
North Wales MP knighted as mountaineering, fire and health stalwarts also recognised
In total 1,215 recipients have been awarded for their exceptional achievements, with a particular focus this year on those who have given their time to public service.
This year's recipients include dedicated community champions, role models in sport, pioneers in the arts, passionate health workers, and supporters of young people. Recipients from Wales make up 6% of the total number of recipients receiving honours this year.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer said: 'This year's Birthday Honours List is a powerful reminder of the extraordinary dedication, compassion, and service that exists in every corner of our country. From community champions to cultural icons, each recipient reflects the very best of Britain. I extend my heartfelt congratulations and gratitude to them all.' Join the North Wales Live Whatsapp community now
The Secretary of State for Wales, Jo Stevens MP, said: "Huge congratulations to the incredible individuals from Wales who have been recognised in The King's Birthday Honours List. Each award recipient has demonstrated dedication, passion, and commitment to their communities, making significant contributions that resonate far and wide.
'Your work in supporting vulnerable people, championing the arts, increasing access to sport and improving lives in countless ways, serves as an inspiration to all. Thank you for your exceptional service.'
Notable recipients across Wales include:
* Oliver Sykes, 36, of Denbigh, who receives an MBE for services to Access to the Arts for Underprivileged Young People. His work leading the Stories for Care programme has empowered over 5,000 young people from low income backgrounds, and given them access to literary works not normally available to them.
* Muriel Morgan, who receives the British Empire Medal for services to the community in Wrexham. At the age of 88 years old she has only recently retired from her 50 year career in the Royal Voluntary Service (RVS).
During her time in RVS she coordinated volunteer drivers to take elderly and vulnerable people to medical appointments they might not otherwise be able to make. She worked tirelessly throughout the pandemic to ensure the service was maintained and that even in one of the most challenging times for the service, their service users were still able to attend critical medical appointments.
She would organise transport for service users with anywhere between four and nine volunteers, as a co-ordinator who considered her a friend and she has seen the service through challenges, including the pandemic where other volunteers had to retire.
She has recently been instrumental in handling the service on to The Rainbow Foundation, so she can enjoy an incredibly deserved retirement.
Other recipients from Wales include:
* Louis William Hiatt, 40, of Gwynedd, is awarded the British Empire Medal for services to the community in Aberdyfi and Tywyn. His community work above and beyond his duties has considerably improved the recruitment and retention of retained firefighters in his locality.
He located, fundraised for, and restored a fire engine once based at Aberdyfi Fire Station (his local station), which is 60 years old, and has now returned it to the station on public display. He has served as a retained firefighter for over 22 years.
In 2023, he organised and hosted an open day at Aberdyfi Fire Station to celebrate 125 years of firefighting in the village. Approximately 2000 people came throughout the day.
He and his crew work tirelessly to fundraise and have raised over £22,000 on behalf of The Firefighter's Charity to date. He is widely known in the Service and his community for 'getting involved' in fundraising and charitable efforts, his most notable and long-running community project is his chairing of a local pantomime group, Aberdyfi Players, raising over £700 annually.
* Rebecca Ashcroft, 56, of Mold, is made a MBE For services to Mountain Rescue. The demand for mountain rescue callouts has surged from 15-20 jobs per year in the 1990s to 75-90 currently.
She is a role model and mentor, breaking down barriers for women in the team, and her diversity policy has been adopted by other teams. She led the North East Wales Search and Rescue (NEWSAR) to become a Charitable Incorporated Organisation in 2020, utilising her knowledge of charity law, protocols, and procedures.
She is a highly qualified Search Manager, recognised as one of the best in the UK. She has served as a Trustee since 2016 and as Chair since 2022 of NEWSAR. As the Trauma Incident Manager, she assists the public and supports team members who have experienced stressful and disturbing events during mountain rescue operations.
She joined the Mountain Rescue team at the age of 17 in February 1986, having already been involved through volunteering with NEWSAR as part of her Bronze Duke of Edinburgh Award.
* Simon Alistair Bareham, 65, of Bangor, , who is lately a Senior Specialist Adviser, Radioactivity and Industry Policy, is made an MBE For services to the Protection of Air Quality and Biodiversity in Wales. For 38 years of public service Simon has been a leading figure in the field of air pollution and its effects on the natural environment.
He has led the way, highlighting the impacts of air pollution, which is one of the primary causes of wildlife loss and environmental degradation in Wales. He has secured action in Wales and across the UK to tackle the impacts of nitrogen deposition caused by ammonia and nitrogen oxide emissions from intensive farming practices and fossil fuels.
