. April 2019 - Page 2 of 3 - Wilcop Media

The Council, in partnership with Mansfield District Council and Newark & Sherwood District Council commissioned Homeless Link to carry out a Homelessness Review and develop a new Homelessness and Rough Sleeping Strategy.

The Review and draft Strategy have been developed following extensive research, data analysis and stakeholder interviews. It is Ashfield District Council’s vision that the residents of Ashfield have affordable and warm housing in a safe community that promotes their health and well being. Preventing homelessness is key to achieving this vision and is identified as a priority in the Council’s Corporate Plan.

We are now consulting with stakeholders on the draft Strategy before it is finalised and put into action. A copy of the consultation document and online feedback form can be found on https://www2.ashfield.gov.uk/limesurvey/index.php/818864?lang=en. Consultation runs until the 10th May 2019.

The Council is pleased to welcome brand new business Home Sweet Home to Darwen Market.


The stall sells quality bed covers, pillows, duvets, cushions, bathroom mats, towels, throws and more and is already proving a hit with customers after just a week. After hearing too many times that there was nowhere in Darwen town centre to get bedding, towels and other items for the home, Lee Hughes decided to set up stall at Darwen Market.

Husband to Melanie, popular owner of Making Memories Haberdashery, Lee is a plasterer by trade but saw an opportunity to bring this high quality stall to the market and we’re certainly glad he did!

For now, Lee will continue plastering part-time and the stall will be run by Lee and local employee Mikki. She is certainly knowledgeable and can vouch for the quality of the products, as she admits to spending her first week’s wages on goods from the stall.

She said: The ‘Hug and Snug’ throws are so soft; I’ve bought four so far – one in every colour! They are great as I can fit my entire family under one throw.” The stall is well laid out and looks really good in the Market. We have had lots of comments saying that this is just what we needed in Darwen and I think that they are right”. Darwen Market has become a family affair for Melanie and Lee with their two stalls now and both daughters working on Saturday’s for Crabtree’s Indulge and Rushton’s the Bacon Stall.

Why not pop down and say hello, browse the products and maybe even treat yourself to something new for your home. The throws and cushions would make fantastic Mother’s Day Gifts too!

The addition of new stalls is good news for the market and its customers. If these stories have given you the motivation to open your own pop up or stall, there are currently a number of opportunities for pop ups, short and long term leases at Darwen Market.

For more information please contact our friendly team on 01254 585151 or contact us via our website http://www.darwenmarket.com/ and click on ‘rent a stall’.

Ewood Park hosted Blackburn with Darwen’s first summit on healthy weight on Wednesday 13 March. The ‘Making Healthy Weight Everyone’s Business’ event saw Local Government partners, including Blackburn with Darwen and Blackpool Councils, join forces with Blackburn with Darwen Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG), Public Health England and the Food Active partnership – a collaborative programme made up of Public Health Directors across the North West.

Chaired by Blackburn with Darwen Council’s Executive Member for Health and Adult Social Care, Councillor Brian Taylor, the morning of the summit saw speakers from the various organisations talking on a range of issues including the national perspective on healthy weight, healthy weight in Blackburn with Darwen and ways to make healthy weight everyone’s responsibility. The afternoon session saw workshops taking place to develop the vision for the recently announced Childhood Obesity Trailblazer Programme.

That programme is funded by the Department of Health and Social Care and managed by the Local Government Association. It seeks innovative action to tackle childhood obesity at local level. The Council and its partners in the Together a Healthier Future programme will use an initial £10,000 funding to develop innovative plans to reduce childhood obesity that can also be shared across the country.

The healthy weight summit was another achievement of a three-year strategy by Blackburn with Darwen Council and NHS health partners to encourage residents to move more, eat well and maintain a healthy weight.
The Eat Well, Shape Up, Move More Strategy aims to encourage positive lifestyle changes that enable local people to improve their health and wellbeing by supporting an environment where physical activity and healthy eating is the easy choice for everyone throughout their lives. This has included a commitment to signing a joint healthy weight declaration.

