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Man dies after fire breaks out in Sheffield house
Man dies after fire breaks out in Sheffield house

BBC News

time09-07-2025

  • BBC News

Man dies after fire breaks out in Sheffield house

A man has died following a house fire in Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service said firefighters were called to the property on Southcroft Walk, off Abbeydale Road, at about 04:48 said crews "recovered the man from the house" but he was pronounced dead at the scene.A fire service spokesperson said an investigation into the cause of the blaze was under way. Listen to highlights from South Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North

Six crews tackle Rotherham building fire
Six crews tackle Rotherham building fire

BBC News

time07-07-2025

  • General
  • BBC News

Six crews tackle Rotherham building fire

Six crews of firefighters have been called to a blaze in a building in Rotherham and are expected to remain at the scene "throughout the evening," according to the fire living near Moorgate Road have been asked to keep their windows and doors shut due to the large amount of smoke in the area, a South Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service spokesperson fire was reported at about 17:44 BST and the response was increased at about 19:30 to include six engines and an aerial ladder. A spokesperson added: "Please avoid the area while our crews work to bring this incident under control." Listen to highlights from South Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.

Fire warning after blaze narrowly avoids Barnsley farm
Fire warning after blaze narrowly avoids Barnsley farm

BBC News

time05-07-2025

  • Climate
  • BBC News

Fire warning after blaze narrowly avoids Barnsley farm

Police have issued a warning about dry weather after a fire the "size of a football pitch" narrowly avoided destroying a farmer's crops in South fire in Barnsley on Thursday could have caused "tens of thousands of pounds worth of damage" had emergency services not seen it in time, South Yorkshire Police said. The force said teenagers were seen running from the bottom of the field but officers were not able to reach them in time.A spokesperson said: "What you may think is a joke or a prank affects people, their livelihoods, property and wildlife." They added: "If we catch anyone causing this type of damage, we will prosecute with the full force of the law, young or not."According to police, the fire on a patch of land above Grange Lane was being blown towards Quaker Lane when officers called South Yorkshire Fire & Rescue services put out the fire but warned that due to recent dry weather, fields could "go up like a tinder box".A police spokesperson said: "Farmers work hard throughout the year to bring food to your table. Without them, we would be in trouble."The potential threat to life, wildlife and property should not be underestimated."We saw several birds and animals that, unfortunately, we couldn't help or save but had been affected by the fire." Listen to highlights from South Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North

LGBT Pride Month has become a pointless embarrassment
LGBT Pride Month has become a pointless embarrassment

Telegraph

time04-06-2025

  • General
  • Telegraph

LGBT Pride Month has become a pointless embarrassment

See if you can make any more sense of this than I can. The other day, the official Facebook page for South Yorkshire Fire and Rescue posted a photo showing three employees wearing face paint. Two were plastered with the rainbow colours of the Pride flag, and the other with the pink, blue and white of the transgender flag. And here's the message that ran alongside. 'We're proud to stand with our LGBT+ communities this Pride season and beyond,' it said. 'Fire doesn't discriminate. No matter who needs us, we'll always be there.' A noble sentiment. My only question is: what on earth was the point of it? I mean, of course the fire brigade will 'always be there' for LGBT+ people whose houses have caught fire. That's always been the case, even back in the dark, distant days when homosexual acts were illegal. To the best of my knowledge, no one calling 999 to report a blaze at their home has ever been ordered to state their sexuality. ('I'm awfully sorry, sir, but in that case we can't help you, I'm afraid. We only put fires out for red-blooded heterosexuals.') What this message was intended to achieve, therefore, is sadly lost on me. Still, no doubt there's more such bafflement to come. The whole of June, after all, is Pride Month. And what was once a vital means to campaign for equality has long since descended into an orgy of competitive virtue signalling by members of what the anti-woke Labour peer Lord Glasman has so memorably dubbed 'the lanyard class'. As in: the preening elitists who seize every chance going to parade their moral superiority. Here's another example. This week, Air Canada opened Pride Month by advertising its first-ever 'all-2SLGBTQIA+ flight'. In other words, every member of the crew was one or more of the following: lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, 'queer', intersex, asexual, or 'two-spirit' (that is, someone who subscribes to the American Indian belief that the body contains both a 'masculine spirit' and a 'feminine spirit'). Congratulations to all involved, naturally. Again, though, I can't help wondering what the point was. It surely can't have meant much to the average passenger. In my own experience, at least, few holidaymakers refuse to board a flight until they've ascertained the exact number of ancient tribal spirits currently inhabiting the pilot. And to be frank, I don't see how it helped the staff, either. Since when has there been a shortage of job opportunities for gay air stewards? Back in Britain, even the head of MI6 has been joining in. In a statement, Sir Richard Moore announced that 'MI6 is proudly flying the Pride flag from Vauxhall Cross, alongside the Union flag, for the whole month of June. Your sexual orientation is no bar to you working and thriving at MI6.' Once upon a time, of course, it would have been. But how many people imagined that this were still the case, in 2025? And while we're on the subject: is it really essential for Sir Richard to declare on his social media profile that his pronouns are 'he/him', as if he were some blue-haired student, rather than the 62-year-old chief of the nation's foreign intelligence service? We already know he's a 'he'. The 'Sir' was a bit of a clue. Otherwise he'd be Lady Richard. In the United States, at least, times are changing. According to Newsweek, there's been a big drop in corporations jazzing up their logos in Pride colours. Perhaps their CEOs fear being ridiculed by Donald Trump. Or perhaps too many customers twigged that it was all just a load of empty spin (having noted, for example, how few of these corporations used Pride logos in their Middle Eastern markets). In Britain, however, the lanyard class remains scrupulously observant. Yet it's hard to avoid the sense that the wider public is starting to feel patronised. Of course homophobia still exists. Like all forms of prejudice, it always will. But under the law, people who describe themselves as LGBTQIA+ have the same rights, these days, as everyone else. So when a business preaches about inclusivity, it's difficult to see what it's trying to accomplish – other than to earn some easy applause. All of which is why Pride Month increasingly feels like a pointless embarrassment. No longer a platform for the powerless to speak out – but for the powerful to show off.

Second fire at Ings Lane Social Club in Bolton upon Dearne
Second fire at Ings Lane Social Club in Bolton upon Dearne

BBC News

time09-05-2025

  • Sport
  • BBC News

Second fire at Ings Lane Social Club in Bolton upon Dearne

A fire has broken out at a derelict sports and social club for the second time this were called to a large blaze at Ings Lane Sports & Social Club, in Vancouver Drive, Bolton upon Dearne, at 23:00 BST on Thursday.A spokesperson for South Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service said while smoke had reduced since the fire broke out, residents were advised to still keep their doors and windows engines remained at the scene on Friday morning, with no injuries reported and the cause under investigation, the spokesperson added. It comes after crews were also called to a fire on Tuesday, with the fire extinguished at 04:00 BST on to highlights from South Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.

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