logo
Heckmondwike and Marsden gum problem targeted by £26k grant

Heckmondwike and Marsden gum problem targeted by £26k grant

BBC News19-06-2025
Efforts to tackle the problem of chewing gum stuck to pavements in two West Yorkshire towns have been boosted with the award of a £26,450 clean-up grant.The money from the Chewing Gum Task Force would be spent on a one-off deep clean in Heckmondwike and Marsden town centres, according to Kirklees Council.The task force was established by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs and is run by the Keep Britain Tidy charity, but is funded by chewing gum manufacturers. Last year, a total of 16,503 pieces of gum litter were removed from streets in Huddersfield and Dewsbury following a £25,500 investment from the task force.
Kirklees Council is one of 52 local authorities across the country which successfully applied for a grant this year to help efforts to clean chewing gum off pavements.
'Think twice'
Councillor Tyler Hawkins, cabinet member for highways and waste, said: "We are delighted to have been awarded further funding to help us tackle the problem of gum litter across our towns and villages in Kirklees."Removing chewing gum litter will get these areas looking their best and complement our ongoing programme of regeneration work within our town centres. "With this clean-up and new signage, we hope it will make potential litterbugs think twice and help keep our home tidy."According to Keep Britain Tidy, about 77% of England's streets and 99% of retail sites are stained with gum, while estimates have suggested the annual cost to UK councils of cleaning up chewing gum litter is about £7m.Allison Ogden-Newton, Keep Britain Tidy's chief executive, said: "People need to remember that disposing irresponsibly of their gum causes harm to our environment as it takes years to decompose naturally – and, ultimately, costs the public purse to clean it up."Figures from Behaviour Change – a not-for-profit social enterprise – have shown that in areas which benefited from the first and second year of Chewing Gum Task Force funding, gum littering dropped by up to 80% in the first two months, the Local Democracy Reporting Service said.Meanwhile, reductions were still being observed six months after targeted street cleansing and the installation of specially designed signage to encourage people to bin their gum.
Listen to highlights from West Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

A-level and GCSE results are being released. Here's what to expect
A-level and GCSE results are being released. Here's what to expect

The Independent

time7 minutes ago

  • The Independent

A-level and GCSE results are being released. Here's what to expect

Hundreds of thousands of pupils across England, Wales, and Northern Ireland are poised to discover their A-level and GCSE results over the coming weeks. The key dates for this summer's examination season have been confirmed. A-level and AS-level results will be released on 14 August. On the same day, pupils in England who have undertaken T-levels – qualifications designed to provide high-quality technical alternatives to A-levels – will also receive their outcomes. Thousands of pupils will also be receiving results for various vocational technical qualifications (VTQs) throughout the month. Results for Level 3 VTQs, such as BTecs, which are often taken alongside or instead of A-levels, are scheduled for release on or before 14 August. Many Level 2 VTQs are expected to have their results published on or before 21 August. Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson said that she expects a 'pretty straightforward year' for students as things have 'returned to normal' since the Covid-19 pandemic. In 2024, 27.8 per cent of UK A-level entries were awarded an A or A* grade, up from 27.2 per cent in 2023. It was the highest proportion of entries scoring top grades outside the pandemic-affected years of 2020-22. In 2019 – the last year that summer exams were taken before the pandemic – 25.4 per cent of entries were awarded A or A* grades. The pandemic led to an increase in top A-level and GCSE grades in 2020 and 2021, with results based on teacher assessments instead of exams. How does the situation differ in Northern Ireland, Wales and Scotland? In 2023, GCSEs and A-levels returned to pre-pandemic grading arrangements in England. In Wales and Northern Ireland, exam regulators returned to pre-pandemic grading last summer. Scotland has a different qualification system and students received their results on Tuesday last week. Figures released by the Scottish Qualifications Authority (SQA) showed that 78.4 per cent of those sitting National 5 exams passed with grades A to C – up from 77.2 per cent in 2024. For Highers, 75.9 per cent passed with the top bands, up from 74.9 per cent in 2024, and for Advanced Highers 76.7 per cent of students achieved A to C grades, up from 75.3 per cent in 2024. Will it be tougher to get university places? A record number of 18-year-olds are likely to be successful in securing their first choice of university this A-level results day even if they narrowly miss their grades, the head of Ucas has suggested. Jo Saxton, chief executive of the university admissions service, it was a 'good year to be a UK-domiciled 18-year-old' that wants to go to university. She has suggested that British universities are keen to recruit UK school and college leavers because there is more 'uncertainty' around the international market and which overseas students are going to turn up. Dr Saxton added that domestic undergraduates offered universities 'stability' for their 'financial planning'. Nearly 22,700 courses with vacancies for undergraduate students living in England were available on the Ucas clearing site as of Wednesday last week – eight days before results day, an analysis showed. A sample of 129 of the UK's largest higher education providers showed 17 of the 24 elite Russell Group universities had more than 3,600 courses with vacancies for English residents on clearing. What can students do if they do not get their first-choice university? Clearing is available to students who do not meet the conditions of their offer on A-level results day, as well as those who did not receive any offers. Students who have changed their mind about what or where they wish to study, and also those who have applied outside the normal application window, can also use the clearing process through Ucas. Applicants will be able to add a clearing choice from 1pm on results day. In England, if a student is unhappy with their grade they can ask their school or college to request that the exam board review the marking. If there are still concerns, the student can ask their school or college to appeal against the result. Exam aids have been given to GCSE pupils in England in mathematics, physics and combined science since 2022 to limit the impact of Covid-19 on learning. In October 2024, the Education Secretary asked England's exams regulator Ofqual to continue providing formulae and equation sheets to GCSE pupils in these subjects in 2025, 2026 and 2027. Most pupils who took their GCSE exams this summer were in Year 6 when schools closed after the national lockdown in 2020.

