
Derbyshire community funding scheme faces freeze
He added: "We know how vital these grants are to the community and they are an important part [of] supporting vital services."Reform UK has pledged to carry out audits of the local council budgets it will soon control after winning several councils in the local elections, in an attempt to combat wasteful spending.The scheme currently costs Derbyshire County Council about £120,000 each year.However, it is among the areas whose funding is facing uncertainty as the authority's new Reform leaders assess where money can be saved on the council's books.
The leader of Derbyshire Conservatives, Alex Dale, said the scheme was "a lifeline for countless grass roots projects". "Putting this scheme under review is worrying and suggests Reform are clearly unaware of the positive impact it's had on Derbyshire communities."The Conservatives defended their decision to halve funding for the scheme in the past as "a responsible move to reduce council costs", adding that "it was preserved due to its direct and tangible benefits to local people."
A British Legion branch in the High Peak area received £4,880 from the fund to carry out specialist essential repairs to a war memorial in Chapel-en-le-Frith's market place, which is central to annual commemoration events. The remainder of the cost is being covered by supporters of the legion.Jason Adshead, a local parish councillor, said paying for the costly repairs would not have been possible without the fund."It's a major part of our town... it's important we keep these monuments in tip top condition. It's the very least we can do."I would ask [Reform] to think long and hard before they make any drastic decisions."
The Friends of Dronfield group have received funding from the scheme for the past few years, which is used to host Christmas lunches for roughly 40 local elderly residents to combat loneliness during the festive period.They cost about £900 to run, half of which has been funded by the scheme.David Goater, who organises the events, said groups like his would struggle without the funding."The community is very important. I know that funds are tight, but there are a lot of people out there doing good things. We should be celebrating that."
Reform UK will take control of the council on 21 May after winning 42 seats on the authority in the local elections.Derbyshire County Council were approached for comment.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Sky News
29 minutes ago
- Sky News
Senior aides to King and Prince Harry pictured meeting in London
Senior aides to the King and Prince Harry have been pictured together in London, possibly opening a channel of communication between the two sides for the first time in years. Meredith Maines, the duke's chief communications officer, and Liam Maguire, who runs Harry and Meghan's UK public relations team, were pictured meeting with Tobyn Andreae, the King's communications secretary, at the Royal Over-Seas League near Clarence House. Sky News understands it's the first time they've all met like this. The images were obtained by The Mail On Sunday, with the paper quoting a source saying there was no "formal agenda" to the meeting, but there were "things both sides wanted to talk about". Both sides have been contacted for comment. Relations between the King and his second son declined significantly after the 2021 interview with Oprah Winfrey, during which Harry and Meghan alleged a member of the Royal Family was concerned about the colour of their son Archie's skin before he was born. In his controversial memoir Spare, the duke then claimed his brother, the Prince of Wales, had physically attacked him and that the King put his own interests above Harry's, and was jealous of Meghan. The rift deepened further in 2020 when the Sussexes announced that they would step back as senior members of the Royal Family and split their time between the UK and US. It was at this time that Harry's taxpayer-funded security was also taken away. In a Good Morning America interview in 2023, Harry said he was "stunned" by the decision. He also took the Home Office to court over the move. In May this year, the duke lost that legal challenge, with the Home Office saying security decisions were now taken on a "case-by-case" basis. claimed the King "won't speak to me".


