Thursday, December 25, 2008
Sunday, November 9, 2008
Remembrance Sunday
Here is the story behind two of the names on the War Memorial in Church Road, Leyland.
Harry B Jackson, pictured left, was working with the Leyland Paint and Varnish company in South Africa at the outbreak of the war. He served with the 4th Regiment South African Infantry (South African Scottish). Having gone through the war he unfortunately died of Spanish Flu just 4 weeks before the Armistice.
Harry and his brother Will died within a week of each other in barracks down in Woking in October 1918. Here they are together in South Africa around the outbreak of the War.
Many thanks to Paul, grandson of Harry Bowman Jackson, for the information and photos.
Paul's dad grew up in a house on Bow Lane. He went to Liverpool university but left in 1939 to join the army and was a despatch rider with the Border Regiment and escaped from Dunkirk by the skin of his teeth. He then joined the RASC and ended the war in East Africa and then was part of the British Military Mission to Ethiopia until 1947 or so.
Paul was born in Africa and his family remained there until 1972 and eventually settled in Lincolnshire but Paul is proud of his Lancashire and Leyland roots.
You can read an article Paul wrote about his dad's WW2 experience over at the BBC People's War website
Other members of Paul's family also served the Leyland community. One of his grandfather's older brothers was Fred "Pop" Jackson who was headmaster of Balshaw's School in the 1920s -Paul's dad Allan Jackson was a pupil there at the same time.
Great Grandfather, Levi Jackson, also a teacher, taught at St James' School Moss Side and was also a Councillor on Leyland Urban Council at some time-around 1909 representing St James' Ward.
Paul's great grandfather on his grandmother's side was Thomas Williams and he was a chief inspector of police possibly based at Chapel Brow police station.
A big thank you to Paul for providing a slice of Leyland history and to the Jackson family for service to Leyland.
While Remembrance ceremonies and services took place across the Borough and around the county, scenes from Preston's ceremony at the Cenotaph was featured on the North West part of the BBC's Politics Show.
The BBC have a special page at www.bbc.co.uk/remembrance to commemorate 90 years of remembrance where you can read and contribute history and stories of WW1 and the Guardian began a 7 day series of free booklets telling the history of WW1 including original commentary, testimony and photographs. Read Part One and Part Two. Also coming soon on BBC's iplayer, 'A Woman in Love and War: Vera Brittain', a dramatisation of the life of Vera Brittain, a young woman who survived the First World War. She lost many loved ones and worked as a volunteer nurse both at home and at the Front.
Labels: History, Local news
Monday, November 3, 2008
Trains of thought
County Councillor Matthew Tomlinson, Lancashire County Council's Cabinet Member for Sustainable Development, appeared on the North West segment of the Politics Show last Sunday. He contributed to a feature on transport links within the North West.
Campaigners have long argued for the re-instatement of the Todmorden Curve a stretch of rail track which would considerably shorten the journey time from Burnley to Manchester. This was the main focus of the Politics Show report but as County Councillor Tomlinson pointed out there are a number of schemes for consideration including a link from Poulton to Fleetwood and the other Curve ...the Burscough Curve each with ardent advocates and only a limited pot of money. The priority is to deliver the best value for money for taxpayers.Top level talks have been taking place on how the Todmorden Curve scheme could be financed.
Labels: Local news
Thursday, October 30, 2008
Leyland Round Table Bonfire & Fireworks Display
South Ribble residents will once again be treated to Leyland Round Table's Bonfire and Fireworks display this November.
Now in its 38th year the event provides a lovely warming bonfire, traditional bonfire night fayre, a spectacular fireworks display and a funfair giving an evening's entertainment for all ages and at affordable prices.
See our photos of last years event here.
November 5th on Worden Park, Leyland - Visit Leyland Round Table's website for more details and find out more about the origins and work of the Round Table.
*Stay safe this bonfire night with Lancashire Fire Service*
Labels: Local news
Monday, October 27, 2008
Over the summer, Matthew Tomlinson, County Councillor for Leyland Central and South Ribble Borough councillor for Golden Hill ward, in his role as LCC's Cabinet member for Sustainable Development, was pleased to announce an extra £5 million for Lancashire's roads. This was over and above the scheduled spending as a result of sound financial handling.
Matthew said:
“This is great news for communities across Lancashire as the improvements the money makes will be clearly visible.
“I’ve handed the cash to the Lancashire Local committees in each district so that the decisions can be made locally.
“The committees could decide to carry out some extra road resurfacing, grass cutting, sign cleaning or lighting column repainting.
“..the £5 million is over and above what we are already spending on our day-to-day highway maintenance, improvement and safety projects. It will allow the Lancashire Locals to target some of the lower priority issues.
“The money has become available as a result of a review our finances at the end of the 2007/08 financial year. The county council is working hard to make savings, and is now able to invest these savings in our communities.”
Labels: Local news
Sunday, October 26, 2008
Amazing Autumn
Arboricultural experts at Kew Gardens are excited by the fact that a wet summer, cold nights and warm days are producing an impressive display of autumn colours. Fortunately, South Ribble residents do not need to travel to Kew to enjoy a stunning kaleidoscope of autumn colours.
Our very own award-winning Worden Park rewards visitors with all the joys of autumn (photos above).
It was also heartening to see so many of our young people enjoying the facilities in our leisure centres over the summer holidays.
South Ribble Labour councillors are proud to have left a legacy of a 4-star council to the residents of the area. But are the Tories looking after it?
Labels: Local news
Tuesday, September 9, 2008
Sharp Elbow
Congratulations to local lads, based in Bury, or the 'drinking man's Coldplay', Elbow, who won the Nationwide-sponsored UK Mercury Music Prize last night.
Listen to their music here.
Labels: News
Saturday, July 5, 2008
Happy Birthday and Good Health!
In a debate in parliament in June, Fraser Kemp, MP for the North East constituency of Houghton & Washington East, spoke of one of his constituents who will be 100 next year and who said of the NHS that its creation was the best decision any government had ever taken in her lifetime. It took away the fear she had back in the 1930s of having to make health decisions on the basis of whether she had £2 to call the doctor rather than whether she needed help.
We in the Labour Party are all immensely proud that it was a Labour government who took that decision and created the National Health Service 60 years ago today in the face of opposition from the Conservatives.
