
Students urged to donate – not dump – end of term unwanted items
Students moving out of their accommodation for the summer are being urged to donate their unwanted belongings instead of binning them.Fifteen bright red donation bins have been installed temporarily in Bath near student housing so that items can easily be dropped off.Last year, these bins prevented 32.7 tonnes of goods from going to landfill and raised more than £60,000 for the British Heart Foundation, according to Bath & North East Somerset Council, which runs the scheme with a student community group.Benji Orford Thompson, University of Bath student union community officer, said the "Pack for Good" scheme was a "great way to give back".
Council leader Kevin Guy said the scheme, which is run with the Student Community Partnership, was in its tenth year.He said it is expected to have raised £1m in its lifetime by the end of this year.Last year's donations included items such as clothing and shoes, utensils, books, DVDs and CDs.Volunteers and officers have been knocking on thousands of doors around the city giving recycling advice to students packing up at the end of term.Ghika Savva, SCP manager, said: "When students are packing up they've got so many things that they can't take with them that they'd like to donate and these [donation bins] provide a way of doing that."We'll take anything you can sell in a charity shop."
Mr Thompson added that the bins were "very easy to see"."There's a lot of waste and a lot of things you don't know what to do with," he said."This is a great way to give back and not just discard to a landfill."Councillor Tim Ball said the campaign "supports the council's drive to ensure more unwanted items are reused and not needlessly wasted".
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Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
‘I was counting on mum's inheritance – but she cut me out of her will'
If you have a conundrum that you want answered in a future column, email: moralmoney@ All our letters are genuine, but writers are anonymous. Dear Sam, My sister has made the choice to pass my inheritance to my children, leaving me and my husband with financial stress for the rest of our lives. I find it hard to describe how I feel – it is somewhere between hurt and furious. Our wonderful mum died a few months ago and we are very sad. She was in her 80s and died peacefully at home, which is the only blessing, and we know she would have been pleased not to have ended her days in a care home, since she saw my dad in care for the past year suffering with dementia and she did not want that for herself. When dad first went into care, mum rewrote her will to pass her assets to me and my sister equally. It was agreed that she did not want to pass it all to my dad given that it would likely be swallowed up in care costs. Unbeknown to me, she had since then added a codicil that actually bypasses me and my sister and passes her wealth to her grandchildren. My sister and I have two children each, so mum's estate is being divided between the four grandchildren. They are all adults with good jobs, mortgages and families, and although they can obviously all make use of the inheritance, none actually need it. My husband and I have struggled over the last decade financially. A mixture of poor health, a Covid-related business downturn and bad luck have seen our nest egg dwindle. We had been relying on the inheritance from my parents to help us repay our mortgage, which would ensure we have housing for life and can then manage on our pensions. My sister is named as the executor in mum's will. She knows that mum's original desire was to have her estate shared between me and my sister. It isn't clear to me or my sister when and why mum added the codicil. My sister is comfortable with the idea of her half going to her children, as she has enough for her lifetime already. I on the other hand am shocked and disappointed by the alteration. I have asked my sister to just ignore the codicil and go with the original intention of mum's will, and she could then give her inheritance to her children if she wants to. I need to keep my inheritance for my own wellbeing. However, my sister claims this is impossible and we have had a big row about it. I am very frightened that the outcome could leave me in dire straits, but my sister claims there is nothing she can do. Please tell me there is something I can do to have the original will honoured. The pain of losing my dad to dementia, my mum's recent death and now rowing with my sister is awful. I feel emotionally exhausted, so any help you can offer on how to stand up to my sister without doing more damage to our relationship would be greatly received. – Anon Dear reader, I am so sorry for your loss. It's clear that your mother was deeply loved, and I understand how the sadness of her passing has been compounded by what feels like a financial and emotional betrayal. You describe your feelings as somewhere between hurt and furious, and that is entirely understandable. Grief often magnifies tensions within families, especially when money and perceived fairness are at stake. But alongside the emotional toll, this situation does carry a hard legal truth – your mother's final wishes, as expressed in the most up-to-date version of her will and codicil, are legally binding. Regardless of previous versions or informal discussions, it is the latest valid