The Local Authority Declaration on Healthy Weight – signed in 2017 – contains fourteen common commitments that all Local Authorities that sign up to it agree to pursue, along with a set of themes specific to the local area.
The local commitments have included promoting active travel with the launch of the Weavers Wheel; supporting the Daily Mile scheme and food policies for Primary Schools; food and physical activity policies and support for early years settings; creation of a Food Alliance for BwD to address food poverty and food sustainability and working towards the borough’s designation as a Breastfeeding Friendly Borough and a Sugar Smart Borough. Councillor Brian Taylor said: A healthy weight is an essential foundation for physical, emotional and social wellbeing. Along with partners from across the borough and beyond, we have made various commitments to support residents to eat well, shape up, move more and live healthier lives and this healthy weight summit – which I was delighted to chair – was all part of our ongoing focus in that area.

Private renters in Nottingham are among the best protected from so-called revenge evictions, according to the Chartered Institute of Environmental Health.

Nottingham City Council is among the top ten councils for taking formal action and offering tenants protection from landlords who evict tenants after they raise a complaint. The council is making use of a power that came in under the Deregulation Act 2015 which means that renters who raise a complaint with their landlord cannot be evicted for six months – but only if the council formally gets involved and issues an improvement notice for certain hazards such as damp, cold, asbestos, over-crowding and poor security.

The CIEH says that many councils try to resolve matters informally and not all complaints will involve this level of hazard, leaving one tenant in every 20 who complains to their council unprotected. It cites the top councils for taking formal action and offering tenants protection as Tower Hamlets, Merton, Nottingham, Wiltshire, North Somerset, Waltham Forest, Bournemouth, and Cornwall.

Nottingham City Council’s Head of Safer Housing and Anti-Social Behaviour, David Walker, said: “We are wholly focused on ensuring that private tenants can raise issues about the state of their property without being penalised either by rent increases or revenge evictions by unscrupulous landlords.

“Wherever possible, when we receive a complaint we will take formal action which rightly gives tenants protection from this sort of thing, while ensuring that the necessary improvements to the property are carried out.”
If private renters in Nottingham experience problems with their property or landlord, they should call the council’s Safer Housing Team for advice and support on 0115 876 1331.

An appeal has been launched for environmentally minded Rushcliffe residents to apply to be a tree warden and ensure trees in their neighbourhoods are protected to breathe further life into communities.
Tree wardens are volunteers appointed by Parish Councils to champion local trees and woods, involve fellow residents in tree projects and protect local trees by reporting early signs of insect pests, disease and vandalism.
The initiative follows the Rushcliffe Borough Council’s successful free tree scheme last year, which saw over 1,600 trees given to residents and Parish Councils to plant in their gardens, properties and communities.

The Council’s Executive Manager for Communities Dave Mitchell said: “It is incredibly important not only that we plant new trees in Rushcliffe but also look to protect and encourage trees to flourish in our towns and villages.
“Tree wardens in Rushcliffe will help to ensure that as communities grow, green, sustainable environments surrounding them will increase too, giving current and future residents a higher quality of life.”

Residents interested in joining the scheme should email media@rushcliffe.gov.uk or contact the Borough Council on any of its social media channels.

For residents living in West Bridgford, where no Parish or Town Council exists, or for further information, please email the Council’s Environmental Sustainability Officer Paul Phillips at environmentalissues@rushcliffe.gov.uk.

The riverside play area in Towneley Park was has been re-opened by local youngster eight-year-old Kenzie Lumsden following a major refurbishment undertaken by Burnley Council’s greenspaces team.

Kenzie is disabled and wasn’t able to use the previous equipment but the refurbished play area featured equipment that is accessible and open for Kenzie, and others like him, to use. He was put forward to officially re-open the playground and the council was pleased to allow him the honour.
The play area has always been a firm favourite with local families but needed some improvements and so the council worked with the Friends of Towneley on the consultation and design of the play area and the Friends secured grant funding of £30,000 from the Lancashire Environmental Fund towards the cost of the scheme. Burnley Rotary Club also helped support the project.

