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Driving restrictions needed to 'save young lives'

by Roman April 3, 2025
written by Roman

When asked if she has any resentment towards the driver, Ms Lucas said: "Absolutely not, no."

"The driver had not been drinking. The driver was young. He was inexperienced," she added.

"We know that young people's brains are not mature until they're about 25.

"It wasn't his fault. There was nothing to stop him driving. It's just sadly – very sadly – one of those things."

Ms Lucas described her son as a natural entertainer and music lover who was "full of life" and who "completed the family". He was studying business at Bournemouth University and would have turned 23 this week.

Ms Lucas said she had joined other bereaved families to campaign for graduated driving licences to stop more families going through similar experiences.

"Losing a child, for anybody, is clearly hard," she said. "Losing a child where, arguably, it could be prevented by a change in the law… it's not going to save all lives, but it could save so many. That's really my focus.

"Let's make some change. Stop these deaths."

Graduated driving licences already exist in Australia, New Zealand, Canada, some US states, Finland, Norway, Sweden, France and Northern Ireland.

Ms Lucas is calling for a UK-wide version to be rolled out which would mean new drivers could not carry passengers under the age of 25 until they have been driving for six months, or have turned 20.

"It's to stop young people having a group of friends in a car when they don't have the experience to handle the distractions," Ms Lucas said.

"It's just about giving them some time to drive on their own and improve their own skills before they have the responsibility of having passengers in the car."

The restrictions explained

The overall campaign is led by Crystal Owen, from Shrewsbury, who lost her 17-year-old son Harvey when he was a passenger in a car that crashed in north Wales in November 2023. Three other teenagers were also killed.

The campaign is calling for:

  • A minimum six-month learning period for learner drivers before they are eligible for a practical test.
  • For the first six months after passing their test, or until they turn 20, drivers should not carry passengers aged 25 or under unless accompanied by an older adult
  • All cars must be fitted with a tool that could smash open a window if a car is trapped, to allow occupants to escape to safety.
  • Violating the rules would result in six penalty points, leading to immediate licence suspension.
PA Media
The campaign group is calling for new licence restrictions for young drivers

Six mothers of road crash victims, including Ms Lucas and Ms Owen, have now delivered a petition calling for stricter driving laws to Downing Street after it was signed by more than 100,000 people.

Since the event, Ms Lucas said she heard from more parents who wanted to support it.

"The group has now got well over 100 members," she said.

MP Dr Roz Savage said restrictions may unfairly disadvantage people in rural areas

MP for the South Cotswolds, Dr Roz Savage, said the work Ms Lucas has done to raise awareness was "admirable".

However, she added restrictions may "unfairly disadvantage" young people in rural areas where public transport is "often non-existent".

Ms Lucas argued the temporary restrictions are designed to save lives and not disadvantage, adding: "There is no greater disadvantage than having no life."

A Department for Transport spokesperson said: "Every death on our roads is a tragedy and our thoughts remain with the families of everyone who has lost a loved one in this way.

"Whilst we are not considering graduated driving licences, we absolutely recognise that young people are disproportionately victims of tragic incidents on our roads.

"We are determined to tackle this, including through our THINK! campaign, which has a focus on men aged 17-24 as they are four times more likely to be killed or seriously injured than other drivers."

Lorna Lee, campaign manager at the AA, said that while more education could form part of a graduated drivers licence system, the presence of young passengers was the factor the motoring body sees "time and time again" in serious crashes.

"We know that for every similar age passenger that is carried with a young driver, that crash risk increases," she said.

"So if you can just remove that risk for a short period of time after they have passed their test, we think you would start to see a real improvement in the death and serious injury rates amongst that demographic."

April 3, 2025 0 comments
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Innovation

Kent botanist saved Japanese blossom from extinction

by Kelly April 3, 2025
written by Kelly

The story of how a botanist from Kent saved a variety of Japanese cherry trees from extinction in the 1920s will be told through a series of walks.

Collingwood Ingram, from Westgate-on-Sea, was in Japan when he was shown a picture of a white cherry blossom thought to be extinct in the country.

