
New memorial announced for Jersey slave labourers
Mr Trevellyan said the privately funded project, part of wider plans under way to upgrade the tunnels, would involve a consultation with local communities, artists, and historians, with local artists expected to contribute to the final design.The tunnels are a former underground hospital complex in St Lawrence.
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BBC News
4 hours ago
- BBC News
Number of primary school pupils falls by 5.6% in two years
The number of primary school pupils in Jersey has fallen by 5.6% in the last two years, a study group has Centre Jersey (PCJ) examined data from Public Health Jersey which found the number of babies born in Jersey had fallen by almost 10% in 2024 compared to the year report also found four schools across the island had recorded declines of more than 10%.The charity said that with fewer children to teach, it was likely people would call for smaller class sizes rather than fewer schools. It said: "Jersey has an unusual structure of primary school provision - there are 24 separate schools with an average of 254 students at each, however, six of the schools have over 350 students while nine have fewer than 200."There may well be a need for some restructuring particularly among the smaller schools... in practice there will be pressure for smaller class sizes rather than fewer schools." PCJ said it was hard to see how the government could address the falling birth rate without potential "financial incentives" to encourage people to have more said: "More generally, if the high cost of living in Jersey is causing a reduction in the number of young people who might otherwise have chosen to live in Jersey to choose not to do so then this can be tackled only by measures to reduce the cost of living, specifically the cost of housing."The government announced that it had launched a new 25-year strategy to improve the island's public infrastructure to address the island's high cost of housing and ageing infrastructure.


BBC News
12 hours ago
- BBC News
Recycling: How does it work in the Channel Islands?
An environmental campaigner is calling for financial disincentives to stop people in Jersey putting rubbish in black bin bags as the island's infrastructure minister admits the current recycling system is not the most Jones, from Jersey in Transition (JiT), said the government could do "a lot better" with recycling and should share more information about how it Andy Jehan acknowledged there was far more the island could do after previously revealing Jersey had a municipal recycling rate of 35% in 2023 compared with 59% in understand these different recycling rates, the BBC has looked at how recycling works in each island. What can you recycle? In Guernsey, a range of household materials can be recycled, including:Paper and cardboardTins, cans and aerosolsPlastic bottles and containers Tin foilMilk and juice cartonsGlass bottles and jarsAny items contaminated with food, such as chip papers and pizza boxes, cannot be included in household household appliances can also be recycled at the Household Waste and Recycling Centre (HWRC). In Jersey, similar materials can be recycled but there are some notable cannot recycle:Food and drink cartonsMilk cartonsPlastic pots, trays and tubsMr Jones said it was a "great shame" that food and drink cartons can't be recycled, adding there should be a charge for suppliers who import non-recyclable packaging into the also does not recycle food said Guernsey's food waste system was "terrific" and he was looking at implementing something similar, although it could take months. How is it collected? In Guernsey, all households have access to a kerbside recycling scheme where different materials are collected in coloured can put recycling out for collection on a two-week rotation - one week it is tins and plastics, the next week is paper and waste is also collected once a week with general waste and glass collected every two weeks, for most island also has a 'pay-to-throw' scheme for general waste, set at £1.88 for a bag of up to 50 litres and £3.38 for a bag up to 90 manager at Guernsey Waste Sarah Robinson said: "We really encourage people to recycle as much as possible by making it as easy as possible for them." In Jersey, kerbside collection for recycling is organised by each individual out of 12 parishes have kerbside collection for paper, cardboard, plastic bottles and metal packaging, with St Martin recently introducing the house has a weekly general waste collection and most have a regular glass collection organised by the parish, although some people in St Helier have to drop off glass at said he was working with the island's constables to introduce a "uniform" parish collection system, adding it was not cost-effective or environmentally-friendly to have 12 parishes doing separate things. Where does recycling go? One Jersey parish that does not have a kerbside recycling scheme is St Marcus Troy said this was largely because he could not find a refuse collector to do said he was sceptical about whether the island's waste was being properly recycled, adding that he had heard anecdotes about paper and cardboard being burned. He said his parishioners were not supportive of recycling at the moment but he was open to change, particularly if the government organised an island-wide collection scheme. Jersey's head of recycling Piers Tharme said he was aware of the "common myth" that everything in the island gets said a key part of his job was trying to explain to people what actually happens, adding that only contaminated loads of paper or cardboard would be said some misconception was because a lot of parish recycling gets collected in a similar truck to the normal waste. A 2024 freedom of information request revealed what happens to the majority of recycled material in is taken to the government waste metals facility to be transported to Portsmouth where it is separated into different grades before being sold for further cardboard and plastic bottles are taken to the government's on-island recycling provider which bales and ships the material to different UK processing of the collected glass is transported to the UK, while a percentage is turned into a glass sand mix that can be used on-island for construction projects. Ms Robinson said Guernsey Waste has about 40 contracts or supply agreements for managing said general waste was sent to Longue Houge before being shipped to the UK, then onwards to an energy recovery facility in said food waste was processed into a liquid which is pumped into tanks and shipped to the UK for anaerobic said plastic, tins, cans, cartons, paper and cardboard were all sorted, by hand and machine, at an on-island facility before being shipped to the also gets bulk loaded onto containers for shipping to the UK, she added. Is recycling the best thing to do? Mr Jones said with the world in an "ecological crisis", recycling was a good thing but not the best said: "The best thing is buying less in the first place, making it last by repairing it, re-using it and then gifting it on when you're done with it." He said he remembers the "true recycling days" when people used glass milk bottles that were collected by the milkman before being used again. Ms Robinson said Guernsey was joining a national 'Love food, hate waste' campaign and would be trying to reduce waste in general in Tharme added that recycling often gets used as an answer to the big environmental questions."The reality is that what we need to do is consume less and produce less waste," he said.


BBC News
2 days ago
- BBC News
Jersey Zoo welcomes giant otter duo
A furry mother and daughter duo have arrived at their new home in Jersey Trinity-based site said the giant otters, called Alexandra and Fia, had come to the zoo from Yorkshire Wildlife Park and would be living in its South American House.A Facebook post from the zoo said giant otters were classified as endangered on the International Union for Conservation of Nature Red List due to issues including habitat loss, water pollution and illegal at the zoo said they were "delighted" to have them join the site, adding their species had long, powerful tails and were speedy swimmers.