logo
Learn to Swim lessons in Lanarkshire teaching kids how to be safer in and around water

Learn to Swim lessons in Lanarkshire teaching kids how to be safer in and around water

Daily Recorda day ago

Swimmers are set to learn the crucial Water Safety Code as well as basic floating techniques which can make a massive difference when someone feels in danger in the water and that could help save their lives or someone else's.
Learn to Swim lessons in Lanarkshire are teaching children how to be safer in and around water during this month to mark Drowning Prevention Week as part of a Scotland-wide campaign.
From Shetland to the Borders, swimming pools are adapting and transforming their regular swimming lessons into workshops which will focus specifically on water safety knowledge and skills.

Swimmers are set to learn the crucial Water Safety Code as well as basic floating techniques which can make a massive difference when someone feels in danger in the water and that could help save their lives or someone else's.

The special lessons come as latest figures reveal the ongoing risks around Scotland's waters, the National Water Safety Forum reported that tragically in 2024 there were 33 accidental drownings in Scotland.
Drowning prevention is one of the main objectives for the Learn to Swim National Framework and in June each year the programme does a major water safety push to coincide with Drowning Prevention Week, where youngsters take part in a bespoke water safety swim lesson delivered by the leisure trusts and aquatic providers.
John Lunn, CEO of Scottish Swimming, said: 'Every June, our Learn to Swim classes shift focus to concentrate on water safety.
'It's not just about being a strong swimmer- understanding how to recognise hazards, help others in distress and make smart decisions around water is equally important.'
Peter Farrer, Chief Operating Officer at Scottish Water, added: ''We cannot over-emphasise the importance of water safety all year round, but it's particularly relevant as we approach summer when people are often more likely to be around water.

'These water safety lessons provide an opportunity to equip people with the vital knowledge and skills to help them feel safer in, on and around water, and help their parents and family network feel confident and comfortable in their swimming abilities.'
The Learn to Swim National Framework is delivered by 38 leisure trusts and aquatic providers in 167 pools from Shetland to the Borders with the vision of creating 'Generation Swim', a generation of children who are confident, safer and competent swimmers, who will also get to experience the wider health and social benefits that swimming can offer.
The programme currently reaches around 82,000 children across Scotland who will have access to a new interactive water safety quiz that has been developed to improve water safety knowledge this year.
Drowning Prevention Week, organised by the Royal Life Saving Society (RLSS), stands as one of the largest water safety campaigns in the UK and Ireland.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Country diary: Sometimes the shy visitors are the most welcome
Country diary: Sometimes the shy visitors are the most welcome

The Guardian

time44 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Country diary: Sometimes the shy visitors are the most welcome

As I walk beside a quiet lochan at the hem of the Cairngorms, a goldeneye family speeds into view. The mother is sleek, with russet crown and yellow eye, while her chicks are tousled fluffballs, but matching her in pace and the comical thrusting of the head. With her, they leap into a dive. Moments later, all re-emerge in a carpet of waterlilies, losing any sense of urgency as they meander through the pads. Overhead, gulls wheel and tip, corvids feather the air and a grey heron makes a flappy circuit. Below, four tufted ducks turn in languorous circles, dipping and shaking their glossy heads to full effect in the sunshine. In contrast, sand martins perform aerial circus stunts all across the loch, careening about in their crazy, dippy flight, glancing off the water and catapulting into the air. Round to the right, something has irked the greylag geese, and the sound of ruffled feathers grows into wingbeats and an outraged honking as they rise and circle and land again. A flotilla launches into the water, fuzzy brown goslings in tow, everybody still a-cluck about something. Meanwhile, a dumpy little bird has been cutting a silver path across the water on the far side, but diving every time I train the binoculars on it and resurfacing far away. Gradually, it paddles closer and I catch enough glimpses to discover that it is a little grebe. The smallest and least flashy of the European grebes, also called a dabchick, is fairly common across the UK's inland waters, but no less charming. Its distinctive summer markers are the coppery cheeks and throat, the pale gape at the bill and the 'powder puff' rear feathers. Both parents build a raft nest, incubate the eggs and feed the chicks, sometimes carrying them on their backs. It is generally shy and spends more time in long dives than flying. Today, though, in an inexplicable change of character, it suddenly lifts its skirts and tears across the lily pads as if running for its life. There is no apparent cause. It plumps down again on the other side, shakes its tail feathers and spirits underwater. The lochan ripples and resettles. All is well. Under the Changing Skies: The Best of the Guardian's Country Diary, 2018-2024 is published by Guardian Faber; order at and get a 15% discount

