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Monday, December 11, 2023

Eisteddfod's Snowman concerts now sold out

NEW Sinfonia and the Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod's 'Snowman' fundraising concerts on December 23 are officially sold out.  

The shows feature community choir NEW Voices and will be led by refugees. 

The concerts, held at the Llangollen Pavilion main hall, promise to be one of the highlights of Llangollen's festive calendar and will culminate with 'The Snowman' film, whose magical soundtrack will be brought to life by North East Wales orchestra NEW Sinfonia. 

The concerts are part of an ongoing partnership between the Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod and NEW Sinfonia.  

They worked together on the acclaimed 'White Flower' concert in July and this latest collaboration has proved one of the hottest tickets in the region in the run up to Christmas. 

David Hennigan, a Board Trustee at the Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod. said: "We are really pleased that families have bought lots of tickets for our Christmas concerts.  

"This was one of things that residents told us they wanted us to bring back.  NEW Sinfonia are a pleasure to work with.  

"We are lucky to have an orchestra like this based in North Wales. They share our ethos of promoting peace and reconciliation through music. We are looking forward to these special Christmas Concerts which are part of our festival's focus all year-round activity."

The two concerts will raise money for the Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod and a local refugee charity.  

The Eisteddfod goes from strength to strength. Last week, they announced their core concert programme featuring a Llangollen debut for Sir Tom Jones, classical superstar Katherine Jenkins, local superstars Johns Boys' Chorus, Royal Harpist Alis Huws, award-winning folk band Calan, West End and Broadway stars Kerry Ellis and John Owen-Jones and two-time GRAMMY winning jazz sensation Gregory Porter.  Tickets are available at www.llangollen.net


NEW Sinfonia, led by brothers Jonathan and Robert Guy, have a busy Christmas schedule.  

The orchestra and community choir NEW Voices are also performing a New Year Gala Concert on Saturday, January 6 at 3pm at St Giles Church, Wrexham.  

This will feature renowned Ukrainian Soprano Khrystyna Makar, who now lives with her family in Shotton. 

Robert Guy, Artistic Director and Co-Founder of NEW Sinfonia, said: "We're delighted that we have sold out our Christmas Concerts in Llangollen and cannot wait for our New Year one in Wrexham.  

"This will cap another busy Christmas for our orchestra, choir and the amazing refugees we are proud to give a stage to.  


* Khrystyna Makar.

"The Snowman Concerts will be an amazing experience for those lucky enough to get tickets. If you haven't managed to get a ticket then why not join Khrystyna and NEW Sinfonia in the beautiful surrounds of St Giles Church for our New Year Gala Concert."

If any business would like to place an advert in the programme, then adverts are available from £70. Please email jonathan@newsinfonia.org.uk  

For tickets to the Gala Concert, go to: https://www.newsinfonia.org.uk/event-details/new-year-gala-concert-1

Bryan Adams to headline Eisteddfod concert next June


Multi-million selling recording artist Bryan Adams is coming to Llangollen next summer. 

The Canadian rock star will perform a headline concert as part of the International Musical Eisteddfod on Tuesday June 18. 

He will be supported by electro-pop singer-songwriter Cassyette. 

Tickets go on general sale at 9am on Friday from llangollen.net and www.ticketmaster.co.uk 

* Pre-sale tickets are available tomorrow (Tuesday) from 9am to Friends of the Eisteddfod. You can join by clicking "Priority Tickets" on the Eisteddfod website.

With energetic vocals and a charismatic stage presence, Bryan Adams is one of the most exciting live musicians in the world. 

In a career spanning more than four decades, he has released 17 studio albums, with four new studio albums in 2022 including GRAMMY nominated So Happy It Hurts, Pretty Woman – The Musical, and Classic pt. I and pt. II, featuring new recordings of his greatest hits. 

His 2023 singles include The Thing That Wrecks You, What if There Were No Sides at All, You're Awesome and Sometimes You Lose Before You Win.

His song-writing has garnered him numerous awards and accolades including three Academy Award nominations, five Golden Globe nominations, a GRAMMY Award and 20 Juno Awards. 

The headlining show is announced as part of a new partnership between Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod and Live Nation promoters Cuffe and Taylor. 

Lead Programmer & Production Manager of the Eisteddfod Dave Danford said: “We’re so excited to be welcoming Bryan Adams to Llangollen for the first time. He has a huge back catalogue of anthemic songs, which will raise the roof of our Pavilion next summer. He’s the latest name to be announced in our incredible line-up for 2024, when the Eisteddfod will be bigger and better than ever.”

Cuffe and Taylor co-founder Peter Taylor added: “We have had the pleasure of presenting numerous shows with Bryan Adams over the years. He is a musician and singer who never fails to deliver the most impressive show, and I have no doubt our Llangollen audience will enjoy a brilliant evening from this brilliant international rock star.” 

