DERBYSHIRE, Leicestershire and Rutland Air Ambulance has welcomed a High Court ruling closing down companies that operated a misleading charity collection.
Three connected firms were shut down in the public interest by the High Court in London following an investigation by Company Investigations of the Insolvency Service.
The investigation found the three companies, primarily operating in the Midlands, made misleading representations that the proceeds raised from the onward sale of unwanted clothing would be donated to local air ambulance charities. The reality was this did not happen. Due to the failure of all three companies to maintain adequate accounting records, it is not known what became of any proceeds generated through the sale of clothing items collected by the companies. No evidence of donations made to any Air Ambulance Charity was found.
The investigation also found the companies operated in a similar manner, attempting to pass themselves off as authorised collection agents by making charity bag drops in residential areas, with attached leaflets bearing similarities to the logos of official air ambulance charities. At no time throughout their trading histories were they ever authorised by any air ambulance service to act as charity fund raisers.
News and views on the Peak District by Chris Sabian of http://www.peakdistrictview.com
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
Thursday, October 27, 2011
Ranger-led Peak District hike
Most people do not go walking to experience a low, but there are three on a ranger-led Peak District hike next month.
Held on November 12th, it starts at Great Hucklow village cross at 12:00 GMT and then carries on to Grindlow and Foolow in a four mile route that is completed by 15:30 GMT.
While some may prefer shorter, lower-level walks of this kind in the
autumn and winter, others might still wish to get on higher moors.
The same weekend offers two other ranger guided walks in the national park, including one above Bamford and Derwent with views of Win Hill and another exploring wartime air crash sites on the Kinder Plateau, both of which are on Sunday, November 13th.
In the latter case, this coincides with remembrance Sunday and offers a chance to pay respects to the airmen lost in the incidents.
Don’t forget to bring your walking boots, waterproofs and food and drink.
Labels:
derbyshire,
moorlands,
peak district,
walk,
walking
Wednesday, October 26, 2011
Dovedale Dash
THE Peak District is the venue for the popular cross-country race, the Dovedale Dash.
Now in its 56th year, the event covers a four-and-three-quarter-mile
course over field and dale, on rough paths and tracks. It features a
crossing of the River Dove at the Stepping Stones beauty spot.
This year’s race take place on Sunday November 6 at 11am. Last year over 1,500 runners of all ages and capabilities competed.
There are trophies for winners in the open class, under-18s, under-14s, over-60s, women and locals.
This year, there will also be a separate race for under-10s, starting at 10am.
Entry is £5 on the day only, starting from 9am, and there is no charge for parking.
Full details are available at www.dovedaledash.co.uk, or contact the organisers on 01335 350 410 or 01335 350 239
And the good news – the toilets will still be open so there will be no Paula Radcliffe moments!
Ride Sheffield petition to prevent byway sanitisation
This should be of interest to anyone that rides in the Peak District,
local or otherwise. Access and trailbuilding group Ride Sheffield have
been in touch to say that they need your support to help make the
Sheffield Rights of Way team reconsider planned surfacing work on the
Jumbles Road/Houndkirk byway in the Peak District.
Red hightlights are where the work is planned….
The notice, posted by the Sheffield Council Rights of Way team, says
that they plan to improve the surface of three different sections across
the moor, resurfacing the existing path with locally sourced crushed
gritstone, in an attempt to slow down erosion and improve the drainage.
However, Ride Sheffield are campaigning to make the council
reconsider. They believe the surfacing work will destroy the character
(and fun) of an archetypal Peak District Bridleway, something they say
has happened to other trails in the area.
They have created a petition in the hope that if enough riders
express their concerns over the surfacing work, the Council will
reconsider and attempt to carry out the work in a more sympathetic
manner.
If you agree with this, they’d like you to sign the petition, which can be found below.
Follow @pdview
Friday, October 21, 2011
Sheffield bus axe protest
RESIDENTS of a Peak District village are protesting at changes to buses which will see a commuter service to Sheffield axed at the end of this month.
The 51A runs from Castleton into Sheffield via Bamford village, Ladybower and Broomhill and is one of only a few direct services from Bamford to Sheffield each day.
More regular services run on the main road through the Hope Valley but are a mile from Bamford village centre.
The railway station is a similar distance away.
Thursday, October 20, 2011
Ghostly goings on at Bolsover Castle
FOLLOWING the success of last year’s Hallowe’en events at Bolsover Castle,
English Heritage is promising even more ghostly apparitions and
gruesome tales from the grave for its biggest ever Hallowe’en event.
Hallowe’en week will see family activities during the day and two evening openings when Bolsover Castle’s ghostly secrets will be revealed with special illuminations, ghostly effects and costumed actors.
