
New Plymouth traffic restrictions ‘prioritise pedestrians'
'Good news for businesses'
Deliveries will only be permitted between 04:00 and 08:00 BST seven days a week.Vehicles will only be allowed between 08:00 and 18:00 BST, and 20:00 BST on Thursdays, if the driver has a permit issued by the council. The no loading and no waiting restriction will apply to the entire city centre pedestrian area.Steve Hughes, chief executive of the Plymouth City Centre Company, said: "It [the traffic order] will help us to make the city centre livelier and develop the evening and night-time economy, so will be good news for our businesses."PCC said it is an experimental order with an open 18-month consultation period, meaning arrangements can be "tweaked" if necessary.

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


Daily Mirror
34 minutes ago
- Daily Mirror
Zharnel Hughes speaks out over unpaid Grand Slam Track prize money
Britain's fastest man Zharnel Hughes is waiting for $130,000 in prize money from Grand Slam Track, which scrapped its final meet of the season over financial struggles Zharnel Hughes has warned athletes could take a wide berth of Grand Slam Track next year after admitting he is among those still waiting for prize money. Michael Johnson's breakaway competition was billed as transformative when it kicked off in Apri l by offering track stars the potential to earn unprecedented prize money. But after its fourth fixture in LA was scrapped for financial reasons, a host of athletes are still waiting to be paid. Athletes were promised top prizes of $100,000 - with Brits Matt Hudson-Smith, in Jamaica and Philadelphia, and Josh Kerr, in Miami, landing first-place finishes. World Athletics president Sebastian Coe had admitted 'this is not a good situation' with the governing body monitoring the situation. Grand Slam have not commented but a number of agents have been given assurances that prize money will be sent by late September. And Hughes, who won $130,000 across three weekends, says he is among those left in limbo - though he has received appearance fees from the US-based league. 'We haven't got any payment yet,' Britain's fastest man said. 'My agent has been in contact with them. It's not like I'm studying what's going on but I know I've not received funds yet. 'I think the appearance fees have come through but in regards to the actual racing it hasn't come through yet. I'm just looking to see if we get paid by August or September, hopefully it's in the accounts by then. 'I think people enjoyed it but obviously now the payments have been delayed and they fell short by not having the last one people may be more hesitant to try out next season. We have to see how it goes next season.' Hughes added 'it kind of sucked' that Grand Slam did not bring one of their fixtures to the UK or Europe. Ticket sales for three events that went ahead fell well below expectations. 'Hopefully they can sort themselves out and if they do go again next season they can get some races in Europe,' Hughes said. 'You won't be worrying about having to fill up the stadiums.' Join our new WhatsApp community and receive your daily dose of Mirror Football content. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. If you're curious, you can read our Privacy Notice.


The Independent
15-07-2025
- The Independent
OBR boss denies forecast drove welfare cut proposals
The Chancellor could have met her fiscal rules without proposing £5 billion worth of welfare cuts, the head of the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) has said. Richard Hughes rejected the suggestion that the OBR's forecast was now driving policy, saying it was up to chancellors to decide how much headroom they wanted against their targets. In March 2025, it was reported that Rachel Reeves had expanded planned cuts to welfare shortly before her spring statement after the OBR forecast the Government's previous proposals would not save as much money as thought. That enabled her to maintain the £9.9 billion of headroom against her debt target that she set out in her October 2024 budget. But it also prompted an outcry from Labour backbenchers, leading to the Government dropping most of the proposals in order to avoid its first Commons defeat. Appearing before the Commons Treasury Committee on Tuesday ahead of his proposed reappointment as the OBR's chairman, Mr Hughes denied that changes in the OBR forecast had driven the proposed welfare changes. He said: 'I don't really accept the characterisation that it was changes in our forecast that forced the Government to make any particular sort of policy decision. 'Back in March, the Government decided to make £5 billion worth of welfare savings. They had £10 billion worth of headroom against their fiscal rule. They could have settled for five.' Mr Hughes went on to characterise the decision on welfare, which has now been largely reversed, as 'an entirely political choice' and added Ms Reeves could also have decided to break or change her fiscal rules. Asked about a perception that the forecast was now driving policy, he said: 'Chancellors can make a point about how much headroom they want against their fiscal rules. Recently they have left themselves very little.' Mr Hughes also pushed back against criticism from the Prime Minister, who had complained to the Commons Liaison Committee in April that the OBR's forecast had not included the effect of the Government's welfare reforms on employment. He said the Government had failed to provide enough detail on the employment support programme for it to be included, saying: 'There were no specifics. 'They couldn't tell us who was going to benefit from this programme, which groups, what kind of support they were going to get. 'There was no policy for us to score in our forecast.' A series of U-turns on the Government's welfare proposals at the start of July have left the Chancellor looking for another £5 billion in savings or tax rises if she wishes to maintain the headroom against her debt target she had last year. Ms Reeves is also likely to face a further squeeze thanks to a weakening economy and a commitment to partially reverse cuts to the winter fuel allowance.


