Tag: 2023

  • PRESS RELEASE : Regenerating St Columb’s Hall with £181,000 support [January 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Regenerating St Columb’s Hall with £181,000 support [January 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities on 17 January 2023.

    The Grade A listed former temperance hall sits in the heart of the walled City of Derry~Londonderry. The building was closed since the start of the pandemic, but now with £181,000 from the Community Ownership Fund, the hall is brought back to its former glory.

    The hall has been closed since the start of the pandemic and cannot currently be reopened due to the deterioration of the building.

    Preparing for the future

    The hall will be future proofed by:

    • working with conservation specialists to improve accessibility and plan for future adaptations
    • completing urgent works to make the building safe and accessible for the public

    This will enable St Columb’s Hall Trust to begin generating income to secure the Hall’s long-term future.

    Preserving the past

    The funding will help to:

    • capture oral histories and generate awareness of heritage significance
    • work with groups to research the heritage of the hall and its future
    • reactivate community connection with the Hall
  • PRESS RELEASE : Wales World Heritage Site awarded £13.3 million for visitor improvements [January 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Wales World Heritage Site awarded £13.3 million for visitor improvements [January 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities on 17 January 2023.

    The Pontycysyllte Aqueduct, area of outstanding natural beauty, has been awarded £13.3 million from the Levelling Up Fund.

    The Pontycysyllte Aqueduct is a masterpiece of engineering and a popular visitor destination. The aqueduct is a main focal point on the 11-mile stretch of the World Heritage Site. This area of outstanding natural beauty has been awarded £13.3 million from the Levelling Up Fund.

    The funding will help:

    • secure its future as a prime heritage asset
    • maximise the potential of the site

    Trevor Basin plan to expand tourism benefits

    The initial phases of the Trevor Basin Technical Masterplan will deliver:

    • refocusing of the site around the Pontcysyllte Aqueduct
    • a range of visitor improvements

    This will include investment to:

    • develop a new walking route in Dee Valley and the area around the aqueduct
    • set up a woodland activity and education area
    • rewild former industrial land
    • create a new arrival area

    Upgrading the visitor experience

    The investment will improve connectivity, including:

    • improving links between Llangollen and the Wenffrwd Nature Reserve
    • an active travel route for walking and cycling along a disused railway line
    • a new public space at Llangollen’s Castle Street and Abbey Road junction
    • new visitor facilities at Horseshoe Falls

    Improved access across the site will deliver health and well-being benefits for future visitors.

    Improvements to Corwen Station

    Station and car park upgrades include:

    • an active travel route along the former railway line between Corwen and Cynwyd
    • electric vehicle charging points

    These improvements will:

    • bring the area back to life as a global tourist attraction
    • provide a major boost to the local economy
  • PRESS RELEASE : Whithorn’s Old Town Hall gets a £300,000 boost [January 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Whithorn’s Old Town Hall gets a £300,000 boost [January 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities on 17 January 2023.

    £300,000 was allocated from the Community Ownership Fund to transform the Old Town Hall in Whithorn, Galloway. The funding will help the town hall become more accessible, functional and support working towards Net-Zero.

    Plans for the building

    The Grade B listed Georgian town hall is set to turn into a new social enterprise that will offer training to young people in:

    • traditional stonemasonry
    • joinery skills

    It will also showcase energy efficiency innovation for hard-to-treat Georgian buildings.

  • PRESS RELEASE : £200,000 to transform listed building into community hub [January 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : £200,000 to transform listed building into community hub [January 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities on 17 January 2023.

    £200,000 from the Community Ownership Fund has been awarded to the Wharf Community Hub in Marple.

    The project will regenerate the Grade II listed building to create a local community hub.

    The Wharf Warehouse

    The Warehouse building has been a key part of the community since the early 1800s but is now in a poor state of repair.

