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Halifax, Lloyds, NatWest, Lloyds and Bank of Scotland bank closures hit Manchester

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Manchester Evening News

A total of 24 closures are set to sweep the high street – including a couple in Greater Manchester

Customers in Greater Manchester face losing more access to face-to-face banking services this week as Halifax, Lloyds, NatWest and Bank of Scotland press ahead with another round of branch closures. A total of 24 branches across the UK have either already closed or are scheduled to shut their doors over the coming days.

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Several banks say the decision reflects changing customer habits as many now opt to manage their finances online and via mobile banking apps rather than visiting banks in person. But this decision has sparked huge concern, especially among the elderly, who rely on the additional support banks provide for their banking needs.

In a statement, NatWest said: “We’ve recently announced that we’re closing some branches. You can still bank with us in many other ways.

“Banking has changed dramatically in recent years. There’s more demand for mobile and online services, allowing you to benefit from a faster and easier way to bank.”

It continues: “We understand the closure of your local branch will bring some changes, and we want to make sure you are fully informed and supported every step of the way.”

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Nevertheless, NatWest and Lloyds Banking Group – which operates Lloyds Bank, Halifax and Bank of Scotland – say customers will still be able to access banking services through alternative arrangements. These include temporary community banking events, while dedicated banking hubs are being introduced in some areas affected by branch closures.

Of the 24 branches affected nationwide, two are located in Greater Manchester. Halifax’s Didsbury branch is scheduled to close on Wednesday, June 10, while Lloyds Bank’s Altrincham branch ceased operations on Tuesday, June 9.

To find out more information, visit each respective bank’s websites. Here’s the full list of Halifax, NatWest, Lloyds, Bank of Scotland closures:

Halifax

  1. Ellesmere Port, Cheshire – June 8
  2. Hunts Cross, Merseyside – June 8
  3. Shipley, West Yorkshire – June 9
  4. Didsbury, Greater Manchester – June 10
  5. Bridgend, Wales – June 11
  6. Cardiff Albany Road, Wales – June 11

NatWest

  1. Sheffield – Attercliffe June 8
  2. South Shields – June 9
  3. Kirkby Lonsdale – June 10
  4. Boston – June 11

Lloyds

  1. Golders Green, Greater London – June 8
  2. Birkenhead, Merseyside – June 8
  3. Lymington, Hampshire – June 8
  4. Altrincham, Greater Manchester – June 9
  5. Crowborough, East Sussex – June 9
  6. Lancaster, Lancashire – June 9
  7. Southam, Warwickshire – June 9
  8. Hinckley, Leicestershire – June 9
  9. Birmingham Blackheath, West Midlands – June 10
  10. South Newington, Oxfordshire – June 10
  11. Wolverhampton Tettenhall, West Midlands – June 11

Bank of Scotland

  1. Bridge Of Don – June 10
  2. Haddington – June 11
  3. Rutherglen – June 11

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Westhoughton’s Provenance food hall is a real gem

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Westhoughton’s Provenance food hall is a real gem

Dotted right there on the corner of King Street and Market Street – essentially Westhoughton’s main street – you couldn’t pick a more conspicuous location for an eatery.

Wandering past you’ll find Provenance Artisan Food Hall – one of the best places to eat and shop not only in Westhoughton, but in all of Bolton.

(Image: Dan Dougherty)

Provenance was set up around three years ago by Paul Rogers, a man with decades of experience in the food and catering industries. He bought the large, historic building from the Tinniswood family who had spent several years building it up.

“It’s quite a historic building,” said Ethan Rogers, Paul’s son, “It’s great – it’s three storeys, and everything’s in house.”

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The three-storey building Paul chose to inhabit has been put to versatile use. The ground floor sells drinks, pies, and cakes, with seating available for anyone wanting to sit inside. There is also an in-house butcher, selling top-quality ingredients, a full spice rack, fresh fruit and veg, wine, and all sorts of other treats.

(Image: Dan Dougherty)

The middle floor is the café, serving a wide menu of breakfast and lunch items from the in-house kitchen. All the classics are there – eggs Benedict, Caesar salads, steak frites – as well as a Sunday lunch roast menu and afternoon tea.

The top floor is the Provenance bakery, where the team’s in-house chefs bake fresh pastries for the two floors below them.