Councillor Tom Hanson remembers...Labour councillor for Bamber Bridge West ward, Tom Hanson, also celebrates his birthday in the same week as the NHS. However, he was born in 1930 and so remembers what it was like before anyone had access to health care free at the point of need. Doctors had to be paid or poor people had to rely on the chemist for minor ailments and children died of diphtheria, consumption (Tuberculosis) and scarlet fever.
Tom helped his local Labour Party in the 1945 elections which saw Labour swept to power in an historic landslide. Surveys of the time (they had polls then too!) showed that the Labour Party was most trusted by the public to implement the proposals of the Beveridge Report which included the creation of a National Health Service.
A most civilised stepOn 5th July 1948 Aneurin 'Nye' Bevan as health Minister symbolically received the keys of Park Hospital (now Trafford General Hospital) to mark the birth of the NHS right here in the North West.
This famous picture of the occasion shows Sylvia Diggory (nee Beckingham) age 13, the first NHS patient. Later in life she recalled:
"Mr Bevan asked me if I understood the significance of the occasion and told me that it was a milestone in history - the most civilised step any country had ever taken, and a day I would remember for the rest of my life - and of course, he was right."
Tories' wrong medicine for NHSHealth Minister Alan Johnson recalls what the Conservatives' Patient's Charter promised for care:
"The 1995 version of the Charter gave a waiting time guarantee of 18 months. We now have a maximum waiting time of just 18 weeks, and many areas are way below that. The 1995 document states: 'In addition, you can expect treatment within one year for coronary artery bypass grafts and some associated procedures.' A year for a life-saving bypass? That's unthinkable now, with waits down to no more than a few weeks.
On its 50th anniversary commentators were talking of the demise of the NHS. It took a Labour government once again to rescue it from 18 years of Tory under-funding.
The Future of the NHSRead all about the Next Stage Review which sets out the future direction for the NHS and have your say on a new NHS Constitution.
The proposed NHS Constitution is about safeguarding its core principles and values for the next generation, while setting a clear direction for the future. Consultation ends 18th October 2008.
Read Manchester MP Tony Lloyd's moving tribute to the NHS in parliament on the 3rd July here.
Labels: Events, History, Local news, News
Priceless!
Money and politics is once again a toxic mix. One which many commentators agree that some in the media are only too happy to stir.
Recently it was reported that Tory MEP Den Dover, once an MP for neighbouring Chorley, was sacked as chief whip of the Tories in the European Parliament amid allegations of inappropriate use of expenses. He is alleged to have paid large amounts of public money to a company comprised of his wife and daughter for secretarial work. The company also donated money to the Conservative Party. There have also been questions raised about the purchase of cars and building work to one of his homes.
Another MEP, Sir Robert Atkins, former Tory MP for South Ribble, has also been criticised for using public money for a trip to America to visit Republican politicians but during which he also attended his son's wedding.
Alan Duncan exposedWhile David Cameron is keen to appear to be supporting more transparency his Shadow Secretary of State for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform, Alan Duncan (pictured left) was busy trying to dodge being asked questions about reports of donations to him from an oil tycoon.
Here is journalist Peter Oborne's account of what he witnessed prior to a recent Andrew Marr show (June 22) on which he and Duncan were guests:
"Both Alan Duncan and I were guests last Sunday on BBC1's The Andrew Marr Show.
Before the programme went on air, Duncan approached Marr and attempted to make sure he didn't ask him any questions concerning a story in one of that day's newspapers relating to his oil interests.
'There's been an exchange of legal letters you know, better not go there,' was the thrust of Duncan's remarks.
To his credit, Marr insisted on putting the matter to Duncan in the studio, even though the answers he received were unsatisfactory."
It was painful to watch him squirm as he realised he'd been sprung live on TV. It was indeed priceless!
Whether the allegations around the donations are true or not he was clearly less than transparent not only in his unwillingness to publicly account for himself but also, according to Oborne, in actively seeking not to be called to account yet Cameron seems not to have noticed.
Labour introduced transparency rulesIn any walk of life there will be a few bad apples who get the rest a bad name. Most politicians at all levels of government are honest and hard-working. Some of the cases which appear in the news will simply be as a result of administrative errors yet the media swirl around them make it impossible for them to continue.
It was the Labour Party in government who introduced the rules around declaring donations in a bid to bring more transparency into politics. They also introduced the Freedom of Information Act. Never before has the interested citizen had such access to so much information.
We need to go furtherAs many MPs across all parties predicted whichever way they had voted on their pay and expenses the media coverage would have been universally negative which it was.
There were some more measured reporters who suggested that if you actually look at the points put forward in the debate many were quite reasonable.
For example, they rejected a system of external auditors because of the high cost of fees -£1000+ per day- which the taxpayer would be paying, in favour of an internal audit system which will see all receipts for claims of £25 or over published from October offering more transparency.
Media reports also give the impression that MPs are busy leafing through a John Lewis catalogue picking out new furniture. The so-called 'John Lewis List' was unknown to MPs before it was published by a national newspaper earlier this year. The list is something which parliament's financial administrators use behind the scenes as a yardstick for assessing MPs claims for help with the additional costs of setting up a second home.
Peter Kilfoyle remembers the days when poorer MPs used to sleep on the floors of parliamentary offices and argues that having the Additional Costs Allowance means that people from all backgrounds are not excluded by the sheer expense of having to run two homes -one in London as well as their home in the constituency.
Kerry McCarthy also gives an account of what her vote meant.
Locally, Conservative Councillor Mike France complained that he is out of pocket as a councillor.
Less focus in the media has been given to the fact that MPs rejected a proposal to raise their salaries by up to 2.3% this year and 4.7% next year. Instead they voted for a below inflation 2.25% pay rise this year and did not take up the recommendation of a "catch-up" payment of £650 a year for the next three years.
However, Gordon Brown has said that although "We voted to keep MPs' pay down... now we must look at the issue of expenses and accountability again.'
Democracy valuedWhile people around the world pay with their lives in the struggle for democracy, including our soldiers serving abroad, we are able to vote freely. It is important that we have confidence in our democratic process.
The more citizens directly engage in the political process the more they will be able to see first hand how power is exercised on their behalf.