As the inspirational Chair of the JNCC Interagency Air Pollution Group, he used his enthusiasm and professionalism to garner co-operation across the UK and Europe. Most notable has been his work and influence as chair of the Joint Nature Conservation Committee (JNCC) Interagency Air Pollution Group for over 20 years.
More recently, he worked to ensure the impacts of air pollution on biodiversity, protected and important ecological sites were included within the Environment (Air Quality and Soundscapes) (Wales) Act 2024.
* Steven John Amor, Lately Watch Manager, Mid and West Wales Fire and Rescue Service, is awarded the MBE for services to the community in Mid Wales(Llanwrtyd Wells, Powys).
* Iain Keith Ashcroft, of Mold, who is Operations Officer of North Wales Mountain Rescue Association, gains the MBE for services to Mountain Rescue.
* Ann Atkinson, of Corwen, opera singer and former Artistic Director of North Wales International Festival, is awarded the MBE for services to Music.
* Victoria Poole, of Prestatyn, who is Deputy Chief Inspector, Care Inspectorate Wales, Welsh Government, is made an MBE for Public Service to Social Care.
There are other recipients of honours across North Wales.
Medallists of the Order of the British Empire are awarded to:
* Roberta Morrall for services to the Arts in Nefyn
* Joan Mary Vaughan for services to Older People and to the community in Conwy
* Christopher David Williams for services to the community on Anglesey
* Victoria May Williams for services to the community on Anglesey
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Daily Mail
3 days ago
- Daily Mail
Dragons' Den venture capitalist is stripped of MBE after being held in contempt of court over unpaid £200,000 legal bill
Former Dragons' Den star Julie Meyer has been stripped of her MBE three years after she was scolded by a British judge for being 'selfish' after refusing to turn up to court or pay her lawyers, it has been revealed. The venture capitalist, 58, was handed a six-month suspended sentence for contempt of court after she repeatedly failed to submit documents and attend hearings relating to £200,000 in unpaid fees to her solicitors, Farrer & Co. Meyer was awarded an MBE in 2012 for her services to entrepreneurship and was invited to sit on two government advisory panels that year. Yet last night it emerged she has forfeited the award for 'bringing the honours system into disrepute'. Her name appears alongside 11 others on a newly-updated list published by the Cabinet Office of individuals stripped of their prestigious gongs since August 2023. At least six of these - all men - were stripped after being convicted of child sex offences, while the others were found guilty of misconduct or acting inappropriately. They include nuclear submarine captain Commander Iain Fergusson who was handed an OBE despite being the subject of a major sex abuse and bullying probe, and former senior Army officer Andrew Whiddett, who was convicted of asking mothers in the Philippines to sexually abuse their children in front of him on a webcam. Meyer is also one of only two women on the infamous list in recent years - the other being former Post Office chief executive Paula Vennells, who forfeited a CBE for her handling of the Horizon IT scandal. She now joins a roll of shamed individuals that more recently include Grime star Wiley, who made anti-Semitic remarks and likened Jews to the Ku Klux Klan, paralympian Anthony Griffin, who was jailed for dealing heroin and PR guru Anthony Bailey, who was found in contempt for breaching a divorce agreement. Despite her being stripped of the title, she is still styling herself as having an MBE on her multiple websites and LinkedIn. The American-born businesswoman was hailed as one of two new Dragons chosen for an online version of the BBC Two show in 2009 and she formerly advised David Cameron 's government. Meyer was lauded for her business instinct and supported major internet and tech brands early on in their development, including and Skype. But her name hit the headlines for all the wrong reasons in 2022 when she became embroiled in a legal fight with Farrers, the law firm engaged by the late Queen Elizabeth II. When she failed to turn up to a court hearing on Valentine's Day that year, the judge dramatically issued a warrant for her arrest. Controversially, the entrepreneur said she had been unable to travel from her home in Switzerland due to conjunctivitis and not having received a Covid vaccine. But it was ruled her medical evidence was not grounds to avoid attending the court hearings in person. She was said to owe almost £200,000 to Farrers, which represented her in a court case in Malta. The High Court heard she failed to pay Farrer partner Julian Pike £197,000, claiming the firm had provided a poor standard of service, which had been worth about £50,000. When Meyer was handed a six-month suspended sentence, Mr Justice Kerr said she had shown herself 'to be a selfish and untrustworthy person'. The judge said: 'I am satisfied there