
Lockdown pushed Shropshire B&B owner to volunteer
In 2020, a small bed and breakfast in Shropshire won a regional award which the owner hoped would help to raise the profile of the business.But just days later, the country was put into the first Covid lockdown and Catherine Evans was forced to temporarily close Broome Park Farm B&B, near Cleobury Mortimer.She described to BBC Radio Shropshire the frustration of not being able to take advantage of winning the West Midlands tourism award for B&B of the year."People couldn't come and stay, couldn't come and see what we had to offer here. It was a bit gutting really," she said.
Once the lockdown was in place, in March 2020, Mrs Evans remembered spending a lot of time in the garden doing yoga and enjoying the "glorious weather".
But she and a team of volunteers from Cleobury Mortimer also decided to rally behind the NHS and help people in need of support.She sewed scrubs for local hospitals and was part of a group who organised deliveries of food and medicine to people's homes."It was a wonderful sense of purpose, because it made you feel like you were doing something to help," Mrs Evans said."They were quite dark days at times, when everybody felt quite helpless, so it was a wonderful thing to do."
When restrictions were lifted, a surge in staycations sparked a boom in her business but took "quite a bit of managing", she said."Even two or three years after Covid, business was strong," she added. "In the last couple of years it has eased off, with people going abroad, and the English weather hasn't been playing ball."Asked how she felt when she looked back on the lockdowns, she said: "I think it was a wonderful community effort. I think everybody pulled together."For all the bad things, there were good things as well."
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Belfast Telegraph
42 minutes ago
- Belfast Telegraph
NI to receive £1.2bn more after spending review – but economist warns that alone won't fix challenges
Announcing the outcome of Labour's spending review, the Chancellor Rachel Reeves declared: 'The devolved administrations will receive their largest real terms settlements since devolution began in 1998.' Budgets across Westminster departments will grow by 2.3% per year in real terms until 2028-29. Northern Ireland will see an increase in the amount of money it receives through the Barnett formula, the mechanism the Treasury uses to calculate how much money it gives to Stormont. Speaking about the average increase of £1.2bn, the Treasury said: 'The Northern Ireland Executive will receive an average extra £1.2 billion through the Barnett formula, 24% more to spend per person than the comparable UK Government spending in the rest of the UK, reflecting Northern Ireland's unique circumstances." Westminster has committed to maintaining some already-announced spending over the course of the review, for example allocating: '£137 million over three years in continued support for tackling paramilitarism and organised crime, and the Police Service of Northern Ireland's Additional Security Fund." Some of the Chancellor's headline nation-wide policies will have a direct impact on Northern Ireland, including changes to asylum policy. The government intends to end the use of hotels to provide accommodation to asylum seekers within the life of the current parliament. The Home Office currently contracts private firm Mears Group to source accommodation – including in hotels – for people seeking asylum in GB and NI. As of last September, there were over 300 such people in Northern Ireland living in hotels, in conditions which have been criticised by refugee rights' groups. 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Northern Ireland will also have access to an additional £350m from the British Business Bank, the governmental body that offers financing and investment to private firms across the UK. It was through the bank that the Covid-relief loans were provided to companies. It has supported 6,000 businesses in NI since 2014 and its NI investments include Reform RX, a Pilates reformer company which was recently sold on to a major US firm. Northern Ireland will also be part of other pieces of investment, including the government's plan to aggressively grow AI capabilities in NI. An AI unit will be set up within the Executive, part of what Deputy First Minister Emma Little-Pengelly called 'a huge agenda.' 'We are determined to try and ensure Northern Ireland can do transformation in efficiency and productivity improvements through all of the tools that are there. That includes the advances in AI,' she said. 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"Northern Ireland needs a structured, long-range recovery plan with investment in the right places, powers aligned with purpose, and a relentless focus on outcomes. 'Otherwise, we risk repeating the cycle of pouring more money in and improving little.' Meanwhile, Stormont Finance Minister John O'Dowd said that agreements secured with the Treasury by his department will 'deliver an additional £600m of funding provided for vital public services here.' Mr O'Dowd was referring to the Treasury's willingness to exclude over £300m of agriculture funding from funding calculations, saving the Executive £600m over the period of the spending review. An independent review of Northern Ireland's Level of Need by Professor Gerald Holtham was also published yesterday, recommending an increase in the Barnett adjustment factor.


Spectator
2 hours ago
- Spectator
Farage was the Spending Review's real winner
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Daily Mirror
2 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
'Most hated city in Europe' where Brits love to go on holiday
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