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Sioned Williams: Who is the Plaid cabinet minister in Reform UK’s firing line?

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Wales Online

Wales’ new Deputy First Minister is responsible for many of the policy areas that Nigel Farage’s party has attacked in the early days of the new Plaid government

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It is still only a matter of weeks since the ballot boxes were tipped onto tables at leisure centres and venues across Wales and Plaid Cymru knew the threshold it had set itself had been crossed to form a minority government led by Rhun ap Iorwerth.

His second in command is Sioned Williams. The 54-year-old is a former BBC journalist who previously worked for the party in communications. In both of those roles she crossed paths with her party’s now-leader but the pair go further back than that having met when she was 17 at the Cwrs ddrama Urdd.

“I’ve known him as long as my husband,” she laughs, as we meet in the Senedd. Yet she says she never expected he would appoint her as Deputy First Minister.

“Our paths have crossed many times and we’ve known each other a long time so we’ve got a very good relationship and it was the honour of my life to be asked and I’m absolutely delighted to be able to support him,” she says.

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Her chance to get to take that role came as a result of a historic win for the party she has been a member of since she was a student.

Plaid Cymru won 43 of the available 96 seats.

“There was a long preparation period for us running up to this election,” she says.

“We were working extremely hard on policy development knowing that it was going to be a four-year term, knowing that finances were going to be constrained [and] we weren’t going to able to do everything that we’ve been talking about for the last 100 years so getting that really tight focus on what we thought really mattered what was important,” she says.

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“We also knew that this was going to be an election like no other for all kinds of reasons so we fought the campaign of our lives.”

The result was, she admits, at the “top end” of the party’s expectations and she was personally thrilled it would not only mean they had representation all across Wales but there was a good gap between them and the second-placed party, and official opposition, Reform UK.

Reform UK has dominated the early days of the Senedd. An exchange between one of their new members, Joe Martin, with the First Minister about the Nation of Sanctuary followed by their choice of cutting all international spending as topic for an opposition day debate led to a walkout of politicians from Plaid, the Greens, and Labour.

Equality, community cohesion, and Wales in Africa are all things that fall under her brief and she is already hearing concerns about the topics and tone being used in this seventh Senedd. Is she surprised?

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“I’m not surprised that Reform are latching onto things that they know will be inflammatory, things which I think that they’re misrepresenting, policies they’re misrepresenting, expenditure that they are misrepresenting, and missing the wider point of the effect of some of the rhetoric,” she says.

Aside from those two issues Reform UK did scrutinise the new government’s flagship childcare bill, which is “absolutely their job as opposition”, although she says “it did feel rather strange that they’d pick that when they hadn’t even mentioned childcare in their manifesto”.

There is, she says, “much that needs to be done” to help people in their everyday lives. “To be choosing those issues for debate I would say is rather missing the point of an effective opposition,” she says – but adds the party will stick to its own values.

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“The decisions we make, the policies that we’ll enact, will show those values and those are the values that have been supported by the majority of people in Wales who elected us as their government.

“That’s how we will demonstrate where we sit on those issues. I understand, having said that, the strength of feeling [that led to the walkout].

“It is shocking to many members, especially perhaps newer members, but to all of us the level and the language and the rhetoric that has been used.

“I hope that the Llywydd will be able to make sure that we don’t see a continuation of the type of language.

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“I personally was accused of something which is completely untrue, my position completely misrepresented. This has real-life impact obviously for us as politicians, especially as female politicians online, but also more broadly about people who are minoritised, who are marginalised, and who are impacted. Their lives and their safety is impacted by this type of rhetoric.

“As the First Minister said we are all about uniting our communities, strengthening our communities, celebrating the diversity in our communities – that’s the Wales we want to see. So we will demonstrate that through our actions but also, yes, I think we have to make sure that we don’t see a type of rhetoric allowed to become normalised in our national parliament.”

The things she wants to talk about are the things that drive her to be a politician. In the last Senedd regular viewers would regularly see her passionate contributions to debates about children and poverty and holding onto the brief she had when she was in opposition was non-negotiable.

