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Times Concise No 9852 The Times & The Sunday Times

Times25-05-2025
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Sunderland Museum and Winter Gardens plans approved
Sunderland Museum and Winter Gardens plans approved

BBC News

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Sunderland Museum and Winter Gardens plans approved

A Grade-II listed city centre museum is set to get new entrance and galleries after redevelopment plans were proposals for Sunderland's Museum and Winter Gardens were revealed earlier this year after it was confirmed the library currently housed in the venue would move and free up space. Restoration works to the roof and windows of the site will also be carried out. A timescale for the work and a developer are yet to be confirmed. The museum had not been renovated for more than 20 years, the Local Democracy Reporting Service said. According to council plans, refurbishment was needed "to maintain current audiences, attract new visitors and for the museum in the longer term to be commercially independent".The council's conservation officer also claimed the relocated entrance would help increase footfall to the venue. What is planned? Several new gallery spaces will be created at the space will be freed up after the entrance relocates and the city library moves to the Culture House development in Keel Square in the autumn. Window on Wearside on the ground floor would feature "displays of star objects and new favourites, tactiles, interactives and AVs to enjoy Sunderland's story of sports, music, events and more".Sunderland Story, located in the soon to be vacated library, also on the ground floor, will have interactive games and "mass displays" of early archaeology, ship models and mining lanterns to help visitors connect with Sunderland's Space exhibition, set to be based in the glazed area facing Burdon Road which currently houses the museum shop. According to plans, it aims to serve as a collaborative space where communities can discover how to live sustainably. It will feature a "central island tree sculpture" and live plants. The Hold, on the third floor, will show the city's pottery and glass collections. Under planning conditions, the development must be brought forward within three years. Follow BBC Sunderland on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram.

New Forest donkeys spark backlash from furious locals after raiding council wheelie bins for leftover food
New Forest donkeys spark backlash from furious locals after raiding council wheelie bins for leftover food

Daily Mail​

time27 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

New Forest donkeys spark backlash from furious locals after raiding council wheelie bins for leftover food