    Plans for the funding include renovating the building and creating a:

    • health and wellbeing studio
    • heritage centre
    • canal side café

    Benefits to the local community

    The hub will provide a place for the community to come together and a chance for people to learn about Marple’s canal transport heritage.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Almost £125,000 for Resource and Training Centre [January 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Almost £125,000 for Resource and Training Centre [January 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities on 17 January 2023.

    The Community Ownership Fund allocated £124,258 to the CANA Resource and Training Centre. The centre is in a converted nineteenth century chapel in the Pen-y-Waun estate in Rhondda Cynon Taf.

    The funding will:

    • equip locals with appropriate skills and qualifications
    • set up a training centre

    Equipping local people for local jobs

    This training centre will help local people gain the skills needed for jobs in the area, and those expected to be in demand in the future.

    The investment will help regenerate the physical structure of the building. It will also provide a facility that generates an income. This will ensure the centre’s sustainability in the long term.

  • PRESS RELEASE : £240,000 of support for Prince of Wales pub in Newtown-in-St-Martin [January 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : £240,000 of support for Prince of Wales pub in Newtown-in-St-Martin [January 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities on 17 January 2023.

    £240,000 from the Community Ownership Fund to support the reopening of The Prince of Wales pub in Newtown-in-St-Martin, Cornwall.

    The Prince of Wales pub in Newtown-in-St-Martin closed in November 2020. The financial impacts of the pandemic led to the shutdown of this pub in Cornwall. Now £240,000 from the Community Ownership Fund has supported the purchase and reopening of the 17th century inn.

    Community plans to put pub at the heart of the town

    Community ownership of the pub is being led by a community group: Friends of the Newton St Martin Pub Limited. The community group are hoping that by reopening the pub, it becomes the focal point of the town again.

  • Richard Murphy – 2023 Comments on NHS Funding and Sajid Javid’s Proposals

    Richard Murphy – 2023 Comments on NHS Funding and Sajid Javid’s Proposals

    The comments made by Richard Murphy, the Professor of Accounting Practice at Sheffield University, on Twitter on 21 January 2023.

    Sajid Javid says we need to pay £20 for a GP appointment and £66 to go to A&E as a way to solve the NHS funding crisis. He’s wrong because there are so many better options in my new report on funding the NHS.

    There are 367 million GP appointments in the NHS each year. Assuming everyone had to pay (and I bet children and pensioners would not) at £20 a time that would raise £7.3bn in extra revenue.

    In England there are roughly 27 million A&E appointments a year, which at £66 each, assuming everyone paid, would raise £1.8 billion a year.

    So, Javid wants to raise £9.1 billion a year by imposing a sickness tax on those wanting to see a doctor. But that’s before exemptions and before the massive cost of actually collecting this money, which can’t be ignored. So, let’s guess it’s £6 billion after exemptions.

    In my new report on NHS funding out today I suggest the NHS needs £30 billion extra a year to function properly. So Javid is not proposing anything that will make any big difference to its fortunes. But he is going to hit the poorest hardest.

    I have suggested how to find the £30 billion required to pay for the NHS we need. Half would come from extra taxes paid simply as a result of spending the extra money on the NHS or by making people well enough to work again. In the real world that’s what happens.

    But that stills leaves £15 billion to find. That could come from halving the tax reliefs given to the wealthiest 10% in the UK on their pension and ISA accounts which cost a staggering £30 billion a year in total. Wouldn’t that be better than charging the sick?

    Or we could double the rate of capital gains tax and collect maybe £15bn a year. It is absurd that right now this tax, paid almost entirely by the wealthiest, is charged at half the rate of income tax. Wouldn’t that be better than charging the sick?

    Alternatively, we could invest £1 billion in HM Revenue & Customs to tackle tax abuse. It is reckoned they collect £18 for every £1 spent. So that could also raise the money needed. Again, wouldn’t that be better than charging the sick?

    And there are other tax options as well on top of which the government could simply run a deficit to pay for this or do QE to fund the NHS as the Tories did for other crises.