Time Travellers Go…Ghosts and Ghouls
From Monday 24 to Friday 28 October, special children’s activities
are on offer with Time Travellers Go…Ghosts and Ghouls. Let your little
horrors scare themselves silly this Halloween with creepy crafts, spooky
activities and ghost hunting galore! Take part in a knee trembling
trail around the grounds to find the hidden tomb and discover who lies
within. Create your own terrifying decorations in our craft area and
wander the grounds with our very own ghost hunter as he tells gruesome
tales of times gone by! Adult £7.80/Conc £7.00/Child £4.70/Family
£20.30. EH members free entry. Plus £1 for every child (members and
non-members)
The Ghostly Castle at Night
On Saturday 29 and Sunday 30 October Bolsover Castle will open its
gates at 6pm for two nights of spooky Hallowe’en fun. Have you got what
it takes to brave the castle after dark? Find out about some of
Bolsover’s more horrific happenings and ghostly goings on, then explore
the site by torchlight and meet some the castle’s previous residents:
they are dying to meet you.
The Castle at Night Hallowe’en event is from 6pm- 9pm (last entry
8.15pm) on Saturday 29 and Sunday 30 October. Booking tickets is
recommended as places are limited. Adult £10.00, Concessions £9.00,
Children £6.00. Purchase tickets online at
www.english-heritage.org.uk/bolsovercastle or by calling 0870 333 1183.
Labels:
bolsover,
castle,
derbyshire,
english heritage,
Travel and Tourism
Wednesday, October 19, 2011
BBC Film To Focus On 4×4 Problems In Peak Park
A BBC fly-on-the-wall documentary to be screened at the end of this month focuses on the challenge of managing opposing views about 4×4 and trail bike use on green lanes in the Peak District National Park.
Film-maker Richard Macer spent a year following the Peak Park
Authority’s rights of way team and was given behind the scenes access
to help the public understand the challenges of managing a complex legal
issue that arouses strong passions about the balance required to
conserve and enhance the environment, while allowing people legal access
to the countryside.
The documentary is part of a series caled Tales From The National Parks and will be screened at 9pm on Sunday 30 October on BBC4.
Tuesday, October 18, 2011
Woman lost in Peak District
A WOMAN suffering exhaustion was carried to safety by mountain rescue
team volunteers after she got lost during a day’s walking in the Peak District.
The 65-year-old had been on Bleaklow with her daughter in her 30s when they got separated in thick fog.
Fears were raised for the mother’s wellbeing, and she was eventually
discovered by a search dog team in a cold, wet and exhausted state,
unable to walk any further.
Rescue team members carried her off the hill on a stretcher.
When walking in the Peak District ensure you have a map, compass, and a working torch, and know how to use them!
Labels:
bleaklow,
Buxton Mountain Rescue,
peak district
Snow and Arctic winds on the way
ARCTIC winds, frost and snow will force us to turn up the heating this week that is if you can afford it!
It will be warm today but in a sign the October heatwave is truly at
an end, the Met Office predicts snow will hit the Pennines and Peak District by Tuesday.
Also, the dry autumn has left East Anglia and the Midlands facing
drought warnings, meaning they are likely to be hit by water
restrictions in the new year.
Peak Park governors up for election
The Peak District National Park Authority is recommending 22 of its governing members go up for election in a trial of direct election for national parks.
The authority is currently governed by 30 members, of whom 16 are
councillors appointed to the role and six are elected parishioners.
But the authority says all members – apart from the remaining eight
state-appointed experts – should go up for election in the pilot. It
aims to improve local engagement and was requested by Defra.
Friday, October 14, 2011
Future of Dovedale toilets – public meeting November 1
Residents, visitors and organisations are invited to have their say on the future of the public toilets in Dovedale at a public meeting.
The Peak District National Park Authority is holding the meeting at Thorpe Village Hall on Tuesday November 1, from 5pm to 6pm.
The Authority’s chief executive Jim Dixon, director of operations
Richard Campen and head of property Keith Jennings will be there to hear
people’s suggestions for alternative ways to maintain the public
toilets.
The toilets at the iconic beauty spot are owned by the Authority and
cost more than £17,000 a year to run and there are no income generators
for the Peak Park to offset the cost. In the light of the budget cuts
this seems a reasonable position to take.
However, Dovedale and the surrounding land belongs to the National
Trust and the car park is privately owned and at £2.50 per car perhaps
the responsibility should pass to someone with a big snout in the
trough.
Princely praise for Peak District
PRINCE Charles has sent a message of support to the Peak District National Park in recognition of its 60th anniversary year.
The Prince’s message was read out at a service in Edale Parish
Church, which was organised by Peak District National Park Authority
chairman Tony Favell and led by the Rev Dr Simon Cocksedge, vicar of
Edale.
