92
Turnout 22.69%
Thursday, October 3, 2019
County encourages more food waste recycling
* See reaction at foot of story from former Llangollwn county councillor Stuart Davies
A food recycling
project is being piloted in three areas of Denbighshire as part of efforts to
encourage greater use of recycling facilities before significant changes are
introduced to the county’s waste and recycling services.
During a recent
monitoring exercise the council noticed that a total of 600 properties had not
placed their food waste caddies out in the previous weeks.
Those households
have received a leaflet which encourages them to recycle food waste and to make
sure that householders are aware of the equipment needed to recycle food.
The equipment
includes an orange kerbside collection bin, a convenient silver kitchen caddy
that can be placed on counter tops or under the sink and a roll of compostable
liners.
Any households
not placing their food waste bins ready for collection will be visited by a
team of recycling advisors, to see what can be done to rectify any issues.
In
December 2018, the
Council approved plans to change waste and recycling collections in
Denbighshire. Those changes will come into effect during
2021 and will be:
§ a new
weekly collection for recyclables such as paper, glass, cans, and plastic
§ a new
weekly collection for nappies and incontinence wear
§ a weekly
collection for food waste
§ a new
fortnightly collection for clothes and small electrical items
The council says that if residents use the recycling service
correctly, it should only result in a minimal amount of residual waste being
created.
As a result, the council will be changing the collection of non-recyclable
waste to every four weeks for the majority of households.
Residents will be issued with a
bigger black bin if they need one, but overall, households would have more
capacity each week for managing their waste than they have with our current service.
The new weekly recycling service, using a Trollibloc system, would provide more
capacity for recycling when compared to the current fortnightly collection with
the blue wheelie bin.
The council says residents will be able to free up even
more space in their black bin by using new kerbside recycling services for
textiles, small electrical goods, batteries and where needed, nappies and
incontinence waste.
Councillor Brian Jones,
Cabinet lead Member for Highways, Environmental Impact, Waste and
Sustainable Travel, said: “The council provides a weekly food waste
recycling service to properties and people should be using it to take away
unwanted food. They should not be placing any food waste in their black bin. If
this initiative is successful, it could be drawn out across the county.
“The council can fine
people who repeatedly fail to separate their rubbish so it is important people
take the time to put the right waste in the right container.
"The majority of
residents in Denbighshire recycle their food waste and we thank them for that,
but we need to understand why some people do not dispose of their food waste
properly. Households receive orange kerbside collection bins that goes
out once a week with the remainder of the refuse. A convenient silver kitchen
caddy is used to gather the food waste and a roll of compostable liners.
“This is a very timely
initiative as we prepare our plans for a significant waste and recycling
project being rolled out in 2021. In the meantime, our efforts to encourage
greater amounts of recycling continues. And over the coming months we will be
rolling out a series of initiatives to make it safer and more
community-spirited to recycle as much as we can."
* To find out information
about waste and recycling in Denbighshire, visit: www.denbighshire.gov.uk/recycling
Reaction from former Llangollen county councillor Stuart Davies ...
Reaction from former Llangollen county councillor Stuart Davies ...
How dare Cllr Brian Jones threaten residents of
Denbighshire with fines when his department is just as guilty of not collecting
recycling properly themselves?
About five years ago DCC rolled out the recycling scheme in
Llangollen, however they did not have small enough vehicles to access country
properties such as mine and we have been on sack collection since. One for
plastics, paper, metal etc and one for everything else! That includes waste
food!
As the then County Councillor I was promised that as the fleet was
renewed that vehicles suitable for collecting the various recycling would be
incorporated and we could ALL do recycling properly! It has not happened! We
still are on two sack collection!
The question needs to be asked of this arrogant councillor, is
why he thinks it is ok to threaten residents with fines for not recycling when
his own department is not doing its job properly by providing proper facilities
for recycling to residents out in the country side? It smacks of having double
standards!
Rehearsals going well for Twenty club's Blackadder
Rehearsals are going well for Langollen Twenty Club's next production, a stage version of the smash-hit TV comedy series Blackadder.
Fresh from their most recent success with the gripping Dinner with Otto, the group are lightening the mood by staging three episodes of the iconic show written by Richard Curtis and Ben Elton.
They've chosen to depict Blackadder's Elizabethan-era incarnation in the play which runs at Llangollen Town Hall from November 7-9, each performance starting at 7.30pm.
Director Chrissie Ashworth said: “We have chosen three episodes which we considered to be the best mix and most suited to perform at our home at the Town Hall.
"We've assembled a fantastic cast, of a number of them new to Twenty Club, and rehearsals are going extremely well. In fact, sometimes it's hard to get anything done because we're all laughing so much at the lines and the plot situations."
She added: "We're aiming for a close ‘copy’ of the original TV characters, as that is what people remember and the humour that goes with it. The three episodes are entitled respectively Head, Beer and Bells.
She added: "We're aiming for a close ‘copy’ of the original TV characters, as that is what people remember and the humour that goes with it. The three episodes are entitled respectively Head, Beer and Bells.
Wednesday, October 2, 2019
Brexit uncertainty damaging to social care, says boss
* Mario Kreft MBE, chair of Care Forum Wales.
A social care champion is calling for certainty over Brexit.
Mario Kreft MBE, the chair of Care Forum Wales, says the current state of flux was hugely damaging.
He was speaking in the wake of the publication of the UK Government’s Operation contingency planning document, Operation Yellowhammer.
According to Mr Kreft, who is also the proprietor of the Pendine Park Care Organisation, the political paralysis surrounding Brexit was already driving up prices and had led to European workers returning home.
He said: “Operation Yellowhammer suggests the worst-case scenario would be very serious with some smaller care homes closing within a fortnight because of escalating prices and larger providers under threat within a month or two.
“The current uncertainty is already causing issues for social care because is ratcheting up prices while the issue of people not wanting to come and work in this country becoming a real problem.
“We’ve seen a lot of talented care practitioners and nurses leave Wales already and this is a major concern because we have an aging population and, planning ahead for the next 15 to 20 years, we are going to see a 100 per cent increase in the number of people aged over 85.
“Regardless of what happens with Brexit, the demographics are going to cause enormous issues but this uncertainty and this appearance that we no longer welcoming people who have talent and want to work here is causing even more problems because the NHS is already under tremendous pressure.
“We have been fortunate in recent years but if we have a bad winter, you would see pressures on the NHS that we have never seen before.
“Social care underpins the NHS and what business wants and what social care wants is an end to this uncertainty.
“While Westminster decides whether it’s a deal or a no deal Brexit, what the social care sector needs is certainty to be able to continue to provide services for the most vulnerable people in our society.”
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