“This is really the reason I’m in politics,” she says.

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Elected for the first time aged 49 she had been a member of Plaid Cymru since she was a student. Her political journey came via her community council before being chair of her local Cylch Meithrin, then chair of school governors, and campaigning on local issues.

“I wasn’t really active in the party until Leanne Wood became leader 14 years ago because I saw a passion in her and coming from the South Wales Valleys as I do that’s where my politics comes from,” she said.

Both her grandparents were miners while one grandmother died at 50 from asthma, likely from the conditions she lived in, and the other was an uncertified teacher.

She and her sister were the first in their family to go to university.

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“So I understand the impact that poverty can have in and just closing off those opportunities. That’s where my politics comes from so this portfolio is really why I’m here. Without these issues to fight on I don’t know if I would be here in elected politics.

“It’s a huge honour and that’s why I am absolutely determined to achieve what I can for those people in Wales who, through no fault of their own, don’t have the same opportunities as everybody else,” she says.

Since the election there have been murmurings that Plaid was backing down on its flagship policy and then there was a very public row after an attempt to force them to release their costings backfired in the Senedd.

So I ask her to spell out what is the government’s position on childcare. By the end of this four-year term, in 2030, what is her aim? “I want 20 hours for every child offended from the age of nine months to four years,” she states simply.

“I am absolutely thrilled to be talking about childcare.

“I have been wanting to talk about childcare – as a feminist, as a female politician, as someone who believes in social justice and equality and also believes that the children are the future of our nation and we need to be supporting them and condemning them to high levels of child poverty in Wales – for years and years and years.

“We understand that this is an intervention that is fully in the power of the Welsh Government to make.

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“It more than pays for itself. It is a complex policy because of the system we’ve inherited, which committee report after committee report, anti-poverty organisations, equality organisations have demonstrated in report after report, isn’t currently working for children and families in Wales.

“What I want to do, and we have to do this in a phased way because it’s so complex, is make sure that we have a uniform, universal offer funded for all families between nine months and four years,” she says.

She would have said that before the election, I put it to her, so now she is in office and has spoken to officials, has seen the books, is it still realistic? “It is realistic,” she says, pointing to a recent announcement about extending childcare. But surely that was that something that would have happened anyway?

“This was a programme that was initiated, first of all, under the cooperation agreement [with the last Labour government] because we put that first and foremost as one of our policies, along with free school meals.

“It was initiated in the last government. It wasn’t completed. It didn’t have adequate focus or funding. So what we saw [is] it wasn’t achieved so the first step that we wanted to do was make sure that that was achieved because the local authorities already have plans in place for that. They just haven’t been given the direction or funding that they needed in order to be able to complete it,” she says.

She references one of the key questions, aside from finding the money, which is finding a workforce.

“This is one of the work streams that we have obviously. We absolutely know that the workforce are key to this expansion,” she says.

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“But there’s also other things that we can do. We know that at the moment people have to move settings, for instance, in order to be able to access their entitlement under the two years so what we want to do is look at the whole system. I’m not just talking about adding hours here and there – I want to transform this system so it is one system and that it is in the best interest of the children and families who need to access that system.”

“I couldn’t just announce funding and say: ‘There will be more hours’. We absolutely recognise that. It is about working in partnership with local authorities. We’ve got a skills audit happening.

“My colleague Cefin Campbell is looking at post-16 education making sure that we are preparing the pipeline. But we also know that it is about giving assurance to providers and to local authorities – all the partners that are key and fundamental in this, the education sector – bringing people in who currently their qualifications aren’t recognised for instance,” she says. For our free daily briefing on the biggest issues facing the nation, sign up to the Wales Matters newsletter here

She adds there is nothing she has learnt since getting into office that makes her think she will deliver a policy different to what was spelled out in the manifesto.

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The new government has been criticised for ordering data, reports, and audits. “I think it’s about doing things sustainably and responsibly and there is a lot of data gaps.