The Royal message praised the Peak District’s record in pioneering
services that are now part of country life and singled out the ranger
service, which began in Edale in the 1950s, for providing a bridge between farmers and visitors.
Crime falls in Derbyshire
CRIME is continuing to fall in Derbyshire, according to the latest figures published by the police.
During the first six months of the year, overall crime fell by six per cent across the county compared to the same period last year – meaning nearly 2,000 fewer victims of crime.
Between April 1 and September 30 crime fell from 34,898 to 32,934 offences.
House burglary is down by 17 per cent, vehicle crime nine per cent and criminal damage nine per cent.
Violent crime is also bucking the trend with a 15 per cent reduction equating to a thousand fewer victims of crime.
What hasn’t been factored in of course, is the number of crimes that do not get reported for whatever reason!!
During the first six months of the year, overall crime fell by six per cent across the county compared to the same period last year – meaning nearly 2,000 fewer victims of crime.
Between April 1 and September 30 crime fell from 34,898 to 32,934 offences.
House burglary is down by 17 per cent, vehicle crime nine per cent and criminal damage nine per cent.
Violent crime is also bucking the trend with a 15 per cent reduction equating to a thousand fewer victims of crime.
What hasn’t been factored in of course, is the number of crimes that do not get reported for whatever reason!!
No power for 1,000s after Winster fire
Thousands of homes and businesses in Derbyshire were left without power overnight after an explosion at an electrical substation.
The station at Winster, near Matlock, was damaged on Wednesday afternoon and more than 30,000 properties in Matlock, Darley Dale and Cromford were affected.
By Thursday morning about 5,000 customers were still without power but this was restored by about 16:00 BST.
Western Power Distribution said it was investigating the cause of the blast.
Tuesday, October 11, 2011
Public Support Chesterfield Canal Project
A STAGGERING 13,000 people have backed a petition to show there is support for restoring Chesterfield’s canal.
Less than a year ago the Heritage Lottery Fund reportedly said the
waterway’s mammoth rennovation did not hold much heritage value or
public support.
Now that has been proved otherwise by the Chesterfield Canal Trust petition.
The canal stretches from the River Trent to Chesterfield, through tranquil countryside to what will be the multi-million pound Waterside development.
In total restoring 20 miles, with nine left to close the gap, will
cost around £32m. Funding is being sought in chunks and the petition
will help bids by showing how much support there is for the massive
initiative.
Latest progress includes a 200m stretch being rennovated at Mill Green and Staveley’s new canal basin.
The Heritage and Lottery Fund said discussions are ongoing about the
project’s development and support that may be offered in future.
Over £91.4m has been awarded for more than 215 projects on canal or river navigations by the fund.
Labels:
canals,
chesterfield,
derbyshire,
english heritage,
lottery
Software problem makes £340,000 bus signs ‘unreliable’
Derbyshire County Council has admitted that a software issue means that £340,000 worth of bus information signs may never work.
The boards, which advise when buses are due, were bought three years
ago, but 35 remain in storage and eight have not been switched on.
After the purchase bus operator Trent Barton told the council the software used for the signs was “unreliable”.
The council has been unable to find better replacement software.
The Conservative-run authority said it was still trying to resolve
the issue – along with an additional problem affecting 25 of its other
bus information signs which have been out of order for several months.
It said it could not rule out that both sets of signs would never work again.
What a complete waste of money.
Labels:
conservative,
derbyshire county council,
transport
National Park Authority sets out views on direct elections
Article taken from the Derbyshire Times who explain the situation better than I:-
THE Peak District National Park Authority,
one of two national park authorities chosen by the Government to pilot
direct elections, is recommending that all 22 of its council and parish
members should be considered for election.
The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) asked
the Peak District and the New Forest to pilot direct elections following
a review of the governance of England’s 10 national parks, the results
of which came out last month.
At present, the Peak District National Park Authority is governed by
30 members, 16 of whom are councillors appointed by district, county and
city councils within the national park, six elected by parish councils
within the park, and eight appointed by the Defra Secretary of State for
their national expertise.
Defra has already ruled out applying direct elections to the
Secretary of State-appointed members, who are recruited as experts on
major national park issues such as cultural heritage, landscape
conservation, recreation management and planning.
But Defra has asked for the Authority’s views on how many council or
parish members should be directly elected, without increasing the
overall size of the Authority.
A majority of members decided it would be wrong to be selective about
asking council or parish members to give up their seats, and
therefore all 22 should be put forward, and it would be up to Defra to
decide.
They also voted on the principles on which direct elections should be held:
•That local residents achieve a greater sense of ownership of Authority decisions
•That elections do not damage the working relationships with local authorities or parish councils
•That the most cost-effective and efficient process should be identified
• That the costs of holding elections should not be borne by the Authority.