There's plenty to see at www.parliament.uk, www.lancashire.gov.uk and www.southribble.gov.uk
A free media can also act as a check on government and corporate power but as the filter through which the nation gets its news it also wields power and it has its role to play in improving the health of our democracy by reporting that is balanced and proportionate.
Labels: Local news, News
Friday, July 4, 2008
Carers Week and a strategy for the next 10 years
Carers in the area took a break from their caring responsibilities to enjoy health and relaxation activities during National Carers Week which was held 9-15th June.
Government action for carers
The government has listened to what carers and carer's organisations have been saying and during Carers Week published its updated Carers Strategy for the next 10 years which includes a pledge to double the money for care services which allow carers to take a break, a full review of carers' benefits, support to help carers access or return to work, a national carers helpline, identification and support for young carers, pilots for annual health checks for carers and training for GPs so that they are better able to identify carers and the extra help they may need.
Carers UK welcomed the strategy as an "important step forward for carers, backed up with over £255 million of new investment and groundbreaking initiatives."
Charnley Fold, Bamber Bridge
Care Services Minister Ivan Lewis MP recently opened a new centre for dementia care and older people's mental health needs at Charnley Fold in Bamber Bridge.
He was delighted with the new centre as he explained at the official opening:
“In an ageing population, providing excellent quality care for older people with mental health needs is one of the greatest challenges facing the NHS and social care system. There are currently an estimated 570,000 people with dementia in England, and this figure is expected to double in the next 30 years. That is why last Thursday I announced the first ever national dementia strategy to improve the lives of people living with dementia. I am delighted that Charnley Fold is now open to serve the growing needs of the local community.”
The facility is a response to the increase in the number of older people with mental health needs such as dementia in the area and has been developed with £1.5 million of joint investment by Lancashire Care NHS Foundation Trust, Central Lancashire PCT and Lancashire County Council.
The centre is a good example of otherwise seperate services being joined up. Lancashire Care, Lancashire County Council, Central Lancashire PCT, Age Concern and the Alzheimer's Society are working together to provide the new services which include:
· A ground-breaking health and wellbeing centre and support service for older people provided by voluntary sector organisations. This includes advice, information, a carer's cafĂ© and carer support services
· A flexible care service to work with people and their carers at an early stage of being diagnosed with dementia
· A community based assessment, diagnostic and treatment service
· Specialist staff including psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers and other therapists who provide a range of support services in the local community
· An enhanced day care service for older people with complex needs
· Training facilities for staff who work with older people
More help for disabled children and their families
Also recently Labour peers Lord Rix and Lord Adonis made an amendment to the Children and Young Persons Bill, currently going through Parliament, which will place a duty on local authorities to provide short breaks for disabled children and their families. Last year the government also announced £280 million over three years to increase the availability of short breaks for disabled children and their families.
Labour cares for carers
Labour has a strong record in recognising and supporting carers needs. It was a Labour MP, Malcolm Wicks, who first gained legal recognition for carers and their right to have their needs assessed in 1995. Another Labour MP, Tom Pendry won further rights to services for carers and in 2004 Hywel Francis MP introduced legislation which aimed to enable carers to take up opportunities which those without caring responsibilities take for granted, such as education, leisure or work. Labour has also introduced the right to request flexible working for carers.
Have your say on future care policies
An ageing population means that in 20 years' time a quarter of the adult population will be over 65 and the number of people over 85 will have doubled.
The growth in the number of people with care and support needs will put increasing pressure both on services and on the financial support received through benefits and other funding.
Visit www.careandsupport.direct.gov.uk to have your say on what a future care and support system should look like and how it should be paid for.
The government is also consulting on the more specific development of a National Dementia Strategy and invites everyone to give their views on the ideas set out in the 'Transforming the quality of dementia care' document, as well as contribute new ideas to the debate. The consultation runs from 19 June to 11 September 2008.
Help available for carers locally
If you are a carer, you can find out what help may be available to you locally here .
Labels: Local news, News
Thursday, July 3, 2008
Knight amazed by Leyland history
The Leyland Guardian has been reporting on the rise, fall and rise again of a historic sports centre in Leyland
Steve Knight, project manager overseeing the construction of a new fitness centre on the site of the old Leyland Motors Social & Athletic Club was impressed at the turnout as the club was finally demolished.
"I was amazed at how many people showed up with their cameras. They were all talking about it, how it had 10,000 members and a lot had their 21st birthdays or got married there.
It's an institution and I found it incredible how many people have an association with it.
Of course a lot of people worked for Leyland Motors and the building touched everybody in Leyland."
Leyland councillor Fred Heyworth had a 47 year association with the club. He told the Leyland Guardian:
"Every summer they had a sports day, literally hundreds would come. It was a hub of the community and was packed out every Saturday. It was quite a happy situation in those days, alas that is no longer the case.
It's sad that it's gone but these last few years it was in a state of disrepair."
It may have been demolished but it will live on not only in local people's memories but the bricks of the old building will be crushed into suitable material for use in the foundations of the new.
Labels: Local news
On TV
Regrettably, and for political purposes, a misleading statistic as to the number and context of CCTV cameras in the UK has been used to inform debate nationally on such matters.
A figure of 1 camera for every 14 members of the public has been used to scaremonger about a 'Big Brother' state. The figure was arrived at by applying the estimated number of cameras in two busy streets in London to the rest of the UK. These figures included not just those cameras in public spaces but all such security cameras in private businesses which have nothing to do with the state or government at all.
Leyland cameras
Thankfully Leyland residents have a more sensible approach to cameras. When consulted residents have said that they want Leyland to be a safe and welcoming environment.
Cameras which produce high quality images installed at Earnshaw Bridge have improved what was previously a problem hotspot for anti-social behaviour. Local businesses, residents and the police report how quiet the area is now.
Bannister Brook, Centurion Way, Leyland Market and parts of Hough Lane are now to receive the same protection with new cameras linked directly to police.
Meanwhile Councillors Anne Brown and Fred Heyworth have been active in acheiving a 'No Cold Calling Area' for residents of Welsby Road and Yarrow Road.
This gives residents some deterrence against bogus callers and doorstep sellers and enables the more vulnerable members of the community to say no to cold callers and call on community support to assist them when necessary. Read more about such schemes here.
More hi-tech and high praise for Lancashire Police
There was good news in May as Lancashire learned it is to be one of 27 police forces to receive money from central government for new handheld computers.
