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Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Wolverhampton city centre buildings searched and evacuated as fire spreads
Firefighters searched and evacuated city centre buildings as an early-hours rubbish fire spread. Emergency services were called to Princes Square, Wolverhampton, at around 4.40am this morning (Monday, July 28). West Midlands Fire Service said the flames had spread to a ground floor outbuilding, while surrounding buildings were affected by the smoke. READ MORE: Great Bridge fire update as crews remain at scene almost 24-hours on A West Midlands Fire Service spokesperson said: "At around 4.40am on Monday, we responded to an incident on Princes Square, Wolverhampton. "Three fire engines responded, crewed by firefighters from Walsall, Bilston, and Wolverhampton fire stations. "This involved a rubbish fire that had spread to a ground floor outbuilding. "Surrounding buildings were affected by the smoke. "A total of six firefighters wearing breathing apparatus tackled the fire with hose reel jets. "Crews evacuated and searched neighbouring properties and shops due to smoke logging, ensuring there was no one trapped." The spokesperson told BirminghamLive the incident was "ongoing". As a result of the fire, Broad Street has been shut in both directions from A4150 Ring Road St Patricks to Princes Square as firefighters tackle the blaze. National Express West Midlands has warned passengers of "service disruption", with services diverted via Lichfield Street and Fryer Street.


New York Times
2 hours ago
- New York Times
Thinking Is Becoming a Luxury Good
When I was a kid in the 1980s, my parents sent me to a Waldorf school in England. At the time, the school discouraged parents from allowing their kids to watch too much TV, instead telling them to emphasize reading, hands-on learning and outdoor play. I chafed at the stricture then. But perhaps they were on to something: Today I don't watch much TV and I still read a lot. Since my school days, however, a far more insidious and enticing form of tech has taken hold: the internet, especially via smartphones. These days I know I have to put my phone in a drawer or in another room if I need to concentrate for more than a few minutes. Since so-called intelligence tests were invented around a century ago, until recently, international I.Q. scores climbed steadily in a phenomenon known as the Flynn effect. But there is evidence that our ability to apply that brain power is decreasing. According to a recent report, adult literacy scores leveled off and began to decline across a majority of O.E.C.D. countries in the past decade, with some of the sharpest declines visible among the poorest. Kids also show declining literacy. Writing in the Financial Times, John Burn-Murdoch links this to the rise of a post-literate culture in which we consume most of our media through smartphones, eschewing dense text in favor of images and short-form video. Other research has associated smartphone use with A.D.H.D. symptoms in adolescents, and a quarter of surveyed American adults now suspect they may have the condition. School and college teachers assign fewer full books to their students, in part because they are unable to complete them. Nearly half of Americans read zero books in 2023. The idea that technology is altering our capacity not just to concentrate but also to read and to reason is catching on. The conversation no one is ready for, though, is how this may be creating yet another form of inequality. Think of this by comparison with patterns of junk food consumption: As ultraprocessed snacks have grown more available and inventively addictive, developed societies have seen a gulf emerge between those with the social and economic resources to sustain a healthy lifestyle and those more vulnerable to the obesogenic food culture. This bifurcation is strongly class-inflected: Across the developed West, obesity has become strongly correlated with poverty. I fear that so, too, will be the tide of post-literacy. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.
Yahoo
4 hours ago
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'Living pillars' to be added to city lamp-posts
A number of lamp-posts in Derby are to have vertical planters installed to help create a "greener" city centre. The planters, described as "living pillars", will be attached to 15 existing lamp-posts and signage posts. Each of the pillars is solar-powered, able to collect rain water - making them self-sufficient - and will be planted with pollinator-friendly plants and flowers, Derby City Council said. Work to install the pillars is currently under way and will be completed later this summer. Carmel Swan, the authority's cabinet member for sustainability, said: "Living pillars will be a brilliant addition to the work we've been doing over the past few months to bring more life into our city centre. "We're serious about our commitment to creating a greener, healthier city that supports our residents, and the installation of these pillars is another step towards achieving this." A number of bee-friendly bus stops and "pocket parks" were introduced across the city in 2024. The pillars have been designed by Scotscape, an urban landscaping company that focuses on improving biodiversity in cities, and are funded by Bauer Media Outdoor's Community Innovation Fund. According to the council, the pillars will also help to guide people to "key destinations and attractions" in Derby. Follow BBC Derby on Facebook, on X, or on Instagram. Send your story ideas to eastmidsnews@ or via WhatsApp on 0808 100 2210. More on this story 'Pocket parks' to appear at seven city locations 'Bee-friendly' bus stops being installed in city Related internet links Derby City Council Scotscape