    But what we do not need to do is charge the sick what is, in effect, a new tax when being sick is already a good indicator of being on lower than average income and Javid’s sole aim in doing this is to pave the way for NHS privatisation, and his scheme raises insignificant money.

    We need a debate on NHS funding but crass ideas from Sajid Javid and his like on NHS charging need to be dismissed out of hand when vastly better options from taxing the best off more fairly or from borrowing are available.

    My report is at https://www.taxresearch.org.uk/Blog/2023/01/21/the-nhs-funding-crisis-and-how-to-solve-it/.

  • Sajid Javid – 2023 Article on Charging for NHS Treatment

    Sajid Javid – 2023 Article on Charging for NHS Treatment

    A section of the article published in The Times, written by Sajid Javid, the former Health Secretary and the Conservative MP for Bromsgrove on 21 January 2023.

    Too often we hear doctors and nurses frustrated at people making unnecessary trips to frontline services, which takes time from other patients. Would the same level of demand exist here if this Irish model were adopted? This extends to GP appointments. In Norway and Sweden a visit to the GP comes with a contribution of about £20. For some people, just like my parents, that is a noticeable part of the weekly budget. But as demonstrated by so many other countries, it is possible to means-test this provision. Even a tiny fraction of patients reconsidering their visit to the GP (and perhaps visiting a community pharmacist instead), would save thousands of clinical hours.

    Co-payments are not the only alternative. Germany’s social health insurance model gives the structural benefit of a greater choice of providers, including non-profit community hospitals, and therefore less pressure on the public system. In the UK, more and more people are moving towards private healthcare (including within NHS Trusts). But provision is limited in comparison. Other systems with a contributory principle have seen a range of providers emerge. Patients in the UK are all directed towards the front door of the NHS, which only worsens the queueing.

    For patients, this is not cost free. More waiting can mean an increased risk of illness and discomfort. And for NHS staff, it also means a constant tide of pressure (and sometimes abuse). We have already instilled an element of contribution into the NHS: we ask people who can afford it to pay towards the cost of prescriptions, and dental and optical care. Labour and Conservative governments have had a role in this. We should look, on a cross-party basis, at extending the contributory principle.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Supporting the future of Northern Ireland’s screen industry with £2.9 million boost [January 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Supporting the future of Northern Ireland’s screen industry with £2.9 million boost [January 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities on 17 January 2023.

    Over £2.9 million of Levelling Up Funding has been allocated to build on Northern Ireland’s global reputation as a prime location for the film and TV industry.

    This funding will be used to purchase ‘Flexible Virtual Production Studios’ and support the landmark Studio Ulster project by Belfast Harbour, Ulster University and NI Screen as part of the Belfast Region City Deal.

    The investment from the Levelling Up Fund will:

    • unlock the potential to create new businesses in this area of technology within Northern Ireland
    • promote the use of virtual production methods within Northern Ireland businesses
    • support the growth of the local film industry

    Opportunities for young people

    The project will also give young people the opportunity to:

    • be mentored by industry professionals
    • gain valuable work experience
    • work on a film production

    Professor Frank Lyons, Associate Dean of Research at Ulster University, said:

    Studio Ulster is a step change for the screen industries in Northern Ireland. It brings capabilities and access to cutting edge, real-time, virtual production technologies previously unavailable to the Belfast Region and in short supply globally. This new technology and expertise will transform the types of productions that can be made in Northern Ireland and the types of jobs that will be created here; a genuine levelling up of capability in the region.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Upgrading New Galloway Town Hall with £175,000 [January 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Upgrading New Galloway Town Hall with £175,000 [January 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities on 17 January 2023.

    The Community Ownership Fund will help upgrade the community-owned New Galloway Town Hall with £175,000. The listed building stands at the physical and emotional heart of New Galloway.

    It provides a space for people in the community for:

    • meetings
    • activities
    • events

    Plans for the future of the building

    Plans for the town hall include:

    • renewable energy sources to replace the current heating system
    • improved insulation
    • disabled toilets
    • a lift

    The repairs and refurbishment will make the building fit for future use.