BBC News
12-07-2025
- BBC News
Rachel Reeves autumn Budget will see significant tax rises
Two very different reports have reignited UK economic gloom over the past four days. Friday's economic figures showed a further monthly dip in UK growth, or GDP, in May. Earlier this week the official forecaster, the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR), said Britain faced "daunting" risks, including the possibility that levels of government debt could soar to three times the size of the very different timescales - the economy in a single month, and the public finances in half a century's another moment both might have been largely ignored. Monthly GDP figures are notoriously volatile, and what does a debt forecast for 2075 even begin to mean? What would the Treasury forecast from 1975 tell us about this year?But these very different charts are setting the tone for some tricky judgements required by autumn and tough calls about what happens in the next half really unusual thing about the OBR's long-term risk and sustainability report was the strength of the words from its boss Richard Hughes."The UK cannot afford the array of promises that are displayed to the public," based on reasonable assumptions about their cost and growth, he report also cited a pattern, over multiple governments, of U-turns on tax and spending came within days of the government's reverses over welfare savings and the winter fuel 36 advanced economies, the UK now has the sixth highest debt, the fifth highest annual borrowing, and the third highest borrowing costs leaving it "vulnerable", when compared to other countries, to future crises, the OBR clear message was that repeatedly borrowing more is not a long-term solution to rising day-to-day spending pressures. Yet the pressure to spend more may prove stubborn, thanks to geopolitical and societal OBR's existing forecasts assume that the post-pandemic surge in incapacity and disability cases will fall half way back to normal by is very uncertain. Local councils are now spending 58% of their revenue on social care for adults and children, with some councils spending more than 80%.A £4.6bn special financial arrangement to deal with ballooning special educational needs budgets risks mass local authority promise to increase defence spending to the new Nato target of 3.5% will cost nearly £40bn per year by 2035. Time to level The OBR's report was basically a polite plea for some realism about the choices ahead.A government with a massive majority and four more years would normally be expected to have the strength to make these sorts of pointed out before the last election, there was little attempt to level with the public, especially over big picture is that this autumn's Budget may see £10bn to £20bn of further tax top of this, Trump's tariffs have triggered profound uncertainty. That has pushed up UK government borrowing costs. But they are also prompting a more fundamental shift in the foundations of the global economic system, with the dollar and US government debt no longer treated as unbreachable safe havens. Kitchen sink Budget So how might the chancellor respond to these challenges?She may choose to rebuild the so-called "headroom" to give her a better chance of meeting her self-imposed borrowing limits. Currently that buffer is a very tight £ has said she will stick to her plans to not borrow to fund day-to-day spending and to get government debt falling as a share of national income by 2029/29, despite some concern from she is considering the International Monetary Fund's advice to only adjust her plans once a year, rather than in both spring and there may still need to be a kitchen sink approach to this autumn's Budget, with the chancellor throwing everything she has at fixing the public finances. Ministers have not abandoned the idea of finding savings in the health-related welfare bill.A discussion is opening up about whether the Personal Independence Payment (Pip) benefit, designed to help pay for physical equipment, is the right vehicle to manage the specific surge in mental ill the other hand, while politicians acknowledge the cost of the state pension triple lock is far higher than originally forecast, that policy seems to be utterly politically impregnable. Netting revenue So we are heading for significant tax rises. The expected further freeze on income tax thresholds will not be noise around wealth taxes points to property and inheritance taxation, as baby boomers start a mass transfer of trillions of pounds of housing equity to their the Treasury to think very hard about what size of net it might lay in the water to ensnare bountiful revenues, aimed at funding the costs of an ageing society without levying that burden entirely on working course the great hope is the return of robust economic growth to smooth the way. Reeves' fiscal rules have left space for longer term investments in infrastructure, although the planning reforms will take some time to yield a construction boom. The UK's position as a comparatively stable island in a sea of trade tumult, should also yield of the world's most important business people, such as Jensen Huang of Nvidia, were falling over themselves to praise the UK's investment potential for frontier tech. The very latest economic news does contain some perking-up in levels of confidence over the past few weeks, and more interest rate cuts are on the way. Some City economists say the gloom is overdone and we are "past the worst". UK stock markets and sterling remain that is the long-term challenge laid down by the OBR, balance the books and boost the economy. A government that should still have four years of a thumping majority has the necessary power, but the past month has raised concerns about its authority.