This will allow police officers to record any necessary details right there and then out on the beat giving more time on patrol for officers, increased police visibility and reassurance for communities.
Flanagan Review of Policing
The use of such technology implements recommendations made by Sir Ronnie Flanagan, Chief Inspector of Constabulary, who was tasked last year by the Home Secretary with conducting an independent and comprehensive review of policing. He was asked to focus on the four key issues of how to reduce bureaucracy in the police, making progress on Neighbourhood Policing, ensuring that there is sufficient local involvement and local accountability for policing, and how the police service can manage its resources effectively.
The Home Secretary welcomed Sir Ronnie's reports and the recommendations giving her 'clearest endorsement' and a mandate for swift action.
Neighbourhood Policing
Already, action taken on the findings and recommendations are beginning to be seen. The Flanagan report spoke of the success of earlier initiatives such as 'Neighbourhood Policing' - this brings together a team of officers and Police Community Support Officers who work together with local people to identify local priorities, listening to them and ensuring their concerns are met through local agreements.
Neighbourhood Policing Teams are now in place in every area with named officers contactable by phone or through community meetings.
"Praise for our prompt police"
A letter-writer to the Lancashire Evening Post recently praised the response of their local team as one of "a very responsive and professional police force." Read the full letter here.
Neighbourhood Policing in our area
You can read about Neighbourhood Policing and find out who the team is for your postcode area here.
Labels: Local news, News
Monday, May 19, 2008
Wheelie Clean
A local resident has set up a business offering a cleaning service to wheelie bin users.
Visit the Wheelie Clean Bins website and find out about their domestic and commercial services.
Everyone agrees that we cannot simply send more and more waste to landfill. There wouldn't be enough holes in the ground and the ones we have are rapidly filling up. As the waste in them breaks down, gases contributing to climate change are released.
There is also the problem of chemicals leaching into the ground and water resources. Continually burying and burning rubbish is no environmentally sound solution to the waste we produce.
Also the earth and its natural resources are a finite resource. Recycling ensures maximum use of the resources we do extract from the environment while also reducing the amount of environmentally damaging emissions produced.
South Ribble residents have expressed a high degree of satisfaction with the waste and recycling collection we introduced. We would like to thank all residents for their co-operation and hard work in helping to make South Ribble an environmentally responsible place to live.
Labels: Environment, Local news
Wednesday, May 7, 2008
Bus U-turn
As mentioned in an earlier post here Tory councils in Lancashire took the opportunity of the introduction of the government's national free travel scheme for over 65s and disabled people to scupper the scheme by withdrawing their own funding for peak-time travel leaving people wanting to travel at these times stranded or out of pocket.
After pressure from Labour MP for West Lancashire Rosie Cooper, the Conservatives on West Lancashire District Council voted to reinstate the 50p flat rate less than a month after they abolished it.
Rosie said:
“The council’s willingness to axe the 50p scheme in the first place meant that disabled people who had to go to work or pensioners with early hospital appointments were being hit in the pocket."
“It was an absolute disgrace but they now appear to have seen sense."
“I’m now demanding they allow people in West Lancashire to have free bus and rail travel, unlike the current situation where they are only allowed to have one or the other."
“That was another one of the Tories’ bright ideas which has led to many West Lancashire people wondering why they are being treated like second-class citizens compared to those living in neighbouring authorities."
“But the Tories are slowly waking up to the fact that their barmy decisions are having a negative impact on people’s lives, so I look forward to them doing even more U-turns in the future.”
The Labour Group at South Ribble have been and will continue to call to account the Conservatives locally on travel opportunities for those eligible for concessionary fares.
So far their response questions their commitment to people on lower incomes and those who wish to use public transport.
Labels: Local news
Centre of Excellence
Staff, parents and children at a Leyland Children's Centre are proud to have received a 'Learning Excellence Award', more usually given to schools. It is the first such centre in Lancashire to receive the award.
The award, given to the Wade Hall Children's Centre on Royal Avenue, was presented by County Councillor Anne Brown in recognition of the centre's imaginitive and successful work in supporting families.
Councillor Brown praised the centre's achievement
"I'm very proud that the centre has gained this award which is a tribute to the high standard of work done at Wade Hall -work that helps children enter school as confident learners."
Starting school is an important time and it can be unnerving for young children, so anything that gets them off to a good start can only reap benefits later."
Local parent Ruth Halstead who uses the centre said:
"Its such a good place -my children have got so much out of coming to the centre. My daughter sailed into nursery and is now enjoying full time school -and my youngest daughter is about to follow her.
I've made new friends and learned new skills at the centre. I am now chairman of the advisory board."
The day care facility is now operating and they have a small waiting list. The centre offers all sorts of activities and lots of support. It has a dedicated band of volunteers as well as the professionals.
There is Bounce and Rhyme and Breastfeeding groups as well as more targeted work.
The team at the Royal Avenue centre will be increased to take care of new centres at Wellfield Business and Enterprise College in the centre of Leyland and at Bamber Bridge.
County Councillor Fred Heyworth said:
"I am delighted to be on the advisory committee, this centre makes a real difference to the young families who use it."
Labels: Local news
Feel safe at home
Local labour Councillors Fred Heyworth and Anne Brown have been working with local residents to campaign for an area of sheltered accommodation to be identified as a ‘No cold calling zone’.
If you feel that you receive too many strangers knocking on the door , or if you receive suspicious calls then you local Labour team will be happy to take up the matter.
Labels: Local news
Saturday, April 26, 2008
Local heroes
Back in November as a tribute for Remembrance Sunday we listed the names on the War Memorial in Church Road, Leyland.
It was great then to hear recently from a relative of two of the soldiers named on the memorial who found the names and image on our website and who then provided further details of his family -Harry Bowman Jackson and Will Jackson.
Harry B Jackson, pictured left, was working with the Leyland Paint and Varnish company in South Africa at the outbreak of the war. He served with the 4th Regiment South African Infantry (South African Scottish). Having gone through the war he unfortunately died of Spanish Flu just 4 weeks before the Armistice.
Harry and his brother Will died within a week of each other in barracks down in Woking in October 1918. Here they are together in South Africa around the outbreak of the War.
Many thanks to Paul, grandson of Harry Bowman Jackson, for the information and photos.