is every prospect that the defendant will continue to flout orders of the court unless coerced into obeying them.' He added that some of the evidence filed on Meyer's behalf sought to show her as 'too important for the courts of England and Wales to take precedent over her other interests'. In her defence, Meyer said the law firm had 'abused their privileged position as the Queen's lawyers' and claimed they had 'harassed' her and her firm. She lost an appeal to overturn the suspended prison sentence later that year. On her website, she claims to have secured £880million in capital investment and boasts of her 'royal recognition' — her MBE. The American moved to London in July 1998 and made millions from the $50million sale of her firm First Tuesday, a networking group for entrepreneurs and investors, in July 2000. In her Dragons' Den biography, she was described as a World Economic Forum Global Leader for Tomorrow, an Ernst and Young Entrepreneur of the Year and a regular speaker on entrepreneurship and leadership. The Daily Mail has contacted Meyer for comment. The other new individuals revealed as having forfeited their honours include child sex abuser Wayne O'Donnell, 66, from North Yorkshire, who was jailed for 18 years for raping and sexually abusing two young girls. His MBE, awarded in 1994, has now been taken away from him. Priest Timothy Biles, 89, of Sherborne, Dorset, was stripped of his MBE after being found guilty of sexually assaulting boys in the 1960s at St Francis School in Hooke, leading to him being handed a six-year jail sentence last December. Disgraced former senior Army officer Andrew Whiddett, 76, of Portsmouth, was jailed in 2019 for asking mothers in the Philippines to sexually abuse their children in front of him on a webcam. Whiddett had served in the forces with distinction for 30 years and 'dedicated his life to the country' before moving into security in the Middle East - including working at the British Embassy in Baghdad. He has now forfeited the MBE he was handed in 1988. Former choirmaster and teacher David Pickthall pleaded guilty last October to a series of child sexual offences spanning his career of more than 40 years. Essex Police said he was charged as part of an investigation into alleged offences against 19 people between 1980 and 2021 in Brentwood and Upminster. The former teacher has been stripped of his MBE awarded in 2015 for services to education and charity. Commander Iain Fergusson, the former captain of HMS Vigilant, faced a barrage of bullying and sex abuse complaints brought by whistleblower Sophie Brooke last year. He was cleared of alleged sexual assault by putting his penis in Lt Brook's pocket, but other claims were substantiated, including that he licked her ear, blew on her neck and punched her in the kidneys during periscope training. Cdr Fergusson has now had to hand back the OBE he controversially received while the claims were being probed in 2024. Christian youth festival founder Mike Pilavachi, 67, who established Soul Survivor Anglican Church in 1995, stepped down from the ministry after allegations surfaced two years ago that he wrestled with young men and gave them 'oil massages' while they were in their underwear. He has now forfeited the MBE he was given in 2020. World-renowned classical music conductor Jan Latham-Koenig, 71, was caught in a police sting at London Victoria train station last January after arranging to meet what he believed was a 14-year-old boy he had met on a dating site. But the boy was an undercover police officer posing as a child. He was given a 14-month prison sentence, suspended for two years, and has now forfeited the OBE he received in 2020 for services to music and UK-Russian cultural relations. Maths teacher Dr Richard Evans was also forced to hand back the OBE he received for fundraising during Covid after he was found guilty of misconduct. Wayne O'Donnell (left) lost his MBE after he was jailed for raping and sexually abusing two girls, while former Salford priest Peter Conniffe (right) lost his MBE after he was found to have sexually abused a 15-year-old girl during the late 1970s The former deputy of Copland Community School in Wembley, west London, was one of four staff members and two governors accused of defrauding the school to the tune of £2.7million in bonuses. Evans was found to have received unauthorised and excessive bonuses totalling £180,000. Former Salford priest Peter Conniffe was stripped of his MBE for 'bringing the honours system into disrepute' after an investigation found he groomed and sexually abused a 15-year-old girl during the late 1970s, before raping her when she was 24. In 2019 he wrote a letter of apology to the woman, which was made public. Harry Legg, a former Acting Sheriff and Justice of the Peace for St Helena, was jailed for five-and-a-half years after pleading guilty to the historical sexual assault of young boys - resulting in the loss of his OBE. Sean Cox was stripped of the MBE he received in 1999 after receiving a criminal conviction.


