Those with an understanding of how the embassy in Washington works describe it as being almost like a government department itself in size – and, crucially, with connections to so many aspects of the Whitehall government machine, given the importance of the UK-US relationship. This is particularly true on military and intelligence matters, much of which will likely be redacted from this document drop on national security grounds.
The new route between London Euston and Stirling has been temporarily halted after a mechanical fault affected the operator’s only train assigned to the service.
Neil Lancefield, Press Association Transport Correspondent and Gemma Ryder Reporter
13:16, 01 Jun 2026
A newly launched rail service linking London and Scotland has been suspended just a week after its debut due to a fault affecting the operator’s only train assigned to the route.
Lumo announced that it was unable to run services on the West Coast Main Line (WCML) on Monday after a mechanical issue developed with the train.
The FirstGroup-owned operator introduced the service between London Euston and Stirling in central Scotland on May 25.
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Trains also call at stations including Milton Keynes Central, Crewe, Preston and Carlisle.
The two services planned for Monday – one in each direction – were cancelled.
Depending on their route, passengers are being told to travel by taxi or coach, or use another train operator.
Passengers are advised to check Lumo’s website or social media channels for the latest information.
Services are expected to resume on Tuesday.
A spokesperson for Lumo said: “Since launch, the vast majority of our services have operated as planned, however, a few services have been cancelled with alternative travel offered to customers.
“We apologise for the inconvenience and are working closely with Alstom who maintain the trains to ensure minimal disruption to customer journeys.”
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Lumo’s lack of rolling stock on the WCML means its timetable has initially been restricted to one daily return service.
As it receives more trains, this is expected to be gradually increased to four by late July, with an additional daily return service between Euston and Preston.
The faulty train is a refurbished Class 222 Meridian train previously used by East Midlands Railway.
When the west coast route launched, Lumo said it was “designed to offer low-cost fares and attract more people to train over air and road”.
Lumo also runs services on the East Coast Main Line, connecting London King’s Cross with Edinburgh, Glasgow and Falkirk.
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It operates on an open access basis, meaning it sets its own fares, takes on all revenue risk and receives no taxpayer-funded subsidies.
This means it is not affected by the Government’s renationalisation of all remaining franchised train services in Britain.
FirstGroup holds track access rights from regulator the Office of Rail and Road (ORR) for the route on the WCML until 2030.
In January, Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander wrote to ORR chairman Declan Collier, expressing concerns that the open access model can cause “potential congestion” and result in taxpayers being “left to fill shortfalls” in maintenance costs.
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She stated it was her “expectation” that “the impacts on the taxpayer and on overall performance” are “given primacy” when his organisation analyses track access proposals.
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The finals are the biggest ever, with 48 teams and a round of 32. It’s also the first time three nations have co-hosted, with Mexico the first country to host a finals three times.
Concerns around player welfare have prompted FIFA to introduce three-minute water breaks at every game, to be taken close to the midway point in each half.
France, Spain and England look like the most likely teams to triumph, but as ever with summer tournaments the key will be who arrives with the most players fit.
The new faces are Cape Verde, Curacao, Jordan and Uzbekistan. Curacao will become the smallest nation ever to play at the finals.
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England have been drawn alongside Croatia, Ghana, and Panama in Group L as they launch their quest to end what will be 60 years of hurt by the time the tournament kicks off in Mexico City.
Fortunately for England faithful, the Three Lions will be based mainly on the United States’ east coast, meaning kick-off times a relatively favourable for those watching from home.
Tournament co-hosts Mexico will face South Africa to open proceedings, a repeat of the 2010 World Cup’s curtain-raiser which ended 1-1.
Matches will be hosted across 16 cities, with the final due to be held at New Jersey’s MetLife Stadium on July 19, 2026.