But the times are a-changing at Provenance.

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(Image: Dan Dougherty)

Ethan only joined the business full time last year, working previously as a pool cleaner around Bolton. Despite the recency of his start-date, though, Gen Z Ethan has big plans for the place.

“I’m part of the generation where people are eating and drinking things I don’t even really understand – all the matcha and the Spanish coffees and things like that.

“My dad’s stepped back a bit and he’s given more freedom to me and Tom,” Ethan said.

(Image: Dan Dougherty)

Tom is the Provenance chef – he’s worked with Ethan’s dad on many occasions across many different locations throughout the years.

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“Me and Tom have been trying to butt heads about what we’re going to do.”

Tom jumped in: “We want really good pies, really good pastries, different fillings, veg products, meat products.”

Butcher Rodney Mayoh (Image: Dan Dougherty)

And if Ethan and Tom want to start getting creative, Provenance is certainly a large enough canvas. Three floors, hundreds of products, and outside, a rapidly-growing town of 25,000.

“It’s a massive building – think of all the things we could do in here. It’s good now, but there’s so much more we could do with it.

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“Everything we have is local. Our bread is from Ecclestone, our Basque cheesecakes are from Westhoughton, all the bakery stuff is made upstairs, the cheese is from Harvey and Brockless in Manchester – it’s all about the community.”

(Image: Dan Dougherty)

‘Community’ is at the heart of what Ethan wants to do with Provenance.

“We want to start pushing upstairs with the shop – create somewhere where people can come in and do a bit of work.

“We have Hive products, and they’re great, but nobody is doing all of it at once. Nobody is offering the comfortable, relaxing, Manchester-style atmosphere, and that needs to come over.

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(Image: Dan Dougherty)

“Because then you get those people, you get people from other places, people visiting Westhoughton – it builds the town.

“Gen-Z is coming up – the oldest Gen Z people are now 29.”

There are barriers to this, as Ethan realises. The first thing may be the perception of Provenance as an expensive place to eat – a perception bolstered not a little by the self-designation of ‘artisan food hall’.

(Image: Dan Dougherty)

“But ‘artisan’ doesn’t have to mean expensive,” said Ethan, “it just means quality.

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“We once had a food influencer come to Westhoughton and he was filming in the street. He was saying, on camera, ‘where else can I go to eat in Westhoughton?’ We were in the background as he was talking and he didn’t even think to come in here!

“So we have the restaurant, but we want to push it into more of a hybrid with a café.

(Image: Dan Dougherty)

“We have so many students around here that want a place to just sit and work, and there’s nowhere really you can do that.

“We’ll be doing it on the first floor – we just need to get our heads around it first. Then we have to let everyone know they can come here and eat and work and relax.”

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As a concession to changing trends, Provenance recently acquired a canning machine, that they can use to make matcha, iced coffees, and even cocktails.

“We want it to have that cosy vibe upstairs – rustic. It’s dining-room seating at the moment, but we want it to be mix-and-match, so it will have those chesterfields, warm and welcoming vibe.”

(Image: Dan Dougherty)

What isn’t going to change is the commitment to quality. Ethan may be pushing the business in a slightly different direction, but the fresh meat, local cheeses, restaurant-tier cakes, and sausage rolls they require a knife and fork – all that is going nowhere.

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As the ‘Provenance’ name indicates, no matter how much they change, they aren’t going to forget where they came from.

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Trooping the Colour live: William and Kate share behind-scenes clips from King’s parade as Prince Louis steals show

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Daily Mirror

EXCLUSIVE: When the Royal Family made their way to the Buckingham Palace balcony for the RAF flypast to signify the conclusion of Trooping the Colour, royal fans were eager to catch a glimpse of the rarely-seen Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis.

And according to body langage expert Judi James, 11-year-old Charlotte was ‘in charge’ of the Wales family and their presentation to a see of royal fans who had descended on the Mall.

Judi told the Mirror: “It was Charlotte in charge of the choreography here, motioning Louis to his ‘spot’ with a two-handed gesture and checking George, ushered with one very tender hand on the back by his mother, got to his place in the line-up, too.”

The expert added of her older brother Prince George: “Perhaps because he will soon be off to ‘big’ school, George appeared to want to stick close to his mother here. After William waved Charlotte and Louis into the front row, George stood beside his mother, even side-stepping across to get closer.