He immediately recognised it as Taihaku, which he had seen in a garden in Winchelsea, East Sussex, and later sent cuttings back to its native Japan for propagation.

Walks telling the story of Ingram's life and work will be held in Dane Park, Margate, and Ellington Park, Ramsgate, where Taihaku trees were planted in his honour in 2020.

Ingram was born in 1880 and was said to have found his love for nature on the Minster Marshes.

Upon visiting Japan in 1902, he discovered that cloning of more popular colours of cherry had led to a decline in the number of varieties.

He gathered 50 endangered varieties and planted them in his garden in The Grange, Biddenden, for safekeeping.

Peter Hasted, from Thanet Urban Forest, is leading the walks

Ingram became something of an authority on cherries and was invited to address the Japanese Cherry Society, when he was shown the picture of the Taihaku.

His initial efforts to send cuttings from Winchelsea to Japan failed. Only on his last attempt, when he sent them buried in a potato by train, did the cuttings take.

Now, more than 100 years on, Thanet Urban Forest has arranged two walks to tell the story of Ingram's important work and teach people about planting and blossom.

Leading the walks is Peter Hasted, who said: "These were lost species in Japan, [Ingram] spent many years and lots of money trying to re-establish the cuttings in Japan.

"We come to the cherry blossoms, stop, and appreciate what they are."

The walks will be held on 13 April.

April 3, 2025 0 comments
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Business

'Bear with us' say town bosses as works begin

by Ian April 2, 2025
written by Ian

Penzance will spend some of the £21.5m awarded from central government on changing Market Jew Street with works starting in July.

Penzance Town Fund (PTF) said it aimed to improve accessibility for pedestrians, people with reduced mobility, cyclists and public transport.

Other investments would include a climbing centre in a former supermarket and a street food hall in the town's historic Market House, it said.

The PTF boss said some people had complained "because everyone romanticises the past" and asked residents to "bear with us" while the changes were made.

Sarah Shaw is the BID manager and works with Penzance Town Fund

'People hate change'

Business owner and Business Improvement District (BID) manager Sarah Shaw works with the Penzance Town Fund and she said: "The ultimate goal is to have a user friendly, highly populated, busy thriving town of Penzance.

"There's certainly plenty of people grumbling about it but in fact Penzance has always been quite hostile to pedestrians.

"I think people romanticise the past – 'the old days were always better, the town was busier and we all took more money'.

"I think people hate change but we ask them to bear with us."

Morgan Lewis works in an e-bike business in Penzance and hopes the move will help to fill empty shops in the town

Following a trial period the banning of cars in the town between 11:00 and 16:00 has been made permanent.

Morgan Lewis who works at Ride on E-Bikes in the centre of the town said: "Local Facebook groups have plenty of moaning about it, but there will always be lovers and haters.

"We need to reinforce pedestrianisation and calm the traffic coming up and down Market Jew Street.

"I think it will help fill the empty shops with new businesses and bring more people into Penzance."

There are three different projects to transform the town planned to take place between July this year through to early 2026 and these will be combined with upgrades to the gas pipework.

Wales and West Utilities programme controller Abby Smith said: "We know that working in areas like this is not ideal, which is why we're working collaboratively to agree the best way to get this important work done while causing the least disruption to the community."

April 2, 2025 0 comments
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Business

Twenty jobs could go as part of WRU restructure

by Stephanie April 1, 2025
written by Stephanie

The Welsh Rugby Union will cut up to 20 roles as it implements a restructure aimed at saving £5m a year.

It said the "transformative programme" would involve savings and efficiencies in the business and would allow the governing body to operate" in a manner befitting of a £100m-a-year business".

The organisation which employs 344 people added it has entered a formal consultation period with staff.

It comes after the WRU announced on Wednesday it had agreed to buy Cardiff Rugby, one of the four regional Welsh sides, after it collapsed into administration earlier this week.

April 1, 2025 0 comments
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Industry

Man attacked friend after finding him with his ex

by Owen March 30, 2025
written by Owen

A man who hit a friend on the head with a wrench because he suspected he was in a relationship with his estranged wife has been jailed.

