Connect with us
DAPA Banner
DAPA Coin
DAPA
COIN PAYMENT ASSET
PRIVACY · BLOCKDAG · HOMOMORPHIC ENCRYPTION · RUST
ElGamal Encrypted MINE DAPA
🚫 GENESIS SOLD OUT
DAPAPAY COMING

NewsBeat

Tributes to former deputy head teacher at Cambridge school among death and funeral notices

Published

on

Cambridgeshire Live

Our thoughts are with those who have lost a loved one

Tributes have been paid to a retired deputy head teacher which are among the death and funeral notices from Cambridge News this week. Announcing the passing of a loved one in local news media is a long standing tradition and we are proud of the trust placed in us to make these important announcements.

Advertisement

Every notice published to our newspaper and news site also appears on funeral-notices.co.uk – the UK’s number one site for death notices and memoriams. Every notice remains online forever providing friends and families with a lifelong tribute to their loved one, a safe place online to share memories, add tributes, photographs and make donations in memory.

Each week we pay tribute to the loved ones remembered in our area with a funeral notice and online tribute page. To read the latest announcements and add tributes to those from our area who have passed away, or to create a funeral notice yourself, click here . Alternatively, you can create a notice by calling our helpful team on 01482 908084.

Here are a selection of notices published earlier this week.

Death Notices

of Hauxton: Retired Deputy Head Teacher at The Perse Preparatory School. Passed away on Sunday 24th May 2026, aged 77 years. Beloved husband of the late Sheila, Much loved Dad to Caroline & Rob, father-in-Law to Jason and a loving Grandad to Jordan, Emily, and Sam. Funeral Service at Hauxton Parish Church on Tuesday 23rd June at 2.30pm followed by a private committal. Family flowers only please but if wished donations for Alzheimer’s Research UK may be sent c/o H.J. Paintin, 43 High Street, Linton, Cambridge, CB21 4HS.

Advertisement

Of Cottenham passed peacefully to rest on Sunday 24th May 2026 aged 97 years. A loving wife of the late Alexander, much loved Mum, Nan and Great Nan. Funeral Service to be held at the Cambridge City Crematorium on Monday 29th June 2026, 12:15pm West Chapel. Family flowers only, donations if desired made payable to East Anglian Air Ambulance may be left following the service or forwarded to Richard Stebbings Funeral Service Ltd, Kendal House, Cambridge Road, Impington, Cambridge CB24 9YS. Tel: 01223 232309

(White) The late Doris Blake sadly passed away on Sunday 24th May 2026, at Orchard House Care Home, aged 92. Family flowers only, any donations please forward to Orchard House (Orchard House Comfort Fund). Weyman’s Funerals, 26 Abbey Walk, Cambridge CB1 2QJ.

Of Cambridge. Passed away peacefully on Wednesday 13th May 2026 at home, aged 91 Years. Devoted Husband to Barbara. Dearly loved Father to Duncan and Frances. Treasured Grandfather to Rachel and Jonathan. Don shall be missed by all. Funeral service to be held on Monday 22nd June 2026 at St Andrew Street Baptist Church at 12pm. Donations, if desired, to the benefit of Youth For Christ May be made at the service or online via Donald’s personal InMemory page at www.peasgoodandskeates.co.uk 617 Newmarket Road, Cambridge, CB5 8PA 01223 415255

of Cambridge, passed away peacefully on Sunday 31st May 2026, aged 93 years. Loving wife of the late Tony, a wonderful mother to Linda, Susan, Celia and Andrew. Funeral Service at St Mary’s Church, Ely on Wednesday 1st July at 2.00 pm. (Private Cremation). Smart casual clothing to be worn. Family flowers only please, but if desired, donations, made payable to R. J. Pepper Donation Account (to be shared between The Smile Train and Jimmy’s Night Shelter) may be left at the service or sent c/o R. J. Pepper & Son Family Funeral Directors, 14, Prickwillow Road, Ely, Cambs, CB7 4QT Tel: 01353 665300

Advertisement

(Née Middleton) of Milton Passed away peacefully on Tuesday 19th May 2026, aged 97 years. Loving wife of the late Richard, much loved mum of Rose, Jan, Sue, Richard and Sarah and a dear mother-in-law, nana and great nana, who will be sadly missed by all her family and friends. Funeral Service at Cambridge City Crematorium, West Chapel on Thursday 25th June at 11.15 am. Family flowers only please, but if desired, donations, made payable to Arthur Rank Hospice Charity may be left at the service or sent c/o R. J. Pepper & Son Family Funeral Directors, 1, Telegraph Street, Cottenham, Cambridge, CB24 8QU. Tel: 01954 251919