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“Not only did this place him more in the ‘grown ups’ row, he was able to keep Kate company as they chatted and laughed together fondly.”

Princess Charlotte was ‘in charge’ during balcony appearance(Image: Samir Hussein/WireImage)

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New bus service offering free bus travel in Cambridgeshire city

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Cambridgeshire Live

The route will be free for everyone to use in its first two weeks

A Cambridgeshire city is set to get a new bus service which will be free for its first two weeks. From Monday, June 29, the new Peterborough 26/26A service will begin operation, linking Queensgate to Longthorpe, Serpentine Green, Great Haddon, Yaxley, Farcet and Fletton.

Buses will be operating hourly in both directions, with 26 travelling clockwise and 26A anticlockwise. On Saturdays, buses will operate between Yaxley and Peterborough via Great Haddon, Serpentine Green and Longthorpe only.

Central Connect, who will be operating the new service, have said that fares for this route will remain below the national fare cap, with fares to and from Peterborough Centre costing £2.80. Discounts are also available to anyone buying day or season passes.

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For journeys around the loop that don’t start or finish at Queensgate or Rivergate, an Orbital Single will cost £2. For the first two weeks, 26 and 26A will operate completely free to everyone as an introductory offer.

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Russell starts title fightback with Barcelona pole as Hamilton qualifies second

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Russell starts title fightback with Barcelona pole as Hamilton qualifies second

George Russell took a morale-boosting pole for Sunday’s Barcelona-Catalunya Grand Prix and will line up alongside a resurgent Lewis Hamilton on the front row in Spain.

Russell, who has had a torrid few weeks in which he has fallen 68 points behind Mercedes team-mate Kimi Antonelli in the title race, told his team it was “nice to feel the groove again” as he returned to the pits.

The British driver beat Antonelli by over three-tenths of a second at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya to continue his fine form from practice.

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Hamilton, who has profited from Russell’s recent struggles to move into second in the championship, very nearly pipped his former Mercedes team-mate to pole. The seven-time world champion was up on Russell’s time midway through his final push lap, but lost time in the final sector to finish 0.064sec behind.

Hamilton’s Ferrari team-mate Charles Leclerc suffered a heavy shunt in Q3, bringing out red flags while marshals carried out repairs to the barriers. It follows the Monegasque’s race-ending crash in Monaco last weekend, since when he has switched his brake setup to match his team mate. Leclerc’s latest accident led to suggestions he may be rattled by Hamilton’s form.

Antonelli will start third, with McLaren’s Lando Norris fourth and Red Bull’s Max Verstappen fifth.

More to follow…

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Lotto winning numbers live: National Lottery results and Thunderball on June 13

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Daily Mirror

The Lotto draw, which has an estimated jackpot of £2 million, will take place at 8pm tonight. To win the jackpot, a player must match all six main numbers. The odds of winning the Lotto jackpot are about one in 45,057,474.

Meanwhile, the Thunderball draw, which has a top prize of £500,000, will take place at 8.15pm. The odds of winning the Thunderball top prize are about one in 8,060,598. Other smaller prizes, ranging from £3 to £5,000, are also up for grabs. Players have a one in 13 chance of winning any prize in each Thunderball draw.

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Delays expected in Knaresborough as Bed Race concludes

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Delays expected in Knaresborough as Bed Race concludes

The Great Knaresborough Bed Race saw thousands of residents and visitors of Knaresborough line its streets to cheer on 90 teams as they sped to the finish line at Conyngham Hall today (Saturday, June 13).

The event has been a highlight of the town’s calendar – excluding 2020 and 2021 – since 1966.


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It sees participants, including one passenger sat on a decorated bed, race across Knaresborough in a gruelling course of 2.4 miles.

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Each year, teams are also judged on their bed decoration in accordance with a certain subject – with 2026’s event marking 60 years since the inaugural bed race day and a fitting ‘Swinging Sixties’ theme.

Ninety teams took part in this year's Bed Race - adopting a 'Swinging Sixties' themeNinety teams took part in this year’s Bed Race – adopting a ‘Swinging Sixties’ theme (Image: Lisa Young – Camera Club)

Speaking about this, chairman of the Bed Race organising committee, Jatinder Khalsi, said: “Themes are changed every year, which keeps the Best Dressed Bed competition fresh and really alive.

