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Monday, September 9, 2024

New school admissions system to be implemented

From September, parents and carers will now be able to make applications for the academic year starting September in 2025, using a new Education Self-Service system. 

The new system will cover Nursery, Reception, Junior, and Year 7 school places, and will help streamline the application process, allowing parents and guardians to have a central and accessible way to easily view applications. 

To be able to use this system, users will need to setup a secure account and provide relevant details such as: 

  1. Their details.
  2. The details of their children.
  3. The schools they wish to select. 

 

This change will make it easier for parents and carers to track their applications from start to finish, with future outcome notifications also provided in the system. 

Admission

Phase

Admission forms available from

Consideration period

Closing date

Offer Date

Secondary

02/09/2024

02/09/2024   -   04/11/2024

04/11/2024

03/03/2025

Junior

23/09/2024

23/09/2024  –  18/11/2024

18/11/2024

16/04/2025

Reception

23/09/2024

23/09/2024  –  18/11/2024

18/11/2024

16/04/2025

Nursery

23/09/2024

23/09/2024  –  17/02/2025

17/02/2025

06/05/2025

 

Applications must be received before the closing dates shown above in order to be considered.  

For applications for September 2025, pupils must be of the following age:

 

Child must be born between:

Nursery

1 September 2021 & 31 August 2022

Reception

1 September 2020 & 31 August 2021

Junior (year 3)

1 September 2017 & 31 August 2018

Secondary (year 7)

1 September 2013 & 31 August 2014

 

* Parents and guardians can set up an account through this link: www.denbighshire.gov.uk/education-self-service

Geraint Davies, Head of Service for Education at Denbighshire County Council said: “This new online facility will allow parents and carers to access and track their applications from start to finish more easily. Having the applications in one place also helps if there are a number of applications pending at one time."

Councillor Diane King, Lead Member for Education, Children and Families said: “It is great that we are making our school applications system easier to use and more accessible. I’d like to thank all involved for all of their hard work in developing and implementing this new system.”

New Dolphin makes BYD for slice of EV market



BYD Dolphin launch by Steve Rogers

The BYD story is picking up pace with two new versions of the best selling Dolphin and a new SUV later this month.

First a quick reminder about the company that is still a mystery to many. It arrived from China last year with two electric cars, ATO 3 SUV and then the Dolphin, a five door family hatchback around the size of a Vauxhall Astra that has become its best seller.

BYD - Build Your Dreams - started life as a battery maker and, believe it or not, plays a huge part in our daily lives powering one in five smartphones and half of the world’s ipads.

Its big selling point is building affordable electric cars and on the back of the success of Dolphin is expanding the range with smaller battery outputs to keep prices down.

So two new models each with a 44.9kWh battery pack, Active with a range of 211 miles and the more powerful Boost with 193 miles. Even the 95bhp Active is sprightly but you get more zing from the 173bhp Boost which also switches to multi-link rear suspension for a slightly more settled ride. A fair question is why isn’t it on the Active model as well?

If planning a long journey a top up would be needed around the 150 mile mark so look for a 100kW charging point and the car can be 80 percent full in just under half an hour although these new models are aimed at customers who do not cover many miles.

Pricing is still competitive compared to the big names but cannot claim to be the cheapest with the Renault backed Dacia setting the cat amongst the pigeons with its £15k low range electric car.

Reducing the size of the battery pack has not impacted on the level of equipment, a strong point of the Dolphin, so you still get the big rotating screen, vegan leather trim, 360 degree surround camera, powered front seats. LED auto dipping headlights, and a safety pack that includes forward collision warning with emergency braking and rear cross traffic braking. There is a trolley full of technology, cheery design with lots of thoughtful touches and several storage spaces.

This is a spacious car thanks to its wafer thin underfloor battery pack. I sat behind a six foot driver and had plenty of legroom. Boot space is not class leading but more than adequate for family motoring.

Living with the Dolphin will take a bit of getting used to. There is precious little in the way of switches so prepare to be bamboozled by the touchscreen which controls just about everything. A good voice control system helps out until you get used to operating regular functions like heating selections and tuning the radio. There is no navigation but connections for Android Auto and Apple CarPlay so routes can be displayed on the main screen.

BYD has had a good first 18 months with sales climbing steadily from 213 to 3,600. Dealerships have gone from four to 60 and that will double through next year when showrooms will open in north and south Wales.

We are going to see a lot more Chinese vehicles on our roads because joining BYD and MG is another newcomer with the strange name of Omoda. Next up for BYD is a plug-in hybrid SUV version of the Seal luxury saloon with prices ranging from £33,205 to £39,905.