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Transport Secretary admits she hasn't been able to afford an electric car... as she prepares to unveil '£700m of subsidies' to combat flagging sales
Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander today admitted she has not been able to afford an electric car - as she prepares to unveil millions of pounds in new subsidies. The Cabinet minister- who earns around £160,000 - said she had not purchased a vehicle for about six years as it was 'expensive'. She also pointed to difficulties in getting charging cables from her terraced house - but said she would 'definitely' be buying an EV next time. Concerns have been growing about flagging sales of EVs and the potential impact on Net Zero targets. From 2030 sales of new diesel or petrol only vehicles are meant to stop - while from 2035 all new cars must be electric. Appearing on the BBC 's Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg show, Ms Alexander said a £63million fund would create tens of thousands of new charging points. The cash will help councils install cables under roads where there are no driveways. And a plan due to be revealed on Tuesday would see Brits given grants towards buying an EV. The scheme - thought to be worth around £640 million - could mean money off downpayments. The biggest grants are likely to target UK-manufactured vehicles such as Nissan. Similar subsidies were scrapped by the Tories in 2022. Ms Alexander said there was 'some good news' on EV sales, pointing out that as of June one in four new cars in the UK was electric. 'But we do need to make it easier and cheaper for people to buy an electric vehicle. So today we're announcing a really big investment, £63 million in charging infrastructure across the country, £25 million for councils so that people like me, who don't have a driveway. 'I live in a terrace house, if I had an EV, I'd be asking myself questions about how I would get the electric cable across to the car.' Kuenssberg interjected: 'So the Transport Transport Secretary doesn't have an electric car, but you're telling everyone else to have one?' Ms Alexander replied: 'I don't have an electric car, Laura, but I'm like millions of people in this country who, I bought a new car about six years ago, I'm thinking about the next car that I will purchase, and it will definitely be an electric vehicle. 'I'm not in the habit of changing my car on a yearly basis, expensive as it is, and so that's why we're making £25million available to councils so that they can provide financial support to households who want to put in a cross pavement gulley, so that you can safely run the cable across the pavement.'


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Lord Blair of Boughton
Ian Blair, Lord Blair of Boughton, who has died aged 72, was the Metropolitan police commissioner who not only faced unprecedented terrorism attacks on London during his tenure, but was the first for more than 100 years to be sacked by the politician to whom he was responsible, Boris Johnson as mayor of London, in 2008. Casting a very dark shadow over his leadership was the handling of the shooting of the innocent Brazilian electrician Jean Charles de Menezes by police marksmen at Stockwell tube station in the wake of the 7/7 terrorist attacks five months into Blair's appointment as commissioner in 2005. He was slow to acknowledge that the police had made a terrible mistake, failed seemingly to appreciate the severity of the error and tried to prevent the Independent Police Complaints Commission from investigating what had happened. London and its police force were under tremendous pressure at the time, but the incident was devastating to his career and reputation. Blair, an Oxford-educated graduate in English literature – another first for the role - notably attempted to reform the procedures of the Met and to make it more responsive to the capital's diverse communities. But he failed to master public relations – and lost any credit he might have had both with the rightwing media and its Conservative political allies and, more crucially, with many of the officers under his command. He was, they called him, 'the PC PC', too close to the government of his unrelated namesake Tony Blair and prone to buckle in a crisis. In the words of the former policeman and commentator Tony Judge to the Guardian in 2006: 'He doesn't seem to be a leader, seems to be very much a theorist … seen as an academic police officer first and foremost, a product of the leadership cadre that has emerged over the last 30 years.' There was ingrained suspicion of a fast-tracked graduate in a traditionally non-graduate profession. Blair was the younger son of Sheila (nee Law) and Francis Blair, who worked for Lever Brothers, latterly as the dock manager at Port Sunlight. Ian and his older brother, Sandy, were brought up in Boughton, a suburb of Chester, and both were privately educated – in Ian's case at Wrekin college – with their fees paid by an uncle who was a doctor. Ian then studied English at Christ Church, Oxford, having ambitions to be an actor, though his family hoped he might become a doctor. Acting did not come off, but the university careers service was successful, to his family's disappointment, in suggesting he might try the police instead. Joining the Met in 1974, he was fast-tracked on the new police graduate entry scheme, rising rapidly up the ranks: detective sergeant at Notting Hill, chief inspector at Kentish Town and a period on the staff of the chief inspector of constabulary, investigating the police themselves. These were not deskbound jobs: he was involved in policing the Brixton