“Last term it was TV Adverts and before that we have had Innovations, Entertainment, the Environment, Yorkshire, Heroes and Villains.

“But this year, with its great significance of six decades of Bed Race, what else could we have had as a theme but ‘The Swinging Sixties’?

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“The idea is to give the teams the broadest canvas to spark their creative juices to come up with ingenious designs.

“Cross-dressing is a major focus and it all adds up to a wonderful parade through town.”

Delays are expected as closures along Market Place, High Street, Bond End and Harrogate Road lift.

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Teen crash prompts calls for ‘speed bumps and cameras’

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Cambridgeshire Live

Readers have been debating road safety on Sycamore Avenue in Dogsthorpe, Peterborough, after two teenagers were seriously injured when the car they were driving struck three parked vehicles.

Cambridgeshire Live readers have debated a local report about motorists using residential streets that led to a collision. Contributors expressed firm opinions on speeding, enforcement, and the consequences for emergency services and cyclists.

A city councillor is demanding action to address speeding and reckless driving on a Peterborough road after two teenagers sustained serious injuries in a crash.

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Dogsthorpe Councillor Katy Cole is scheduled to meet with residents, police, Peterborough City Council officers, ward councillors and Cabinet colleagues on Tuesday, 9 June, to explore measures that could tackle speeding and road safety issues.

“The reason I’ve put this meeting together is so that the [council] officers, the police and Angus Ellis (Cabinet Member for Transport) can come up with a plan,” Cllr Cole said.

The residential streets surrounding Sycamore Avenue are recognised as an area where drivers regularly travel erratically at excessive speeds. Earlier this month, two teenagers suffered serious injuries after the vehicle they were driving collided with three parked cars.

One reader, Garyblowpants comments: “Looks like it needs more speed bumps and cameras. Speed bumps and also potholes give drivers a much-needed massage in the lower region from their long hours of sitting in queues of their own causing. They should be thankful!”

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Freddly writes: “I’m equally concerned about the ‘respectable’ drivers in Dogsthorpe who routinely drive at 45 in a 30 zone. We will not solve this problem until the fines are commensurate with the danger to life. There is very little speeding in Aus / NZ towns and cities because the fines are many hundreds, every time.”

Skipper says: “Problem is, 99.999% of drivers drive sensibly, but all of us are penalised rather than tackling persistent offenders. Of course, the anti-car councils use it to make life even more unpleasant for drivers.”

Tyrannosaurus adds: “Elected in 2023 and not many months without concerns from residents. It’s nearly halfway through 2026, so why has she ignored her residents’ concerns for 3 years? And let me get this straight, she can ask for meetings with the police, and they attend, yet if you’re a normal citizen of this dump, the only time you get to see a police clown is when they are watching football, watching whatever fun run is going on or if there is a new Greggs opening. Perhaps if they weren’t sitting around in meetings, they could possibly do their job and actually deal with crime, but no, they only have the resources for the 3 things mentioned above and sitting around in 3 years to late meetings.”

While over on our Facebook page, Katie R B comments: “It won’t change, they’re like it everywhere in Borough, Paston, Dogthorpe, Westwood. There’s a long road or ring road; they’ve always done it.”

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Janie M mentions: “Thought it was King’s Hedges road, Cambridge, as that’s a rat race too. Ballacarva idiots doing wheelies, speeding on those stolen motorbikes. Seems it’s the same.”

Will more speed bumps/cameras solve this issue? Comment below or HERE to have your say.

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Jonathan Newdick has created a cat that dispenses York Gin

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Jonathan Newdick has created a cat that dispenses York Gin

Jonathan Newdick’s Puss & Mew was unveiled this week at a ceremony at York Distillery in front of the Sheriff of York and other guests. 

The two-foot-tall work is based on an 18th Century gin vending machine which flouted the strict licensing laws designed to stop people drinking so much.

We understand this is the  only ‘working’ Puss & Mew in the country since the 18th Century. An original wooden Puss & Mew is available to view at the Beefeater Gin Museum in London.

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York Gin notes a 2025 full of spirit and confidence in 2026

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When curious visitors deposit a coin in the slot in the cat’s mouth, a bell rings and a shot of gin flows from a pipe in the cat’s paw into a waiting glass below.