The Guardian
22-07-2025
- The Guardian
San Francisco to ban RV living as mayor pledges street ‘cleanup'
San Francisco is set to ban homeless people from living in RVs by adopting strict new parking limits the mayor says are necessary to keep sidewalks clear and prevent trash buildup. The policy, up for final approval by San Francisco supervisors on Tuesday, targets at least 400 recreational vehicles in the city of 800,000 people. The RVs serve as shelter for people who cannot afford housing, including immigrant families with kids. Those who live in them say they are a necessary option in an expensive city where affordable apartments are impossible to find. But Mayor Daniel Lurie and other supporters of the policy say motor homes are not suitable for long-term living and the city has a duty to both provide shelter to those in need and clean up the streets. 'We absolutely want to serve those families, those who are in crisis across San Francisco,' said Kunal Modi, who advises the mayor on health, homelessness and family services. 'We feel the responsibility to help them get to a stable solution. And at the same time, we want to make sure that that stability is somewhere indoors and not exposed in the public roadway.' Critics of the plan, however, say it is cruel to force people to give up their only home in exchange for a shot at traditional housing when there are not nearly enough units for all the people who need help; the mayor is only offering additional money to help 65 households. Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, says city officials are woefully behind on establishing details of an accompanying permit program, which will exempt RV residents from parking limits so long as they are working with homeless outreach staff to find housing. 'I think that there's going to be people who lose their RVs. I think there's going to be people who are able to get into shelter, but at the expense' of people with higher needs, like those sleeping on a sidewalk, she said. San Francisco, like other US cities, has seen an explosion in recent years of people living out of vehicles and RVs as the cost of living has risen. Banning oversized vehicles is part of Lurie's pledge to clean up San Francisco streets, and part of a growing trend to require homeless people to accept offers of shelter or risk arrest or tows. The proposal sets a two-hour parking limit citywide for all RVs and oversized vehicles longer than 22ft (7 metres) or higher than 7ft, regardless of whether they are being used as housing. Under the accompanying permit program, RV residents registered with the city as of May are exempt from the parking limits. In exchange, they must accept the city's offer of temporary or longer-term housing, and get rid of their RV when it is time to move. The city has budgeted more than half a million dollars to buy RVs from residents at $175 per foot. The permits will last for six months. People in RVs who arrive after May will not be eligible for the permit program and must abide by the two-hour rule, which makes it impossible for a family in an RV to live within city limits. It first cleared the board of supervisors last week with two of 11 supervisors voting no. Carlos Perez, 55, was among RV residents who told supervisors at a hearing this month that they could not afford the city's high rents. Perez works full-time as a produce deliveryman and supports his brother, who lives with him and is unable to work due to a disability. 'We don't do nothing wrong. We try to keep this street clean,' he said, as he showed his RV recently to an Associated Press journalist. 'It's not easy to be in a place like this.' Yet, Perez also loves where he lives. The green-colored RV is decorated with a homey houseplant and has a sink and a tiny stove on which Carlos simmered a bean soup on a recent afternoon. He has lived in San Francisco for more than 30 years, roughly a decade of which has been in the RV in the working-class Bayview neighborhood. He can walk to work and it is close to the hospital where his brother receives dialysis multiple times a week. Zach, another RV resident who requested being identified by his first name to not jeopardize his ability to get work, started living in the vehicle a dozen years ago after realizing that no matter how hard he worked, he still struggled to pay rent. Now he works as a ride-hail driver and pursues his love of photography. He parks near Lake Merced in the city near the Pacific Ocean and pays $35 every two to four weeks to properly dispose of waste and fill the vehicle with fresh water. He says Lurie's plan is shortsighted. There is not enough housing available and many prefer to live in an RV over staying at a shelter, which may have restrictive rules. For Zach, who is able-bodied, maintains a clean space and has no dependents, moving to a shelter would be a step down, he says. Still, he expects to receive a permit. 'If housing were affordable, there is a very good chance I wouldn't be out here,' he said. RV dwellers say San Francisco should open a safe parking lot where residents could empty trash and access electricity. But city officials shuttered an RV lot in April, saying it cost about $4m a year to service three dozen large vehicles and it failed to transition people to more stable housing. The mayor's new proposal comes with more money for beefed-up RV parking enforcement – but also an additional $11m, largely for a small number of households to move to subsidized housing for a few years. Officials acknowledge that may not be sufficient to house all RV dwellers, but notes that the city also has hotel vouchers and other housing subsidies. Erica Kisch, CEO of non-profit Compass Family Services, which assists homeless families, says they do not support the punitive nature of the proposal but are grateful for the extra resources. 'It's recognition that households should not be living in vehicles, that we need to do better for families, and for seniors and for anyone else who's living in a vehicle,' she said. 'San Francisco can do better, certainly.'