Chair of the Friends of Towneley, Maureen Frankland, said: “Towneley is part of our lives, we played here as children and now we enjoy taking our children and grandchildren to the park and seeing them having fun. We wanted the play area to provide opportunities for children of all ages and abilities and we are very grateful to the Lancashire Environmental Fund and Burnley Council for providing the funding to refurbish the play area.”
The council’s head of greenspaces and amenities, Simon Goff, said:

“We have opened the play area for the Easter holidays so that youngsters could enjoy it during the school break. It’s not quite complete, and we have a couple of large items of equipment, including an interactive sonic arch and a 3m high tube slide with rope bridge still to put in. These will be installed after the holidays are over.”

Young people from different parts of the borough spent the weekend together on a residential aimed at exploring what they have in common and making plans to work together. Blackburn with Darwen Borough Council’s Young People’s Services organised and delivered the weekend residential which took 18 young men and women to Coldwell Activity Centre near Burnley for a variety of outdoor team-building activities and workshops. Representing the Council’s Young People’s Service, BRFC Trust, Blackburn Youthzone, IMO and One Voice Blackburn, the young people also took part in youth work curriculum sessions on democracy and workshops exploring identity.

The young people were nominated by their organisations to represent them at the two night residential which had a focus on social integration.
Blackburn with Darwen is one of only five areas nationally that are working closely with the Ministry for Housing, Communities and Local Government to explore innovative ways of building stronger communities.
Jayne Ivory, Director of Children’s Services at Blackburn with Darwen Borough Council, said: Blackburn with Darwen has one of the youngest populations in Europe, with one in four people under the age of 15. This presents us with a fantastic opportunity in terms of how we approach the borough’s integration challenges. Coming together as a group and working together, as these young people have begun to do, is a great way to change perceptions and attitudes to people from different backgrounds to our own.
It’s heartening to hear these young people say that they started the weekend as strangers, but ended it as friends. I hope they’ll enjoy continuing to work together.

Shannon represented Blackburn Rovers FC Community Trust at the residential weekend. She said: I enjoyed the weekend because it was really good to meet other people that have similar interests, and to also meet people from other organisations and get to know their opinions on what’s going on in Blackburn with Darwen. Blackburn with Darwen Youth MP Uday Akram took part in the residential. He said: The weekend really brought us together, different people from different backgrounds, giving their opinions. And we can really see that everyone does want integration to happen. During the residential weekend, young people were tasked with putting forward suggestions for a Great Get Together event for others in their age group. The Great Get Together, a national campaign in memory of murdered Batley & Spen MP Jo Cox, aims to bring people together to celebrate what they have in common. Events this year will be held on the third weekend in June. Working in four groups, the young people came up with a wide variety of ideas. They will now work together to develop their ideas and film a video pitch.

The group with the winning pitch will receive funding from the Our Community, Our Future social integration programme to stage their Great Get Together in the summer.

For more information about Blackburn with Darwen’s Our Community, Our Future social integration programme, watch this short video.
https://vimeo.com/ 304607951/2cbb52c07b

The organisers behind the Blackburn Festival of Light are in the running to win £50,000 to launch a brand new project in the town. They’ve been chosen as part of ‘The People’s Projects’ scheme, a partnership between ITV and the National Lottery, and are competing against groups from across the North West. The cash would help to fund the new ‘Let it Shine’ The People’s Parade initiative which would run throughout the summer holidays and work with families – ending in a celebratory carnival.

The participants will get to do everything from helping to make costumes to learning performance and musical skills and they even could even feature in the parade itself. Kerris Casey-St.Pierre, who’s helping lead the bid, said: “We have been running the community lantern parade now for seven years. “In the winter we run workshops making lanterns, teaching dance and performance and we make the costumes – it brings the community together to create something fantastic.

“What we really want to do is extend our programme throughout the year.
“A lot of our families struggle, particularly during the summer holidays, and we want to arrange a series of workshops throughout that time.” Kerris added: “We want a big carnival-style procession at the end of August right throughout the town centre.