Disabled veterans face eviction over charity cash troubles
Disabled veterans face eviction over charity cash troubles

BBC News

time7 hours ago

  • BBC News

Disabled veterans face eviction over charity cash troubles

An estate for disabled veterans is facing demolition after its charity landlord revealed plans to sell the land to estate in West Lothian has been home to tenants of Sight Scotland Veterans – formerly Scottish War Blinded – for the charity has now told residents to find new homes within a year – with 27 of them facing life on the housing comes after Sight Scotland Veterans faced losses of more than £18m over the last four years. The charity said it was working with residents and no one was facing immediate eviction. 'Every man for themselves' Linburn Park sits on the former Linburn estate, which also houses a military museum, a veterans centre and a community contains 23 homes – 10 of which have lain empty in recent decision affects a total of 13 residential properties on the site, including seven veteran tenants with vision impairment and six private also impacts three non-housing tenants - a military museum, a farmer and a garden Mackie, 71, has lived on the estate since 2015. He is partially sighted and has mobility showed BBC Scotland News a map of the proposed development site in said: "This lot is all going to go and when it does, it's because they're selling the land to a developer."We've heard 40 houses are going up, 50 houses, 400…"I asked at a meeting if [the charity] is going to give us help to find new houses. They said, 'Oh aye, we'll give you a letter that says you're out in 84 days.' That's it."He added: "It's every man for themselves. We'll have to go on the housing waiting list."There are currently 10,820 on West Lothian's list, including 1,260 live homelessness cases. Like the other residents, Mr Mackie was first made aware of the plans in a meeting on 3 June at the village community then received a letter from Sight Scotland read: "Unfortunately, it is no longer financially viable for our charity to run the estate as it is. Many of the houses are vacant, some are in disrepair and the estate is costing us more than we are earning from it."The central part of the Linburn Estate – excluding the Centre and Centenary Hall – was approved as a potential housing development site by West Lothian Council a number of years ago."Given our current financial situation, we now intend to sell the surrounding land to a housing developer and inform the council of our intentions as part of the Local Development Plan."The letter added that no deal had yet been made with a residents got in touch with Your Voice, Your BBC News. Two doors down from Mr Mackie, veteran Craig Kirkland has lived in Linburn Park with his wife Caroline for 18 53-year-old is a former infantryman with King's Own Scottish Borderers who is blind in one eye and suffers from post-traumatic stress moving there, he was the estate's groundsman and owns a parcel of land nearby and raises Kirklands said they believe homes in the estate have been left empty on continued: "It means we will need to find somewhere else. We have 12 months' notice, give or take a few months' leeway."They said if we had a private let, they'd help with the deposit. How can I go into a private let?"The couple sold their Lanarkshire home in the 2000s and signed a tenancy agreement with the believed they would stay in the community for the rest of their 52, added: "At my age, I'm not going to have a mortgage. We'd sold our house to be here."The tension here has been very harsh in the last few weeks." 'We will be homeless' Not all of the tenants are veterans. The housing was opened to private tenants due to a lack of demand from veterans with sight Fisher, 39, has cerebral palsy, learning difficulties and hearing was offered a tenancy at Linburn Park 15 years ago. His parents Kim and Paul Forbes sold their own home and moved to the area to be Keith's full-time Forbes said: "We came out here thinking it was for a lifetime, and this house would be Keith's forever."We thought we were going to here for the rest of our days. This news is devastating for all of us."She continued: "To get the three of us in a home together would be rather difficult."Keith would go into supported accommodation, which would mean he would leave the family home, and we would apply to get accommodation for over-65s."Other than that, there is no way we can go to anybody else. We will be homeless, which is very sad." Local MSP Angela Constance – who is also the Scottish government's justice secretary – met with residents to hear their concerns last told the BBC that she contacted Sight Scotland Veterans who "outlined at the top level the financial issues that they are wrestling with"."It is my job to represent my constituents and the veterans that are residents here in Linburn," she said."It has been deeply distressing. They have felt as if the rug has been pulled from under their feet."Constance said the site's history dated back to the end of the First World War. She added: "When people came to live in this community, they were told they had a house for life. That has been taken away from them."Sight Scotland Veterans – named Scottish War Blinded until 2017 – has the same board as sister charity Sight Scotland, previously known as Royal 1946, Royal Blind paid £14,000 for the estate. It was transferred to Sight Scotland Veterans eight years the decades, Linburn estate developed into a campus offering workshops, tuition and therapy for blind veterans. It also provided in recent years, both charities have faced financial strain – with the veterans' charity posting budget shortfalls between £4m and £6m each year since 2021. 'Veterans are living longer' Chief executive Craig Spalding said the number of supported veterans had increased from 1,500 to 5,500 in recent said: "Veterans are living longer, which is of course welcome, but it has resulted in more age-related sight loss and a greater need for support."Mr Spalding said income was limited and depended largely on fundraising and investment added that between 2020/21 and 2024/25 it supported services from its reserves, which have been reduced from £61.8m to £ Spalding added: "Running the Linburn Estate alone has generated a loss of almost £1m over this period."To secure our services beyond 2031, we now need to generate additional income through the sale of land, investment in income-generating assets, and increased fundraising efforts."Mr Spalding told the BBC the charity was working closely with each said: "We wish to make it clear that no one faces immediate eviction."We have started open and transparent discussions to outline our intention to sell the land for development. "Our priority is to engage constructively with all those affected and to work together to find solutions that are fair, respectful, and take everyone's circumstances into account."A West Lothian Council spokesperson said: "The council has not received a planning application or granted consent for the redevelopment of the veteran's village at Wilkieston."However, we are preparing a new Local Development Plan for West Lothian."Through the 'call for ideas' part of this process we have been made aware by Sight Scotland that they wish to dispose of this site for market and affordable homes."The spokesperson added the local authority was reviewing all of the proposals and would publish a proposed plan "in due course".

