logo
Borders council votes for nursery closures plans despite parent protest

Borders council votes for nursery closures plans despite parent protest

BBC News15-04-2025

A council has voted to press ahead with plans which could see a number of nurseries closed despite a protest from parents.The local authority in the Borders revealed proposals to shut six rural sites earlier this month due to low attendance levels.It prompted criticism from families with children at the nurseries - as well as from Slow Horses actor Jack Lowden. He went to Channelkirk Nursery in Oxtonwhich is under threat of being mothballed.Scottish Borders Council's executive committee voted by nine to seven to take forward its "meaningful consultation" which could pave the way for mothballing the facilities.
The council plans, which emerged earlier this month, said the sites across the region were operating at 50% capacity or below and should be mothballed.The local authority said the closest alternative provision was within an "acceptable distance" and promised consultation before any closures went ahead.That was criticised by parents over the short notice with which they had found out the proposals.Jack Lowden also said he hoped some alternative solution could be reached.A facility in Fountainhall shut this school year and it is proposed to remain mothballed.A further six - Channelkirk in Oxton, Cockburnspath, Ednam in Kelso, Walkerburn, Westruther and Yetholm - are being recommended to be mothballed due to falling numbers.
Channelkirk parent Paul Fulton said: "All of us are so upset and disheartened by the whole process."We feel that the decision made today is the wrong decision."He said an amendment - which would have dropped the closure plans and allowed longer consultation - would have been the "common sense" option."We just feel they need to take stock and come back next year with a properly thought-out policy," he said.Mr Fulton said he did not think the short consultation being proposed of a few weeks was long enough.However, he said they had not given up hope of keeping the sites open."We are going to continue the fight and continue to tell them exactly how we feel about it," he said."We hope that by the time it comes back to council the right decision is made."
Executive committee member Julie Pirone said they needed to understand all the factors affecting the 50 or so children involved and why parents had sent them to a particular nursery."Everybody must be clear that this council - and every other council up and down the land - is looking at the same thing," she said."We are strapped for cash."I do not like looking at cutting services when we have increased the council tax."She stressed that finances were not the only issue they needed to look at before reaching a final decision."We need to consider people's views and having a consultation is the right way to do that over the next few months," she said.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Will Labour's rail replacement service leave travellers stranded?
Will Labour's rail replacement service leave travellers stranded?

Spectator

time28-05-2025

  • Spectator

Will Labour's rail replacement service leave travellers stranded?

By spooky coincidence, on Saturday night I watched an old episode of Slow Horses in which a passenger died mysteriously on a replacement bus between High Wycombe and Oxford Parkway – and on Sunday I woke to reports that the first service of the new era of rail renationalisation, the 5.36 from Woking to Waterloo, had also featured a replacement bus. Nobody died, but it wasn't a good omen. Nor was it quite the 'turning point for the future of our railways' that Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander declared. South Western Railway's return to state hands this week was in fact the fifth major passenger franchise to go that way – four having already failed under the previous government. Nine more will transition as their contracts expire between now and 2028, by which time Labour's Great British Railways (GBR) will have seized control of the whole contraption, including tracks and stations. So this is a work in progress – which in theory should lead to economies of scale, co-ordinated timetables and simpler ticketing. In practice, it's also likely to be hobbled by incompatible IT, endless track and signal troubles, and workforce intransigence. But in fairness, all this reflects the fact that the Major government's 1996 blueprint for privatisation, which broke British Rail into 70 companies, was a Treasury-driven dog's breakfast that enriched undeserving players, bankrupted worthy ones and left commuters deeply disgruntled. On the other hand, GBR is also a nakedly leftist move to return to state ownership the only privatised industry in which (as its time-limited franchises expire) the transfer can happen without confiscation or compensation.

Gary Oldman repeatedly turned down Churchill role... then his wife intervened
Gary Oldman repeatedly turned down Churchill role... then his wife intervened