That should be very interesting because the Seal was my 2023 Car of the Year.

Fast facts

Dolphin Active/Boost

£26,195/£27,195

Battery: 44.9kWh

Power: 95bhp/173bhp

Boot: 345-1310 litres

Warranty: 6 years

Battery: 8 years

Sunday, September 8, 2024

Llangollen antique shop owner pens Gresford disaster book

In time to commemorate its 90th anniversary later this month a man closely associated with the area’s coal mining heritage has published a book about the Gresford Colliery Disaster.

The 1934 catastrophe, which took place on September 22nd 1934, saw a series of explosions rip through the Dennis Section of the mine to claim the lives of over 250 men in a matter of minutes.

The men blamed the pit management, the management blamed the men and the government fined the pit owner £500, or £2 per man lost. The dead are still underground.

George Roberts McGill, who lives in Ruabon and for years has run a well-known antique shop in Llangollen, was born into a mining community in Southsea, Wrexham, 75 years ago and had family members who worked down the local Plas Power pit.

He says this has given him a special empathy for the industry and the people who have worked in it and led him to write “No Moon No Stars”, a story he has woven around fictional characters with a connection to the disaster.

Although the paperback he has created runs to 140 pages he points out that it isn’t written in the style of a book at all but rather a theatrical script with over dozen characters who appear in it being guided by stage directions and speaking their lines as in the theatre.

George, who is retired but for many years has had the Passers Buy antique shop in Llangollen, said the title of his work is taken from a poem about the disaster by local writer Rhona Roberts, which appeared first in a Wrexham newspaper in the year of the disaster.

“I decided to use it as the title for the book – or play - which took me over 20 years to put together and has just been published,” he explained.

“I decided to write it as a script as I’m not a writer and couldn’t do a book. But I do know a bit about the style of plays, dialogue, scripts and stage directions as for a number of years I’ve appeared in local amateur stage productions. I’m actually rehearsing at the moment for the latest comedy, ‘Allo ‘Allo: The Camembert Caper, which Llangollen Twenty Club will be performing in November.”

George built up “No Moon No Stars” using anecdotes about Wrexham’s coal mining years he fund in books, autobiographies, biographies and old films of the period and the “cast” includes a mining family of grandfather, son and daughter, a police sergeant, a local doctor, a vicar and even a drunken Mancunian visitor to the area.

The action takes place just before, during and in the aftermath of the disaster, with even a few scenes set down a coalmine.

George said: “It is being sold on Amazon and I’m also distributing it to various venues in and around Wrexham, such as the Miners Rescue Museum in the city’s Maesgwn Road, Waterstones bookshop and the local library.

“I’m not taking any money for the ones they sell and have told them to keep the proceeds and put it towards their own upkeep.

“I wanted to do this because I have a strong feeling for the coal mining community, not just in this area but right across Britain.

“I even painted the front cover myself in the dementia-friendly art class in Wrexham that I help out with.

“It’s likely to be my one and only venture into writing but I must admit I have another subject in mind which quite interests me, so you never know.”   

* No Moon No Stars is available on Amazon at: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Moon-Stars-George-Roberts-McGill/dp/B0DDHCVP22     

Saturday, September 7, 2024

Latest dates at Pengwern Community Hub


 



Citizens Advice column for September

Latest column from Denbighshire Citizens Advice:

Q: Everywhere I look I see adverts for upcoming sales - Black Friday and Cyber Monday ‘deals’ are jumping out at me from all directions. Some of the prices seem too good to be true - how can I be sure I really am getting a good deal and not being scammed? 

A: You’re not the only one eager to bag a bargain. The busiest shopping time of the year is also a busy time for cyber criminals who use the spike in spending to disguise their scams as legitimate shopping sites. 

Fraudsters are also taking advantage of AI advances to help them produce accurate and professional-looking content to trick victims into giving away their financial details. 

It sounds like you’re aware there are risks when buying online and that scammers will try to tempt consumers with special offers, fake reviews and sought-after items at rock bottom prices. The good news is there are ways you can protect yourself and shop safely. 

Here Citizens Advice Senior Consumer Expert, Kate Hobson, shares her top five tips to make sure you don’t end up with more, or less, than you bargained for during this busy shopping season. 

1. Make sure you don’t feel rushed. Scammers will often create a sense of urgency by claiming it’s a limited offer or price which encourages you to act without taking as much time to consider the purchase. 

2. Know who you are buying from – if buying from a company you have not used before, check reviews and previous customers’ feedback. If in doubt, don’t buy. 

3. Be wary of suspicious web links. These may direct you to fake (but realistic-looking) websites. It is better to type in the website address yourself. 