Stuart Jarman with the Puss N New at York Distillery (Image: Pic supplied)

The interactive artwork was unveiled at York Distillery – York Gin’s boutique distillery, tasting room and gin school in Middleton’s Hotel – on Tuesday  June 6. 

Visitors will be encouraged to use it to reimagine the experience of 18th Century gin drinkers.

Using the Puss N Mew at York Distillery (Image: Pic supplied)

The 1736 Gin Act restricted the sale of gin during the ‘Gin Craze’ – when there was a moral panic about the excessive consumption of the spirit. 

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However, an inventive individual named Captain Dudley Bradstreet found a loophole in the law – by creating the ‘Puss & Mew’ what is thought to be the world’s first vending machine.

Bradstreet installed a cat-shaped wooden sign on the outside of his building. A gin drinker approached and asked: “Puss puss… (have you any gin)?” 

Then if in luck, they  would then hear a cat’s ‘Mew’ from inside –  meaning gin was available. 

Jonathan Newdick with the Puss N Mew at York Distillery (Image: Pic supplied)

The buyer would slip a coin in the cat’s mouth…and the thirsty patron then received a measure of gin that the seller poured through a pipe, hidden the cats paw –  into the buyer’s waiting cup.

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Artists Impression of a Puss and Mew (Image: Pic supplied)

By serving the public anonymously Bradstreet avoided identification and the police did not have authority to enter the building. This “spirit of ingenuity and mischief” forms the conceptual backbone of the sculpture, says Mr Newdick.

“It’s been quite challenging because of its function. It’s the first time I’ve created

Artists Impression of a Puss and Mew (Image: Briony Godivala)

a sculpture which also has a mechanism. It makes a sound and delivers a

measure of gin – that took a bit of skill and a bit of luck. It’s also the first time I’ve

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made something the public can physically interact with..”

He added that the piece is designed to evoke a sense of curiosity and unease, echoing the unpredictable nature of cats themselves.

“You get a bit of a feeling like when you approach any cat – slightly nervous, slightly intrigued. There’s a sense of mystery to it, and the mischievous look on its face is challenging you to have another nip!”

The sculpture has been created using cold-cure patinated bronze and Jesmonite. It is

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Jonathan Newdick with the Puss N Mew at York Distillery (Image: Pic supplied)

mounted on a teak base designed for durability and engineered with longevity and public interaction in mind, combining traditional craftsmanship with the hidden mechanical elements.

York Gin said the project represents a unique collaboration between heritage storytelling, contemporary design, the city’s ongoing creative culture as well as York’s and gin’s love of cats – the York Gin logo has a cat called Rutterkin sitting on the city walls.

Emma Godivala from York Gin said: “I know that Jonathan doesn’t often take new commissions, so I was thrilled to capture his imagination with this slightly bonkers idea. We’ve wanted to recreate a real Georgian-era Puss & Mew for a few years now.

The Puss and Mew Sculpture (Image: Matthew Kitchen)

“Jonathan’s cat has moved stealthily from the 18th into the 21st century, into the

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world of the modern gin lover, the cat lover, and something sinister in between. We

can’t wait for Puss to serve some of our Old Tom gin to visitors at York Distillery!”

The Puss and Mew Sculpture (Image: Matthew Kitchen)

The Puss & Mew continues Jonathan Newdick’s long-standing creation of the city’s “Mystery Cats” – a collection of feline sculptures he has carefully embedded in York’s streetscape and folklore for nearly 50 years. 

Around 50 cat statues adorn York’s buildings – documented in The Mystery Cats of York book. Thousands of visitors follow the cat trail each year – and the new sculpture will feature in the new edition of the book. 

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This new work is expected to be included in the next edition of The Mystery Cats of York book, further cementing its place within the city’s public art heritage.

The sculpture will be accessible to the public at York Distillery when experiences and classes are not being held.

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Durham Women FC’s fight for survival ‘extremely worrying’

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Durham Women FC's fight for survival 'extremely worrying'

The Women’s Super League 2 side revealed earlier this week they could fold within 21 days unless new investment is found to plug a reported £1m shortfall.

