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Howden relief road construction to start in July
Howden relief road construction to start in July

BBC News

time23-06-2025

  • Automotive
  • BBC News

Howden relief road construction to start in July

Work to build a new £45m relief road in Howden is due to start at the beginning of July, a council has route would connect the A614 Thorpe Road with Station Road and was expected to take two years to Riding of Yorkshire Council said the scheme was "designed to reduce congestion by diverting heavy traffic away from the town centre, reducing accidents, lowering carbon emissions and improving travel times".Councillor Gary McMaster, the authority's cabinet member for planning, housing and infrastructure, said: "This initiative is part of wider aspirations to enhance infrastructure in Yorkshire and the Humber, ensuring smoother transportation and grow the economy." Sheffield-based firm Aureos Highways was awarded a contract for the project, which also included building four roundabouts for the authority said the work would begin on Thorpe Road and would include the installation of a new pump station for surface water to the south of the site to improve drainage. "While the vast majority of the work will be carried out off road, there will be times of traffic management on Thorpe Road and Station Road, although disruption will be kept to a minimum," a council spokesperson McMaster said the new link road would "significantly improve connectivity and ease congestion, giving HGV traffic a different route to avoid the town centre, for the benefit of both motorists, residents and businesses in Howden".Louise Pavitt, managing director of Aureos Highways, said: "We are delighted to be supporting East Riding of Yorkshire Council on the Howden Relief Road scheme."This project is a critical step towards economic development in the region and will provide much needed highways improvements, opening up new routes and easing scheme is funded by local housing developers and the authority via government grants totalling £ for the relief road was approved by the authority's planning committee in June 2023 as part of proposals to build 1,900 homes, a school and a pub. Listen to highlights from Hull and East Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, watch the latest episode of Look North or tell us about a story you think we should be covering here.

From WWII to Diablo Canyon junk reef: Readers add SLO County history insight
From WWII to Diablo Canyon junk reef: Readers add SLO County history insight

Yahoo

time17-05-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

From WWII to Diablo Canyon junk reef: Readers add SLO County history insight

Local readers have recently emailed to help answer questions posed by Photos From the Vault over the last few weeks. The responses show a fascinating way to see the historical stepping stones to where we all stand today. Also in this column is an update on a threatened historical gem, the California Digital Newspaper Collection. Thanks to our readers, here are their insights: In response to a recent Vault, Gary McMaster, chairman and curator of the Camp Roberts Historical Museum, took the time to look through training books from the World War II era. The camp was one of the largest military training facilities in the United States. It was reactivated during the Korean War as well. McMaster found images of 'Little Berlin' and a simulated Japanese village used to train combat troops during the war. During World War II, the United States had to fight on two fronts, both Europe and the Pacific. In the latter phases of the war in the Pacific Theater, invasion of the home islands of Japan was being planned for and the bloody island-hopping battles toward Japan gave military planners pause. Urban combat is recognized as being especially difficult. Specialized training is required to minimize losses and effectively achieve objectives. The museum is a fascinating visit, open Thursdays and Saturdays excluding some national holidays. Admission is free and group tours are available via reservation. In answer to the question about the proposal to create an artificial reef near Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power Plant, a Tribune reader wrote in with a link to a nautical chart. Nautical Charts Online shows a rectangular obstruction southeast of the plant at 9 fathoms or about 54 feet below ocean level. So it appears that some time after 1984, the proposal became a reality just outside the security zone and in the neighborhood of other existing natural obstructions. Lastly, a troubling update to the budget shortfall for the California Digital Newspaper Collection. Regular readers of this column know that the CDNC is the gold standard for researching names and events throughout California from 1846 to more recent times. As much as 25% of the site's content is only available on the CDNC. If you haven't already, I challenge you to take a moment to search the name of a grandparent or a California event from history that has always made you curious. To a history fan like me it is better than a theme park or a movie. It documents the real time experiences of history at the time it was being made. At times it is a revelation to see how some things have changed but that often human motivations connect us through time. It is a fascinating and free encyclopedia of California events and personalities. As Director Brian Geiger said in a recent email, 'unfortunately, the news is worse than I expected.' The deleted funding line for the budget was for this year, not next, and now the organization has a scant three months to collect donations to save public access to the archive. Otherwise as Geiger writes, 'We will almost certainly have to cease operations.' They have a donation page with the goal of raising $300,000 by June 30.

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