Alan Westwood, 58, struck at his victim's home in Peel on 31 August.

Douglas Courthouse heard Westwood hit the man with a tool that had been in his car.

He was sentenced to two years and eight months in prison, and given a restraining order banning him from contacting the victim.

The court heard Westwood and his wife had first become friendly with the victim in 2020 and had often met for a drink.

But the 59-year-old had stopped going out after giving up drinking alcohol.

Two weeks prior to the attack, his wife had told him their marriage was over, and he began to suspect she was in a relationship with the other man, the court was told.

'Premeditated and unprovoked'

The court heard she was having a drink with the other man when she received a message from Westwood at 19:45 BST saying he was going to visit him at his home in Peel.

The pair had returned to there to wait for him.

Doorbell camera footage shown to the court showed the victim beckoning Westwood to come in through the back door.

After a brief exchange, Westwood hit the man on the head with the wrench before the pair began grappling on the sofa.

The police were called and Westwood was arrested.

He later pleaded guilty to attempting to cause grievous bodily harm with intent.

Prosecutors said it had been a "premeditated and unprovoked assault" that had left the victim with a headwound that needed six staples.

Westwood's advocate said he had only noticed the wrench in the footwell of the car when he arrived at the house, and had not deliberately taken it with him.

Handing down the jail term Deemster Graeme Cook said: "You could have killed him."

March 30, 2025 0 comments
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Economy

Planned Tropicana revamp expected to get go-ahead

by Faith March 29, 2025
written by Faith

Plans to transform Weston-super-Mare's Tropicana into a 5,000-seater venue could be approved next week after the design was amended following criticism from locals.

Some local residents dubbed the building "brutalist" and a "1980s warehouse" when plans were unveiled in January, but now planning officers are recommending a softened design gets the go-ahead.

After closing as a pool in 2000, the Tropicana stood vacant for years until Banksy used it as the setting for his Dismaland bemusement park in 2015, since then it has been used as an events space for hire.

North Somerset received £20m from the government's Levelling Up Fund in 2022, and allocated a portion to revamp the 1930s former lido.

March 29, 2025 0 comments
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Tech

'Rayner on the Rampage' and 'My big sister Kate'

by Zoe March 27, 2025
written by Zoe

The lead in the Times is the proposed expansion of a network of mental health emergency care units across England, which it says are "intended to relieve pressure on hospitals and emergency services". The paper quotes the NHS national director of mental health, Claire Murdoch, as saying that the units would be a "first port of call" for patients in crisis – and would reduce lengthy stays on mental health wards.

The Daily Telegraph reports that a Jewish protester was arrested by the Metropolitan Police for holding up a placard which "satirised a Hezbollah leader" during a pro-Palestinian rally last September.

The paper says it has seen footage of a police officer asking him repeatedly if he thought the image would offend "pro-Hezbollah" demonstrators and stir up racial hatred. The Telegraph adds the man's case is the latest in what it calls a "string of heavy-handed police responses to lawful expression". A spokesperson for the Met said the force would "attempt to learn lessons from the episode".

The Guardian leads with the delay to the publication of Labour's child poverty strategy, which it says may result in tens of thousands more children falling into poverty. The paper quotes a government source as saying that he believes the two-child benefit cap – which prevents parents from claiming universal credit or tax credit for more than two children – will eventually be dropped. But it says there are questions being raised inside Number 10 over the political benefits of scrapping it.

The Daily Mail is among a number of the papers to report that a new biography about Freddie Mercury, the late lead singer of the rock group Queen, had a secret daughter. The paper says her existence was only known to his closest circle of family and friends.

According to the Mail, she is now 48 and lives in Europe and had a very "loving" relationship with Mercury before he died in 1991. It reveals he gave her 17 volumes of his personal journals, which she has shared with the rock biographer Lesley-Ann Jones. She's written the new book called Love, Freddie, which will be published in September.

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March 27, 2025 0 comments
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Tech

Controversial US-backed group says it has begun aid distribution in Gaza

by Robert March 26, 2025
written by Robert

A controversial new aid distribution group backed by the US and Israel has begun working in Gaza.