“We’ve got a certain focus on our key priority areas as a party and in order to make progress on those we need to have an absolutely comprehensive view of what we’re dealing with.

“We need to work to better understand what some of those data gaps are,” she says.

“We have made it very clear we want to work on the basis of evidence. We also want to work transparently and we need to work responsibility, ground all our policies in the reality that is in front of us, not make empty promises”.

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The childcare policy will, she says, make a difference. “This can help all children get the best start in life and get the best start towards their education journey.

“We know that’s not a level playing field. It can also help families who are currently in poverty to be able to increase their income, that’s economic inequality, and then we know of course gender inequality.

“This mainly impacts women and I’ve had experience of this myself. I was earning more than my husband when we had children. I didn’t catch up until I was 49 and I had my first when I was 30. So we know that this impacts women mainly and I’m really clear about the effect that it can have on our society broadly and especially obviously our children, the difference that this policy can make.”

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She has already spoken in the Senedd chamber about Cynnal, a Welsh child payment, providing £10 a week for children aged from birth to six in households claiming universal credit. “Evidence has shown that this is one of the key interventions that can be made.

“Scotland has shown the way on this – it’s undeniable evidence. So we want to show the difference that a policy like this can make. Because of the fact that we don’t have the same powers as Scotland currently over the benefits system and welfare payments we have to do this as a pilot but I think that we can demonstrate the impact this can have and it’s about reaching those children who are in the deepest poverty,” she says.

She hopes it will help 15,000 children across different backgrounds and areas of Wales. For some families it will mean being able to go to a cinema or theatre, to have swimming lessons, to be able to say yes instead of no to a birthday party because you can’t afford to buy a present.

“Those everyday childhood experiences that every child should have this hopefully could just make an impact around that and we know it’s those direct cash payments that make the difference,” she says.

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HMRC personal allowance for pensioners debated in parliament

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HMRC personal allowance for pensioners debated in parliament

More than 120,000 people signed a Parliamentary petition calling for the personal allowance for state pensioners to rise to £25,140, forcing ministers to respond in Westminster Hall.

Campaigners argue that the annual increases to the state pension under the triple lock are being undermined because the HMRC personal allowance has remained frozen, dragging more people into paying income tax despite relying on modest retirement incomes.

Opening the debate, prompted by the petition, Conservative MP John Lamont said increasing numbers of pensioners were being caught by frozen tax thresholds.

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He highlighted the case of petitioner Tim Mason, who said he receives a small Royal Mail pension alongside his state pension and believes many retirees are now paying tax on pensions they spent decades saving for.

Lamont told MPs that many pensioners were receiving unexpected tax demands from HMRC as the state pension continues to rise while the personal allowance remains unchanged.

He said: “The triple lock has increased the state pension year on year, while personal tax allowances have remained frozen.”

He added that many pensioners were living on limited incomes and found unexpected tax bills both “distressing and deeply worrying”.

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Why the HMRC personal allowance is becoming a bigger issue

The HMRC personal allowance currently stands at £12,570.

Meanwhile, the full new state pension has risen to around £12,547.60 a year, leaving a gap of just over £20 before retirees begin paying income tax if they receive any additional pension income.

That means even relatively small workplace or private pensions can push retirees above the tax-free threshold.

During the debate, Conservative MP Alison Griffiths said many pensioners feel frustrated because they see their pension increase each year only for more of it to be taxed.

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She said: “They are asking a simple question: why are more and more pensioners being drawn into paying tax?”

She argued that the issue was not that pensioners had become wealthier, but that frozen tax thresholds meant “the tax system reaches further into people’s incomes each year.”

Calls for an HMRC personal allowance increase

The petition asks ministers to introduce a separate, higher personal allowance for state pensioners.

Supporters argue this would ensure retirees are not paying tax on income that many see as intended to provide a basic standard of living in retirement.

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During the debate, Conservative MPs pointed to the party’s previous proposal for a “Triple Lock Plus”, which would have increased the tax-free allowance alongside rises in the state pension.

