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Call to halt Cleckheaton building work over asbestos fears

Call to halt Cleckheaton building work over asbestos fears

BBC News3 days ago
Residents are urging a council and developers to stop construction work after asbestos dust was found in their homes.Building started several months ago on 180 homes in Cleckheaton but people living nearby have raised concerns about the quantity of dust created by the works, and its contents.The developer, Strata Homes, said the work was being carried out safely and in line with regulations.Kirklees Council said it had carried out 19 monitoring visits in recent months and was in regular dialogue with the developer and residents.
Resident Tracy Weaver said living near the development was "like living in a dystopian nightmare".She said: "There have been people who now need inhalers. Four of us [on the same street] have been referred to the hospital for a chest X-ray to be on the safe side. We can't get a deep breath. I can't go a whole day without an inhaler."Another resident, who did not want to be named, said the site was not made safe before building began.They said: "Now they're planning pile driving, which will stir up even more of the material underground. We're scared for our health."The residents are crowdfunding in order to pursue legal action and have called for the construction to stop until independent testing and a review of safety measures is undertaken.
In October 2023, planning permission was granted to allow Strata Homes to build on a plot of land off Westgate, Cleckheaton.Since then, the site has been taken on by affordable housing provider Thirteen Group with the construction being carried out by Strata Homes.A contamination report, submitted alongside the planning application in 2023, stated asbestos was among the materials present in parts of the site.It said evidence suggested an "unknown quantity" of asbestos was dumped in one area, which had previously been home to a chemical works, but it had been filled over by a previous tenant.A remediation strategy was drawn up to set out how risks would be addressed and mitigated.Since the start of the work, some residents have sent samples of the dust collecting in their homes to be analysed by asbestos specialist, Acorn. The Local Democracy Reporting Service said resulting documents from June and July of this year concerning five properties in the area, confirmed there was amosite, known as brown asbestos, present in the dust in two samples, and chrysotile, known as white asbestos, in three samples.Four of the samples were taken from gardens and one from an inside windowsill.Thirteen Group said work on the site was being carried out in a "phased and controlled" manner and in "full compliance" with national regulations.Chief executive Matt Forest said Kirklees Council and the Health and Safety Executive had found nothing of concern.He said: "We are aware of local residents' concerns and have sought assurances from the specialist contractor handling the remediation of the site."The contractor has confirmed work is progressing in a phased and controlled manner, in line with the remediation plan approved by Kirklees Council, and in full compliance with national regulations."A spokesperson for Kirklees Council said: "We understand the concerns residents have about the site and want to reassure them that we are taking them seriously."We have communicated with residents about the steps we are taking to keep them safe but it's clear to us that concerns remain."
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Warning after woman left with agonising blisters from picking blackberries which could have KILLED her

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SMALL CAP IDEA: Ketamine drip therapy firm is taking on alcoholism
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Again, more on this later. Its lead drug is SNV-001, an experimental treatment being tested in advanced clinical trials for people with severe alcohol use disorder (AUD). It combines two approaches: a carefully controlled dose of ketamine (a dual anaesthetic and painkiller medicine that affects certain brain receptors) given by drip, and a course of cognitive behavioural therapy, or CBT, designed to specifically help prevent relapse. The aim is to see if using these together can help people stay off alcohol more effectively than either treatment alone. Early trial results for SNV-001 have been encouraging. In phase II testing, people given the treatment had 50 per cent fewer heavy drinking days compared to those who received a placebo. Even more striking, on average 86 per cent of participants stayed off alcohol for six months after treatment, while only 2 per cent had managed this before joining the trial. 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So alike are the two compounds that Solvonis last month kicked off a process designed to provide scientific 'bridging' data linking SVN‑002 to Spravato. By referencing the existing drug, Solvonis aims to pursue the 505(b)(2) regulatory pathway, a route that allows companies to rely on existing data to streamline approval processes. Not only this, the company also hopes SVN-002 will be eligible under the same reimbursement codes as Spravato, potentially saving significant time and cost. Now, here's the eyes-on-stalk moment. Spravato is already generating annual revenues of more than $1billion and analysts believe this figure could actually peak at $5billion. However, its addressable market is a couple of million Americans with severe depression. Contrast this with the estimated 22 million people in the States who struggle badly with alcohol. As they say in the States, you do the math(s). American investors have not been slow to cotton on. Companies listed across there paddling in similar, or adjacent, pools, the likes of Atai Life Sciences, MindMed, GH Research and Compass Pathways, have been in lift-off mode. Meanwhile, pharma giant Abbvie is reported in the US business press last week to be preparing a $1billion offer for a privately owned-US peer of Solvonis, a company called Gilgamesh Pharmaceuticals. In other words, real buzz around the sector in the States that has so far been absent here in the UK, which is also reflected in valuations stateside, which are orders of magnitude larger than Solvonis. Atai, for example, has programmes barely emerged from phase I and carries a market capitalisation of more than $800million. That reflects America's greater understanding of not just biotech, but the potential of this new emerging area of treatment. Value inflexion points for companies such as Solvonis tend to come at the end of clinical studies – phase II usually, but also phase III. This is when large pharma is sufficiently emboldened to invest in the expensive process of follow-on studies, and/or pouring tens of millions of dollars into gaining regulatory sign-off. A licensing agreement of this type not only provides third-party validation of the work to date, it comes with financial kickers such as upfront and milestone payments. We already know that Solvonis has drafted in Pharma Ventures, a specialist in partnership and alliances of the sort outlined above, to shop SNV-001. So, one can safely assume conversations are taking place. It will be interesting to track the role in negotiations played by Solvonis chair Dennis Purcell. He is also a director of IGI, which recently cut a $1.9 billion deal with AbbVie, with $700million of that upfront. Okay, this was in the oncology arena, but Purcell has first-hand experience of going toe-to-toe with big pharma. And this will be crucial when talks hit the nitty-gritty phase. 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