Country diary 1925: A desperate search for the cattle
Country diary 1925: A desperate search for the cattle

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

Country diary 1925: A desperate search for the cattle

NEW FOREST: A disconcerting bill was posted on a barn last week. A case of foot-and-mouth disease, and all cattle within a radius of 15 miles from the infected spot to be brought in forthwith. We are just within the area. At once the search began to get the beasts in before they were impounded. And what a search! You would think it was a case of looking for a needle in a bundle of hay. It did mean hours of tramping by day and night, with the moon hidden and a heavy rain falling. For the cattle have been out a long time now, and though each man knows which way he drove his own out weeks ago they may have shifted their ground some half a dozen miles or more. Each beast is duly marked, and a register kept by the agistor, as he is called. But the forester needs no mark. He can pick out his own at sight, and often his neighbours' too, from a congregation of beasts which are still a good way off. Indeed one man with only a heifer or two may have a harder task than one with 10 or 20. A group catches the eye, but you may pass your heifer with only a bush between and see no sign. They are all in now, or almost all, and the Forest looks queer and empty without its groups of cattle. It will be a good day for beasts and owners when they are out of their cramped quarters and free of the forest again.

King Charles' testy encounter with an award-winning gardener who he 'summoned to Highgrove'
King Charles' testy encounter with an award-winning gardener who he 'summoned to Highgrove'

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

King Charles' testy encounter with an award-winning gardener who he 'summoned to Highgrove'

It is widely understood that Highgrove is Charles' pride and joy with the stately home becoming a sanctuary for the King and Queen. With his passion for nature, King Charles takes a particular interest in the award-winning garden which surrounds the estate. However, as the garden is so cherished by the King, his high standards have ruffled more than a few feathers among staff. Last month, reports emerged that low pay and staff shortages, coupled with the monarch's demanding attention to detail, had prompted an exodus of horticulturists employed to keep his Gloucestershire garden in good shape. Over the past three years, 11 of the 12-strong gardening team have quit, including the head gardener and his deputy. However, this is not the first time the tranquil green space has been at the centre of gardener-related drama. Writing in his book about Charles' life - titled Rebel King - author Tom Bower has recalled the time Sir Roy Strong had a testy encounter with Charles when he was invited to Highgrove. Bower claimed that the King 'summoned people to drive the two hours from London for even the briefest meeting' but it was one few refused. He wrote: 'Roy Strong was summoned to advise on the cultivation of hedges. He spent days with his own gardener perfecting his ideas.' 'At the end he submitted his employee's bill for £1,000 - and was never asked to return, or even thanked. Strong had personally inscribed a copy of his book on gardening to Charles, but it was left in a waiting room rather than included in the prince's library.' '"He's shocked by the sight of an invoice," Strong noted. "So he likes people who don't charge for their services".' Sir Roy was not the only gardening expert who Charles allegedly asked for unpaid advice and on other occasions unpaid labour. '"Grace and favour" took on a new meaning,' Bower wrote. 'To make up a floragim (a book of paintings of Highgrove's flowers), Charles recruited over 20 artists to paint two or three flowers each, for free. Similarly, he approached Jonathan Heale, a woodcut artist, for some of this work, which he expected to be donated as a gift.' 'One of the few artists known to have rebuffed similar demands was Lucian Freud. Would Freud swap one of his oils - which sold for millions of pounds - for one of Charles' watercolours? "I don't want one of your rotten paintings" Freud replied.' More recently, an investigation by the Sunday Times found that at one point in March 2022 half of the gardening team that were on the payroll were earning minimum wage, which is thought to have played a part in the exodus of staff. Charles' high interest in the upkeep of the garden is also thought to have played a part. The King, who is known to patrol the grounds with a pair of secateurs, regularly offers feedback on the garden, writing handwritten notes to staff in red ink, expressing delight or upset at the progress of individual plants or flowers. While some workers appreciate his interventions, others told the Sunday Times they found his feedback impolite and demoralising, it is claimed. In late 2023, one member of staff filed a grievance against management claiming the gardening team were under-resourced and struggling to fulfil the King's demands. The employee's complaint said some staff had developed physical injuries because they were overwhelmed with work and there was low morale among the team. 'There is little management of HMTK (His Majesty the King's) expectations and I know I would not be allowed to say we are understaffed,' the claim said. The gardener also alleged he was shouted at and given a dressing down by Constantine Innemee, the executive director of Highgrove and one of the King's most trusted advisers, when he suggested to Charles that he would need a specialist member of staff if he wanted to cultivate his magnolias in a specific way. The grievance led to an external investigation by the King's Foundation, the charitable organisation that now runs the garden. Although that inquiry found evidence of 'staff shortages' and suggested pay be reviewed if it continued to be 'an issue for recruitment and retention' of staff, the complaint about Mr Innemee's management style was not upheld. The garden at Highgrove has been King Charles' pet project for the past 45 years. In an interview with his friend, gardener and broadcaster Alan Titchmarsh, Charles previously explained that he was attracted to buy the property in 1980 because of its 'blank canvas' garden. 'I actually planned everything myself, I did the whole thing, I chose all the plants,' the King said. 'I love evening patrol at the weekend. As I potter about I notice things and weed or prune bits off. I'm sure most people come here and think I don't do anything. But I do.' Over the past four decades the gardens have flourished, from the early kitchen garden and arboretum to the Sundial Garden, which showcases the King's favourite delphiniums - as well as the Thyme Walk and the Islamic-inspired Carpet Garden. In 2009 Charles received the Victoria Medal of Honour from the Royal Horticultural Society, presented by the late Queen for his services to gardening.

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