Bryan Adams joins British pop giants Madness, indie heroes Kaiser Chiefs, Manic Street Preachers and Suede, BRIT award-winning artist Paloma Faith, chart-topper Jess Glynne,anddisco legends Nile Rodgers & CHIC among the artists to be announced to headline dates either side of the iconic peace festival in 2024. 

The core week of the festival will see a series of events celebrating the Eisteddfod along with headlining shows from Welsh legends Tom Jones and Katherine Jenkins and international jazz sensation Gregory Porter.

For more information and to purchase tickets go to llangollen.netand www.ticketmaster.co.uk 

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'Scrooge' council gets wooden spoon over 'lowest' care home fees

* Mario Kreft MBE, the Chair of Care Forum Wales, with the wooden spoon outside the headquarters of Denbighshire County Council in Ruthin.

A council has been awarded a wooden spoon for paying the lowest care home fees in Wales and refusing to hand out free personal protective equipment even though it’s been paid for by the Welsh Government.

According to social care champions Care Forum Wales (CFW), Denbighshire County Council deserve to be named and shamed because they are “literally the lowest of the low in terms of their meanness of spirit which would even make Ebenezer Scrooge blush with embarrassment”.

An investigation by CFW revealed that the six North Wales local authorities were at the bottom of the league table for paying the lowest rates for residential care.

According to the Chair, Mario Kreft MBE, it was clear that they were operating a fee-fixing cartel because the lowest five were paying exactly the same amount, £711.83 per person, per week for fully regulated care.

The only exception in North Wales was last year’s wooden spoon recipient Flintshire County Council which pays marginally more, £727.55, placing the authority sixth from bottom.

It all adds up, says Mr Kreft, to a growing North-South divide with the betrayal of elderly and vulnerable care home residents in Denbighshire and the rest of North Wales who are being treated with “utter contempt”.

As a result, a care home in Denbighshire receives £10,432 less per resident, per year than a care home in parts of South Wales.

In a 50-bed care home that’s a difference of more than £500,000 a year for providing exactly the same level of service and being subjected to the same regulations.

Mr Kreft  said: “We could have given the wooden spoon, which recognises the meanest local authority which pays the lowest residential care home fees, to any one of five North Wales councils because they are joint bottom of the league of shame.


“Last year it was awarded to Flintshire who are slightly out of the frame this year and this year it’s Denbighshire who deserve to be branded as the Scrooge council, although it must be said that the fees in Flintshire are still abysmally low.

“What tipped the balance was that Denbighshire Council is the only North Wales council to turn down the offer of free PPE from the Welsh Government who recognised the importance of protecting vulnerable people and staff in care homes. It’s an open and shut case.

“Members of the Senedd, particularly those who represent North Wales, should not turn a blind eye to this injustice.

“When you look at care homes in Denbighshire, they are almost without exception small and medium-sized local businesses – family-run organisations like most of our economy in North Wales.

“They provide crucial services to their communities, often reflecting the local culture and language , as well as providing vital support to families in the run up to Christmas so the way they are being treated is truly shameful.

“Care homes in Denbighshire are being denied the opportunity to have the free PPE that the Welsh Labour Government want them to have and they’re being denied by a Labour run county council.

“The public in Denbighshire need to ask what the Dickens is going on because the Leader of the council, Cllr McLellan, and his chief executive, Mr Boase, are behaving like latter day Scrooges.

“How is it that the older, vulnerable people in Denbighshire – people who have given so much to this country – are demoted to the bottom of the pile, especially after all we’ve been through with Covid. It’s totally unacceptable.

“If you live or work in a care home in Denbighshire you will know that Covid has not gone away even if most of the world thinks it has.

“This about the Welsh Labour Government saying, after all the analysis by the Chief Medical Officer and by all of the other experts, that Covid is still with us and it’s a very nasty, infectious disease that still has the potential to kill, particularly if you’re elderly and vulnerable.

“I don’t understand why a Labour local authority is refusing to provide care homes in the area with free PPE that’s been paid for by the Welsh Government.

“This is a total betrayal of vulnerable people because these are the very people who should matter most to us, particularly at this time of year.

“What you’re seeing in Wales is a North-South divide. If you are old and vulnerable, you’re very lucky if you live in South Wales while those in Denbighshire are the unluckiest.

“These are statutory services and the law clearly says that the fees paid by local councils and health boards should reflect the true cost of care.

“But Denbighshire is brazenly ignoring its legal obligations to these people and acting unlawfully because the fees they pay come nowhere near the actual cost.

“It’s also institutional prejudice against the private sector who actually enable the NHS to function and if you haven’t got somewhere to discharge hospital patients the whole system will come to a grinding halt.

“Domiciliary care is also struggling financially because of irresponsibly low fees at a time when recruiting and retaining staff is more difficult than it’s ever been.

“All of which means that social care is in the eye of a perfect storm  and Denbighshire have chosen this moment to decide not to hand out or find a distribution point for people to get the PPE that the Welsh Government has provided.