riots and placed in charge of identifying the victims of the King's Cross fire in 1987. He was sent on the senior commanders' course at Bramshill police training college and in 1982 given a bursary to study rape case procedures in the US, subsequently producing a book, Investigating Rape (1985), which would inform his attitude to the treatment of the crime and its victims. In 1993 he was made head of the Met's complaints investigation bureau and placed in charge of the Operation Gallery inquiry into police corruption. He became assistant chief constable of the Thames Valley force, in charge of policing the protests against the construction of the Newbury bypass, and in 1998 was made chief constable of Surrey. Two years later he was back at the Met, as deputy to the commissioner, John Stevens, the coppers' copper, a dominating and popular presence in the force. Blair, supposedly supplying the intellect to accompany Stevens's avuncular authority, was clearly earmarked as his successor. In 2003 he was knighted. The Met was still recovering from accusations of institutional racism levelled at it in the Macpherson report into the investigation of the murder of the black teenager Stephen Lawrence and Blair introduced initiatives intended to root out the so-called canteen culture, not only of racism but also misogyny and homophobia within the force. These appealed to the Blair government in appointing him as commissioner to the traditional five-year term in 2005, but also inevitably led to resentment and antagonism among some officers. The force's unofficial magazine Constabulary claimed 'PC has gone way beyond reasonable and fair,' and the fact that Blair was seen as too close to New Labour inevitably aroused the ire of the Daily Mail and the Telegraph. Both would pursue him relentlessly. It did not help that Blair, assured and often genial to members of the public and in broadcast interviews, could be seen as chilly and remote within the force. He told the Guardian in 2005: 'I am never going to be the Daily Mail's cup of tea. I can't work the Telegraph out: the things we are doing are what the Telegraph would like us to do, but they still don't like it.' Measures such as diverting £300m to frontline policing, being more responsive to London's residents, the setting up of 600 safer neighbourhoods local teams of officers, the streamlining of the Met's labyrinthine and sometimes rival operational teams and the codifying of the force's values cut little ice with the critics. Nor did falling crime and murder rates and the recruitment of an increasing number of people from minority ethnic backgrounds. Then came 7/7: the detonation on 7 July 2005 of Islamist terrorist bombs on three rush-hour tube trains at Russell Square, Aldgate and Edgware Road, and on a bus at Tavistock Square, which together killed 52 people and injured 800. With the capital on full alert and its population fearful, Blair went directly not to the scenes – he would do that later – but to the television studios to offer reassurance. 'I was just instinctively aware that what we needed now was a man in uniform to say we're OK,' he said. 'I don't want to be at all boastful, but I just thought it was the right moment.' This demonstrativeness came back to haunt him a fortnight later. De Menezes, innocently on his way to work, was shot dead at Stockwell station by armed officers who mistakenly believed that he was one of the missing terrorists. Blair, against the advice of senior colleagues, gave a highly misleading press conference later that day indicating that the killing was justified because De Menezes had refused to stop or obey police instructions, even as it was becoming clear that the police narrative was both self-serving and wrong. De Menezes had not refused anything, had not tried to escape, had not been carrying a concealed bomb and had already been restrained when he was shot. Blair was slow to acknowledge the mistakes the following day and even downplayed the incident later, telling the Guardian that it had been 'a paragraph in a novel moving at high speed. It's awful we shot somebody. It's awful he was completely innocent.' It emerged that he had tried to prevent the IPCC carrying out its duty to investigate the shooting. He survived the fallout and subsequent investigations, but his reputation did not recover and he became increasingly gaffe-prone, as when he appeared to downplay the seriousness of the murder of two girls in Soham, saying their case did not merit such widespread media attention as it was getting. Blair by now was alienating not just Conservative media and politicians – he was the first commissioner whose work was overseen by the mayor of London and the capital's police authority rather than the home secretary – but also senior officers in the Met who were increasingly critical of his leadership. In October 2008, Johnson, the new mayor, announced that he could not work with Blair and forced him into resignation, the first commissioner not to serve out his full term since 1890. Blair, who was created a life peer in 2010, retired to write his memoirs, Policing Controversy (2009), and to serve on various charitable bodies. He was a trustee of the Globe theatre, and chair of trustees at the children's hospice Helen & Douglas house in Oxford, and of the Woolf Institute, an interfaith charity in Cambridge. He was active on the commission for assisted dying (2010-12) and made notable contributions on this subject in the House of Lords. He married Felicity White in 1980. She, a son, Josh, and a daughter, Amelia, survive him. Ian Warwick Blair, Lord Blair of Boughton, police officer, born 19 March 1953; died 9 July 2025