Liberal Democrat MP Charlie Maynard also criticised the continued freeze in tax thresholds.

He told Parliament: “Raising tax thresholds is the best and fairest way to cut taxes.”

He warned that hundreds of thousands more people have been pulled into paying income tax because thresholds have remained frozen.

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Government rejects higher HMRC personal allowance

Pensions Minister Torsten Bell acknowledged the strength of feeling behind the petition but ruled out introducing a higher tax-free allowance for pensioners.

He said no political party was proposing to double the personal allowance because it would cost the Treasury billions of pounds each year.

Bell told MPs: “The reality is that no political party will deliver a doubling of the personal allowance for pensioners.”

Instead, he said the Government’s priorities remained protecting the state pension through the triple lock and reducing NHS waiting lists.

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However, he confirmed that ministers still plan to stop pensioners with only small amounts of tax to pay having to deal with HMRC’s simple assessment process from 2027, with legislation expected in the next Finance Bill.


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Why pensioners are worried

Although the state pension continues to rise each year under the triple lock, frozen tax thresholds mean more retirees are expected to become taxpayers over time.

Many campaigners argue that without an increase in the HMRC personal allowance, future state pension rises will increasingly be offset by income tax, reducing the value of annual increases.

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While ministers rejected the petition’s proposal, the Westminster Hall debate demonstrates growing political pressure over whether the HMRC personal allowance should rise as more pensioners begin paying tax on their retirement income.

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Bolton business left without bin collection for nearly a month

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Bolton business left without bin collection for nearly a month

John, 41, who works at Nailtastic Beauty on Bury Road, says the council has failed to resume its routine weekly collections and believes his shop has been “forgotten”.

The issue was first highlighted after John said his commercial blue bin had only been emptied once in more than a month, prompting The Bolton News to contact Bolton Council.

John has now revealed that, apart from the one-off collection on June 3, no further routine collections have taken place.

He said: “Usually the collection is every Friday morning, and we put our shop bin out on Thursday night ready for the next day.

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“We thought it was back to normal after the follow-up, but the council did not come on Friday, June 12.

“Since the special one-off pickup last time, they haven’t come back as part of the routine collection. It’s been nearly a month.

“I am still having the issue. It seems like they forgot about my shop and are not coming to pick it up.”

Nailtastic (Image: Public)

John said the business continues to leave its blue commercial bin at its usual collection point at the back of the street every Thursday evening, where it has always been collected from on Friday mornings.

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When previously contacted by The Bolton News, Bolton Council said motorists should ensure roads remain accessible on collection days, warning that refuse vehicles may be unable to reach properties if access is blocked by parked cars.

A council spokesperson said: “Residents and business owners are reminded to ensure roads remain accessible on collection days by avoiding parking in a way that obstructs refuse vehicles.

“Our collection crews operate large vehicles which require sufficient space to safely reach properties and collect waste and recycling.

“Where access is blocked by parked cars, collections may not be able to take place.

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“We ask motorists to be mindful of this and, where possible, park considerately to help ensure everyone’s bins can be collected as scheduled.”

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Postcode Lottery winners in Peterlee, Ferryhill and Stockton

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Postcode Lottery winners in Peterlee, Ferryhill and Stockton

The postcodes from across the region won £1,000 each in recent draws, with cash prizes going to Peterlee, Ferryhill and Stockton.

One postcode in particular in the region was extra lucky as TS21 1GA in Fairfield, Stockton won a whopping £30,000 with the Postcode Earth Trust.

The Postcode Lottery is a subscription lottery which aims to raise money for charities while also bringing cash prizes to homes across the UK.

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Players enter using their postcode as a ticket and pay £12.50 a month to take part in each draw.

It unveils daily prizes for postcodes across the UK, including £30,000 jackpots for every winning ticket in a postcode on weekends, and £1,000 prizes for 20 different postcodes each day.

The lottery not only gives cash prizes but also helps raise funds for charities in the UK and beyond.

