
Home office gives borough more funding to house asylum seekers
The increased grant funding was also revealed in the report, which said the current system for settling asylum seekers had been in place for two years, and would be extended for a further year.The grant would be used to continue helping set up tenancies for those waiting on decisions, and for temporary accommodation to move out those awarded asylum claims, the report said.
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Home office gives borough more funding to house asylum seekers
A council in Lancashire has been given more money from the Home Office to house asylum seekers after a surge in demand in the past to a recent council report, the grant paid to Blackburn with Darwen Council has risen from £561,000 to £855,600 for 2025/26 year to cover the costs of support and housing provided by contractor borough has been a designated dispersal area for more than two decades, meaning it has homed and supported people both granted refugee status and those waiting for a decision on their asylum claim. A spokesman for the council said there were no plans to increase the amount of homes available, with the extra money being used to help support the 713 asylum seekers already living in the borough. The increased grant funding was also revealed in the report, which said the current system for settling asylum seekers had been in place for two years, and would be extended for a further grant would be used to continue helping set up tenancies for those waiting on decisions, and for temporary accommodation to move out those awarded asylum claims, the report said. Listen to the best of BBC Radio Lancashire on Sounds and follow BBC Lancashire on Facebook, X and Instagram. You can also send story ideas via Whatsapp to 0808 100 2230.


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Northants councillors whose parties are no longer on the fringes
In May Reform UK secured control of North Northamptonshire party won 39 seats, and a month later gained another councillor in the postponed Higham Ferrers ward election, taking its numbers to party took control from the Conservatives, who had been in power since they were not the only ones celebrating. The Green Party had a landmark performance, picking up eight seats, double Labour's tally, and emerging as the third-largest party on the prompted some of the new councillors from both parties to stand, and how do they see things? 'Hard-fought race' Leon Gibbs, 35, represents Barton Seagrave and Burton Latimer for Reform has lived in the ward for 11 years, having moved to the county with his wife from Luton, where he grew is of mixed heritage: two of his grandparents emigrated from Jamaica, and a third from South did not necessarily expect to win his seat. "It was a very hard-fought race in Burton Latimer and Barton Seagrave," he said."Up until the moment our names were called out, I never would have expected us to win. You just never know; you never know until the votes are counted."For a short time, he was a member of Labour but said "that membership was very quickly cancelled shortly after Jeremy Corbyn became leader",He decided to stand as a councillor for Reform UK earlier this year, prompted by Home Secretary Yvette Cooper's announcement that there would not be a national inquiry into grooming said this was "one of the absolute biggest scandals that we've seen in this country for the past several decades", adding: "It's unconscionable to me that anybody would refuse to want to do a national inquiry for that topic." The Prime Minister has since announced there will be a national inquiry into grooming gangs. 'Plain-speaking, being honest, being truthful' Maurice Eglin, 40, represents the same ward for Reform UK. He has been a truck driver since leaving the Army about 12 years went along to the first Reform UK meeting in Kettering in February - after he found he was shouting at the radio and TV about things he was hearing in the news, and his husband suggested he should do something about was at that initial meeting that he decided to stand. He said the party seemed to fit with his views."I believe in plain-speaking, being honest, being truthful, and if you can't get the job done, be honest with everyone and tell them a reason why."And Reform seemed to echo a lot of the sentiments I believe in, with no fluffing up or anything; just saying what you want to get done."Eglin said he and his other ward councillors had a large presence online, which he thinks helped raise awareness and get them elected. 'People didn't feel represented' Ben Jameson, 30, represents Ise Ward for the Greens and was elected for the first time in joined the party in 2020 but only got involved with campaigning last spring ahead of the general was while door-knocking and speaking to people that he thought about standing as a said: "It didn't seem like they felt represented, whether that was from their current MP or current councillor, and on reflection after the campaign, I sort of thought 'Well, if I don't offer them that option, who can I expect to?'"Jameson has also been elected as mayor of Kettering on the town council this year. The party have quite the monopoly there, winning 19 out of 20 seats. 'We won in areas weren't campaigning in' James Towns, 58, represents Kettering Central ward and is deputy leader of the Green group on North Northamptonshire joined the party in 2019, prompted by a few world events. "It was the Brexit decision and the move away from Europe," he said."I believe in more community and sort of working together with people and other countries, and also the increase in the issues around climate change and the lack of any real action."He has been a town councillor in Kettering since 2021. However, it was his first time standing for the unitary said he was not expecting the result. "I was a little bit surprised in our success," he said."We won in areas where we weren't campaigning, so the word about the work that Green councillors do and campaigners do in the areas, it's obviously spread across the town." Follow Northamptonshire news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.