
Warehouse roof destroyed by huge fire in Loughborough
National Grid and gas network operator Cadent were also called to isolate supplies to the property.Fire crews remained at the scene throughout Sunday to ensure hotspots did not reignite. The cause of the fire has not yet been revealed.
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BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
West Midlands LGBTQ+ adults and others urged to foster children
More people are being urged to consider fostering in the West Midlands as, according to the charity The Fostering Network, there is an urgent need for 630 more carers in the one example, members of the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community are being urged to consider filling the gap. Kimberly and Lucy Chapman, from Shifnal, Shropshire, have been fostering together for seven years and said they were worried they might be judged for being gay but described the fostering community as welcoming and accepting."There are lots of highs and lots of lows but we really love fostering," said Kimberly. "I couldn't imagine doing anything else." The couple, who mainly do long-term fostering, are currently caring for four foster children under the age of five, including a newborn baby."It's extremely full on but we're having a blast," she 42, who has two biological children, began fostering as a single mother, inspired by her own parents who fostered for 21 the couple met two years later, Lucy went through the assessment process and they started fostering have fostered 15 children and enjoy taking them on holiday, shopping and teaching them to ride admit the hardest part is letting the children go: "It's incredibly difficult to say goodbye." There are no official figures on the number of foster carers who identify as LGBTQ+, but a survey by the agency Compass Fostering estimated it was 7%.Lucy believed having an LGBTQ+ background could be an asset in being a foster carer."The majority of people coming out will have experienced rejection from their family, even homelessness, and I think a lot of children in foster care have experienced exactly the same thing," she fostering agency the couple work with, Family Care Group, said its main drive was to get more people from the LGBTQ+ community to think about becoming foster Sandhu, from the agency, said the fostering process did not make assumptions about sexuality or gender identity."It's about being compassionate and having a welcoming home to offer," she and Lucy urged other gay couples who are thinking about adoption to give fostering a go first."There's a million reasons why people think you can't foster but you absolutely can, you just need a spare room and an open heart". John Cargill, a single male foster carer who lives in Worcester, also wanted to change perceptions about who could foster."Nobody thinks of a single male as being the primary carer but there are lots of them out there, they're just unsung heroes," he 67-year-old retiree decided he wanted to become a foster carer after the Covid pandemic."I was rattling around this lovely little Victorian semi and thought that was a bit selfish and that maybe I should be sharing what I have with someone else," he has been a respite foster carer with Worcestershire Fostering for 18 months, looking after teenagers for up to a week so their primary caregivers can have a break."When they come to me, it's like a little holiday for them because some of these kids come from quite traumatic and neglectful backgrounds," he said. Mr Cargill, who does not have birth children of his own, said he tried to pass on important skills to the young people he looked after, such as cooking and he said he also enjoyed getting involved in their hobbies. Although he found it challenging doing it on his own, he said he enjoyed it so much that he planned to carry on doing it for as long as he was physically able. He urged others considering a career in foster care not to be put off by societal expectations."Gender doesn't matter, sexuality doesn't matter, your background, your class, your education doesn't matter. Kids just want to be understood and looked after," he Pollock, from Worcestershire Fostering, said they have more than 1,000 children in the county who needed a said they were looking for a range of carers, with some children benefiting from having a single carer like Mr Cargill and other children needing a busy said they wanted to get away from the idea that you have to be superhuman or a superhero to foster a child."We just want people who can cook a bit of spag bol, put a meal on the table and just have capacity to love and accept a child," she said. Follow BBC Shropshire on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.


BBC News
2 hours ago
- BBC News
Family's multi-generation home after man's death is 'no-brainer'
A family who have been living with three generations under one roof for nearly a decade say choosing to live together was a "no-brainer".Sarah Clayton bought a house with her parents and daughter in 2016 following the death of her family is one of many across the island choosing live in such a way to save money on rent, child care and nursing Clayton said that everyone sometimes got annoyed with others but "we make allowances". Having space Nearly 20% of households in Guernsey are made up of three or more adults aged 16 or over, with about half of those also having a child living there too. However, this figure does not give specific numbers of those living in multi-generational households. As a result of her circumstances, Sarah said it seemed that living together was the best option. She said: "It just changed my perspective of how we wanted to live. "I thought not having a husband was going to be tricky, so I said to mum and dad: 'How about I sell my house, you sell your house and we live together?"'You will be able to help look after [her daughter] Scarlet and, when you get older, I can look after you.' It was a no-brainer."There are always challenges for any family living with three generations, sometimes more, in the same house, it was important to give each other space, the family said. Sarah said: "We've grown together."I had a way of living they had a way of living. Yes, they would annoy me and I would annoy them at points, but we've come to understand we make allowances." However, constructing multi-generational homes is not yet standard practice for builders, according to housing expert Henry told BBC News: "We're not, I'm afraid, seeing that kind of imagination when it comes to house developers. "We often see it when we talk to people who are building their own houses. "House developers are a bit like car manufacturers. You don't find them making two-seater sports car which are readily adaptable into family estates. "They like people who will sell their sports car and then buy a new car, and so it is with house builders and developers."What we do need though is some forethought on this." A spokesperson from the Planning Service said: "While there aren't set standards that new housing developments are required to meet to specifically accommodate multi-generational living, in the last political term, revised supplementary planning guidance on ancillary or associated living accommodation units was published to support multi-generational living in existing housing."This superseded the old dower unit [possible separate living space on a property] guidance and reflects the more flexible approach under the current Island Development Plan. "This makes it easier to create ancillary units, even outside of the main and local centres." There are families looking to live in multi-generational households, experts say. For estate agent Swoffers, of about 70 local market offers in at the moment, two were looking for that option and there were other suitable houses for Austin, director of local market sales, said that, although it was no more prevalent in Guernsey now than 20 years ago, multi-generational households did suit some. He said: "Maybe they are at a later stage of life and they have younger members of family on tap to help them."The challenge is with these sorts of properties that you aren't just satisfying two people. "It could be four, five, six people, and you need to ensure everyone is happy."


BBC News
2 hours ago
- BBC News
Wildlife trust credits mink control programme for rise in great crested grebes
A conservation programme aiming to control non-native mink has helped to boost the numbers of the great crested grebe, a wildlife trust has Wildlife Trust said efforts to reduce the mink population had benefitted the birds at Attenborough Nature avian residents are famous for their preening and mating displays, but decreases in the numbers of chicks fledging was thought to have been impacted by predation by mink, the trust the trust started mink trapping in January 2024, just under 30 minks have been removed from the reserve. The trust said - while it was "hard to estimate" specific numbers - it had "been a delight to see more great crested grebe chicks this year". The trust said its initiative to control mink numbers had been carried out in Attenborough, the wider Erewash valley and other river catchments across the county as part of its Water Vole Recovery Project, which is funded through Natural England's species recovery volunteer Phil Carter wants to hear from other observers on how grebes and other species are said: "Mink have been having a negative impact on great crested grebes and other species at Attenborough for a number of years and it's been a delight to see more great crested grebe chicks this year."The trust said staff had also observed lapwing chicks on an island they had not previously been record. This, the charity says, is "more evidence" that the reduction in mink numbers may be having a positive impact on the Vole Recovery Project manager Gary Cragg added: "Whilst we only have anecdotal observations that the mink control measures maybe having a positive impact, we're heartened that it does seem that great crested grebes have had a better year this year."Efforts to remove mink from the local ecosystem will undoubtedly benefit a range of species and we hope that birds such as great crested grebe will stand a much better chance of breeding success in the years to come."