document that dictates how her estate must be distributed. It may feel wrong that your sister, as executor, is refusing to 'go with the original intention', but according to our legal expert Gary Rycroft here at The Telegraph, she is not allowed to override the codicil. Executors must follow the will as it stands at the time of death. Ignoring the codicil or redirecting funds would not only breach her fiduciary duty, but could also be challenged as fraud. She could be held personally liable. That leaves you in a deeply difficult position. You were relying on an inheritance that emotionally, and perhaps logically, you believed was coming to you. And it sounds like your mother may not have discussed the change, leaving a wound of both surprise and rejection. You could, if you believe the codicil was written when your mother lacked capacity or was under undue influence, contest the will. However, such challenges are complex, expensive, and can cause irreversible damage to family relationships. If your mother was mentally sound and free to change her will – as is her legal right, even late in life – then you are unlikely to succeed. Another option is to appeal to the goodwill of your children, or your sister's children. While they are under no legal obligation to share their inheritance with you, they may be moved by your circumstances and sense of injustice. But this would need to come from a place of dialogue and mutual respect, not pressure or guilt. What you can do is take stock and focus on what's within your control. The good news is that you've told me your husband's business is recovering, and you are managing your mortgage. This doesn't erase the stress or the blow to your retirement plans, but it does offer a platform from which to rebuild. Financial resilience can sometimes come not from a windfall, but from a shift in mindset and strategy. Speak to a financial adviser to reassess your retirement options. There may be ways to restructure your mortgage, boost pension contributions, or even leverage the business more effectively. Emotionally, it may take time to come to terms with your mother's final decision. It may never feel fair. But it might help to consider whether she acted out of disapproval, fear, or simply changed perspective late in life. It is possible to disagree with her choice and still honour the life and love you shared. As for your sister, try to separate her legal duties from her personal feelings. She may not like the outcome either, but she has no authority to change it. If you want to preserve your relationship, you may need to let go of what you cannot alter and move towards a conversation rooted in compassion rather than conflict. The situation is painful, but not without hope. Your financial future is still salvageable. Your family bonds, though strained, can still be healed. And though your mother left behind a surprise, she also left behind a legacy of life, love, and care that no codicil can erase. Wishing you well, – Sam


The Sun
2 hours ago
- The Sun
Keep your home cobweb and pest-free this summer – a 35p household essential is key & it'll make your windows sparkle too
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BBC News
2 hours ago
- BBC News
Beloved Nottingham tram cat returns home for the final time
The memorial of a cat at a tram stop where he frequently cuddled up to commuters has now been returned to his former owners in an apparent "stroke of luck".Benton, a black and white moggy, became well-known for visiting the Inham Road tram stop in Chilwell, Nottinghamshire, before he died in Express Transit (NET) subsequently added a poster about him to the stop's information board at the Ginny Hicks, the cat's owner, spotted an tram worker while travelling to work last month, who mentioned it would soon be taken down. "She struck up a conversation with him," her daughter, Steph Hicks said."They offered really quickly to give [Benton's memorial] back to her and arranged it all... but if she hadn't been going to work at that time on that day, it might not of happened." The "sociable" feline was found as a stray by the Hicks' family when he was a four-month-old kitten, after almost being hit by a bus in ingratiated himself with the local community thereafter by visiting the Inham Road tram stop "pretty much every day".Steph said: "He was a really big personality, even for a cat. He'd just go down there all the time, because he was smart enough to know that there's people that are going to be staying still there."If there was somebody out on the street, he wanted to be their friend."Since he's been gone, we end up speaking to people about him and his memory, complete strangers, bonding over the memories of Benton." The memorial of Benton was formally delivered back to the family on 3 June."We're very touched by all of this, it just kind of feels like it's come full circle with him coming home," Steph an alternative to the memorial, information about Benton and a collage of pictures has been added to the tram stop's web page."So it's a bit bittersweet, because obviously we still miss Benton, but knowing that he was so loved, its a nice feeling."According to Steph, NET needed to change the information board because it was "outdated", and there was no room to keep the memorial poster on the new version."[We're] completely fine with that. We feel really cared for by NET and the lovely gestures that they've done there," she said.