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SoFI Stadium in Los Angeles
AFP via Getty Images
Here are the full fixtures, dates, venues, and kick-off times for the 2026 World Cup…
World Cup 2026 fixtures, kick-off times and venues
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8pm: Mexico vs South Africa (Group A, Mexico City)
3am: Korea Republic vs /Czechia (Group A, Guadalajara)
8pm: Canada vs Bosnia & Herzegovina (Group B, Toronto)
2am: USA vs Paraguay (Group D, Los Angeles)
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5am: Australia vs Turkey (Group D, Vancouver)
8pm: Qatar vs Switzerland (Group B, San Francisco)
11pm: Brazil vs Morocco (Group C, New York/New Jersey)
2am: Haiti vs Scotland (Group C, Boston)
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6pm: Germany vs Curacao (Group E, Houston)
9pm: Netherlands vs Japan (Group F, Dallas)
12am: Ivory Coast vs Ecuador (Group E, Philadelphia)
3am: Sweden vs Tunisia (Group F, Monterrey)
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5pm: Spain vs Cape Verde (Group H, Atlanta)
8pm: Belgium vs Egypt (Group G, Seattle)
11pm: Saudi Arabia vs Uruguay (Group H, Miami)
2am: IR Iran vs New Zealand (Group G, Los Angeles)
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8pm: France vs Senegal (Group I, New York/New Jersey)
11pm: Iraq vs Norway (Group I, Boston)
2am: Argentina vs Algeria (Group J, Kansas City)
5am: Austria vs Jordan (Group J, San Francisco)
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6pm: Portugal vs DR Congo (Group K, Houston)
9pm: England vs Croatia (Group L, Dallas)
12am: Ghana vs Panama (Group L, Toronto)
3am: Uzbekistan vs Colombia (Group K, Mexico City)
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5pm: Czechia vs South Africa (Group C, Atlanta)
8pm: Switzerland vs Bosnia & Herzegovina (Group B, Los Angeles)
11pm: Canada vs Qatar (Group B, Vancouver)
2am: Mexico vs Korea Republic (Group A, Guadalajara)
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5am: Turkey vs Paraguay (Group D, San Francisco)
8pm: USA vs Australia (Group D, Seattle)
11pm: Scotland vs Morocco (Group C, Boston)
2am: Brazil vs Haiti (Group C, Philadelphia)
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6pm: Netherlands vs Sweden (Group F, Houston)
9pm: Germany vs Ivory Coast (Group E, Toronto)
12am: Tunisia vs Japan (Group E, Monterrey)
1am: Ecuador vs Curacao (Group E, Kansas City)
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5pm: Spain vs Saudi Arabia (Group H, Atlanta)
8pm: Belgium vs IR Iran (Group G, Los Angeles)
11pm: Uruguay vs Cape Verde (Group H, Miami)
2am: New Zealand vs Egypt (Group G, Vancouver)
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6pm: Argentina vs Austria (Group J, Dallas)
10pm: France vs Iraq (Group I, Philadelphia)
1am: Norway vs Senegal (Group I, New York/New Jersey)
4am: Jordan vs Algeria (Group J, San Francisco)
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6pm: Portugal vs Uzbekistan (Group K, Houston)
9pm: England vs Ghana (Group L, Boston)
12am: Panama vs Croatia (Group L, Toronto)
3am: Colombia vs DR Congo (Group K, Guadalajara)
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8pm: Switzerland vs Canada (Group B, Vancouver)
8pm: Bosnia & Herzegovina vs Qatar (Group B, Seattle)
11pm: Scotland vs Brazil (Group C, Miami)
11pm: Morocco vs Haiti (Group C, Atlanta)
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2am: Czechia vs Mexico (Group A, Mexico City)
2am: South Africa vs Korea Republic (Group A, Monterrey)
9pm: Ecuador vs Germany (Group E, New York/New Jersey)
9pm: Curacao vs Ivory Coast (Group E, Philadelphia)
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12am: Japan vs Sweden (Group F, Dallas)
12am: Tunisia vs Netherlands (Group F, Kansas City)
3am: Turkey vs USA (Group D, Los Angeles)
3am: Paraguay vs Australia (Group D, San Francisco)
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8pm: Norway vs France (Group I, Boston)
8pm: Senegal vs Iraq (Group I, Toronto)
1am: Cape Verde vs Saudi Arabia (Group H, Houston)
1am: Uruguay vs Spain (Group H, Guadalajara)
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4am: Egypt vs IR Iran (Group G, Seattle)
4am: New Zealand vs Belgium (Group G, Vancouver)
12am: Panama vs England (Group L, New York/New Jersey)
12am: Croatia vs Ghana (Group L, Philadelphia)
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00.30am: Colombia vs Portugal (Group K, Miami)
00.30am: DR Congo vs Uzbekistan (Group K, Atlanta)
3am: Algeria vs Austria (Group J, Kansas City)
3am: Jordan vs Argentina (Group J, Dallas)
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8pm: Match 73 – Group A runners-up v Group B runners-up (Los Angeles)
6pm: Match 76 – Group C winners v Group F runners-up (Houston)
9.30pm: Match 74 – Group E winners v Group A/B/C/D/F third place (Boston)
2am: Match 75 – Group F winners v Group C runners-up (Monterrey)
