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Tuesday, April 15, 2025

Churches Together's Good Friday gathering in Centenary Square

Churches Together in Llangollen (Cytun) is inviting everyone to join together on Centenary Square from 12 noon on Good Friday for songs and readings.

An organiser of the event says: "You are also invited to join with those from the Methodist Church in Princess Street as they leave the church after the 11am service in a Walk of Witness to the square.

"Mini Easter eggs and hot cross buns will be distributed to bystanders. Please come and join in."

Riverside Park among schemes to improve county's open spaces


                     * Llangollen's Riverside Park.                     

 

A number of projects aimed at improving infrastructure in Denbighshire - including a major scheme in Llangollen - have recently been completed by the county council’s Streetscene services. 

 

The county was awarded £340,000 from the UK Government’s Shared Prosperity Fund to improve the public realm and open spaces. 


The funding was spilt over three separate projects in Llangollen, Rhyl and Prestatyn.

 

Riverside Park in Llangollen was in need of some much-needed public realm improvements and underwent a comprehensive refurbishment, including aesthetic improvements such as painting metal railings and street lighting upgrades, and practical upgrades like bench refurbishment and new bin installations.

 

Further structural work included the installation of a timber knee rail fence around the bandstand, repairs to the Multi Use Game Area (MUGA), retaining wall, and fencing adjacent to the A5, alongside some drainage improvements.

 

New signage and posts were also installed to increase the visibility of the park, contributing to refurbishment of the public space.

 

Councillor Jason McLellan, Leader and Lead Member for Economic Growth & Tackling Deprivation said: “The completion of these projects across the County is fantastic news, and this much-needed work to our green spaces would not have been possible without funding from the UK Governments Shared Prosperity Fund and the hard work of our Streetscene team.

 

“The restoration of these areas across Denbighshire will preserve their longevity and ensure their future use for years to come."

 

* For more information on Denbighshire’s Shared Prosperity Fund projects click here.

Monday, April 14, 2025

Care home champion gives cautious welcome to new ratings system


* Mario Kreft MBE, chair of Care Forum Wales.

A social care champion has given a “cautious welcome” to a new ratings system for care homes and home care services in Wales.

But Mario Kreft MBE, chair of Care Forum Wales, believes it has been introduced too soon without sufficient safeguards or proper funding.

As a result, he fears some care homes and domiciliary care companies will be unfairly labelled as failing organisations.

Under the new system, care homes and home care services will be graded on four different aspects of care.

Inspections by regulators Care Inspectorate Wales will focus on well-being, care and support, leadership and management and the environment at the home.

Care homes will then be legally obliged to display their ratings at the home and online.

According to the Welsh Government, they hope the new system will improve standards across the sector.

While supporting the idea behind it, Mr Kreft has concerns about the speed of the implementation and the unfairness of the post code lottery of social care funding in Wales.

He said: “In principle, we like the idea of promoting quality in the social care sector in a way that the public can understand, so we’re giving the ratings system a cautious welcome but with some important caveats.

“Unfortunately, there is a total disconnect in terms of resources because Wales is blighted by a post code lottery of fees that promotes unfairness and inequality.

“If you’re having a national ratings system for care homes you also need a national framework for fees to provide care.

“For example, there’s a massive difference between the fees paid by Denbighshire County Council and the ones in neighbouring Conwy.

“A care home on the Conwy side of the Foryd Bridge in Rhyl will get £9,000 a year per person more than a home in Denbigh.

“It’s also a bit of blunt instrument. You can be a hair’s breadth away from needing improvement or a hair’s breadth away from being rated excellent and you still get the same rating and the system does not take any account of resources.

“In some parts of Wales there are care home receiving £12,000 per resident more than others but they’re all being rated against the exactly the same criteria.

“If a care home in the neighbouring county is getting an extra £400,000 a year that will undoubtedly have an influence on the ratings.

“Everyone knows that keeping staff, offering them careers and paying them above the real living wage costs money.

“Despite this gaping chasm in eligibility for funding they are subjected to the same criteria in terms of ratings and subjected to the same regulatory regime

“”It’s making life very hard for care homes on the wrong end of the post code lottery who are struggling to survive. It’s going to be a lot more challenging for them to be rated as excellent.

“Another issue is that this could give the wrong impression about a particular care home. This is a rating based on a given day.

It may not be a typical day. There could be homes that fall foul of the new system if they’re having a bad day. Things can go wrong and if that’s the day the inspector comes in, you have to publicise that.