The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation said lorry loads of food had been delivered to secure sites on Monday and that distribution had begun. Hundreds of Palestinians collected food parcels from a site in southern city of Rafah on Tuesday.

The GHF, which uses armed American security contractors, aims to bypass the UN as the main supplier of aid to the 2.1 million people in Gaza, where experts have warned of a looming famine after an 11-week Israeli blockade that was recently eased.

A UN spokesman said the operation was a "distraction from what is actually needed" and urged Israel to reopen all crossings.

The UN and many aid groups have refused to co-operate with GHF's plans, which they say contradict humanitarian principles and appear to "weaponise aid".

They have warned that the system will practically exclude those with mobility issues, force further displacement, expose thousands of people to harm, make aid conditional on political and military aims, and set an unacceptable precedent for aid delivery around the world.

Israel says an alternative to the current aid system is needed to stop Hamas stealing aid, which the group denies doing.

March 26, 2025 0 comments
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Economy

'We've been paying for a lift that does not exist'

by Rebecca March 26, 2025
written by Rebecca

Residents at a block of flats have shared their dismay after paying for a lift that does not exist for two years.

The tenants at Barham Park in Wembley, north-west London, contacted the BBC after it reported that Notting Hill Genesis had sent rent and service charge notices to tenants with cost increases of up to 50% "in error".

Those living at Barham Park said their block of flats only had stairs, yet each tenant had been charged close to £200 for a lift for two years in a row.

The housing association apologised and said certain costs at Barham Park had been "incorrectly apportioned", and it would send out new estimates.

It also apologised for concern caused to tenants at another block whose service charge costs are more than doubling after previous year's costs were under-budgeted by more than £77,000, as shown in documents seen by the BBC.

The errors have led to criticism, with the Social Housing Action Campaign (SHAC) saying overcharging and miscalculations made by housing associations "is a scandal on par with the Post Office scandal".

While an employee of a managing agent who works on one of the same sites as Notting Hill Genesis – and interacts with the association – told the BBC anonymously "I don't think the finance systems are robust" because they had seen "duplications in terms of spending on contractors".

They added "there are lots of junior staff and high turnover" within housing associations generally and "employees need more support from the managers".

Barham Park in Wembley has stairs, not a lift

Angela Tanner, who lives at Barham Park with her partner Rosemary, said: "We just don't have a lift in this block.

"We've asked multiple times for a refund but Notting Hill Genesis still haven't made that refund.

"We're paying around £200 for the non-existent lift this year. It's like banging your head against a brick wall."

Ms Tanner said their service charges had almost doubled in a year.

"It's very difficult for me as a resident to understand what I'm being charged for," she said.

"It's also lack of transparency on what the charges are when they lump it together. I don't understand the logic."

'Issuing refunds'

Notting Hill Genesis said at Barham Park it had identified that certain costs had been "incorrectly apportioned meaning some of our residents have received inaccurate service charge bills".

"We have written to residents to let them know and we will be sending new estimates setting out the costs they'll be paying, as well as issuing refunds where appropriate," a spokesperson said.

"We recognise the impact this will have had on residents and are sorry for the understandable concern caused."

In response to the anonymous employee, the Notting Hill Genesis spokesperson said: "We are in the process of embedding a new operating model which provides local officers with support from more specialist teams with expertise in specific areas, including service charges.

"We are also close to introducing a new finance system which will improve how we manage core information and, in turn, improve services to residents."

Tenants at Geneva Court in north London face a service charge increase of more than 100%

Meanwhile, service charges for another group of tenants living in Geneva Court, a Notting Hill Genesis block in Hendon, north London, are increasing by more than 100% – which residents say is the highest increase in more than 20 years.

Paperwork seen by the BBC showed that in 2023-2024 the building had an expenditure of £126,656 but only had a budget of £49,640, meaning the housing association under-budgeted by £77,015.

Resident Manuel Fernandez said: "Why should I be penalised for someone's mistake for under-budgeting a 22-year-old building?

"Looking at the service charges throughout the years, the electricity is exactly the same charge. That's your problem not mine."