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6pm: Match 78 – Group E runners up v Group I runners-up (Dallas)
10pm: Match 77 – Group I winners v Group C/D/F/G/H third place (New York/New Jersey)
2am: Match 79 – Group A winners v Group C/E/F/H/I third place (Mexico City)
5pm: Match 80 – Group L winners v Group E/H/I/J/K third place (Atlanta)
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9pm: Match 82 – Group G winners v Group A/E/H/I/J third place (Seattle)
1am: Match 81 – Group D winners v Group B/E/F/I/J third place (San Francisco)
8pm: Match 84 – Group H winners v Group J runners-up (Los Angeles)
12am: Match 83 – Group K runners-up v Group L runners-up (Toronto)
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4am: Match 85 – Group B winners v Group E/F/G/I/J third place (Vancouver)
7pm: Match 88 – Group D runners-up v Group G runners-up (Dallas)
11pm: Match 86 – Group J winners v Group H runners-up (Miami)
2.30am: Match 87 – Group K winners v Group D/E/I/J/L third place (Kansas City)
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10pm: Match 89 – Winner match 74 v Winner match 77 (Philadelphia)
6pm: Match 90 – Winner match 73 v Winner match 75 (Houston)
9pm: Match 91 – Winner match 76 v Winner match 78 (New York/New Jersey)
1am: Match 92 – Winner match 79 v Winner match 80 (Mexico City)
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8pm: Match 93 – Winner match 83 v Winner match 84 (Dallas)
1am: Match 94 – Winner match 81 v Winner match 82 (Seattle)
5pm: Match 95 – Winner match 86 v Winner match 88 (Atlanta)
9pm: Match 96 – Winner match 85 v Winner match 87 (Vancouver)
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9pm: Match 97 – Winner match 89 v Winner match 90 (Boston)
8pm: Match 98 – Winner match 93 v Winner match 94 (Los Angeles)
10pm: Match 99 – Winner match 91 v Winner match 92 (Miami)
2am: Match 100 – Winner match 95 v Winner match 96 (Kansas City)
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8pm: Match 101 – Winner match 97 v Winner match 98 (Dallas)
8pm: Match 102 – Winner match 99 v Winner match 100 (Atlanta)
10pm: Match 103 – Loser match 101 v Loser match 102 (Miami)
8pm: Match 104 – Winner match 101 v Winner match 102 (New York/New Jersey)
“He’s so iconic that every single word, you just bottle up, and you always try to remember it for future games.”
Scott McTominay has revealed a surprise phone call from Sir Alex Ferguson helped inspire his heroic overhead kick which sent Scotland to the World Cup.
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The Scotland star admitted he was left stunned when an unknown number flashed up on his phone last September. What followed was a pep talk with the Manchester United legend that McTominay still holds close.
Speaking to GQ after being named in their All-Star list, alongside the likes of former Celtic player and Australia captain Jackson Irvine and England fullback Reece James, he said: “I spoke to Sir Alex in September, which was amazing. He called me, and I was extremely grateful that he took the time to speak to me and just ask me about how I was doing and football and stuff like that.
“So it was lovely to speak to him. I was only a young kid when he was leaving, so for him to think of me was extremely special, because he’s the greatest to ever do it, in my opinion.”
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The call came completely out of the blue. McTominay laughed as he explained: “It was No Caller ID. I answered and just said ‘Hello?’ because I answer every call. I feel like I have to.
“And he just said, ‘How are you doing, son?’ And so I knew fairly quickly who it was.
“We had a nice catch-up. It was probably more normal than what people would think – just like your friend calling you up, for example, and asking how you’re getting on and stuff like that.
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“But, yeah, it was really special.”
The Scotland midfielder has refused to reveal exactly what Ferguson told him during that conversation. However, he hinted the legendary former United boss delivered words that have stayed with him ever since.
McTominay said: “Yeah. It’s probably personal, so I wouldn’t ever want to say anything out of turn. But he’s always had great advice.
“He’s so iconic that every single word, you just bottle up, and you always try to remember it for future games.
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“And then three months later, we qualified for the World Cup. So the conversation must have inspired something.”
The Napoli star saw his career change upon moving to Italy, including firing Napoli to the Serie A title, being named the league’s player of the season and even being nominated for the Balon d’Or.
But his wondergoal to help Scotland defeat Denmark 4-2 and send Steve Clarke’s men to their first World Cup in 28 years has elevated him to legendary status in his home country.