Telegraph

time29-04-2025

  • Telegraph

Gary Oldman repeatedly turned down Churchill role... then his wife intervened

Gary Oldman has revealed he turned down the role of Winston Churchill 'half a dozen times' before his wife intervened. The 67-year-old actor, who won an Oscar, Bafta and Golden Globe for his performance as the wartime prime minister in Darkest Hour, said he was partly convinced to accept the part by Alexandra Edenborough, his now former wife. The singer and actress, who was married to Oldman from 2008 until 2015, encouraged him to 'walk on the wire', he said. Speaking to Radio Times, the Slow Horses actor said portraying Churchill in the 2017 film, directed by Joe Wright, was his 'riskiest role' to date. He said: 'It worked out OK, but I'd turned it down half a dozen times. 'It was partly my wife [Edenborough] who said: 'Go out there and walk on the wire. It could be great, but even if you fall and it's no good, you've got to stand on the set and say 'We shall fight you on the beaches'.' And I thought, 'You've got a point there'.' The film ended with Oldman delivering Churchill's renowned 'We shall fight on the beaches' speech in the House of Commons in 1940 to rally the nation against the Nazis. The actor has previously said he first declined to play the former prime minister in part because of the 'physicality' of the role, which required him to wear a 6kg fat suit and silicon mask. Elsewhere in the interview, Oldman admitted he found playing historical figures more exciting than some of the fictional characters – and villains – he has become famed for portraying. 'I find the biographical stuff thrilling,' he said, adding: 'I love being a detective and researching. It makes it tactile. You can go in and touch the history, rather than it just being all imagination. I enjoy the process.' Oldman has received critical acclaim for his portrayal of other historical figures, including an Academy Award for his role as Herman J Mankiewicz, the American screenwriter, in the black-and-white biographical drama Mank. The veteran actor also revealed he had turned down roles that resulted in critical acclaim for others in the industry, saying: 'I won't mention which, but I've passed on things that have given people their careers. 'I passed on something someone won an Oscar for… But I might not have won the Oscar. It would have been a different film, you never know.' He also criticised Netflix for cancelling popular shows after a single season, something the streaming giant has previously come under fire for from fans. Asked if he was 'keen to continue' after four seasons of the Apple TV+ hit Slow Horses, Oldman said: 'Obviously, if they want to keep us on the air and we've got an audience. It's Apple writing the cheques.' He added: 'Speaking of disappointment, have you noticed that some of the streamers can really disappoint their audiences? Like Netflix will give you a season of something or other, and they just go, 'We're pulling it.' 'Apple will not do that. We're working on writing number six. Now, I don't know whether we'll eventually end up doing it, but we've filmed five and there's eight books altogether.'

Council to consider closing list of pools and libraries
Council to consider closing list of pools and libraries

STV News

time25-04-2025

  • STV News

Council to consider closing list of pools and libraries

Borders Council is considering closing several pools and libraries throughout the county to address 'significant financial and operational challenges.' At least five libraries throughout the Borders are slated for closure, along with four swimming pools, six community centres, multiple museums, and town and public halls. It's all part of a Borders Sporting and Cultural Estate Review, which is looking at the future of Live Borders, the charitable trust that runs facilities on the local authority's behalf. Councillors were presented with a range of proposals – including closures and selloffs – to consider during a full Scottish Borders council on Thursday. They were told that both the council and Live Borders are facing 'significant financial and operational challenges in maintaining their extensive sporting, leisure, and cultural estate'. 'Rising energy costs, ageing infrastructure, and declining participation levels necessitate a strategic transformation of leisure, cultural, and community assets,' the report said. 'This review sets out a long-term vision for a high-quality, modernised estate. The ambition is to create the right suite of facilities that are fit for the 21st century and beyond.' The independent report from Integratis Consulting was adamant that the current situation is 'financially unsustainable'. Live Borders required £2.5m of additional council funding in the last financial year – over and above the annual £4.8m management fee – to keep services and facilities operating. 'There is therefore a shared understanding, reflected in the independent consultant's report, that the status quo in terms of services, facilities and funding is not viable,' the council report said. That's why the council has been asked to consider a range of 'significant' proposals – including closures, selloffs, and consolidations. Among the facilities recommended for closure are Selkirk Swimming Pool, the Wilton Primary School swimming pool, the Queen's Leisure Centre and the Tri Fitness gym in Galashiels. The report also advised that Jedburgh's Laidlaw Pool should remain closed. Libraries in Earlston, Eyemouth, Coldstream, and Hawick are recommended to be shut down or consolidated with other services. Old Gala House, Abbey Row Centre in Kelso and Sir Walter Scott's Courtroom in Selkirk are also on the closure list while the bowling hall at Tweedbank and sports hall at the Gytes in Peebles are proposed to be turned into fitness gyms. If the proposals are accepted wholesale, the Mary Queen of Scots' Visitor Centre and Jedburgh Castle Jail and Museum could also introduce new visitor charges. The council acknowledged in the report that the proposals are 'significant', and that it will be 'critically important' to fully understand the impacts before decisions are taken. 'It is important to note that no decisions on the future provision of services or associated buildings are being made at this stage, with significant further work required from communities to consider all options available,' the report added. The council said it would take a 'staged approach' to considering any changes that are proposed. Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country

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