“It’s a total disgrace and the wooden spoon has gone to an authority that has shown utter contempt for older people who need to be in a care home along with those who cared for them through the most hideous global pandemic.

“Denbighshire County Council is the lowest of the low and shamefully deserving of this year’s Care Forum Wales Wooden Spoon Award.”

A spokesperson for Denbighshire County Council said: “In 2023/24, Denbighshire County Council accepted the indicative care fee rates that were agreed by the Regional Care Fees Group consisting of the 6 Local Authorities and the Health Board.  We also continued to offer providers the opportunity to enter in to an ‘open book’ discussion with us if they could evidence that our indicative fee did not cover their specific costs. 

“Denbighshire County Council took the difficult decision, back in July 2023, not to store and distribute PPE to its care providers based on the fact that there was no funding from Welsh Government to support this and unfortunately the financial pressures that the Council is under as a local authority led to it having to make this very difficult decision. 

“The amount of PPE the Council was delivering to care providers had reduced significantly over the last 12 months and whilst recognising that many of its providers utilised the service, others hadn’t. Without any additional Welsh Government funding Denbighshire County Council was simply not in a position to continue renting a storage unit and staffing it. 

“Care providers expressed to the Council that they were disappointed that Welsh Government was unable to continue the funding for storage and onward distribution, but also added their thanks for the support they have received over the last 3 years and they took the opportunity to collect PPE from the amount the Council had left. 

“We continue to be committed to engaging and working with the sector as we have done for many years.”

Bikers invited to funeral of motorcyclist who died in road accident

 


An invitation has gone out to fellow bikers to attend the funeral of a man who died after a traffic motorcycle accident recently.

On Facebook a friend posted: "Michael Thomas Biker Funeral Procession.

"Sadly Michael (29) past away after a tragic motorcycle accident a week ago. 

"The family are asking for as many bikers to attend his final ride as possible. 

"So if anyone would like to attend then all bikes to meet at Aldi carpark in Llangollen, LL20 8BF at 12 to 12.30pm on 21st December. 

"Michael Catania will be there to help with any questions. 

"Biker friends and family will be coming from Corwen, passing Aldi on the way to join on. 

"The cremation is at Pentrebychan Crematorium, Rhostyllen , LL14 4EP at 1.30pm. All welcome. Thank you.

"Please feel free to share this post to other biker groups on Facebook."

Sunday, December 10, 2023

Methodist Church launches annual Christmas Tree Festival

Llangollen Methodist Church has launched its annual and very popular Christmas Tree Festival which gives visitors the chance to vote for their favourite one.

The church is open at various times for people to admire the 11 trees, each colourfully and sometimes creatively decorated, before the winners are chosen based on the number of votes they attract. 

One category specially marks the 75th anniversary of the NHS. 

Homely Santa scene is star of latest Tan-y-Doll Christmas tableau

 


Creative residents of Tan-y-Doll off Abbey Road have come up with another fabulous Christmas scene.

Last year they hit a highspot when their roadside tableau featured the King of Rock 'n Roll himself, Elvis Presley, in all his jump-suited glory.

An upside-down Santa heading down a chimney also put in an appearance and he's back again this year with his boots in the air.

The key theme for Christmas 2023 is a seasonally decked-out living room complete with decorated fireplace, cards and a tree plus a table laid out with some well-earned goodies for the grand old man when he eventually makes it to the other end of the chimney. There's even a little dog in a basket waiting to welcome him.   

Health board positive update on being in Special Measures

Reductions in the number of out-patient waiting times and ambulance delays is flagged up in the latest response to being in Special Measures from the Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board.

The organisation, which covers Llangollen, was placed in Special Measures by the Welsh Government last February due to serious concerns about board effectiveness, organisational culture, service quality and reconfiguration, governance, patient safety, operational delivery, leadership and financial management.

Board members receive regular reports about the situation and the latest update at the end of November listed a number of key achievements.

Board members were told by their officials about:

* A 52% reduction in people waiting 52 weeks for their first outpatient appointment -  equivalent to 13,000 people

* A 42% reduction in people waiting 104 weeks in comparison with the position last year which is in excess of 6,000 people

* A consistent reduction in four-hour ambulance delays with some local variation being closely monitored

* All people waiting over 156 weeks have now either received a date for their first appointment or have started treatment, with some challenges remaining within orthodontics which are under review

* A significant reduction in the usage of agency interim staff from 41 in December 2022 to just seven in September 2023

* A new leadership development framework is being put in to place to help develop and attract leaders within the health board

* Appointments to a number of vital clinical roles, including a new clinical radiotherapy lead to support improvements in oncology

* An ophthalmology “train and treat” model allowing more patients to be treated closer to home by optometrists, getting more convenient and faster care

* An ongoing series of ‘health conversations’ with local communities with a number of community engagement events scheduled for the new year to build a stronger relationship between our board, executives and local communities.