The incredible overhead kick was immortalised in a mural just a stone’s throw from Hampden Park earlier this year. Speaking about seeing it for the first time, he said: “I’m extremely grateful for it.
“Thank you to Adidas for thinking about doing something so special like that, but I almost feel a little… not a sense of embarrassment, but when it’s up on the top there, where all the players can see it in training, you know… I’m quite low-profile.
“Obviously, it’s an amazing thing, but yeah, my big head up on the side of a building is something that’s a little bit surreal to me. I don’t really know how to put it into words, it’s that special.”
McTominay joined Manchester United as a five-year-old and remains one of the last academy graduates shaped during Ferguson’s era. During his time at Old Trafford he won an FA cup and League Cup.
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Now he stands on the brink of another historic challenge, representing Scotland at their first World Cup since France 1998.
Yet amid all the excitement, McTominay insists the biggest winners are not the players – they are the children across Scotland who finally get the chance to see their heroes on the world stage.
He said: “It’s great for the kids to experience something like this – especially for the young and aspiring Scottish footballers.
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“I think that’s the most important thing, when a kid is enjoying it, and they’ll now be able to go to football and think about the World Cup and have conversations with the other kids at school about it.
“It’s an amazing thing. And, for us, we’re just extremely grateful that we could bring that happiness to Scotland.”
While Steve Clarke’s side have reached recent European Championships, the agony of failing to progress beyond the group stage has left a sense of unfinished business. McTominay believes the World Cup offers another chance to create history.
He said: “It’s not been missing, because we’ve qualified for a couple of Euros, but they’ve been underwhelming for our standards.
“We wanted to qualify and get out of the groups, and we didn’t quite manage to do that, so this is another opportunity for us to create a bit of history.”
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Although he was only two years old when Scotland last appeared on the biggest stage, McTominay grew up dreaming of one day playing there himself.
He said: “It’s a tournament that’s watched by the world, and it’s something that, as a kid, I always dreamed about playing in. For me to have the opportunity to do that will be incredible.”
But McTominay is determined not to let the occasion overwhelm him. Instead, he wants to savour every second.
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He said: “What I want, even in the build-up, is to enjoy every minute.
“I don’t want to look back when I’m 40 or 50 years old and think, I was too anxious, I was too worked up. As I’ve gotten older, the career is short. You have to enjoy it.
“If you don’t, it can flash by so quickly and leave you wondering where the time went. Now that I’m a bit older, I can experience and enjoy things. It means more.”
From Monday, June 1, to Tuesday, June 9, no trams will stop at Market Street or Shudehill.
This means that all services from Bury will go to Altrincham via Exchange Square.
The trams will not stop at Piccadilly Gardens, Piccadilly, Market Street and Shudehill.
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Other tram routes will also be affected, with services from Altrincham not calling at Piccadilly Gardens, Market Street and Shudehill.
Trams from the Trafford Centre will go to Etihad Campus and services from Manchester Airport will go to Victoria via Exchange Square.
Information on Bee Network’s website states that customers might need to change trams, take a short walk or hop on the free bus to complete their journey.
It also states that a replacement bus will operate between Piccadilly and Victoria.
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A statement on the website reads: “For customers on the Bury and Altrincham lines, the easiest way to reach Piccadilly will be by changing trams at St Peters Square.
“You may need to change platforms for the right trams, see departure boards and signage on stop for more details.”
Tram services will resume via Market Street/Shudehill stops from Wednesday, June 10.
It joined a number of other M&S Outlet stores in the region, including one at Quayside in Salford, formerly Lowry Outlet; one at Urban Exchange in Manchester city centre; and another at the Designer Outlet Cheshire Oaks in Ellesmere Port.
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The arrival of the store was largely welcomed by shoppers, although some did share their disappointment that it didn’t include a Food Hall, and suggested the original M&S site in Golden Square would have been a better location.
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Others raised concerns about traffic in the area, saying they already struggled to get in and out of the retail park.
Now the retailer has confirmed that the 6,000 sq ft store is closing for good with the company saying its performance ‘hasn’t been where it needs to be’.
Pete Dobson, regional manager at M&S, said: “Our Warrington Riverside Outlet store will close on Saturday 20th June and we’d like to thank all of our customers who have shopped with us and our colleagues. We will continue working hard to serve customers at our nearby Gemini store, offering the very best of M&S Food, Fashion, Home and Beauty, and at our Stockton Heath foodhall.”