At present, only two out of the UK’s 15 national parks have a
proportion of their members directly elected – both in Scotland – the
Cairngorms and Loch Lomond & the Trossachs. In each case they are
community members, their equivalent of parish members.
Labels:
defra,
derbyshire,
food,
Peak District National Park Authority
Great Peak District Fair returns to Buxton
The Great Peak District Fair – set-up to celebrate local culture, food arts and crafts – returns to Buxton’s Pavilion Gardens on October 15 and 16 to celebrate its tenth anniversary.
VAL to sort out drunks and troublemakers
POLICE in Buxton have
been making use of a new van which has been brought in to keep night
time revellers in the High Peak and Derbyshire Dales safe.
A Violence, Alcohol harm and Licensing (VAL) van is being deployed in town centres across the High Peak and Dales.
It is one of four vans purchased by Derbyshire Fire and Rescue
Service which are being used across the county as part of its
responsibility for safety at licensed premises.
Kitted out with both static and mobile CCTV cameras, the van provides
officers with a mobile base to work from and aims to prevent
alcohol-related anti-social behaviour and violent crime.
It can also help police to detect offences by providing officers with footage which could be used as evidence.
And I thought the budgets were being cut? Obviously there must be a
strong argument for buying vans and making redundancies – I just can’t
see it!
Labels:
buxton,
crime,
derbyshire,
derbyshire fire and rescue,
high peak,
police
Crich scoops awards
A POPULAR tourist attraction in Crich is celebrating after landing two accolades at the prestigious Derbyshire Heritage Awards.
Crich Tramway Village, which is home to the National Tramway Museum, was named winner in two categories at the awards last week at the Silk Mill in Derby.
It triumphed in ‘Best Exhibition’ and ‘Working with Children and Young People’.
The first award was for the new Stephenson Discovery Centre
exhibition, while the second was for the centre’s Learning Department
for its work on the Renaissance East Midlands-funded ‘MuBu’ project
‘Hear All About It’.
Friday, October 07, 2011
Are we returning to the Dark Ages?
The controversial plans of the county coucil to permanently switch off nearly 900 Derbyshire street lights in a bid to save £400,000 a year are sending us in the East Midlands back to the dark ages.
The authority is considering turning off up to 60,000 of its 89,000 lamps between midnight and 5.30am, with one per cent – 900 – switched off permanently in some rural areas and non-residential areas.
What effect will this have on crime and people feeling safe in their communities? and what about school children affected by the permanent switch off?
Letters of concern to Derbyshire County Council please.
The authority is considering turning off up to 60,000 of its 89,000 lamps between midnight and 5.30am, with one per cent – 900 – switched off permanently in some rural areas and non-residential areas.
What effect will this have on crime and people feeling safe in their communities? and what about school children affected by the permanent switch off?
Letters of concern to Derbyshire County Council please.
Labels:
community,
derbyshire,
derbyshire county council,
school
Thursday, October 06, 2011
Derbyshire has a new Poet Laureate
Derbyshire has
a new Poet Laureate. Matt Black was unveiled by Derbyshire County
Council yesterday and was described as “An entertaining and
thought-provoking writer, who composes poems for adults and children”.
Matt is the fourth Derbyshire Poet Laureate following on from Peak
District writer Ann Atkinson and will be in his new role until September
2013.
“There was a young woman from Bakewell…………………”
Labels:
derbyshire,
derbyshire county council,
poetry
Local brewery take awards at Sheffield Festival
A FAMILY-run brewery on the edge of the Peak District has won the “Best Beer Brewed in Sheffield” award at the cities 37th annual beer festival.
Bradfield Brewery won the coveted prize for its Farmers Blonde after a
blind tasting session at the festival, held at Ponds Forge
International Sports Centre.
Meanwhile, the brewery’s Farmers Steel Cow ale won a gold award in the “Best Bitter” category.
Labels:
beer,
brewery,
derbyshire,
peak district,
sheffield
Tuesday, October 04, 2011
Time to park the rows over tickets
A very good letter appeared in the Derbyshire Times from Cllr Simon
Spencer who is Derbyshire County Council deputy leader and cabinet
member for highways and transport concerning blue badges, parking
tickets and parking officers.
Everyone gets irate about this subject matter but having read the letter I have a new sense of responsibility.
Read it at http://www.derbyshiretimes.co.uk/community/letters/time_to_park_the_rows_over_tickets_1_3813152Follow @pdview
Monday, October 03, 2011
Pleasley colliery shortlisted for award
PLEASLEY’S historic former colliery has been shortlisted for one of the country’s most prestigious heritage awards.
Members of the Pleasley Pit Trust have worked tirelessly to
preserve the iconic headstocks and winding house at the site, while the
old colliery spoil heaps have become a thriving nature reserve.