Paul's dad grew up in a house on Bow Lane. He went to Liverpool university but left in 1939 to join the army and was a despatch rider with the Border Regiment and escaped from Dunkirk by the skin of his teeth. He then joined the RASC and ended the war in East Africa and then was part of the British Military Mission to Ethiopia until 1947 or so.
Paul was born in Africa and his family remained there until 1972 and eventually settled in Lincolnshire but Paul is proud of his Lancashire and Leyland roots.
You can read an article Paul wrote about his dad's WW2 experience over at the BBC People's War website
Other members of Paul's family also served the Leyland community. One of his grandfather's older brothers was Fred "Pop" Jackson who was headmaster of Balshaw's School in the 1920s -Paul's dad Allan Jackson was a pupil there at the same time.
Great Grandfather, Levi Jackson, also a teacher, taught at St James' School Moss Side and was also a Councillor on Leyland Urban Council at some time-around 1909 representing St James' Ward.
Paul's great grandfather on his grandmother's side was Thomas Williams and he was a chief inspector of police possibly based at Chapel Brow police station.
Once again, a big thank you to Paul for providing a slice of Leyland history and to the Jackson family for service to Leyland.
Labels: History, Local news
Friday, April 25, 2008
Post Office closures
Regrettably Bent Lane Post Office in Leyland is set to close on May 1st as part of the Post Office's network change programme.
South Ribble MP David Borrow has been helping local residents to make their case to keep the post office open and vowed to see if there is grounds to appeal the decision.
Mr Borrow also spoke up in parliament on behalf of all four post offices in South Ribble earmarked for closure. You can read this here and continued here.
Local Tories tried to turn the whole issue into political point-scoring by seeming to oppose post office closures but without actually declaring any policy or pledge to match the £150 million a year funding subsidy the government currently provides for the post office network of 14,000 branches.
The Tories in parliament only called for a delay. They were not arguing that all the current post offices stay open. They also admitted that only 'viable' post offices should stay open.
Post Office Ltd have said that as a purely commercial concern the post office network would only comprise around 4000 post offices and the Tories would not say how many, if any, above this they would subsidise to stay open. Currently the government has backed the network with £1.7 billion of investment until 2011.
There were 3500 post office closures while the Tories were in power and no subsidy to support the network. Additionally, the Tories spent a good deal of money trying to encourage people to have their benefits paid into a bank account rather than through the post office and some advocated the wholesale privatisation of the Post Office.
Their concern for the post office without a proper costed policy will appear as mere political opportunism.
The independent watchdog Postwatch and the National Federation of SubPostmasters (NFSP) have both stated that the current subsidy while the post office is losing customers as more people are using alternative technologies for communications is "unsustainable".
The NFSP did not welcome the Conservative proposal for any delay, indeed, opposed it stating that this would simply lead to more uncertainty and financial losses for their members.
David Borrow will continue to work hard on behalf of South Ribble residents.
Labels: Local news
Continental market back in town
Last year shoppers in Leyland enjoyed the tastes and crafts of continental Europe and this weekend sees the return of the popular continental market.
It is a veritable feast for foodies and anyone else who fancies trying something a bit different but there's plenty for traditional tastes too.
The market will be in town from Friday 25th April until Sunday 27th. The town's own market will also be open throughout the event. We would encourage residents from Leyland and beyond to support both the local and international traders and help make Leyland a vibrant shopping centre.
Also this weekend there's a chance for families to exercise their own craft skills at the Spring Arts and Crafts Fair at Worden Arts Centre. Activities to learn or have a go at include, on Saturday, card making, sun catchers, water colour painting, and Raku -painting and firing a pot and on Sunday flags, kite making, paper craft, post cards, and even circus skills.
There will also be items for sale by local artists in glassware, mosaics, jewellery, cards and original paintings. We hope you will support them.
Labels: Events, Local news
Thursday, April 24, 2008
Travelling Lite
The Conservative and Lib Dem leaders of Lancashire’s District Councils have got together and decided how they will introduce the Labour Government’s new free travel scheme for the over 60’s.
They knew that it was a worthy and popular measure and so they decided to undermine it.
Before even giving the scheme a chance to work they complained loudly that funding that the government had provided was insufficient.
At a recent House of Commons Transport Select Committee, Transport Minister Ruth Kelly explained that the funding had been the subject of consultation with the Local Government Association, that there was a substantial cushion built in, that with the introduction of smart card technology journey and passenger data would be collected and that the policy's operation would be reviewed as necessary.
Instead of co-operating and trying to make the scheme work the Conservatives further tried to make the elderly and disabled feel guilty about using the scheme by suggesting in the media that other services would have to be cut to pay for it.
Most disgracefully they decided to save a very small amount of money by withdrawing the arrangements for peak hour concessions for the over 60’s and the disabled. This hits those valiant people who are trying to retain their independence, by working, rather than relying on benefits
Instead of undermining it the all parties should be celebrating and supporting a policy which enables participation in community, family and work for vulnerable groups at risk of being excluded.
Find out more about the free travel scheme at www.nowcard.org
Labels: Local news
Tuesday, March 25, 2008
Budget 2008 - Downsizing Democracy
Earlier this month the Conservatives in charge at South Ribble published their budget.
Just days after congratulating themselves on a below inflation council tax, shock redundancies were announced -thought to be the first the council has had.
Ron Matthews who oversees the area committee system, Derek Frew head of information services and Jack Gregory, head of revenues and office support are all to lose their jobs.
There are also to be cuts to the number and format of the area committees -the public forums were local people can have their say on local issues.
In addition the funding of small grants to community groups and charities in the area is to be slashed by 50%. In the past such grants have gone to help scout, brownie and guide groups, playschemes, arts and sports groups, pensioners groups and village fetes.
Meanwhile the Mayor is being kitted out with new robes and new links added to the Mayoral chain at a cost of £750 for the robes and around £6500 for the links.
The Conservatives also took to the pages of the local media to bemoan the cost of free travel for pensioners and disabled people. They have suggested they may have a shortfall of £71,000 in funding the scheme.
This is all very different from the extravagant and uncosted pledges the Conservatives made at the local elections last year when they were desperate to regain power after many years in opposition.
They promised £35000 to RAWS to fund legal action which had little chance of being successful against the Farington Waste Plant yet now begrudge pensioners their free travel. They also implied a return to weekly waste collections in their election leaflets but have found it to be too expensive.