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The Outlet store – one of 16 new stores M&S that opened across the UK in the 2025/26 financial year – was an addition to the M&S stores that already exist in Warrington, including the huge one over at the town’s Gemini Retail Park and the food hall in Stockton Heath.
More than 20 new staff were recruited to join a 28-strong team at the Riverside store, which also sold kidswear and a curated range of home and beauty products.
M&S says all colleagues have been redeployed to alternative roles at the company. The closure is part of M&S’s wider ‘store rotation programme’, which is focusing on opening more food-led stores in easily accessible sites.
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Other sites to close include its branch in Oxford Street, Swansea, which shut down on Saturday leaving shoppers ‘heartbroken’. The store has been a major shopping attraction in the city for many years.
A further store closure is scheduled for June in Newport, with the retail chain citing changes in customer shopping habits as the reason for the shutdown.
The machine was reported stolen at 5.15pm on Saturday (May 30) from Farmbank Road in Ormesby.
A spokesperson for Cleveland Police said: “Two males, all dressed in black, are believed to have driven away on the vehicle and drove it around a field.
“Officers conducted a search with support from NPAS. The vehicle has since been recovered.”
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A National Police Air Service spokesperson added: “On Saturday, May 30 at 5.25pm, a police helicopter crew lifted from NPAS Newcastle to assist Cleveland Police with a vehicle search.
“This was located by the crew in the helicopter. The total flight time was one hour.”
Anyone with information is asked to call Cleveland Police on 101 quoting reference number 103716.
Some people may notice some changes to their bus routes in Cambridge
Some routes for Cambridge buses have been changed with the aim to “improve punctuality and reliability”. From Sunday (May 31), a number of major Cambridge bus routes, run by Stagecoach, were updated.
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A Stagecoach spokesperson said the company was making a “few updates” to “improve punctuality and reliability across Cambridgeshire ”. The following services have changed:
Cambridge 1 – timetable adjustments for journeys towards Fulbourn to improve punctuality
Cambridge 4 – Now serving Bourn Quarter and peak times during Monday to Fridays. New stopping times are at 8.10am, 8.30am, 4.05pm and 4.45pm
Cambridge 6 – The 8.40am journey from Mondays to Saturdays will be adjusted. In Cambridge city centre, buses will now depart from stop E4 on Emmanuel Street instead of E5
Cambridge 7 – A new morning journey from Sawston at 8.22am and adjustments to the 3.03pm journey from Pampisford
Cambridge 8A – In Cambridge city centre, buses will now pick up from stop E5 on Emmanuel Street instead of Drummer Street bus station bay 10
Cambridge 13 – Timetable adjustments to improve punctuality
Madingley Road park and ride – Minor Saturday timetable changes to improve punctuality
Newmarket Road park and ride – Minor timetable changes to improve punctuality
Milton park and ride – Buses will now serve Science Park Main Road stop instead of the stop inside Cambridge Science Park, helping to speed up journeys
Tiger 4 – The 8.50am journey from Addenbrooke’s to Newmarket will now depart at 8.40am.
The Winchburgh Community Chest will distribute the funding to local organisations, including voluntary groups, and cultural, environmental and sports clubs.
A major funding boost has been announced for groups in and around Winchburgh, with local organisations set to benefit from a £4,000 support fund.
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The Winchburgh Community Chest will distribute the funding to local organisations, including voluntary groups, and cultural, environmental and sports clubs, through the West Lothian town this year.
Led by Winchburgh Developments Ltd (WDL) and supported by Winchburgh Community Council, the initiative is being backed by award-winning local housebuilder Cala Homes (East), through its Community Pledge programme of support for the area.
Applications are now open with groups able to apply to the grant before the deadline on Tuesday, June 30, with groups able to apply for up to £750.
Penny Lochhead, Community, Sports and Greenspace Manager at Winchburgh Developments Ltd, said: “This is the first time we have joined a housebuilder partner with our own community funding and entered into a local application process.
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“We have many voluntary groups in the community, and we are sure this will allow some great new activity and extra projects to take place locally this summer.
“Cala has previously supported groups directly in the community along with our schools’ projects and we look forward to this new joint initiative having a further positive impact for our community groups across the summer.
“Working alongside our community council, the funding decisions will be made the week after the closing date so funds can be distributed to groups in July for positive impact and activity over the summer.”
Elaine Carrigan, Sales and Marketing Director at Cala Homes (East), said: “We’re thrilled to be demonstrating our commitment to supporting Winchburgh through its Community Chest initiative.
