logo
Cambridgeshire MPs put forward alternative council proposal

Cambridgeshire MPs put forward alternative council proposal

BBC News10 hours ago
Cambridgeshire MPs have put forward alternative proposals for local government re-organisation, which they say would protect "what makes Peterborough great".Original plans put forward by the county's eight councils suggested there should be two new unitary authorities covering the whole county, with different options being considered.However, Labour MPs Andrew Pakes and Sam Carling said this was not in the best interests of Peterborough, and have made their own suggestion. They want a "Greater Peterborough" area, along with a "Greater Cambridge" and a "Mid Cambridgeshire" authority. The proposal will be considered by Peterborough City Council at a full council meeting on Wednesday.
The changes are happening because the government announced it wants all local councils to become unitaries. Currently, Cambridgeshire operates under a two-tier system, with a county council in charge of things like social care, education and local highways. Smaller district councils then look after planning, bin collections and social housing. Peterborough already operates as a unitary authority, with a population of about 220,000. The government has previously indicated it wants each authority to oversee at least 500,000 residents in future.However, with a large amount of growth in the area, some people think there could be an argument for authorities to be slightly smaller.Sam Carling, the MP for North West Cambridgeshire, said he believed the three-council model would be best for residents. "A Mid Cambridgeshire council would allow rural areas across East Cambridgeshire, Fenland and parts of Huntingdonshire to form an authority that can deliver effectively on residents' priorities, while a Greater Peterborough council encompassing the most high-growth areas of northern and western Cambridgeshire could better regulate and plan that growth."Peterborough MP Andrew Pakes said: "Putting Peterborough into a mega council would make it harder to attract investment and focus on the challenges we have as a city."He thinks a Greater Peterborough council "would allow a renewed focus on protecting what makes Peterborough great". He said it would also ensure there was "a local lens on areas in western Huntingdonshire", which would not be "lost or swallowed up into a super-council covering a huge geographical area".
Follow Peterborough news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Coalition outlines plans to disrupt JD Vance's Cotswolds holiday
Coalition outlines plans to disrupt JD Vance's Cotswolds holiday

The Independent

time23 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Coalition outlines plans to disrupt JD Vance's Cotswolds holiday

US Vice President JD Vance is expected to visit the Cotswolds next month with his family, shortly after Donald Trump completes a five-day tour of his golf courses in Scotland. The Stop Trump Coalition has announced plans to protest Vance's visit, stating he is 'every bit as unwelcome' in the UK as President Donald Trump. The coalition, which includes trade unions and anti-Trump demonstrators, is already organising protests against Mr Trump's visit in Aberdeen, Edinburgh, London, and Windsor. A spokesperson for the Stop Trump Coalition indicated that Mr Vance will encounter 'resistance waiting', even in the Cotswolds. Mr Vance's previous holiday in Vermont was disrupted by pro-Ukraine protesters in March, reportedly forcing his family to move to an undisclosed location.

Woman, 74, tells of pain and fear after arrest at Liverpool pro-Palestine rally
Woman, 74, tells of pain and fear after arrest at Liverpool pro-Palestine rally

The Guardian

time24 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Woman, 74, tells of pain and fear after arrest at Liverpool pro-Palestine rally

A 74-year-old woman has said she was left 'shaken and frightened' after being arrested at a pro-Palestine rally under terrorism laws in what she called an attempt to restrict freedom of speech. Audrey White, from Liverpool, was among more than 100 people detained across the UK at the weekend on suspicion of supporting the recently-proscribed group Palestine Action. White had been holding up a sign before she was surrounded by officers in Liverpool city centre on Sunday. Video shows four police officers detaining the veteran campaigner on the ground to chants of 'shame on you' and 'let her go'. One protester shouts: 'Britain is a fascist state.' The officers then drag White across the pavement before handcuffing her as she lies prone on the ground. Footage then shows her being carried to a police van where she was taken to a police station for nearly eight hours. 'I'm very sore, very shaken, very emotional and I'm frightened to be honest,' White told the Guardian on Monday. Demonstrations were held in Liverpool, London, Manchester, Edinburgh, Bristol and Truro over the weekend as part of a campaign coordinated by Defend Our Juries. It has been a criminal offence to be a member of, or show support for Palestine Action since 5 July after the protest group was proscribed under the Terrorism Act despite opposition from UN experts and civil liberties groups. White, who has a heart condition and low bone density, which means she is at risk of fractures, said it was the first time she had been arrested in more than half a century of campaigning against conflicts. 'It's designed to stop human rights and to stop protest and to stop free speech,' she said. 'There's two things to be afraid of in this country and one is that we lose everything we are proud of - the ability to speak out - and the other is that we would ever be involved in a genocide. 'We look at these visions of children losing their limbs and being blown to bits. We've got to say: how can we stop our country's involvement in this genocide? Everyone has a responsibility to stop horrors like this all throughout history.' The Trades Union Congress has previously described White as one the pioneering activists of the last 150 years after her decades-long campaign to change sexual harassment laws in Britain. Glenda Jackson played White in a film about her crusade in 1988. Merseyside police released White and three other protesters on bail shortly before midnight on Sunday. She said one of her bail conditions effectively leaves her 'trapped in the house' because it restricts her from entering Liverpool city centre, where she lives. White, who is the secretary of the Merseyside Pensioners Association and cares for her husband who has cancer, said a police officer had told her she was allowed to attend medical appointments but that she could be arrested if she visited a shop afterwards. 'I'm just an ordinary woman with a family and problems and health issues and love a holiday. I just feel very strongly that these laws are being used against organisations and individuals now,' she said. 'They're against civil liberties, they're restricting the freedom of speech we were all proud of.' White said she was 'in pain and feel terrible' after being dragged into a police van. 'I'm just sore all over. I'm swollen in some places. One of the worst things is my head, it feels like it's blowing off me,' she said. The former shop worker is banned as part of her bail conditions from attending another pro-Palestine march but encouraged others to 'stand in solidarity with people who oppose genocide'. 'I only want peaceful demonstration,' she said. 'There was no need to do that to me. There was no need to arrest any of us. I don't believe they are entitled to arrest people for holding a piece of paper. 'I hope a lot of people saw what happened to me and realise they've got to draw the line somewhere ... People who are peaceful should not be labelled as terrorists, me included.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store