Councillor Matthew Tomlinson, leader of the Labour group at South Ribble criticised the budget as "unremarkable". He said that many who voted Conservative last May would be disappointed as many of the promises which were made have been broken.
He also described the cuts to funding for community groups and charities as "mean spirited" and reminded the Conservatives that they had inherited a council judged excellent by the Audit Commission -the achievement of the previous Labour and Liberal Democrat coalition.
After less than a year in control this does not seem excellent at all. As Councillor Tomlinson concluded his budget speech "is this it?!"
Labels: Local news, Politics
Friday, March 7, 2008
Conservative MP described as miserable so...
Despite appearances sometimes the House of Commons really is a lot of fun.
On Monday Shona McIsaac Labour MP for Cleethorpes, Immingham and Barton introduced a Bill to Parliament in an attempt to gain a new Bank Holiday in Autumn.
The UK has not had a new Bank Holiday added to the calendar since 1978.
Shona outlined to Parliament the history of public holidays:
"This country used to have far more public holidays, as there were local fairs and festivals. In fact, in the 1820s the Bank of England took 33 public holidays a year. But then came the 1830s and it was nose to the grindstone time. Public holidays were cut to just four a year.
We have made progress since, and we now have eight public holidays a year—in England anyway—with the last one being introduced in 1978, under a Labour Government of course. This Government have done well in introducing a minimum annual holiday entitlement, which I am sure everybody welcomes, but we have not done so well with public holidays.
We seem to have spent all our time debating Europe recently, so I thought I would look at European public holidays. It turns out that most European countries are far better than Britain in this regard: Italy gets 16 days, Iceland gets 15, and Spain and Portugal get 14 each. However, countries such as Italy, Spain and Portugal also have all sorts of festivals, ferias and local saints’ days, so they are way ahead of us when it comes to having time away from work. It makes our measly eight days look even meaner."
Shona recognised that although many welcome an extra holiday there were some "misery-guts" who were against such a new Bank Holiday:
"The CBI is one such organisation: it claims that another public holiday would mean less productivity. However, I would hit back by asking whether, if it thinks that one extra day would have such a dramatic impact, it intends to campaign for the abolition of weekends."
Don't tempt them!
There was great hilarity when Conservative MP Christopher Chope got up to object to being called a miserable soul for being against the holiday and proceeded to describe the "victims of bank holidays" -people who are dependent on benefits and want to gain access to public services, those who found themselves caught up in the traffic and of course the national economy (to the tune of £2.5 billion apparently).
His concern in the first instance would be more believable if Conservatives had a record of being concerned about people on benefits or of those trying to access public services. On the contrary! At least not in that way.
Bizarrely, he argued that "bank holidays smack of collectivism and central control."
"They militate against individual freedom and flexibility. Most people, if they were given a choice between taking a holiday on a bank holiday set by the state or at a time of their own choosing, chosen in consultation with their family, would choose the latter."
This would have been a fair point if he was proposing to offer people that choice. But of course he was in favour of no extra holiday at all.
Let Shona know what you think.
Also there is a petition here for a National Remembrance Holiday falling on the second Monday in November each year to reinforce Remembrance Sunday which falls on the second Sunday in November. Such a holiday, the petitioner suggests, "will serve to emphasise our commemoration of The Fallen who gave their lives to save Britain and also the on-going importance of the survival of our Nation. The National Remembrance Holiday will further serve to break that period between late summer and Christmas when there is currently no public holiday." Closing date 18 April 2008.
Labels: Just for fun, Local news, Politics
Shaken but not stirred
This time last week people across the UK were picking up the peices after the country's biggest earthquake in 25 years.
The earthquake's epicentre was at Market Rasen in Lincolnshire and measured approximately 5.2 on the Richter scale -big in UK terms but moderate compared with others that occur around the globe every year.
Nevertheless, many people across Leyland, Lancashire and the rest of the UK were woken as their properties shook in the early hours of the morning on February 27th. While some were worried enough to call the emergency services others either did not stir at all or rolled over and went back to sleep.
There were also some ruffled feathers as a parrot who lives in Fulwood fell off his perch three times as a result of the tremors. Although the parrot's owner was unaware of the 'quake, he was awoken by the fluttering of his African Grey pet parrot Scrimshaw.
Labels: Local news
Thursday, February 28, 2008
Bent Lane Post Office Meeting
A public meeting is to be held this afternoon regarding the future of the Post Office on Bent Lane, Leyland.
The meeting to be held at Wright's Fold Community Room at 5pm will be attended by South Ribble MP David Borrow and Councillor Matthew Tomlinson who will hear residents' concerns.
Councillor Tomlinson and David Borrow have been working hard to ensure local residents' voices are heard during the consultation period.
However, a spokesman for Post Office Ltd stated that it is not numbers of objections received but 'valid rationale' put forward which will help to persuade Post Office bosses of why a particular Post Office should not be closed.
Have your say on the future of your local Post Office. Consultation ends March 3rd 2008.Labels: Local news
Working to improve your environment
Local resident and Councillor for the area Fred Heyworth was amazed at the amount of water that collects at the bottom of Kingsway and Queensway when we get a lot of rain. It prevents people getting in and out of their homes. County Councillors Anne brown and Fred Heyworth have brought the matter to the attention of the authorities. It is believed that the necessary work will be fairly substantial.
They will press for the work to be done as soon as possible.
Golden Hill Lane & Fox Lane
Both Golden Hill Lane and Fox Lane have benefited from extensive re-laying of the footpaths.
Labour’s Anne Brown said:
"I know that the Western Drive and the Cedarwood Drive areas are also in need of work. Some has been done but I will not rest until pedestrians can walk along our streets with pride".
Drinking in Public
The issue of drinking in public on the Wade Hall estate is something that is regularly brought up by residents at Wade Hall Forum. They do not like it. Ways and means of addressing the matter are being considered. Your local Labour Councillors will make sure that it is not forgotten.
Tuesday, February 19, 2008
Rocks in their heads!
As Northern Rock is going through the process of being put into public ownership, the blame game rages on.
The government itself seems to be unfairly taking most of the flak for it. Yet it is the government that has had to step in to rescue a horrendous market failure.
Typically, the Conservatives have engaged in irresponsible, opportunistic flip-flopping on the issue.
