Latest news with #CarolynThomas


CTV News
4 days ago
- Health
- CTV News
Hundreds of cyclists set for Cypress Mountain trek to raise pancreatic cancer awareness
Anthony Thomas and his wife Carolyn are among the hundreds of cyclists tackling the Cypress Challenge this weekend to raise money for cancer research. Some 800 cyclists are preparing to trek up Cypress Mountain to raise money for pancreatic cancer research and care this weekend. For 18 years, the Cypress Challenge has taken place in West Vancouver and is said to have grown into the largest privately funded fundraising event for pancreatic cancer in Canada. On Sunday, dozens of teams will embark on the 12 km. journey up the steep terrain in an attempt to add to the more than $5.2 million raised over the years. The BC Cancer Foundation estimates around 800 British Columbians will be diagnosed with pancreatic cancer this year, and it's projected that only 10 per cent of them will live another five years after that. West Vancouver resident and cyclist Anthony Thomas was diagnosed with the disease on Labour Day last year. Thomas explained to CTV News on Friday that he began feeling a sharp pain in his lower back while on a road trip back from B.C.'s Interior and was struck with nausea and felt ill. His wife Carolyn urged him to pull over and find care in Whistler, where they rushed to the emergency department. Thomas explained that after receiving tests, they found he had kidney stones, but also discovered masses on his pancreas and liver. After an MRI he was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. 'It's been a challenging year, for sure, because I felt completely normal and fine,' said Thomas. He was diagnosed with neuroendocrine pancreatic cancer, a form he was told is rare but manageable. 'It's still bad, it's pancreatic cancer, but there are much better chances of getting through it,' said Thomas. 'When I found that out I really felt like I'd won the lottery.' Since the diagnosis, Thomas and his family have raised more than $50,000 for pancreatic cancer research and are looking to grow that number this weekend during the Cypress Challenge. Donations can be made on the Cypress Challenge website.


Wales Online
12-07-2025
- Business
- Wales Online
Fury as dormant quarry at Welsh beauty spot set to reopen
Fury as dormant quarry at Welsh beauty spot set to reopen Despite 'so many residents' opposing an extension to operations at The Burley Hill Quarry planning permission is expected to be granted for more limestone to be extracted Tarmac Trading Ltd have applied to continue working at Burley Hill Quarry for 15 years (Image: Local Democracy Reporting Service ) Plans to reopen a dormant quarry in a designated area of outstanding natural beauty have been met with anger. Tarmac Trading Ltd have applied to use Burley Hill Quarry at Eryrys, Denbighshire, for another 15 years with the site originally given planning permission between 1950 and 2021. Denbighshire councillors will discuss the extension of the quarry's lifespan on Wednesday, July 16. If approved, this could permit the firm to continue operations at Burley Hill Quarry for another 15 years. While the quarry in Pant Du Road was granted permission until December 2021 the company now seeks approval to extract an additional 3.8m tonnes of limestone. However opponents of the development cite noise pollution, heavy traffic, environmental damage, and disturbance as reasons to reject the proposal. Concerns have also been raised about potential harm to the tourism industry. The debate has been postponed twice by the planning committee in March and April following councillors' decision to defer the application for further public consultation. Article continues below Despite widespread objections from residents and community councils planning officers are recommending the committee grant permission. Llanferres Community Council, Llanarmon-yn-Iâl Community Council, Nercwys Community Council, and Mold Town Council all oppose the plans. So too does the Clwydian Range and Dee Valley Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB) joint advisory committee as well as Madra and Ramblers Cymru. Members of the Senedd, including Sam Rowlands, Carolyn Thomas, Darren Millar, Lyr Gruffydd, Hannah Blythyn, and Mark Isherwood have all raised major concerns Read the biggest stories in Wales first by signing up to our daily newsletter here . Mr Millar MS, speaking on Friday, said: "The reasons for refusing this application are plentiful and I am not surprised that so many residents are up in arms against the application. "Llanferres Community Council have set up a petition against the proposals which has been signed by almost 400 people. The quarry closed 20 years ago and there has been a lot of change in the area since then with many new businesses, many of which rely on tourism to thrive. "We need to protect local residents and businesses from noise and pollution and safeguard road safety along the route from Pant Du through Nercwys and into Mold." He added: "Opposing reopening the quarry will also protect important wildlife habitats and help to maintain the environment in the Clwydian Range Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. An extension to this quarry would be severely detrimental to the local area." A letter sent to Denbighshire from Llanarmon yn iâl Community Council reads: "As the site is located in an area of outstanding natural beauty with narrow roads a further 15 years of extraction would cause unacceptable disruption. "The woods were divided into plots and the offices are now used as holiday accommodation. This holiday accommodation is now too close to the quarry. Since Hendre Quarry (in Flintshire) has gained planning permission for a large extension it would now enable a good supply of better-quality stone." The AONB Joint Advisory Committee also wrote an objection to the council. Their letter said: "Reopening the quarry and extending its life for a further 15 years will have a significant adverse impact on local tranquillity through an increase in noise, heavy traffic, and a general increase in activity and disturbance associated with quarrying operations." But planning officers say that if the quarry is refused permission "reserves would remain unworked and the minerals would be required to be acquired elsewhere" and this would have "implications for the continuity of aggregate supplies in Denbighshire, northeast Wales, and beyond into the northwest region of England". A planning statement added: "It is therefore considered that there is a demonstrable need for the mineral which would outweigh any temporary harm to the tranquillity of the AONB, which can be mitigated. "Whilst it is considered that there would be an impact on tranquillity it would not undermine the natural beauty of the AONB, given the limited time and frequency of the proposed campaign events. "Furthermore the proposed operations would be at a lesser intensity with a reduced output level compared to that of when the site was operational pre-2005 when the AONB designation was in place. Therefore, the impact on tranquillity alone would not justify a reason for refusal of this extension-of-time application and as such, on balance, planning permission should be granted." Article continues below A decision on the plans will be made at a planning meeting scheduled for Wednesday, July 16, at Ruthin County Hall.