The Guardian
22-07-2025
- The Guardian
San Francisco to ban RV living as mayor pledges street ‘clean-up'
San Francisco is set to ban homeless people from living in RVs by adopting strict new parking limits the mayor says are necessary to keep sidewalks clear and prevent trash buildup. The policy, up for final approval by San Francisco supervisors Tuesday, targets at least 400 recreational vehicles in the city of 800,000 people. The RVs serve as shelter for people who can't afford housing, including immigrant families with kids. Those who live in them say they're a necessary option in an expensive city where affordable apartments are impossible to find. But Mayor Daniel Lurie and other supporters of the policy say motor homes are not suitable for long-term living and the city has a duty to both provide shelter to those in need and clean up the streets. 'We absolutely want to serve those families, those who are in crisis across San Francisco,' said Kunal Modi, who advises the mayor on health, homelessness and family services. 'We feel the responsibility to help them get to a stable solution. And at the same time, we want to make sure that that stability is somewhere indoors and not exposed in the public roadway.' Critics of the plan, however, say that it's cruel to force people to give up their only home in exchange for a shot at traditional housing when there is not nearly enough units for all the people who need help; the mayor is only offering additional money to help 65 households. Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, says city officials are woefully behind on establishing details of an accompanying permit program, which will exempt RV residents from parking limits so long as they are working with homeless outreach staff to find housing. 'I think that there's going to be people who lose their RVs. I think there's going to be people who are able to get into shelter, but at the expense' of people with higher needs, like those sleeping on a sidewalk, she said. San Francisco, like other U.S. cities, has seen an explosion in recent years of people living out of vehicles and RVs as the cost of living has risen. Banning oversized vehicles is part of Lurie's pledge to clean up San Francisco streets, and part of a growing trend to require homeless people to accept offers of shelter or risk arrest or tows. The proposal sets a two-hour parking limit citywide for all RVs and oversized vehicles longer than 22ft (7 metres) or higher than 7ft (2 metres), regardless of whether they are being used as housing. Under the accompanying permit program, RV residents registered with the city as of May are exempt from the parking limits. In exchange, they must accept the city's offer of temporary or longer-term housing, and get rid of their RV when it's time to move. The city has budgeted more than half a million dollars to buy RVs from residents at $175 per foot. The permits will last for six months. People in RVs who arrive after May will not be eligible for the permit program and must abide by the two-hour rule, which makes it impossible for a family in an RV to live within city limits. It first cleared the Board of Supervisors last week with two of 11 supervisors voting 'no.' Carlos Perez, 55, was among RV residents who told supervisors at a hearing this month that they could not afford the city's high rents. Perez works full-time as a produce deliveryman and supports his brother, who lives with him and is unable to work due to a disability. 'We don't do nothing wrong. We try to keep this street clean,' he said, as he showed his RV recently to an Associated Press journalist. 'It's not easy to be in a place like this.' Yet, Perez also loves where he lives. The green-colored RV is decorated with a homey houseplant and has a sink and a tiny stove on which Carlos simmered a bean soup on a recent afternoon. He's lived in San Francisco for more than 30 years, roughly a decade of which has been in the RV in the working-class Bayview neighborhood. He can walk to work and it is close to the hospital where his brother receives dialysis multiple times a week. Zach, another RV resident who requested being identified by his first name to not jeopardize his ability to get work, started living in the vehicle a dozen years ago after realizing that no matter how hard he worked, he still struggled to pay rent. Now he works as a ride-hail driver and pursues his love of photography. He parks near Lake Merced in the city near the Pacific Ocean and pays $35 every two to four weeks to properly dispose of waste and fill the vehicle with fresh water. He says Lurie's plan is shortsighted. There is not enough housing available and many prefer to live in an RV over staying at a shelter, which may have restrictive rules. For Zach, who is able-bodied, maintains a clean space and has no dependents, moving to a shelter would be a step down, he says. Still, he expects to receive a permit. 'If housing were affordable, there is a very good chance I wouldn't be out here,' he said. RV dwellers say San Francisco should open a safe parking lot where residents could empty trash and access electricity. But city officials shuttered an RV lot in April, saying it cost about $4m a year to service three dozen large vehicles and it failed to transition people to more stable housing. The mayor's new proposal comes with more money for beefed-up RV parking enforcement – but also an additional $11m , largely for a small number of households to move to subsidized housing for a few years. Officials acknowledge that may not be sufficient to house all RV dwellers, but notes that the city also has hotel vouchers and other housing subsidies. Erica Kisch, CEO of non-profit Compass Family Services, which assists homeless families, says they do not support the punitive nature of the proposal but are grateful for the extra resources. 'It's recognition that households should not be living in vehicles, that we need to do better for families, and for seniors and for anyone else who's living in a vehicle,' she said. 'San Francisco can do better, certainly.'