Elsewhere there has been much media and other expert commentary on the whole subject.
Some have criticised the time it took to get to this stage. However, this period of time since the government first stepped in last September has been spent trying to find a private market-based solution. Yet again the market failed to put a rescue package together which would prevent the taxpayer from bearing huge costs while the shareholders gained all the benefits.
Indeed, some large shareholders to benefit would have been those that have swooped on the bank since the crisis hit hoping to make even more money from the crisis.
Various punditry on the matter blames the shareholders of Northern Rock for not holding the management board of the bank to account for its risky business model.
Though it has to be said that Northern Rock's practices and the complexity of the financial products (called 'collaterised debt obligations' apparently!) in the American 'sub-prime mortgage market' (lending money to poor people to buy a home who couldn't then afford the repayments) that lay behind the Rock's problems doesn't lend itself to close scrutiny or understanding.
Which brings us to the next candidates for blame -the regulatory authorities, mostly notably the Financial Services Authority (FSA). Many questions will be asked of their role and whether they could have done more to prevent the crisis. However, all the financial institutions are regulated by them but it is Northern Rock's specific business model which left it particularly vulnerable to the difficulties it has landed us all in.
Then, of course, there is Margaret Thatcher. Her government and party's policies set the larger context and forces for this to be possible in the deregulation of the financial markets back in the '80s and the whole 'greed is good', loadsamoney philosophy. At the same time the Conservative goverment oversaw the de-industrialisation of Britain and encouraged a heavy reliance in the economy on the financial sector. Profit-making was the primary aim regardless of the wider public good. There was no such thing as society.
The current crisis arose out of the buying and selling of debt and risk as things in themselves in order to make a profit. Those dealing in financial markets took, some have argued, reckless risks with these financial instruments whilst making vast amounts of money.
Credit ratings agencies in these markets also rated these products as safe when many were warning that they patently weren't.
It is important to note that the Conservative MP John Redwood continues to advocate even more deregulation.
The list of other villain candidates include Adam Applegarth, chief executive of Northern Rock, Mervyn King, governor of the Bank of England, Alan Greenspan, chairman of the Federal Reserve in the US from 1987 to 2006 and those poor folks who just wanted to buy a home for their families.
And so the government had to step in to clear up this whole sorry mess. There is widespread agreement that they are doing the right thing. For this it should be given, pardon the word, credit.
Labels: Local news, Politics
Sunday, February 17, 2008
Use it or Lose it
Bus number 112 now connects Croston, Ulnes Walton, Longmeanygate with Leyland and Preston Via Sainsbury’s.
When it was rescheduled your local County Councillor Anne brown suggested that it should run down Leadale Road. She remembered that the old minibus that ceased some years ago was missed by residents.
Some local residents from the Broadfield area, find it a long way to walk to a different bus stop. The 112 will stop on demand. Ring Traveline on 0871 200 22 33 for details of timings.
At present it is not well used and we will find it difficult to justify its continuation if it is running empty.
Labels: Local news
Councillor Profile: County Councillor Anne Brown
Anne Brown has been the County Councillor for the western half of Leyland since 1997.
This covers the wards of Lowerhouse, Seven Stars, Moss Side, Earnshaw Bridge and Golden Hill. The area includes the industrial estate of Moss Side and the large residential areas of Wade Hall and Broadfield.
Councillor Brown is active locally, supporting local schools and has been a Governor of Wellfield High School for 30 years. She is a member of the Community organizations within the area, Moss Side Community Forum, Broadfield 2000 and Wade Hall Action Group.
Within the County Council Anne has special responsibility for Resources and Performance. She is the first woman ever to hold this post in Lancashire County Council.
Anne Brown in action:
Working to improve your environment, On the Buses, First Lady, Supports good works, Local news and action, Working hard for your local environment, On Question Time, Giving Cold Callers the Cold Shoulder
Labels: Representatives
Who believes in equality
The first 3 Labour women MPs, Susan Lawrence - 1923, Dorothea Jewson - 1924, Margaret Bondfield - 1923
The 6th of February marked the 90th anniversary of Royal Assent to the Representation of the People Act 1918.
This Act gave most women over the age of 30 the right to vote. Women finally achieved the same voting rights as men ten years later. The Equal Franchise Act 1928, which gave women the vote on the same terms as men, received Royal Assent on 2 July 1928.
Read more here
The Conservatives have 17 female MPs.
Labour has 97 ...still not enough we should be working towards 50:50.
At Lancashire County Council, County Councillor Anne Brown was the first woman to deliver the important budget speech as Cabinet Member for Resources and Performance.
Labels: History, Local news, Politics
Thursday, February 14, 2008
Setting the record straight (after it has accidently been knocked)
The Health & Safety Executive is fighting back against the 'health & safety gone mad' myths often peddled which cloud the proper business of managing risk.
Each month they shatter a popular H & S myth on their website.
With some humour, dispelling another rumour that they possess none, for September 2007 they tackle the life-threatening issue of playing conkers in school...
"This is one of the oldest chestnuts around, a truly classic myth. A well-meaning head teacher decided children should wear safety goggles to play conkers. Subsequently some schools appear to have banned conkers on ‘health & safety’ grounds or made children wear goggles, or even padded gloves!"
Realistically the risk from playing conkers is incredibly low and just not worth bothering about. If kids deliberately hit each other over the head with conkers, that’s a discipline issue, not health and safety."
Read more fun myths here ...go on fall off your chair laughing.
February 2008 Myth - If a pupil is hurt, the teacher is likely to be sued
January 2008 Myth - Safety Experts’ New Year resolution is to make the life of business people as miserable as possible
December 2007 Myth - Every possible risk needs a safety sign
November 2007 Myth - Workers are banned from putting up Christmas decorations in the office
October 2007 Myth - Children were banned from riding at a donkey derby
September 2007 Myth - Kids must wear goggles to play conkers
August 2007 Myth - Egg boxes are banned in school craft lessons as they might cause salmonella
July 2007 Myth - All office equipment must be tested by a qualified electrician every year
June 2007 Myth - New regulations would require trapeze artists to wear hard hats
May 2007 Myth - Risk assessments must always be long and complex
April 2007 Myth - HSE has banned stepladders
Labels: Information, Local news
Sunday, February 10, 2008
Poles Apart
The story as reported by the Lancashire Evening Post, 7th February, 2008
Margaret Smith, the Conservative Leader of South Ribble Borough Council and councillor for New Longton & Hutton East, thinks the objections by locals in her ward to a recent advertisement written partly in Polish are 'understandable' even though Councillor Smith admits their concerns are based on 'fear of the unknown'.