Now all the hard work has been honoured by English Heritage with a
nomination in its Angel Awards, which were launched by Andrew Lloyd
Webber.
They celebrate the work of individuals and groups who have saved a
significant historic site which was at risk of being lost forever.
The Pleasley trust is one of 16 local groups which have been chosen to go forward to the finals on 31st October.
It is one of four sites shortlisted in the ‘The Best Rescue of an Industrial Building or Site’ category.
The project began with work on the land and development of the site, including landscaping and construction of a car park.
Phase two focused on the conservation of the site’s key features,
including the remaining colliery engine houses and the head gears, along
with other Grade II listed structures.
Work has been supported with investment from East Midlands
Development Agency via the Homes and Communities Agency’s National
Coalfields Programme.
The restoration project cleaned up the derelict industrial landscape
following the closure and demolition of the colliery in the 1980s.
It also created a landscaped gateway entrance to the Pleasley Pit Country Park.
The Land Trust provide the Pleasley Pit Trust with advice and support on the management of the historic site.
English Heritage experts met recently to sift through more than 200
applications for the Angel awards, looking for passion, perseverance and
imagination, as well as the scale of the challenge and how well it had
been tackled.
The nomination marks a double celebration for the site after 90
hectares of the country park was designated as a Local Nature Reserve
this summer.
It allowed members to press ahead with turning it into a top attraction.
Wind farm protests
CAMPAIGNERS against a proposed wind farm near four north Derbyshire villages have been urging people to continue backing their campaign after council planning officers carried out a site visit.
Banks Developments has submitted a planning application to Bolsover District Council to build three, 125 metre-high, wind turbines and an 80 metre-high anemometer mast.
But campaigners argued the development will create a noisy eyesore
and is too close to houses as developers launched an advertising balloon
yesterday over the proposed site in Palterton.
Barlborough-based Banks
Developments has argued that any noise from turbines can be controlled
and that the project will produce enough zero-carbon energy to power
more than 4,000 homes which is the equivalent to 14per cent of homes in
the Bolsover district.
It stated that the site was chosen due to the suitability of the
landscape and subsequent wind strength and it claims nearby communities
will benefit from the environmentally friendly scheme. Banks
Developments feels there is a growing recognition of a need for wind
farms.
Afterall they are only modern day windmills and what would you rather have - them or pylons?
Labels:
bolsover,
council,
derbyshire,
district council,
peak district,
turbines,
windmill
Best Museum in Derbyshire
STAFF at Ilkeston’s Erewash Museum are celebrating after scooping Museum of the Year award at a county ceremony.
The team were also awarded Best Exhibition for the Swing Back to the Forties event on a successful evening at the Derbyshire Heritage Awards.
Labels:
derbyshire,
erewash,
ilkeston,
museum,
peak district
Share of £5m for community enterprises
Local villages have one month to apply for a share of £5 million
Lottery cash to create community enterprises and revitalise their area.
Projects have until 5pm on Thursday 20th October to apply for up to
£30,000 from the Big Lottery Fund’s Village SOS Active competition.
Anyone living in a rural village of less than 3,000 people, with an
enterprising idea can register to be in with a chance of a grant.
All applicants have to do is outline the idea in on online form and
the best ideas will be chosen to complete a full application for a grant
of up to £30,000.
The Village SOS television series broadcast over the last few weeks,
followed the journey of six UK villages as they used a Big Lottery Fund
grant to set up a new community business, including a Peak District community that started up a new local food project and cookery school.
Labels:
community,
derbyshire,
local,
lottery,
peak district
East Lodge is AA Top Performer
Rowsley’s
hotel and restaurant East Lodge in the Peak District has renewed it its
status as an AA ‘Inspectors Choice’ Red Star top hotel – at the
prestigious annual awards ceremony in London last Monday – singling out
East Lodge not just as one of the finest hotels in the region, but as
one of the cream of a select few hotels in the UK – as confirmed by the
AA’s own Inspectors. In the words of the AA’s own website, Red Star
hotels “stand out as the very best in the UK and the Republic of
Ireland, regardless of style”.
Labels:
derbyshire,
peak district,
Travel and Tourism
Friday, September 30, 2011
Police checks at Stanage and Longstone
CHECKS were carried out on 54 vehicles in the Longstone Edge and Stanage areas of the Peak District in a crackdown on illegal off-road bikers.
Police checked that all the vehicles they stopped had insurance, tax and MOTs and checked that they were safe.
A total of 47 were off-road motorbikes and officers spoke to them about Operation Blackbrook, which is a long running scheme to reduce illegal biking.
Police checked that all the vehicles they stopped had insurance, tax and MOTs and checked that they were safe.
A total of 47 were off-road motorbikes and officers spoke to them about Operation Blackbrook, which is a long running scheme to reduce illegal biking.