Manuel Fernandez says "why should I be penalised for someone's mistake for under-budgeting?"

Mr Fernandez added: "I'm physically and mentally drained. It's not the first time I've been dealing with service charges. I've called them a few times on mistakes but they've never refunded us.

"I work five days a week, silly hours, as a gas engineer. I leave at 06:00 and don't come back until 19:00 or 20:00.

'I'm going to have to tell my family we can't go out. We have to pay an extra £300 a month."

Notting Hill Genesis said, in line with the tenancy or leasehold agreement and service charge practices, it reviews the actual spend against the estimated amount each year and then charge or credit the difference.

"Unfortunately, at Geneva Court, the estimated amount was too low, and we now need to recoup the actual cost of those services," a spokesperson said.

"We recognise the impact this has had on residents and are sorry for the understandable concern this is causing."

'Refusing to listen'

SHAC said it was inundated with tenants across the UK complaining about "huge number of errors, inflated charges and unexplained charges".

Co-founder Suzanne Muna said: "'There are people paying directly who are having to find ever greater sums of money to keep up with what their landlords are trying to charge them.

"But we also have a number of people who are having it paid through the public purse and that means we are all paying these highly inflated and sometimes what we would consider downright fraudulent causes."

The group is calling on the government to introduce something similar to the deposit protection scheme to help residents dispute service charges.

"We think this is a scandal on par with the Post Office scandal because tenants and residents have been saying for years it's been happening. And landlords and government have been refusing to listen."

The National Audit office said: "We have received the correspondence from SHAC and we are carefully considering it in line with our remit to audit government spending."

The Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government said: "We will consult this year on implementing measures to drive up transparency of service charges, ensuring leaseholders and tenants can better hold their landlords to account."

March 26, 2025 0 comments
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Business

'Brilliant' youth worker sets up own club at 17

by Abigail March 26, 2025
written by Abigail

A woman who set up her own youth club aged 17 has said she was inspired by her own youth workers.

Yasmin Betteridge leads Wallingford TRAIN in Oxfordshire, an offshoot of Didcot charity TRAIN Youth which she attended as a teenager last year.

She said her youth workers were some of her "biggest role models" and helped her "build up a lot of confidence".

Yasmin won a "highly commended" title at the Oxfordshire Apprentice Awards last month.

Volunteer Michelle (left) said the young people were "always keen to speak" to Yasmin

Yasmin grew up in Didcot and started going to TRAIN Youth aged 11, but said she later found herself drawn into trouble in the town as a teenager.

"In secondary school I got into a different friendship group, and would say I was involved in anti-social behaviour," she said.

"In towns like Didcot and Wallingford there isn't really much to do or anywhere to go.

"We played to stereotypes of what [adults] and pretty much anybody thought of us."

Yasmin said she wanted Wallingford TRAIN to be a "safe, inclusive space"

Aged 15, Yasmin was asked by TRAIN Youth to help with interviews for a new staff member.

She said: "I turned around to one of our trustees and said 'that'll be me you're interviewing one day'."

After doing her work experience with the charity she said she "begged" her manager to set up an apprenticeship, which she then successfully applied for.

She then worked for the charity while studying for a youth work diploma and is now a youth worker alongside her university studies. .

'She calms me down'

Michelle, a volunteer with the Wallingford group, said Yasmin was an "amazing" youth worker who the young people at the club identified with.

"I've known Yasmin for a long, long time. She's got a super relationship with all the young people that come through. She's a brilliant individual," she said.

Dorian, who attends the group, said Yasmin was a particularly good listener.

"When I'm angry I talk to her and she just calms me down. I have a feeling she's gone through the same thing."

Charlotte, who travels to the group from her home in Benson, agreed: "She's a very easy person to chat to and she's… very understanding."

Yasmin said she wanted Train Youth in Wallingford to be somewhere that was both inclusive and safe.

"I think the young people of Wallingford know if they need something that they can call my work phone [or] come to us if they need anything.

"That's pretty much what my idea has been," she added.

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March 26, 2025 0 comments
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