The mobile advertising board for a recruitment agency was placed outside the former Post Office on Chapel Lane, New Longton for less than 24 hours during which time the council received 45 complaints.
Though the advertisement was not placed illegally it was still forced to move as a result of the complaints.
Another local resident could not understand all the fuss about the recent ad.
She did not want to be identified but told the LEP:
"As far as I know no-one has complained about it being there, there is nothing illegal about it being parked by the side of the road and there are a lot of similar sized signs in the village, so I cannot see the problem".
She also said that the same sign had been positioned on the corner of Strand Road and Marsh Lane in Preston for months without problems.
It seems then that it was the Polish element of the sign which drew the objections.
Councillor Smith explained to the Lancashire Evening Post the context of her constituents' reaction:
"Obviously there are sensitivities relating back to last year's planning application which has put this issue in the front of people's minds and, when they see something like this it, understandably, concerns them."
"People are concerned about what is going to come and this degree of the unknown does make a situation slightly awkward".
Last year a plan by the local owners of the property to turn the former Post Office into a hostel for agricultural workers in the area was turned down after other villagers angrily objected. Some were concerned about how the workers, likely to be of Polish and Latvian origin, would affect the "upmarket and quiet" village.
However, further up the road, Tarleton has long hosted and valued the contribution of such workers from abroad.
One resident who has lived in Tarleton all her life said, "I have never come across any problems at all with immigrants in the village,"
Another resident from nearby Little Hoole said of his Eastern Europeans neighbours:
"They are a lot friendlier than English people...They are polite and hard-working. They have made every effort to integrate round here and there have been no problems at all."
Across the river Preston North End has signed the much-coveted Polishman Grzegorz Szamotulski as goalkeeper.
While PNE fans are quite pleased will Councillor Margaret Smith encourage her constituents to be as welcoming if he decides to buy a property in New Longton?
Labels: Local news
Thursday, February 7, 2008
Weather Forecast
The sunshine has made a welcome return to Leyland and its environs after the wet and wild weather of recent weeks.
Elsewhere across the globe, China has just seen its worst weather conditions for 50 years. One traveller caught up in the weather chaos described the scene:
"The railway stations in Guangzhou are a scene of horror, with countless thousands of desperate and freezing people besieging them...." Read more..
In America on Tuesday some of the worst tornado clusters in US history ripped their way through 5 states killing at least 31 people in Tennessee, 13 in Arkansas, seven in Kentucky and four in Alabama.
Parts of Australia have been particularly drought-stricken over the last decade which it is believed is due to climate change. (It has also pushed the price of wine up!)
.Whilst it is difficult to pin any one weather event on global warming the increasing number of extreme weather events seen around the world is in line with the predictions on climate change. And while a minority dispute the precise extent and balance of causes of the changing climate the degree of consensus on the evidence that it is happening and we need to do something is overwhelming.
The challenge is how we prepare for the full consequences and try to minimise our own impact.
Even in the arch-capitalist United States of America some influential businesses together with environmental groups last year formed the United States Climate Action Partnership to demand tough national legislation from the federal government to require significant reductions in greenhouse gas emissions.
Back in Leyland our very own Matthew Tomlinson, Labour councillor for Golden Hill Ward and County Councillor, is showing leadership by example. He has pledged to reduce his own carbon footprint by going to work less by car and using other forms of transport more such as buses, trains and bicycle.
Labels: Environment, Local news
Tuesday, January 29, 2008
Post Office Consultation
There is still time to participate in the consultations about Post Office closures.
**Consultation ends March 3rd 2008**
Click here to access the full list of consultation documents and scroll down to the area plan for Lancashire and Fylde with Southport.
There is also available to view/download a map and 'Branch access report' which shows access and service details of nearby alternative branches to those proposed for closure.
Postwatch the independent watchdog which looks after the interests of postal service customers has handily crunched some numbers and provided some background and reasoning to the proposed changes to the Post Office network.
Have your say on the future of your local Post Office!
Labels: Information, Local news
Monday, January 28, 2008
Nice brick work!
50 years ago today Godtfred Kirk Christiansen filed a patent for what became an icon of the childhood toybox and bane of hoovering mothers everywhere, the lego brick.
Check out the work of brick artist Nathan Sawaya
Labels: News
A holiday to Remember
A petition at the government's online petition site is calling for a new National Holiday
It reads...
"By comparison to many other European Countries, Britain has fewer public holidays and none at all for a period of some three months between the August public holiday and Christmas. Moreover, Britain does not have a "National" day. So what better way to celebrate our Nation than to have a National Remembrance Holiday falling on the second Monday in November each year to reinforce Remembrance Sunday which falls on the second Sunday in November? Such a holiday will serve to emphasise our commemoration of The Fallen who gave their lives to save Britain and also the on-going importance of the survival of our Nation. The National Remembrance Holiday will further serve to break that period between late summer and Christmas when there is currently no public holiday."
Sign up here. Closing date 18 April 2008.
Read about another notable 'Grand National Holiday' (for a whole month!) once advocated. Sadly the closing date for this one was August 1839.
Labels: History, Information
A heart-warming story about Coal
13 years after the Tories tried to take away miners jobs, life and community at Tower Colliery on the grounds that the pit wasn't 'profitable' the last lump of coal really has been finally mined.
In 1994, Michael Heseltine, President of the Board of Trade, Margaret Thatcher then Prime Minister and British Coal bosses told the miners that they and their pit were no longer of use.
Labour MP Ann Clwyd went underground with the miners to stage a sit-in. She emerged dusty-faced carried on the shoulders of the miners. She recalls Michael Heseltine saying to her at Westminster that she should tell the miners to throw in the towel. "I replied: 'Tell them yourself,'" she says.
The miners knew better and used their redundancy pay to buy their pit which they have since run successfully.
On Friday 25th January 2008 they worked the pit for the last time and marched away on their own terms with their heads held high, a triumph of the human spirit over ideology and greed.
Watch interviews with the miners on their last day on YouTube