Get in touch ...

Know of something happening in
Llangollen?
Tweet
us on
@llanblogger

E-mail your contributions to: llanblogger@gmail.com

We are on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/pages/llanbloggercouk/139122552895186



Monday, February 24, 2020

St David's Day concert this Friday

Llangollen Welsh Society are hosting a St David's Day Concert at St Collen's Community Hall on Friday, February 28th at 7pm.

The concert features Lleisiau Ceiriog/Ceiriog Choir.

Tickets are £7 including a light buffet or £5 for members and are available from Elizabeth Benjamin or Eirwen Jones before February 26.

Names are required by today for catering figures. Contact: 01978 860516, or email gwbenji@gmail.com




A483 traffic warning

Tweet by North Wales Police just before 8am:

Please be aware that traffic is backing up on the A483 between junction 7 and 6 southbound due to a road traffic collision. Delays are likely.

Chamber urges businesses to back the BID


Llangollen’s business community is currently being asked to vote on whether or not they wish to be part of a local Business Improvement District.

The Chamber of Trade and Tourism Executive has issued a statement, which llanblogger has been asked to publish, explaining why, as a body, it is voting “yes” to the BID proposal, and suggesting the area’s businesses should do the same.  The statement says:

“As a business with a rateable value over £2500 in the proposed Llangollen BID area you will have received a copy of the Business Plan and will get a voting form via the council and the Electoral Reform Society.

“Several successful and pro-active businesses in the area have supported the consultancy process with lots of their time and some also financially.

“A Business Improvement District is where a group of businesses pay into a not-for-profit company which delivers the objectives set out in the business plan.

“If the majority of businesses in the area vote in favour of the BID plan (both by number and rateable value) then the included business will pay a levy to fund the business plan.

“If businesses don’t vote either way then their votes aren’t included in the numbers and will have no sway either for or against.

“The BID is not a tax, it is a Business Plan, created by and administered by the businesses of the town to improve the town as a place to do business and live and as an investment to benefit those businesses and help them make more money and/or remain in business.

“The BID lasts 5 years but can be cancelled if the businesses don’t believe that it is working.

“The BID is formed as a company (limited by guarantee) and has the running costs associated with any business such as admin and accounts, these are forecast to be about 11% of the collected levy, not 34% as stated on a vote no leaflet.

“To make it work the company will have to employ someone locally to deliver the business plan under the supervision of the board, this is budgeted at £20k to employ a person with the right skill set and experience.

“The council will collect the money and pass it on to the bid company without charging for the privilege, but they will pass on the extra costs from their software licensing for the collection.

“All the marketing money spend is directed by the businesses involved, legally it cannot duplicate existing council spends.

“If  the BID spends money on marketing the town it will come from all businesses with a rateable value over £2500, unlike historical projects like the Christmas lights where just a few of the businesses supported the work.

“The BID will likely choose to support Llangollen 2020, thereby helping them raise more funds towards the project through avenues that are unavailable to the project without business support.

“Businesses have complained for decades that parking maps and signage need improving. The Chamber has never had any money to move on this bar printing some maps.

“With a £100k over 5 years the Llangollen BID Company can get these improved in addition to the existing council budgets.

“All BID levy payers are eligible to be members of the BID company and stand for the election to the board.

“The benefits of BIDS are clear with many BID areas voting to repeat the process over 5 years and have money to spend to improve local business, directed and spent by local business.

“Part of the business plan is to join a national buying group to reduce costs for business including telecoms, utilities, waste collection and potentially rates. For many businesses this will likely recoup all or most of the levy they pay.

“A BID for Llangollen gives you new services, support, marketing and a town competing with other well marketed towns in the area. Llangollen has a lot to shout about, but we don’t. Customers need reasons to come to Llangollen and reasons to return.

“Those reasons are here in abundance, but we don’t promote them to our customers as well as we can. With a BID for Llangollen we can do our town and area justice with better destination marketing.

“Government Support comes to those who support themselves, the more proactive we are as a business community the more we will attract government support. This is one of the primary criteria for government support.

“So by just having a bid we can get more funding for business in the town and have a paid member of staff to apply for it.