Debate on planned sale of Ripley Town Hall is put back
Councillors have voted to delay a debate about the proposed sale of Ripley Town Hall.
A 1,200-signature petition was handed in before the Amber Valley
Borough Council meeting, calling for the hall to be returned to Ripley
Town Council.
The borough council was given the 130-year-old building in the 1970s
but plans to sell it to help save £2m over the next two years.
Councillors voted to defer a debate until they are closer to a
decision. This seems somewhat strange because wouldn’t you have a debate
to enable a decision to be reached? Perhaps that is why I am not a
councillor – I do not have twisted logic!
Thursday, September 29, 2011
What's with the warnings? Ashbourne's got it wrong!
The following extract from a Derbyshire based website suggests that prospective road law abusers should come to Ashbourne.
"Defects were found on school buses during a safety crackdown in Ashbourne.
Operation Safedrive took place at Queen Elizabeth Grammar School and involved police officers and other agencies.
The team inspected 15 buses and coaches as they arrived at school and found two buses with defects that needed to be fixed as soon as possible.
Another bus had to be towed back to the depot for immediate repairs after officers found two wheel nuts which had sheared off.
The team then set up outside Ashbourne Fire Station and handed out a mixture of warnings, notices and fixed penalty notices to:
*6 drivers for using their mobile phone while driving
*3 drivers for having tyre defects
*2 for number plate offences
*1 driver for not being in proper control of the vehicle
*1 for not having a valid MOT
Twenty-eight drivers were stopped for not wearing a seatbelt.
In addition, VOSA issued five immediate and two delayed prohibition notices for defects on vehicles which seriously affected their roadworthiness.
Seven vehicles were also found to have no road tax."
PC Ian Salsbury said: “The check was extremely positive, reassuring the people of Ashbourne of our and our partners commitment to road safety. I would like to thank all the agencies involved in the checks.”
When parking offences carry an unavoidable and substantial fine imposed by lowly wardens, how can it be right that our expensive police force spend time giving "warnings" to motorists?
Surely, the crimes drawn to our attention here require instant and punitive action.
"Book 'em Danno"
"Defects were found on school buses during a safety crackdown in Ashbourne.
Operation Safedrive took place at Queen Elizabeth Grammar School and involved police officers and other agencies.
The team inspected 15 buses and coaches as they arrived at school and found two buses with defects that needed to be fixed as soon as possible.
Another bus had to be towed back to the depot for immediate repairs after officers found two wheel nuts which had sheared off.
The team then set up outside Ashbourne Fire Station and handed out a mixture of warnings, notices and fixed penalty notices to:
*6 drivers for using their mobile phone while driving
*3 drivers for having tyre defects
*2 for number plate offences
*1 driver for not being in proper control of the vehicle
*1 for not having a valid MOT
Twenty-eight drivers were stopped for not wearing a seatbelt.
In addition, VOSA issued five immediate and two delayed prohibition notices for defects on vehicles which seriously affected their roadworthiness.
Seven vehicles were also found to have no road tax."
PC Ian Salsbury said: “The check was extremely positive, reassuring the people of Ashbourne of our and our partners commitment to road safety. I would like to thank all the agencies involved in the checks.”
When parking offences carry an unavoidable and substantial fine imposed by lowly wardens, how can it be right that our expensive police force spend time giving "warnings" to motorists?
Surely, the crimes drawn to our attention here require instant and punitive action.
"Book 'em Danno"
Fight to stop sale of Ripley Town Hall
Campaigners have begun a fight to stop a council selling off a town hall in Derbyshire.
Ripley Town Hall was put up for sale by Amber Valley Borough Council in June.
The authority said selling the 130-year-old building and offices next door would help it save £2m over the next two years.
A petition with more than 1,200 signatures calls for ownership of the hall to be transferred to Ripley Town Council instead.
Ripley Town
Council said it should be offered the building for free as it gave it
to the borough council when the authority was created in the 1970s.
In a statement it said that if the town hall was sold then the police
office, the registrar’s office, the town council’s offices, and the
council chamber would have to be relocated, which would be “extremely
costly and very problematic”.
The council said it was putting the 2.8-acre site on the market
because the authority no longer needed such a large building. Then why
not lease the excess to other businesses?
The sale of the property will be discussed at a council meeting on Wednesday.
Labels:
amber valley,
council,
derbyshire,
police,
ripley
Wednesday, September 28, 2011
£5.5m moor restoration
A £5.5 MILLION conservation project is under way in the Peak District
to restore pollution-ravaged areas of peat moorland. Work is being
carried out by Moors for the Future, a partnership led by the Peak
District National Park Authority.
Funding has come from a range of bodies, including Yorkshire Water,
the National Trust, Derbyshire Council, Sheffield Council, the RSPB and
the Environment Agency.