To date, players have raised more than £1.7 billion for thousands of charities and community projects.

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The Postcode Lottery winners and prize amounts this week are:

  • DL17 9LZ – West Cornforth – £1,000
  • SR8 2QB – Peterlee – £1,000
  • TS21 1GA – Fairfield, Stockton – £30,000
  • TS21 1EJ – Carlton, Stockton – £1,000
  • DH5 9RW – East Rainton, Tyne and Wear – £1,000
  • YO14 0AF – Filey, North Yorkshire – £1,000
  • YO21 2BE – Ugthorpe, North Yorkshire – £1,000

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M&S launches National Picky Bits Day and we’re so glad it has

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Manchester Evening News

The retailer is now selling a pack of picky bits every second

After days of intense heat, nobody wants to be cooking in a warm kitchen, so National Picky Bits Day will no doubt be a welcome relief this weekend.

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It’s not a real thing, it’s an M&S thing. The retailer first created it last year in response to the demand for its tasty savoury snacks and this year it’s gone all out for the event on Saturday, June 27.

Step in store and you can’t miss it. The shelves are piled high with all sorts of tempting treats and there’s seemingly something for every palate.

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You’ve got your traditional picnic snacks of pork pies, sausage rolls, quiche and mini sausages, as well as a range of antipasti dishes with olives, cheese and the like, stuffed bell peppers, sweet potato spiced falafels and more.

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There’s little packs of meat snacks too like the delicious serrano ham and cheese rollitos we tried. You can get these in chorizo and chilli flavour, as well as salchichon and rosemary with cheese.

If you’ve got fussy ones to contend with then you can’t go wrong with the box of dinky shareable popcorn chicken, which although needs cooking, takes just six minutes in the air fryer.

And there are other bits you can quickly warm in the microwave including the chorizo and cheese tortilla and the Spanish style prawn pil pil dish – a real treat with garlic, chili and paprika oil.

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The mini cheese and onion muffins were the biggest hit with my lot. Muffins with sauteed onions, extra mature cheddar cheese and red Leicester cheese, they can be eaten warm or cold, but we liked them better warm and again they take just five minutes in the air fryer.

You don’t have to spend too much to get a meal from it, especially if you add in some typical picky bits like carrot sticks and a few crackers. You could also throw in some sweet treats like the new M&S strawberry sandwich which launched this week, as well as some new sweet dips.

A lot of the products are included in the retailer’s three for £8 offer, which makes them even better value.

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With M&S selling a pack of picky bits every second, it’s no surprise they decided to dedicate a day to the snacks. And with picnic season upon us, Brits have officially named M&S as the UK’s home of picky bits according to new YouGov research, with 44% of shoppers naming it their top destination for summery nibbles.

Its picky bits sales have actually grown by 27% year-on-year, with the retailer predicting its biggest ever summer for picky bits.

“We know everyone loves M&S picky bits so decided to declare it as a national day because… why not?” a spokesman told us.

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Why not indeed.

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‘Iconic’ Cambridge park where you can watch cows grazing minutes from city centre

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Cambridgeshire Live

The green has a fascinating history

A city park, described as “iconic” by previous visitors, offers a scenic area where you can look out for cows grazing. Laundress Green in Cambridge offers a beautiful green area to indulge in picnics, sunbathing, or a walk.

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The city can be quite overwhelming at times, with all the hustle and bustle – particularly in the busy tourist season. Laundress Green offers a place to escape just a few minutes from the heart of the city.

Although today it is a beauty spot, it has a history of hard work – and the name ‘Laundress Green’ hints at its past. Local washerwomen would frequent the area to use the city council washing lines for the laundry staff at the Cambridge colleges.

According to Capturing Cambridge, on Mondays and Tuesdays the ground was free from grazing animals, so that women from Granta Place and Mill Lane could safely hang out their laundry there to dry. For this privilege, they likely had to pay a shilling a year and put up their own posts.