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“This project forms a key part of our Community Pledge for the area, which is designed to bring measurable and meaningful benefit to the town and the people living in it.
“Collaborating with communities on initiatives that really make a difference help us forge even stronger connections with the areas in which we build, and we are excited to be continuing our close work with WDL on this project.
“We are looking forward to learning about the groups which will benefit from this additional funding and watch them make a real difference to the lives of the people living in the town.”
The TV personality and healthcare professional, now 46, came out as gay aged 30 during his marriage to Sulvinder, after which they divorced in 2011.
On what would have been their 20th wedding anniversary last week, Sulvinder posted about the impact the divorce had on her life, her self-esteem and ability to move forward – saying she felt ‘extremely unattractive’ and ‘ashamed’.
‘I mourned. It was heavy because the future I thought I had was gone and the person that I thought I had married was gone as well,’ she said.
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She revealed that despite attempts to ’embrace [her] new life with travelling, partying’, ultimately she let the ‘past dictate her life’ and struggled to ‘let anyone in’.
Sulvinder told her followers that ‘you get to choose what your story is going to be… no one else’, adding that she ‘never wanted’ her ex-husband’s coming out to be her ‘story’.
His ex-wife, Sulvinder, shared a very personal update about the impact of her divorce after Dr Ranj came out as gay (Picture: Instagram)
Upon turning 45, she said: ‘I had no balance. It was all work. I was miserable. It was eating away at me’ and has been trying to transform her life ever since.
Her post has since gone viral, with Dr Ranj – who is in a long-term relationship with partner James Colebrook – now taking to Instagram to say ‘this is something I never expected to revisit’.
He also emphasised he was sharing his side with ‘kindness’ and not intending to take away from anyone else’s story.
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Posting a long statement, he began that it’s been almost two decades since that ‘complicated, emotional and deeply personal’ time.
He continued: ‘I’m genuinely sad that this subject can still bring up pain and difficult feelings. That has never been, and would never be, my intention.
‘I’ve only ever spoken about it because it’s a significant period of my life, when asked directly, and in the hope that it might help someone else. I don’t do it for attention or sympathy; it’s a very painful time.’
He made clear he was careful to leave other people’s identities and perspectives out of it when he spoke about that period of his life.
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Sharing ‘everything has already been said’ about it, however, he added that ‘people still make assumptions and pass judgement’ but ‘life and relationships are rarely straightforward’.
Explaining the origins of their marriage in his 20s he said that their relationship broke down ‘for many reasons’, including the fact they were ‘young and still working [themselves] out’.
He’s been with his partner, fitness expert James Colebrook, for two years now (Picture: Alan Chapman/Dave Benett/Getty Images)
With the support of therapy, he accepted his identity as a gay man but never set out to ‘intentionally try to mislead anyone’. Acknowledging things may have ‘been different’ had he figured out his sexuality earlier, he said ‘identity and sexuality are complex, fluid and evolving things’.
‘We all make decisions and take steps we feel are for the best at the time. Sometimes we get it right, sometimes we don’t. When we don’t, it can be painful and messy, but more than that, it’s just sad and heartbreaking for everyone involved. There are no winners in a breakup,’ he wrote.
Then, he noted the ‘importance’ of their relationship in what they ‘shared’, ‘meant to one another’ and ‘learned from each other’, adding that he ‘looks back at that time, and that person, with nothing but respect, gratitude and kindness.’
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He’s known for offering healthcare advice on daytime TV (Picture: Ken McKay/ITV/Shutterstock)
Reiterating that life is full of different turns, he said he’s ‘different to the person I was then, and the world has changed too’.
Dr Ranj concluded: ‘It’s important we keep moving forward, which is often easier said than done. As long as every step we take is with kindness – towards others and ourselves – that’s all that matters.’
His words were met with an outpouring of support, including from partner James, who commented: ‘Love you and always proud of you.’
‘Sending you love bud it’s a tough time but you’re handling it with honesty and great strength,’ itsyobogaurav wrote.
‘The courage you have shown and continue to show in how you authentically live your life is always inspiring to me,’ Nadianagamootoo added.
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The daytime TV star has previously expressed his regret over the emotional impact this situation had on his ex-wife.
In 2018, he told The Mirror: ‘I was completely broken. It was the lowest point in my life.
‘I can only imagine how hard it was for my wife, though – she didn’t deserve any of that. I feel so incredibly sorry for what she had to go through.’
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