A team from environmental consultants Wildscapes has been involved in
the latest phase of the work, one of the biggest conservation projects
ever undertaken in the UK. The scheme aims to return 1an area of badly
damaged peat moorland to a healthy condition and to protect a much
larger area.
Polluted air has been killing off the plants that keep the moors
healthy. Overgrazing, summer wildfires and the weather have also
contributed to a management problem that, in large moorland areas,
cannot be tackled by one organisation alone.
The partnership’s mission statement is to secure the legacy of 8,000
years of moorland life and ultimately to vastly increase the number and
diversity of mosses and moorland plants that provide the basis for an
important ecosystem.
Wildscapes was selected to deliver the latest phase of work because
of their local knowledge of the delicate moorlands, as well as their
heather and moorland restoration skills which have been developed from
past initiatives, including the Coalfield Heathlands project as well as
work for the National Trust.
Their efforts will help stabilise bare peat in some of the most
damaged areas of moorland, including Kinder Scout, Bleaklow and
Saddleworth, near Manchester.
All bottled up and no where to go
High Peak borough Council have again unanimously rejected resubmitted
plans for a large water bottling factory at Cowdale Quarry near Buxton.
Local residents, conservationists and countryside campaigners are
celebrating after working so hard to keep this beauty spot protected.
Cowdale is an important part of the buffer zone between the Peak
District and Buxton, and crucial for stopping industrial sprawl, noise
and light pollution affecting the Peak District National Park.
Chris Sabian is a writer with http://www.peakdistrict.com and co-owner of http://www.paragonprints.co.uk
Follow @pdview
More injuries in Peak District
A 16-year-old student was stretchered from a footpath after breaking his ankle while on a field trip.
The student, from Rotherham, was with a party on an outdoor education trip near Millstone Edge, Hathersage on Friday when he went over on his ankle, causing an open fracture.
Group leaders gave the boy first aid and alerted mountain rescuers. Edale and Buxton Mountain Rescue Teams went to the scene and an Edale team paramedic treated the student at the site, on a rocky footpath.
He was then stretchered to a waiting ambulance and taken to hospital.
Labels:
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The Derbyshire cold Eyre
Mia Wasikowska has admitted that she was surprised by how cold the Derbyshire
moors were during the filming of Jane Eyre.
moors were during the filming of Jane Eyre.
The Alice In Wonderland actress has the lead role in the new film adaptation
of the Charlotte Bronte novel.
of the Charlotte Bronte novel.
She said that it was so cold, she got hypothermia on the second day of shooting. You should try living here “me duck”.
Monday, September 26, 2011
Tourism promotion row
A ROW is looming over a tourism campaign aimed at attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors to the Staffordshire Moorlands.
Community leaders say the Staffordshire Peak District brand was
adopted to ensure that the Moorlands gets its fair share of
national park tourists.
But only one third of the Moorlands falls within the Peak District boundary and opponents fear tourism outlets in other areas, such as Biddulph and Cheadle, could lose out.
How was the motion passed in the first place?
Former Moorlands District council leader Ron Locker has tabled a
motion to Saturday’s full meeting of the district council calling on the
authority to ditch the brand and market the Moorlands in its own right.
Volunteer speedwatch a success
POLICE in Hathersage are thanking volunteers for helping to spread the word on road safety.
It is after more than 200 letters have been sent out to motorists found speeding through the area during 2011.
They were found during Community Speed Watch checks carried out by
the Hathersage Safer Neighbourhood Policing Team and a team of 27
volunteers from throughout the area.
Between January and September this year a total of 36 checks have
taken place as part of the scheme in many different villages including Stoney Middleton, Calver, Grindleford, Bradwell, Foolow, Eyam, Froggat, Curbar and Hathersage.
Community Speed Watch was set up in the Hathersage
area in November 2010 to target residents concerns about issues with
speeding and to give people a chance to work alongside officers on road
safety issues.
Signs, paid for by the Safer Derbyshire Dales Community Safety
Partnership, are put up to advise drivers about the checks and anyone
caught speeding is sent a letter which advises them about their speed
and reminds them about the limit.
Data recorded through the scheme may also help officers to identify locations for future speed enforcement checks.
Labels:
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Dovedale Loos at Risk
Ideas are being sought to help avoid the closure of public toilets at a Peak District beauty spot visited by about a million people each year.
The Peak District National Park Authority, which faces budget cuts of £1.7m by 2015, said the toilets at Dovedale cost more than £17,000 a year.
It wants to hear suggestions from local people and organisations by the end of October.
The toilets are likely to shut in March 2012 if a solution is not found.
They are situated within Dovedale‘s car park, which is privately owned, with the surrounding land belonging to the National Trust.