In those days, people used this part of the River Cam when the best source of water for washing was the river, long before the era of a much simpler method – a washing machine. Eventually, clean water was made available in homes throughout the city and this function at the river became no longer necessary.

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Situated next to Lammas Land and near The Granta and The Anchor pubs, the green has become a popular place to visit throughout the year, but especially in the summer. A previous visitor to the park described it as “one of the most iconic” river places where “you can find cows grazing in the morning” from spring to autumn.

Another wrote on Google: “The banks of the river Cam and the grounds surrounding are a beautiful park to go for a walk, picnic or have some drinks on the pubs around the area. The pound mill is a very beautiful spot with swans and other birds and trees.”

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Deane residents invited to comment on seven-home Bolton plan

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Deane residents invited to comment on seven-home Bolton plan

An application has been submitted to Bolton Council for seven four-bedroom houses on land at 226-228 Wigan Road in Deane.

The proposal would see the brownfield site redeveloped with two blocks containing a total of seven homes, alongside parking and landscaping.

The planning application was received on June 19 and validated by the council on today, June 22. Residents now have until Monday, July 13, to have their say.

Planning documents say the site was previously occupied by a nursing home but has remained vacant for years after the building was demolished.

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The design and access statement submitted with the application says the development would provide “a small but significant housing contribution” while bringing a redundant site back into use.

The proposed site boundaries. (Image: Bolton Council)

The plans propose seven three-storey, four-bedroom homes with 10 parking spaces, including three visitor spaces.

Documents submitted with the application state that the scheme has been revised following discussions with Bolton Council and has been reduced from earlier proposals.

A previous planning permission for a four-storey apartment block containing multiple apartments was granted on the site in 2006.

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The current application says the proposed houses would better reflect local demand and the surrounding residential character.

Planning documents state the development would retain the existing access from Wigan Road and include new landscaping across the site.

Residents can comment on the application through Bolton Council’s planning portal.

A decision on the application will be made by Bolton Council at a later date.

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Paul Ferris’ most shocking moments from time as feared enforcer to intense feud with rival kingpin

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Daily Record

We take a look at some of his most shocking moments.

Paul Ferris has lived a turbulent life of chaos, violence and crime.

The former Glasgow gangster-turned author is perhaps one of the most recognisable figures from Scotland’s modern true-crime history. From enforcing for “Godfather” Arthur Thompson to an intense feud with rival kingpin Tam McGraw, his life has taken dark twists and turns with stints in jail and involvement with firearms.

We take a look at some of his most shocking moments.

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Early Revenge Knife Attacks

Growing up in Glasgow’s notorious Blackhill estate, Ferris endured years of physical bullying by a local criminal family, the Welshes. But by his late teens, he decided to stop hiding.

He launched a series of extreme, calculated knife attacks against his former tormentors, which led to his arrest at the age of 17. His teenage knife assaults resulted in his first stretch at a Young Offenders Institution.

This sudden and ferocious pivot to violence completely shifted his reputation, instantly drawing the attention of the city’s ruling underworld.

Becoming the “Robot” Enforcer

By 19, Ferris was recruited as debt collector and enforcer for Glasgow’s undisputed crime lord Arthur “The Godfather” Thompson.

Ferris earned nicknames like “The Robot” because of his cold-blooded and detached precision when he carried out his duties.

His daily “business” operations on behalf of the Thompson family involved orchestrating or directly executing violence. “The Godfather” and had links to London mobsters, the Kray twins.

The Murder of Arthur “Fat Boy” Thompson Jr

By the late 1980s, Ferris believed the Thompson family had betrayed him to the police, sparking a vicious turf war. On 17 August 1991, Arthur Thompson Jr was shot dead outside his father’s home.

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Ferris was immediately pinned as the prime suspect, accused of executing the son of his former mentor in a direct challenge to the Godfather’s crown. But Ferris was found not guilty of the murder after a trial at the High Court in Glasgow in 1992.

At the time, it became Scotland’s longest murder trial.

The case remains officially unsolved.