Donkeys in the New Forest have sparked a furious backlash from locals after the animals have been found raiding council wheelie bins for leftover food. Residents living in the National Park in Hampshire are demanding that their council be fined as an ongoing row between locals and the authority surrounding bins persists. Tory-run New Forest District Council [NFDC] caused uproar earlier this year by introducing food waste bins. Since the expensive rollout, which cost the authority £5.6million between April and June, the forest's free-roaming animals have been eating from them. Although they are common across the UK, homes in the New Forest have never had them. Brian Tarnoff is part of an association helping protect the New Forest, and he is urging neighbours to 'tally up' every donkey seen chomping on scraps during bin collection day. He argues this data could then be used to fine the NFDC for violating a bylaw banning the feeding of livestock. New pictures show even more instances of 'feeding frenzies' as the free-roaming donkeys, of which there are 200 in the Forest, gather around toppled over food waste bins and feast on the contents. As well as donkeys, other animal which roam free in the forest, such as ponies, are also joining in on the feast left outside on bin collection days Some members of the equine breed can even be seen eating the bright green bin liners themselves, a huge choking hazard. Mark Timbrell, from the village of Sway, said he had to pull one of the plastic bags out of the mouth of a baby donkey. He said: 'I had to physically pull a green waste bag out of a baby donkey's mouth - it had approximately two thirds of the bag in its mouth and would have choked. 'I then cleared up all the waste and put the bins behind a gate. This will happen time and time again. It's dangerous. 'I reported the incident to Forestry England, who also believe this is now a danger to livestock.' There are concerns that the discarded scraps could spread diseases such as foot and mouth or African swine flu among livestock which would be catastrophic for farmers. The controversy began with the delivery of new plastic caddies for leftovers and wheelie bins for general waste - common in most of the country - to homes across the national park between April and June. The new containers have already been delivered to homes in Brockenhurst, New Milton, Lymington, and surrounding areas, with those in and around Ringwood, Fordingbridge, and Hyde will receive them from October, and those in Totton, Lyndhurst and Lepe getting them in March 2026. NFDC told residents that these bins, which are supposedly livestock proof, must be kept outside of property boundaries, unlike the old system where waste was kept in sacks behind gates and therefore away from animals. Some fear the problem will only worsen in the coming months as the pannage season begins in autumn, when pigs are released into the New Forest to feed on acorns and other fallen nuts - but this year they may be more drawn to the food waste. Sarah Neild, chair of the 168-year-old New Forest Association, told the Verderers' court that the instructions from the local council have been 'totally inconsistent'. She said: 'In the past, New Forest District Council as part of the Shared New Forest Project, agreed with the Verderers and the Commoners' Defence Association that waste bags should be placed inside the gate or cattle grid of New Forest properties. 'As a resident of Brockenhurst, I find the New Forest District Council guidance totally inconsistent. 'The website says one thing and leaflets distributed to residents says another. The latter says bins should be placed at your property boundary - that could be within your gate. 'However, online guidance says it should be beyond the gate - inconsistency is also evident in New Forest District Council's public space protection order against feeding stock, and their own actions which do just that.' She added that the change in receptacle shouldn't mean switching where bins are stored and that the 'so called' locks to prevent livestock getting in are 'totally inadequate'. The Verderers' court 'regulates and protects the New Forest's unique agricultural commoning practices'. Andrew Parry-Norton, chair of the Commoners' Defence Association, has raised concerns about the impact panage season will have on the food waste concern and urged talks to sort the issue before it begins in September The Commoners' are a more than thousand-year-old body made up of locals with the right to graze their animals, including the 200 free-roaming donkeys, in the national park. He said: 'We now have a problem that needs a very fast solution; soon pannage season will start and pigs will be even quicker in opening the bins than the donkeys. 'Urgent discussions need to take place involving all interested parties, maybe suspending the separation of waste food from general waste until the problem is solved.' In a statement, the New Forest District Council said the new system was a 'big step forward' in managing the area's waste and would make things more 'environmentally responsible'. A spokesperson said: 'The waste collection service is undergoing a major transformation, including new vehicles and different waste containers, plus the re-routed collection rounds so that they become more operationally efficient. 'These changes are all to bring the service up to date with modern practices, so that the recycling rate for the area can increase... 'Thank you to residents in the first phase for their participation in the new system, now still only five weeks in, and continued patience and support towards our staff during this period of major change. 'These changes are a big step forward in how we manage waste across the New Forest and are helping us build a more efficient and environmentally responsible service for the long term.' Some who are still on the old system of refuse sacks have also reported problems with weeks of missed bin collections as there is now confusion between the different areas. Households in the national park have been given a 23-litre brown outdoor food waste recycling caddy and a five-litre grey indoor food waste recycling caddy. The council said food waste will be taken to an anaerobic digestion facility where it will be used to create fertiliser and renewable energy.

University of Wolverhampton's clearing process opens
University of Wolverhampton's clearing process opens

BBC News

time27 minutes ago

  • BBC News

University of Wolverhampton's clearing process opens

Potential students at the University of Wolverhampton this September have a second chance to apply as clearing gets underway. Whether students are applying late, reconsidering their choices, or did not get the results they expected, a dedicated website will offer options and advice, the university is also offering one-to-one appointments, webinars and the chance to speak to academics at an open day on 17 resources hope to make the the process as "accessible and stress-free as possible", Jack Clare, director of student recruitment, marketing and admissions said. Clearing helps match university applicants who have not had an offer with institutions that still have unfilled places."Thinking about university can be both exciting and daunting, especially when considering clearing," Mr Clare added."These resources are designed to make clearing as accessible and stress-free as possible. "We're here to help students find the right course and take the next step in their journey with confidence." Follow BBC Wolverhampton & Black Country on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.

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