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Devon and Somerset Fire and Rescue Service said no-one was injured.
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6 minutes ago
- BBC News
Expansion of Birstall school approved as pupil numbers grow
Proposals to expand a village primary school have been approved to meet growing pupil County Council has granted planning permission for two extensions to the Hallam Fields Primary School, in Long Meadow Way, in are currently about 200 children at the school, and the Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS) said it was estimated there would be a predicted deficit of 200 places by 2028 if nothing was the plans, the council will create classroom extensions on both the east and west sides of the current building. The new wings will enable the school to take two classes of new pupils each year, instead of the one a year it does currently, the LDRS residents on the nearby 900-home Hallam Fields housing estate raised concerns about traffic and parking if the school officers said those were "civil matters" rather than planning authority's highways team had ruled the impact of the development to be "not unacceptable" and potential impacts on the road network as "not severe".Some concerns were raised by officials that the development would be partially on green wedge they said this was outweighed by the benefits of the new school places, adding there were "no alternative sites" that could accommodate the scheme.


BBC News
6 minutes ago
- BBC News
Frome's Blue House almsehouse launches urgent repair fundraiser
A historic almshouse which has looked after elderly men and women since 1480 is looking to raise £500,000 for urgent Blue House in Frome is one of just two Grade I-listed buildings in the town. The almshouse offers reduced price accommodation to people aged over 55 who has connections to Frome and are unable to buy or rent privately. Chair of trustees Miriam Cheal said: "We have to replace the windows, do substantial repairs to some of the brick work, and replace the slate on the roof, and that has to be approved by listed building consent officers." Ms Cheal said the building provided an important social service, as some residents had come to them from homelessness."Once they're here, they just pay their weekly charge, which is pre-set, and for that they get heating, lighting, accommodation and water," she said. The current building, dating from 1728, was saved from demolition in the windows were replaced with aluminium frames in the 1970s, and because the building has listed frames, they have to be replaced with new aluminium frames rather than wooden last major donation the Blue House received was in 2014."We feel as trustees that we have a reason to want to keep this going as it is and providing what it has provided for many, many hundreds of years and continue to do so," Ms Cheal said.


BBC News
6 minutes ago
- BBC News
New Bootle bins will help deter seagulls, council says
New bins are being introduced for residents in part of Merseyside in a bid to help deter seagulls and help keep streets free from thousand households in Bootle will see changes to their bin collections with weekly sack collections stopped and the introduction of wheelie waste collections will change to alternate weekly collections with separate bins provided for recycling later this month, a letter to residents has member for Sefton Council's cleansing and street scene department Peter Harvey said the move "will help combat gulls scavenging from sacks and reduce the risk of rubbish blowing around – making Bootle's streets cleaner." "We hope that improvement in waste containment in the area will also discourage people from fly-tipping," Mr Harvey said from mid-August households in the Derby ward, Bootle, will see the changes which "align with our standard model across Sefton".However, some residents raised on a local Facebook page, Michael Brennan said not everyone wanted wheelie bins."A lot of people like the idea of gull-proof sacks, which are used by other coastal towns up and down the UK," he Cato added: "Our house has no front garden or space to put a wheelie bin."Kate Sullivan wrote: "I've seen houses with wheelie bins still dumping black bags outside. If you have more rubbish than a bin can hold, the seagull problem isn't solved."The council said residents would be kept fully informed. Listen to the best of BBC Radio Merseyside on Sounds and follow BBC Merseyside on Facebook, X, and Instagram. You can also send story ideas via Whatsapp to 0808 100 2230.