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The MI5 Gun-Running Bust

In 1997, Ferris’s criminal career came to an abrupt halt following a massive, two-year joint surveillance operation by MI5 and Special Branch.

He was ambushed and arrested in London while transporting submachine guns, Uzi magazines, silencers, and live ammunition hidden inside an Opal Fruits sweet box. MI5 spent six months on Ferris’s trail, using all their skills in human and electronic surveillance to help police track his every move.

And they got their reward in May 1997 after Ferris made a call to a London gun dealer – on a tapped mobile phone. Ferris was the first gangster MI5 had ever gone after. The service usually focused on fighting threats to Britain’s security.

He was sentenced to ten years at the Old Bailey.

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Feud with Tam McGraw

The feud between Paul Ferris and Tam “The Licensee” McGraw was one of the most toxic power struggles in Scottish true-crime history. Initially allies under Arthur ‘Godfather’ Thompson, the two became bitter adversaries, turning the streets of Glasgow into a warzone.

The feud broke out after Ferris’ conviction that McGraw was a police informant. McGraw earned the moniker “The Licensee” because rival criminals believed the police gave him a literal “license” to build a drug empire without fear of arrest, in exchange for intelligence on other gangsters.

While serving a prison sentence in the late 1990s, Ferris penned his first autobiography. He used the book to very publicly humiliate McGraw, explicitly naming him as a police grass and stating that McGraw should “fear the onslaught that will follow.”

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In May 2002, a violent altercation occurred involving Ferris and McGraw, where McGraw was slashed and Ferris suffered knife wounds.

Following the knife attack, a meeting involving Ferris caught on police surveillance led to Ferris having his parole revoked and being sent back to prison. McGraw subsequently spent time living in Ireland and Spain to avoid the underworld backlash sparked by the feud.

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Richmondshire: Scout named in national award shortlist

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Richmondshire: Scout named in national award shortlist

Lindsay Sykes, Richmondshire deputy district lead volunteer, has been nominated for the Defence Inclusivity Award at the Soldiering On Awards, which celebrate individuals and organisations supporting the Armed Forces community.

The award recognises her “outstanding commitment” to fostering inclusion, equality, and opportunity within both scouting and the wider community through her “dedication, leadership, and determination.”

A spokesman for Richmondshire Scouting said: “Lindsay has been a passionate advocate for creating environments where individuals from all backgrounds can thrive.

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“Her work has helped to strengthen community connections, encourage participation and ensure that Scouting remains open and accessible to all.”

Ms Sykes has earned praise from colleagues and volunteers across the district for her “unwavering commitment to the values of service, respect and teamwork.”

Her ability to “inspire others, champion inclusivity and support those around her has earned her admiration throughout the Scouting movement and beyond.”

The Soldiering On Awards celebrate the achievements of individuals and organisations who “support and strengthen the Armed Forces community.”

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Being shortlisted for the Defence Inclusivity Award is a “significant national achievement” and reflects the “positive difference Lindsay has made through her work and leadership.”

The spokesman said: “Everyone at Richmondshire Scouting District is immensely proud of Lindsay’s nomination and the recognition it brings.

“Her dedication to helping others, fostering inclusive communities and embodying the values of Scouting makes this honour thoroughly deserved.

“As the awards ceremony approaches in September, volunteers, young people and supporters across Richmondshire will be cheering Lindsay on and wishing her every success.”

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The Soldiering On Awards ceremony will take place later this year in September.

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“Is this what happens here?” Muslim students injured in Edinburgh ‘knife attack’ speak out

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Daily Record

The young men, both 22, were left with serious injuries in the incident.

Two students who were stabbed in a terrifying ‘anti-muslim knife attack’ have spoken out on the heartbreak of their ordeal.

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The young men, both 22, were left with serious injuries in the incident, which took place at Sighthill Park in Edinburgh moments after they had left evening prayers at a city mosque at around 8.50pm on June 19.