BBC News
12-07-2025
- Business
- BBC News
Outcry over plans to reopen Burley Hill Quarry at Eryrys beauty spot
Plans to extend the life of a dormant quarry in an official area of outstanding natural beauty (AONB) have caused an Trading Ltd is seeking to use Burley Hill Quarry at Eryrys, Denbighshire, for another 15 years, with the site originally given planning permission between 1950 and has prompted opposition from neighbouring councils, walking groups and residents amid concerns about noise, traffic and damage to the environment and tourism in an area known as the Clwydian Range and Dee Valley officers have said if the quarry was refused permission, "reserves would remain unworked, and the minerals would be required to be acquired elsewhere". A decision on Tarmac Trading Ltd's plans to continue extracting 3.8m tonnes of limestone is due to be discussed on Wednesday after the debate was delayed twice by Denbighshire council's planning committee to allow further public officers are recommending the committee grants the application include the community councils of Llanferres, Llanarmon-yn-Ial and Nercwys as well as Mold Town Council, the AONB's joint advisory committee and Ramblers Cymru, while a local petition has collected in excess of 400 of the Senedd have also raised concerns, including Sam Rowland, Carolyn Thomas, Darren Millar, Llyr Gruffydd, Hannah Blythyn, and Mark Isherwood."The quarry closed 20 years ago, and there has been a lot of change in the area since then with many new businesses, many of which rely on tourism to thrive," said Millar, the leader of the Welsh Conservatives in the Senedd who also represents Clwyd a letter to the planning authority, the AONB said "reopening the quarry and extending its life for a further 15 years will have a significant adverse impact on local tranquillity through an increase in noise, heavy traffic, and a general increase in activity and disturbance associated with quarrying operations".But a 140-page planning report said there was "a demonstrable need for the mineral which would outweigh any temporary harm to the tranquillity of the AONB, which can be mitigated"."Whilst it is considered that there would be an impact on tranquillity, it would not undermine the natural beauty of the AONB, given the limited time and frequency of the proposed campaign events," it added the proposed operations would be at a "lesser intensity with a reduced output level compared to that of when the site was operational pre-2005".

South Wales Argus
05-06-2025
- Politics
- South Wales Argus
Calls for Senedd action on 'slow Aberfan disaster'
Labour's Carolyn Thomas led a Senedd debate on an 11,473-name petition – submitted by Monika Golebiewska – calling for an exclusion zone around homes, schools and hospitals. Ms Thomas, who chairs the petitions committee which met campaigners in November, urged Welsh ministers to show they are listening to those profoundly affected by quarrying. 'It is the safety of children on the way to and from school, with quarry lorries going past … the worry about airborne dust in communities, with high rates of serious respiratory conditions… the fear about structural damage to homes." Joel James backed a buffer zone, calling for more to be done to mitigate the impact of Craig-yr-Hesg quarry on people living in Glyncoch, near Pontypridd. Rhys ab Owen, an independent, put the current 200-metre buffer zone in context. '200m is from the Senedd steps to the Norwegian church,' he said, asking: 'Who here would think it'd be appropriate to have such noise and such pollution so near to our national legislature, let alone so near to where children live, are educated and play?'

Western Telegraph
05-06-2025
- Politics
- Western Telegraph
Calls for Senedd action on 'slow Aberfan disaster'
Labour's Carolyn Thomas led a Senedd debate on an 11,473-name petition – submitted by Monika Golebiewska – calling for an exclusion zone around homes, schools and hospitals. Ms Thomas, who chairs the petitions committee which met campaigners in November, urged Welsh ministers to show they are listening to those profoundly affected by quarrying. 'It is the safety of children on the way to and from school, with quarry lorries going past … the worry about airborne dust in communities, with high rates of serious respiratory conditions… the fear about structural damage to homes." Joel James backed a buffer zone, calling for more to be done to mitigate the impact of Craig-yr-Hesg quarry on people living in Glyncoch, near Pontypridd. Rhys ab Owen, an independent, put the current 200-metre buffer zone in context. '200m is from the Senedd steps to the Norwegian church,' he said, asking: 'Who here would think it'd be appropriate to have such noise and such pollution so near to our national legislature, let alone so near to where children live, are educated and play?'