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Guildford: Council rejects plans to turn bungalow into preschool
Guildford: Council rejects plans to turn bungalow into preschool

BBC News

time25-06-2025

  • General
  • BBC News

Guildford: Council rejects plans to turn bungalow into preschool

Plans for a new preschool on the former site of a caretaker's house have been rejected due to fears over highway safety. St Thomas of Canterbury's School in Merrow, Guildford, submitted a proposal to transform a bungalow on the site into a school that parents say is needed to "help children achieve" of Guildford Borough Council's planning committee have rejected the plans in line with the recommendation made for refusal, according to the Local Democracy Reporting Service. Officers argued that the significant benefits of providing early years schooling did not outweigh the massive highway safety risks. While more than 30 letters supporting the application were received, the committee ultimately determined that it had to follow the Highway Authority's advice despite supporting the Joss Bigmore said: "I'm desperate to approve this application […] However, we cannot ignore the language of the Highways Authority- I've never seen it that strong."Highways officers had condemned the plans as seeing an "unacceptable highway safety impact on the adjoining Highway" for both drivers and documents reveal the preschool could result in eight additional cars around the site at peak hours of 08:00 and 09:00 and 16:00 and 17:00 BST. No extra parking spaces would be provided for the new Kibble, responsible for running the St Thomas of Canterbury's School, argued there would be no major traffic increase given the crossover between families with children attending the preschool and primary members that the school would be willing to pay for traffic measures like yellow lines, he said: "I don't believe we have investigated all the options."However, some members raised concerns the starting and finishing times were different for each setting.

‘An embargo on American goods:' Mass. manufacturers fret as tariffs thwart exports to China
‘An embargo on American goods:' Mass. manufacturers fret as tariffs thwart exports to China

Boston Globe

time04-05-2025

  • Business
  • Boston Globe

‘An embargo on American goods:' Mass. manufacturers fret as tariffs thwart exports to China

'All open purchase orders are frozen,' Merrow said. 'The machines that we build already are expensive and we can't export them. Period.' Advertisement He said Merrow machines average about $4,700 retail so tariffs from China would substantially increase their costs. 'We are not reducing our prices to offset tariff increases,' he said. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up His company is among those Massachusetts manufacturers caught in the middle of a tit-for-tat tariff battle between the world's two largest economies. While China is best known as the largest supplier of products imported into the US, it is also an important two-way goods highway for US manufacturers. It is the state's largest foreign-goods market, with Massachusetts sending nearly $4 billion worth of products in 2024, 11 percent of all goods exported from the state, according to the office of the Merrow Manufacturing also exports equipment and machines to China. Completed Merrow Machines sat on a shelf, ready for packaging. Jonathan Wiggs/Globe Staff Trump has suggested his administration Advertisement The import levies China placed on US goods after President Trump's tariffs means any company exporting US-origin products to there will face significant obstacles. 'It means a substantial cost of doing business in China and a substantial barrier to entry into the Chinese market,' said Matthew Bock, a partner at Bock Trade Law. Merrow said the potential loss of the Chinese market may not lead to job losses for his business for the moment. 'We don't think that the suppliers and the factories have made their final decisions about what they're going to do . . . our concern is that once it firms up, that we might see a significant change in the demand,' he said. 'The tariffs on the Chinese market are effectively an embargo on American goods.' Charlie Merrow, CEO at Merrow Manufacturing, standing by a table of the company's sewing machines at its factory in Fall River. Jonathan Wiggs/Globe Staff Last year, industrial machinery products topped the list of goods exports to China from Massachusetts at $1.6 billion, data from the Analysts say high costs of selling products in China has Massachusetts companies facing the prospect of losing that market to competitors from other countries. 'It could go to a local competitor. It could go to a Japanese one, a German one, one from Australia or Thailand, you name it,' said Branner Stewart, senior research manager at the UMass Donahue Institute. Advertisement A fall in exports could hurt jobs in the state, he added. 'Companies will try to forestall any sort of layoffs but, you know, if the demand is not there or the demand is diminished then labor savings . . . may be necessary for some companies,' he said. Some businesses may try to find alternative ways to maintain access to China. 'Depending on the size of the company, that may include pushing production . . . to other locations outside the United States where they could then still tap into the Chinese market,' Stewart said. Merrow, the Fall River-based CEO, said his company was considering establishing a presence in Europe in 2025, 'We are thinking about opening up an assembly facility in Europe to support the European market and, potentially if the tariffs firm up, using a European assembly and parts distribution facility to support the Chinese market and the European markets,' he said. The Merrow Group building in downtown Fall River. Jonathan Wiggs/Globe Staff Kristen Morneau, a trade compliance director with the freight forwarding company OceanAir, said the challenge for some companies is they are getting hit by both sides in the trade war. 'There may be a component that's imported and then built into a customized device, which is then shipped back out. So it is actually seeing the China tariff at time of importation on a component,' she said. 'Then [the product] could be facing retaliation when it gets back to China as a finished article.' Advertisement Morneau suggested some companies are hoping for reprieve for certain sectors in the coming weeks such as what 'What we're going to see for our export customers going to China is going to be a moment of pause for their customers in China to see how this plays out over the next couple of weeks,' Morneau said. For now, it could be too early to see the full effects of the tariffs on US exports to China. 'The effects will be real and will likely be seen in coming months, but it is currently too soon to quantify the actual impacts of Chinese tariffs on U.S. exports,' said Stewart from the UMass Donahue Institute. Merrow said American exports are important for the South Coast and US manufacturing. 'There is sometimes a misperception that US manufacturing is driven by US demand for goods, and in fact we are competitive building machinery and equipment and exporting it into markets around the world,' he said. 'Punitive, reciprocal, tariffs make it harder to export product.' Stitcher Greta Resendes worked at Merrow Manufacturing. Jonathan Wiggs/Globe Staff Omar Mohammed can be reached at

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