Lewis Hawkes, 36, has since appeared at Edinburgh Sheriff Court charged with five counts of attempted murder aggravated by reason of having a terrorist connection after three other men aged 24, 27 and 29, were also later injured in incidents in the Telford Road and Leith Walk areas of the city.

The students, who arrived in the capital from India to study masters degrees just four weeks ago, say they are now to scared to leave their homes after the horror incident Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said appeared to be motivated by “anti-Muslim hatred”.

One suffered seven stab wounds across his body and face and required 35 stitches, while the other sustained five stab wounds and needed 17 stitches.

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They told the Record they came to Scotland expecting to be welcomed into a safe and inclusive country, but have now been left unable to sleep, eat or speak to loved ones back home as they struggle to come to terms with their trauma.

Speaking publicly for the first time, one of the students, who have asked not to be named, said: “It’s hard to comprehend what happened.

“Coming to Scotland is the worst decision I have ever made.

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“Before we arrived, I’d heard a lot about this being a safe country and a beautiful place.

“That’s why I picked Edinburgh when I was deciding where to study.

“Now I am thinking, is this what happens here?

“I can’t even describe the pain I’m in.

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“I can’t eat or sleep and I’m finding it hard to speak to anyone about it.

“I can’t talk to my friends because I’m unable to tell them what happened to me.

“No one back home in India knows what happened to me either, because I don’t want to tell them.

“I’m afraid to go out now and I don’t know when I will be able to.”

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The second student added: “I’m traumatised and I don’t want to leave my room. I’m so afraid.

“I could never have expected that a terrible incident like this would happen here.”

The men are being cared for by their friend Syed Tajammul Hussain, who told how he was the first witness at the scene.

He said: “I was the first person they called and I rushed there quickly.

“All I could see was blood on the ground and my brothers were crying. It was horrific.

“I called the police and the ambulance immediately but every minute felt like an hour until they got there.

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“We are all very traumatised and physically they are in a lot of pain.

“Physically there’s a lot of damage, but they have also been damaged mentally.

“I don’t know if they will recover.”

Counter-terrorism officers were called in to investigate after the five men were injured during the series of incidents across Edinburgh last Friday.

Footage posted online showed a bare-chested white man roaming the streets of Edinburgh with a large weapon.

Another video appeared to show a topless man on the ground shouting that he was “protecting the country” as he was held down by an officer.

Syed said it had been devastating to watch two young men who arrived in Edinburgh excited to begin a new chapter in their lives struggle to recover from their ordeal.

“I don’t know how other Muslims are feeling here now, but I don’t personally feel safe,” he said.

“Everyone has the right to feel safe and for everyone to be kind to each other.

“That’s what we expect from people – but it didn’t turn out like that for my friends here.”

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First Minister John Swinney met the two students privately this week and later described them as “traumatised” by what had happened.

Swinney said he was “deeply concerned” by the incidents and insisted there was “no place for violence, racism or intolerance in our country”.

He later said he wanted to send a message of “solidarity and sympathy and empathy” to those affected and to the wider Muslim community in Scotland.

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Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood said she was “horrified” by news of the attacks and said there was “no place for hatred and violence against Muslims”.

Superintendent Neil Wilson, of Police Scotland, made clear that “there is no place for violence, hatred, or intimidation in our communities” in light of Friday’s incidents.

Officers have has spoken to more than 90 multi-faith organisations since.

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The Muslim Council for Scotland said they welcomed the engagement of Police Scotland as well as politicians.

They said: “Edinburgh’s Muslim community will not be cowed by those who seek to sow fear and division. We are deeply grateful for the many messages of solidarity and support from people of all faiths and backgrounds.”

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Wales breaking news plus weather and traffic updates (Saturday, June 27)

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There are strong winds on the Britannia Bridge in north Wales this morning. The bridge remains open, but a speed restriction is in place.

According to traffic monitoring service Inrix: “Strong winds on A55 Britannia Bridge in both directions between J9 A487 (Treborth) and J8 A5 (Llanfair P.G.). Matrix sign set to 30 mph. The bridge remains open to all traffic but extra care is required.”

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