“We want the streets to be full of people and there be dancing, singing and drumming, people on stilts – people generally coming together as a community to have a big celebration.” The group appeared on ITV on Thursday evening with their appeal for votes.

You can watch their video and vote now. https://www.thepeoplesprojects.org.uk/projects/view/let-it-shine-the-peoples-parade?fbclid=IwAR00K-c6MRV6-kXpowywFEpheUuqwkLM_n806aUmleltwF6QzfUVt4q0kzI
Please help spread the message by sharing the Council’s Facebook and Twitter posts supporting the bid.

People in East Lancashire who are at risk of diabetes, or who have been diagnosed with diabetes are now receiving more support than ever before, says the GP lead for diabetes, Dr Rahul Thakur. 

Patients who are at risk of diabetes can sign up to “The Healthier You: NHS Diabetes Prevention Programme” to help manage their weight and steer clear of a diabetes diagnosis.

Dr Rahul Thakur a local GP and clinical lead at East Lancashire Clinical Commissioning Group said:

“Most people would be shocked to know that around 22,000 people with diabetes die early every year across the country. Type 2 diabetes is a leading cause of preventable sight loss in people of working age and is a major contributor to kidney failure, heart attack, and stroke. There are currently five million people in England at high risk of developing type 2 diabetes. If these trends persist, one in three people will be obese by 2034 and one in 10 will develop type 2 diabetes.

There is strong international evidence which demonstrates how behavioural interventions, which support people to maintain a healthy weight and be more active, can significantly reduce the risk of developing the condition.

The Healthier You: NHS Diabetes Prevention Programme (NHS DPP) identifies those at high risk and refers them onto a behaviour change programme”.

A lack of exercise, poor diet and being overweight are all risk factors for developing the disease. The NHS Diabetes Prevention Programme is designed to stop or delay the onset of diabetes through a range of personalised lifestyle interventions, including:

•             Education on lifestyle choices

•             Advice on how to reduce weight through healthier eating

•             Bespoke physical activity programmes

Those referred by their GP, following a GP consultation, will receive tailored, personalised help to reduce their risk of type 2 diabetes including education on healthy eating and lifestyle, help with weight loss (for overweight participants), and bespoke physical exercise programmes, all of which together have been proven to reduce the risk of developing the disease. Over a minimum of nine months patients will be offered at least 13 education and exercise sessions of one to two hours; at least 16 hours face to face or one-to-one in total.

Recent projections show that the growing number of people with diabetes could result in nearly 39,000 people living with diabetes suffering a heart attack in 2035 and over 50,000 people suffering a stroke.

Nationally, over 17,000 have now completed the NHS Diabetes Prevention Programme nationally and have achieved a combined weight loss of over 50,000 kg – equivalent to the weight of four double decker buses.

The NHS Long Term Plan announced that the programme which sees people at risk of developing type 2 diabetes given help to lose weight, will double in size over the next few years to treat around 200,000 people a year.

2,526 people in East Lancashire and 1,535 people in Blackburn with Darwen have already signed up to the free programme with the vast majority benefiting from the support that it is giving to people. The combined sign up for Pennine Lancashire of 4, 061 over the last year has put Pennine Lancashire as the most successful area for people joining the programme.

From July this year, online versions of the programme, which involve wearable technologies and apps to help those at risk of type 2 diabetes, will be provided for patients who find it difficult to attend sessions because of work or family commitments.

Professor Jonathan Valabhji, national clinical director of diabetes and obesity said:

“Around two thirds of adults and one third of children are now overweight or obese; driving higher and higher rates of type 2 diabetes, that we are now focusing huge efforts to address, as outlined in the NHS Long Term Plan.

“I’m delighted that our work so far in this area has been producing really positive results. This weight loss and glucose reduction is promising – we hope to help many more of those who are at risk of Type 2 diabetes to not get it in the first place.” 

For people who have a diagnosis of type 2 diabetes NHS East Lancashire and NHS Blackburn with Darwen CCGs offer patient self-care diabetes education courses which are freely available and easy to join.