Now, a Department for Culture, Media and Sport spokesperson has acknowledged the seriousness of the situation, saying: “For the fans, players and staff of Durham Women FC, this is an extremely worrying situation.

“It is critical for the benefit of everyone involved that the club provides clarity over its immediate and long-term plan.”

The intervention comes after Durham MP Mary Kelly Foy wrote to a Government minister urging support to safeguard the club.

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In her letter, Ms Foy warned that the loss of Durham Women would be “far more than the disappearance of a football club”, describing it as a “devastating blow” to the city, the wider North East and “hundreds upon hundreds of women and young girls” who see the club as a pathway into the sport.

Durham MP Mary Kelly Foy has written to the Culture Media and Sport department about the situation, which she says would be a ‘devastating blow’ to the region. (Image: UK PARLIAMENT)

She highlighted the club’s role in developing women’s football outside the traditional structures of the men’s professional game, adding that allowing it to collapse would “send an entirely contradictory message” at a time when the sport is growing rapidly.

Ms Foy said: “At a time when successive governments have championed the growth of women’s football and celebrated the achievements of England’s Lionesses, allowing a club such as Durham Women FC to disappear would undermine years of progress in promoting participation, equality, and opportunity.”

(Image: The Northern Echo)

The Labour MP also pointed to the wider impact on the local area, including the club’s contribution to the economy, job creation and its role in attracting visitors and inspiring young players.

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She added: “The next 20 days may determine whether future generations of women and girls in Durham continue to have a local club to support, aspire to join, and be inspired by.”

Durham confirmed on Monday they are actively seeking either investment or a full takeover – just 16 months after securing investment from North East EuroMillions winners – after prolonged talks with potential backers broke down in recent weeks.

Players and staff have been told the club will cease operations at all levels if no deal is agreed within the deadline.

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Founded in 2007, Durham have spent more than a decade in the second tier and built a reputation as one of the leading independent women’s clubs in the country, despite not being backed by a professional men’s side.

However, they have increasingly struggled to compete financially with clubs supported by Premier League and EFL organisations.

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Moment missing woman rescued by Good Samaritans after being stuck in muddy puddle for three days in US

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Adam Sandbeck and Mike Gravalin, frequent visitors to the wooded area near Park Rapids in Minneapolis, were left stunned when what they thought was a ‘dead body’ whispered for help

A missing woman who had not been seen for three days was rescued by two men who discovered her buried in a muddy ‘quicksand’ puddle a hundred miles from home.

Kathryn Woessner, 68, was last seen on June 3 before vanishing from Akeley, Minnesota, leaving her family and friends concerned. Three days later, friends Adam Sandbeck and Mike Gravalin ventured out on their all-terrain vehicles in Minneapolis – more than three hours from where she lives.

They found her in the puddle off the beaten path after taking that route at the spur of the moment. The explorers were surprised to see a van parked in the middle of nowhere, and questioned if the vehicle had the off-road capability to handle the challenging path they were on.

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But moments later they discovered what they thought was a dead body, and all they could see at first was a female’s head with rest of her body submerged.

But on closer inspection, they found she was alive after she whispered to them – but had to act fast with Ms Woessner in ‘really bad shape’. They worked together to pull her out of the sand and called emergency services.

She was later taken to hospital and authorities are still investigating how the vulnerable woman got so far from her home and ended up on the remote trail.

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The rescuers spoke KARE about their find and said: “We could see that there was a body in the puddle next to the van, and then that’s when it got real,” Mr Sandbeck said.

“When we walked up, we thought she was dead. We thought it was just a body, and then she whispered ‘help me’ – and it scared the c**p out of me! She said it was like quicksand, and she couldn’t get out, she said she had been stuck forever.

“My gut tells me if we didn’t drive through that trail, this would be a whole different outcome for Kathryn. There’s no doubt in my mind … this was the hand of God directing us to her, because there’s no reason why we would have ever gone down these little trails.

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“We were supposed to be there. This was the last-ditch effort to save this woman’s life.

“If there are two positives I can take away from this and promote it would be… God is real…. and how important rural volunteers of the fire department and paramedics agencies are to local areas. The real heroes are those people,” he added.

He shared his story on social media, writing that the pals are now planning to take the original ride they had scheduled this weekend.

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The Douglas County Sheriff’s Office later confirmed that Ms Woessner was the woman the men found.

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