Elsewhere the park authority own other facilities nearby, such as car
parks or snack kiosks which help support the associated toilets, but in
Dovedale this is not the case.
Residents of the nearby village of Thorpe, which many visitors pass through on their way to Dovedale, have raised concerns that the closure could increase the numbers using their public toilets.
The answer to me is straight forward. The owner of the car park who
collects £00000000000?s a year should provide the toilets as a matter of
courtesy. Problem solved.
Thursday, September 22, 2011
Derbyshire County Council to pay farmers to clear snow
Farmers with their tractors would be paid a minimum of £200 if they sign-up to help clear snow from rural areas this winter, Derbyshire County Council said.
The authority said it needed help from farmers to remove snow and ice from roads and lanes their gritters could not reach in previous years.
Wouldn’t getting the terminally unemployed to do it be cheaper?
Labels:
derbyshire,
derbyshire county council,
peak district
Top farmers’ market returns
THE UK’s second biggest farmers’ market returns this weekend, with over 80 stalls of specialist products and crafts.
Derbyshire Dales District Council’s multi award-winning Bakewell Farmers’ Markettakes place this Saturday, 24 September.
Supermarket sells Chatsworth grapes
Juicy grapes grown and hand-picked in England will be launched by a
supermarket for the first time this week.
supermarket for the first time this week.
A crop of golden yellow fruit harvested from vines on the Chatsworth estate
in Derbyshire will be introduced by Waitrose.
in Derbyshire will be introduced by Waitrose.
The grapes are the Muscat of Alexandria variety more usually seen in the
sunny climes of Spain, France, Chile and South Africa.
sunny climes of Spain, France, Chile and South Africa.
They were carefully cultivated on the Duke of Devonshire’s estate and their
arrival follows an English wine boom that saw vineyards here celebrate record
production, equal to four million bottles, last year.
arrival follows an English wine boom that saw vineyards here celebrate record
production, equal to four million bottles, last year.
Labels:
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derbyshire,
duke of devonshire,
peak district
Derbyshire greats honoured with blue plaques
Members of the public have chosen six of Derbyshire’s “great and good” to be honoured in the county’s 2011 blue plaque awards.
Derbyshire County Council started the scheme in 2009 to celebrate well-known local people.
This year’s winners include Henry Royce, co-founder of Rolls-Royce, and Sir Joseph Whitworth, who standardised the industrial screw.
Anyone nominated must have died at least 20 years ago.
The other winners were:
- William Barron of Borrowash – a 19th century gardener who designed the
gardens at Elvaston Castle.
- Samuel Slater, Belper – known as the father of the American Industrial
Revolution.
- John Smedley, Lea Bridge and Matlock − regarded as the man who made Matlock. Smedley turned his father’s ailing cotton mill at Lea Bridge into a highly
successful enterprise.
- Alison Uttley, Cromford and Dethick − an author of more than 100 books,
Uttley is most famous for the Little Grey Rabbit children’s stories based on her
childhood at Castle Top Farm, Cromford, where she was born in 1884
Work is now under way to find locations for the plaques.
Labels:
alison uttley,
Blue plaque,
council,
county,
cromford,
derbyshire,
dethick,
henry royce,
lea bridge,
matlock
Tuesday, September 20, 2011
Internet Costs Police Thousands
The chairman of Derbyshire’s Police Federation has called for phone and internet firms to rethink how much they charge police to access their networks.
Derbyshire Police paid out almost £104,000 in the past financial year to check records during investigations.
The companies said they were only recovering costs and charges were agreed with police in advance.
But Insp Mark Pickard, who has led the federation since February, is calling for a more charitable approach.
Mobile phone and internet records have become increasingly central to police investigations over the past decade.
But phone companies and internet service providers said the cost of making information available to forces was “significant”.
According to the phone companies they cost recover an agreed fee from the police depending on the nature of the enquiry. These fees only cover costs and this is supported by legislation under the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act.
The Home Office said it was satisfied with its current guidance which requires companies to prove their charges are appropriate.
Perhaps the police should recover the costs of an investigation against the guilty party or would that infringe on his/hers human rights?
Live music cafe for former Tansley shop
A CHEF hoping to promote local food is leading a venture to convert a village shop in to a tea rooms.
Hathersage man Oliver Kemp is hoping to create a new cafe in Tansley. The plans could also see local musicians playing at the former shop and post office, at the Knoll.
Mr Kemp hosted a meeting with villagers to discuss his proposals after six residents raised fears about noise, parking problems, loss of privacy and the venue encouraging drunken and anti social behaviour.
The district council granted a premises licence for the venue. Mr Kemp is now set to submit a planning application to convert the building.
The proposals could see a tea rooms created, serving homemade cakes and food with plans to serve evening meals at weekends in the summer and host live music.
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