Dozens to be rehomed as Perth fire flat faces demolition
Dozens to be rehomed as Perth fire flat faces demolition

BBC News

time11 hours ago

  • BBC News

Dozens to be rehomed as Perth fire flat faces demolition

Dozens of residents will need to be rehomed in the aftermath of a fatal flat fire in officials told BBC Scotland News the entire building on the corner of Scott Street and South Street must be demolished as a result of the Eric Drysdale, deputy leader of Perth and Kinross Council, said 50 families of varying sizes were affected and significant disruption in the area would last for months. A man died and several others, including an eight-year-old girl, were injured in the fire, which broke out at about 01:50 on Saturday. Cllr Drysdale said the building suffered a heavy amount of structural said: "The whole building will have to come down, every bit of it. "It's a large building with four flats above and shops underneath. The whole of it is a goner, I'm afraid."It's essential the demolition takes place as safely as possible and that means disruption to traffic and businesses and residents for a prolonged period." Residents who had lived in the building will not be able to collect any possessions that survived the blaze others in surrounding properties face "being displaced for a prolonged period", Cllr Drysdale added: "That will involve them being rehoused as locally as possible. "Around 50 families will be rehomed, ranging from one to three or four people [in each family].Cllr Drysdale said the local authority would have to "step up" to support those affected, and asked any landlords with available properties to contact the council if they could around the area will likely be closed for Sunday Kieran Gibson and partner Ellen Fulton told BBC Scotland News that they lost nearly all their possessions in the fire, and were staying with family Gibson said he feared having to make the choice between jumping out the window and staying in the flat and risking being burnt to death as the flames took hold. The couple were rescued about 25 minutes after raising the alarm with emergency Drysdale said it was still too early to speculate on the cause of the fire.A temporary rest centre has been set up at the city's North Inch community from the Scottish Fire and Rescue Service worked through the night into Saturday morning to extinguish the firefighters, one of whom was struck by falling masonry, were given medical treatment.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store