Diabetes education has been shown to reduce longer term complications of diabetes and make people feel more confident in day to day self-management.

In East Lancashire, patients can sign up to EMPOWER, and in Blackburn with Darwen, patients can sign up to DESMOND. Both of these are national, structured diabetes education programmes designed to help people with type 2 diabetes understand what diabetes is, the effect it has on their body and how to make small, achievable changes to the food they eat and their everyday life.

Both EMPOWER in East Lancashire and DESMOND in Blackburn with Darwen are run as a self-referral course which means that people who have type 2 diabetes can sign up without having to see their GP or nurse.  To find out more information East Lancashire patients can go to https://east-lancs.empower-booking.co.uk/ and Blackburn with Darwen patients can go to https://www.lancashirecare.nhs.uk/desmond-blackburn-with-darwen

Belvoir Castle has been revealed as a ‘Garden of the Year’ finalist, a public voted awards organised by Historic Houses Association designed to celebrate the best gardens in the UK.

Emma Rutland is the 11th Duchess of Rutland: “We’re delighted to be up for Historic Houses’ Garden of the Year. Spring is the perfect time to explore our tranquil gardens, with camellias, daffodils and magnolias in bloom and lots of walking trails available. With the public vote now open, we hope everyone who loves visiting our beautiful landscapes will support us.”

Ursula Cholmeley, Gardens Editor, Historic House magazine, says: “What makes the gardens of Historic Houses special is the people who live in them, and we want to see their ideas and passion coming through in the way the garden is evolving. Our great country houses are, rightly, protected from much significant physical change, so it’s often only in the garden that a new generation of inhabitants of these much-loved family homes can really make their mark, leaving their own legacy for future generations. These shortlisted gardens are all ones where we can see that personal imprint.”
The gardens at Belvoir Castle were designed and landscaped by the fifth Duchess of Rutland, Elizabeth Howard, and regarded as one of the greatest gardens north of London in the 18th century. Over the years, the gardens have been lovingly cared for with several Duchesses leaving their own mark. The 11th Duchess is determined to continue redeveloping these beautiful gardens to restore them to their former glory.

This year marks the beginning of a £200,000 restoration of the Rose Garden, following the rediscovery of the original plans drawn up by the 19th century designer Harold Peto in the Castle archives.

These reveal that the Rose Garden is shaped like a boat, with the Chinese horse at the bow, and the circular seat at the stern. Visitors can explore the classical formal gardens, woodlands and views across the rural countryside from the castle’s hilltop position.

Capability Brown Tours have been launched as part of the 2019 season.
Following a two-year restoration programme led by the 11th Duchess, which cleared over 500-acres of woodland and brought the lost plans of Capability Brown to life, visitors can explore the stunning vistas designed more than 250 years ago by the English landscape architect with a head set tour narrated by the Duchess from the new electric bus.

The Belvoir Flower and Garden Festival (13 & 14 July) also returns for its second year, a quintessential british day out with beautiful garden inspiration and ideas. Specialist plant growers, garden furniture, sculpture artists, show gardens, border displays, tools and crafts as well as Expert Horticulturists will be on hand to answer gardening questions.
Admission to the Gardens only at Belvoir start from £12 for adults; £7 for children (4-16 years) and £34 for a family pass (two adults and up to three children). As a listed RHS Garden, Belvoir Castle opens its doors to RHS members in June for free of charge.

To vote for Belvoir Castle to be crowned Historic Houses’ Garden of the Year, visit: www.historichouses.org/goya2019.html. Alternatively, members of the public can cast their vote by making a post on Facebook that includes Historic Houses (@HistoricHousesUK), the words ‘My Vote’, the name of the garden they want to win, and the hashtag #HHgoya. Voting closes on 30 September and the winner will be revealed in November.

For more information about Belvoir Castle, visit: www.belvoircastle.com.
With voting now open, the Leicestershire Estate is the only attraction to fly the flag for the East Midlands as it competes for the national title against seven other historic houses from all corners of the UK.

Images :- Credit Charlotte Graham