4. Don’t share any one-time codes that you’re sent when shopping online. These codes are used to confirm that you’re the one making the purchase, so don’t share them with anyone. 

5. Avoid paying anyone you don’t know by bank transfer. Paying by credit card for single items costing £100 and over gives you legal protection if the goods do not arrive, are faulty, or do not match the description. Paying by credit or debit card for orders costing less than £100 also gives you protection using your card provider’s voluntary ‘Chargeback’ scheme. 

* If you’re worried that something you’ve seen online might be a scam, you can contact the Citizens Advice Consumer line by calling 0808 223 1133 or visit https://www.citizensadvice.org.uk/consumer for more information.

Friday, September 6, 2024

John Palmer completes skydive challenge at 77

                                * John Palmer kitted out and ready for the skydive.

Llangollen man John Palmer has just completed his first skydive at the age of 77, raising money for  a cause close to his heart. Here he describes how it went:

"I completed my tandem sky dive last week.  It had been postponed because of inclement weather.  However the forecast was promising and I arrived at Skydive Tilstock Freefall Club in Whitchurch at 8 am.  

"It was still a bit damp and cloudy but that gave us time for a briefing and some drills one of which was stretching back like a banana – necessary for the freefall part, and the second was pulling my knees to my chest to facilitate our landing. Having confirmed that I could actually do it, I put on my suit, met my instructor and got into the minibus to drive to the plane.  

"There were 10 of us in a ridiculously small aeroplane. Whenever I fly on a domestic flight I am always relieved when we actually leave the ground and continue to ascend. In retrospect this was probably the scariest part of the whole thing. We gradually reached 10,000ft. On the way up my instructor attached himself to me and briefed me again.

"Once we had the green light (literally) one by one people went out through the door. We were the last to go and I found myself dangling out of the plane – no going back now. Suddenly we were in flight just like a free fall parachutist falling at 140ft per second/per second.


* John floats to earth during the dive. 
Picture is by his son Nic.

"It was a relief when the parachute deployed with a jerk and we floated down to the landing zone. A quick practice of the landing drill and then we were landing for real.

"We returned to base and got changed. The instructors were very professional and I was very impressed with their expertise.

"Going home to do the shopping was in stark contrast to the adrenalin rush of a sky dive.

"I did the sky dive to raise money the Friends of Llangollen Health Centre and I would like to thank everyone who sponsored me. I have not yet got a final figure, but I am grateful for all the support.  On the news they reported that a 102-year-old lad had done a sky dive – puts my efforts in the shade.

* John's Gofundme page is at: https://gofund.me/7935d2aa

Thursday, September 5, 2024

Llan park runner Michael takes on 100km charity challenge


* Michael Beynon is a regular at Llangollen's Old Railway Trail parkrun.

Sixteen years ago doctors told Michael Beynon’s mum he would spend most of his adult life in a wheelchair. 

But with support, continuous training and determination he is planning to take on the formidable challenge of running 100km in just one week in a bid to raise £10,000 for the charity Mencap.

 

Michael, now 29, was born with Downs Syndrome, visually impaired and mild right-sided Cerebral Palsy.

 

A resident of Chirk, he is a regular runner and volunteer with the Old Railway Trail parkrun in Llangollen.

Next month Michael aims to take on a the mammoth challenge of running or walking 100km in one week around Wales, starting on Sunday October 6 and finishing the following Sunday, October 13.

His plan is to raise £10,000 for Mencap by:

Running the Cardiff Half Marathon on October 6

* Then running/walking 60km around Wales including walking 5km events with local Mencap Clubs, walking groups and Rotarians, taking in the Llanelli Millenium Coastal Path, the Botanical Gardens of Wales, Stackpole Gardens, Aberystwyth parkrun course, Llanfyllin and Llangefni parkrun course and Llangollen parkrun course.

* Finishing off at the Manchester Half on October 13. 

Michael said: “Every year I take on a challenge for charity. This year I decided to raise money for Mencap, as I am a Mencap Myth Buster and because I received amazing support from Mencap last year after a very difficult episode in my life after experiencing racial bullying.

“I wanted to do a challenge that will push me out of my comfort zone and to share my love for walking/running in nature with my Mencap, parkrun, Rotary and friends throughout Wales.

“Mencap works to improve the lives of people with learning disabilities, live happy and healthy lives through campaigning for our rights, providing support and services.”

 

“I will be updating progress on my 100km challenge daily on my social media platforms - Facebook page Michael Beynon, X (Twitter): MichaelBeynon7, Instagram: michaelbeynon95.”


Michael’s Justgiving page is at: Michael huw mathew Beynon is fundraising for Mencap (justgiving.com)