“If you’re really having a bad day the inspector’s  report could have serious consequences for the home in question.

“We are doing our very best to make it work but it’s not being implemented in the way we would have done.

“The ratings should reflect the funding of the local authorities and health boards and our priority should be to get a level playing field in terms of funding so that it does not discriminate between the have and the have nots.

“You can’t have a fair ratings system without parity of funding. Without a baseline in terms of funding for vulnerable people who need social care, you can’t expect consistency in the standards of care.

“Most of the local authorities and the health boards in Wales are flouting Welsh Government guidelines and they are promoting inequality through this iniquitous post code lottery of funding.

“By and large, the level of funding for individuals is not assessed according to their actual needs but rather on what the council or the health board wish to pay.

“That’s why it’s essential that we have a national framework to decide funding for vulnerable people rather than persisting with a dysfunctional  system that perpetuates discrimination against them.

“We see this as one of the major flaws of bringing in the new ratings when the social care sector is so fragile and the funding so fragmented. Wales should not have a system that promotes inequality.”

Latest local roadworks update from Denbighshire County Council

Latest local roadworks update from Denbighshire County Council is:

Hall Street, Llangollen.

12/04/2025

17/04/2025

Gwaith Draenio / Drainage Works NMWTRA (DCC)

Ffordd ar Gau/Road Closure

 

Llandyn Hall Farm Culvert

TRACK TO LLANDYN HALL FROM A539

28/04/2025

23/05/2025

Gwaith ar Gylfat/ Culvert Works (DCC)

Ffordd ar Gau/Road Closure

 

OPP 10 Regent Street JNC QUEEN STREET AND CHURCH STREET Llangollen LL2

BROOK STREET

19/05/2025

06/06/2025

Gwaith BT/ BT Works SUNBELT RENTALS (DCC)

Ffordd ar Gau/Road Closure

 

Verge

ABBEY ROAD

31/01/2025

13/06/2025

Gwaith Ar Wal Gynnal/ Retaining Wall Works DCC HIGHWAYS


Easter Half Term activities happening in Llangollen

Easter Half Term activities happening in Llangollen:




Sunday, April 13, 2025

Llangollen teacher bids to win BBC's Design Masters

A Llangollen teacher has begun her bid to win the latest series of the BBC's Design Masters programme.

* For the full story go to: Llangollen's Emma starts bid to win Interior Design Masters | The Leader




Councillors welcome extra £2.6m to finish Newbridge Road repairs


* Newbridge Road is expected to re-open to traffic in early summer.

Wrexham councillors have thanked the Welsh Labour Government for its ‘crucial’ investment to restore and reopen a key local route.

The B5605 at Newbridge is set to reopen in early summer, according to Wrexham Council – which will be more than three years since a landslip caused by a major storm.

After awarding the council £2.8m in April 2022, the Welsh Government has now announced a further grant of £2.6m to cover additional costs incurred in the interim.

Cllr Dana Davies, Labour group leader, said: “It’s a massive investment in Wrexham by the Welsh Government – without this crucial funding the project would never have got off the ground. It’s a huge show of support for our area.

“The £2.8m grant awarded in 2022 was in addition to the £175,000 Ministers had already given the council for ground investigations and designs. This has been a massive job and additional costs have been incurred in the intervening period, so this extra £2.6m on top of almost £3m already committed by the Welsh Government comes as a huge relief to us as councillors as it’s a significant amount of capital the authority doesn’t have to find.”

Cllr Frank Hemmings (Chirk North) said: “As a B-road, Wrexham Council is actually responsible for the B5605 but this was always going to be a huge undertaking and extremely costly, so I was delighted when the Welsh Government said it would foot the bill. They’ve saved the day, really, as the council doesn’t have that kind of money lying around for unplanned bills running into millions of pounds."

Cllr Derek Wright (Cefn East) said: “As councillors we are being asked for updates all the time and for explanations as to why things have taken so long since when the initial grant was announced almost three years ago. I share people’s frustration – we’d all have liked this to have been sorted sooner. It’s a major project, but I do think the council could’ve been better at updating the public and answering their questions.

“We are so grateful for the Welsh Government’s vital support, and I know residents in my neighbouring ward will be too.”

Wrexham Council’s last update to members said the work is progressing as planned and the project should accelerate towards the finishing line once some of the more complicated elements of the rebuild, currently being tackled, are completed.
The road is expected to reopen in ‘early summer’.