“Here are five good reasons to vote yes:

1. Over £400,000 of investment for the town centre over 5 years

2. The BID will be run and controlled by Llangollen businesses

3. Projects to be carried out are set out in the Business Plan including an exciting annual Marketing, Promotion & Events Programme, Wayfinding and Access Improvements and Reducing Your Business Costs by centrally organising services such as Trade Waste Management, Recycling & Insurance. Over 70% of businesses will pay less than £1 a day for all this and will get more back than they put in (based on other BID towns experience (Google Keighly BID cost savings)

4.There are over 300 BIDs operating successfully in the UK and 12 across Wales including nearby competitors, and Llangollen will need to compete effectively with them

5. The Llangollen BID will act as a powerful business lobbying and advocacy body to ensure your voice is heard on issues like business rates, car parking and delivering investment. Much of the £90m
Transforming Towns Programme that was announced last week by the Welsh Government will be channelled through BIDs and Llangollen does not want to miss out

6. Includes membership of a national buying group such as Meercat Associates, reducing gas, electric, telecoms and waste bills by negotiating on behalf of 10,000 businesses.

“Please send in your vote, whether YES or NO. We’ll be voting YES, because we invest in our businesses.”

Roadworks notified by Traffic Wales


Traffic Wales have notified the following three sets of roadworks in Llangollen:


24 February — 28 February

Delays likely - Traffic control (multi-way signals)

Works location: NEAR TO CHAPEL ON BERWYN STREET & JUNCTION OF HALL STREET LINK ROAD

Works description: Trial hole to locate existing water main - Open cut and install new 315mm water main in carriageway - UPT Connection onto 6? water main

Responsibility for works: Dee Valley Water

Current status: Planned work about to start

Works reference: ZU003H6W/00038001A


24 February — 06 March

Delays likely - Road closure

Works location: Side of Public House in link Road...

Works description: Open cut new 315mm water main in Carriageway...

Responsibility for works: Severn Trent Water

Current status: Advanced planning

Works reference: LB501H6W/00038004A


24 February — 28 February

Delays possible - Traffic control (multi-way signals)

Works location: O/S Number 45

Works description: Traffic light Head Only Part of 3 Way TLS for work in Berwyn Road under ZU003H6W/00038001A...

Responsibility for works: Dee Valley Water

Current status: Advanced planning

Works reference: ZU003H6W/00038002A


Sunday, February 23, 2020

First steam train of season leaves Llangollen



The first steam service of the 2020 season left Llangollen yesterday (Saturday) with locomotive No.7822 Foxcote Manor hauling the 1040 departure for Carrog.

In the off-peak season steam trains will operate three-times a day at weekends, departing 1040, 1300 and 1510 for the journey down the Dee Valley.

With the River Dee running high and fast after all the recent rain, the views from the train in places are quite dramatic.

On weekdays the heritage railcar operates the off-peak service. See: www.llangollen-railway.co.uk for details.

Listen carefully ... Twenty Club to stage 'Allo 'Allo


* Gordon Kaye in the smash-hit TV version of 'Allo 'Allo.
Listen carefully as I will say zis only once ...

Llangollen Twenty Club are heading back to occupied France during the Second World War for their latest production, 'Allo 'Allo.

This famous farce penned by Jeremy Lloyd and David Croft centres around Café Rene in a small village.

It was a smash-hit TV comedy in the 1980s and is brought to the Town Hall stage from Thursday-Saturday, March 19-21.  

Rene, the café owner, is a likeable but weak man who lusts after all his female staff apart from his long-suffering wife, Edith.  

He hides two British airmen in the café as they await their chance to escape back to Britain.

Centrepiece of the play is a stolen painting, The Fallen Madonna with the Big Boobies, of which there are copies but the genuine one is so well hidden that no-one but Edith knows where it is.

However, the original is much sought after by the occupying Germans and it is because of that the café becomes a hotspot for subterfuge and various goings-on.  

Gestapo man Herr Flick desperately wants it, as does Hitler and there appear to be more than one Hitler doing the rounds - one can count at least four at one point!

Michelle, a smart resistance woman, issues orders to Rene and the bumbling English policeman, Crabtree, tries to keep order and respect.  To no avail.

Characters are all larger than life, from the randy Italian army officer Alberto Bertorelli and the German colonel with a wiglet fetish, to Yvette and Mimi, the two waitresses in the café and the bumbling Leclerc, and from the sinister Herr Otto Flick and his officer "friend" Helga, to the wooden-legged General Schmelling.

Supported by a lively cast of café customers, a capable pianist who links together the scenes and helps herself to the odd tipple, this play is as absurd as only a Croft/Lloyd collaboration can be. 

It is humour at every turn, a little risqué and more than a little non-PC.

Twenty Club promises a stunning set, wonderfully funny characters all very true to the original ones and lots of fast- paced action.






Lenten soup kitchen planned at Holy Cross