At Addenbrookes Hospital on Sunday 24th May 2026, aged 93 years. Former librarian to the Department of Applied Economics, University of Cambridge. Funeral Service to be held at St Augustine Church on Friday 19th June, 1.30pm, followed by burial at St Leonard’s Church, Catworth on Monday 22nd June 2026 at 10.30am. Family flowers only please. Donations welcome to St Augustine’s Church. Mourners are asked not to wear dark colours please. Weyman’s Funeral’s 26 Abbey Walk Cambridge CB1 2QJ

John Kempton Harold Rees died peacefully on 9th May 2026 Leukaemia specialist at Addenbrookes, photographer, opera buff and lover of the arts, John was loving wife to Jan, father of Helen and Kempton, and grandfather of William, James (‘JJ’) and Dylan We are deeply grateful for the wonderful care of the staff at UHW Cardiff and at Marie Curie in Penarth For enquiries, please email jkhr@outlook.com

Peacefully at the Arthur Rank Hospice, Cambridge on Saturday 30th May 2026, Karen (nee Rees) aged 67 years. The dearly loved wife of Chris, devoted mum of Dale and Gareth and an adored daughter, sister, mother-in-law and friend. Funeral service and cremation at The West Suffolk Crematorium, Risby, Bury St Edmund on Thursday 25th June 2026 at 11am. Family flowers only please, donations in Karen’s memory for the Arthur Rank Hospice, Cambridge, can me made at the service or online to the charity. Funeral services entrusted to Woodland Wishes Funeral Services, 4 High Street, Fulbourn, Cambridge CB21 5DH

Advertisement

Married to Husband of 70 years Trevor. Children Bev, Sue, Gary, and late son Butch. Son-in-laws and grandchildren. Funeral to be held on 19th June at 10:15 at Cambridge City Crematorium, in the West Chapel. Family flowers only. Any donations in June’s memory can be made to Parkinsons UK. Please join us after the service.

In Memoriams

Mum, you are the most beautiful memory we keep locked inside our hearts. Love you. Love Louis and Hayden x x x x * * * * * Maxine, I think about you always, I talk about you still, you have never been forgotten, and you never will. I hold you close within my heart and there you shall remain. Walk and guide me through my life until we meet again. Love you. Lots of love, Mum x x x x * * * * * Dear Sister, Miss you always. Love Frances and children x x

June 11th 2014 It’s 12 years since you left us and went to sleep. You are so missed darling, sleep peacefully my love. Mick xxx

To add your own tributes to the loved ones from our area, or to publish a notice for your loved one, visit funeral-notices.co.uk

Advertisement

Our thoughts are with the family and friends of those we have lost.

Source link

Continue Reading
Click to comment

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Leave a Reply

NewsBeat

Is Cain Dingle leaving Emmerdale and does he die? | Soaps

Published

on

Is Cain Dingle leaving Emmerdale and does he die? | Soaps
The couple have dealt with a lot of challenges this year (Picture: ITV)

Cain Dingle (Jeff Hordley) has been given even more bad news about his health in Emmerdale.

Way back in January, during the crossover event Corriedale, Cain was sent to hospital after being shot. While he was there, he was told that a lump discovered inside of him needed to be tested for cancer.

While waiting for the results, Cain and Moira Dingle’s (Natalie J Robb) entire world was turned upside down when Celia Daniels and Ray Walters (Jaye Griffiths and Joe Absolom) reign over the village came to an end.

The drama for the couple hasn’t really stopped, so here’s everything that you need to know about what they’ve faced in 2026 so far, including Cain’s diagnosis, and why Moira was in prison.

Advertisement

What has happened to Cain and Moira so far this year?

Moira speaks to Cain in Wishing Well in Emmerdale
They cannot catch a break! (Picture: ITV)

Following his hospital trip, Cain returned home with Moira and faced an agonising wait for the results of his cancer test.

Focus then turned to Moira, who was arrested on suspicion of assisting Celia with her modern slavery operation.

Moira protested her innocence but as she was unable to explain how the ID cards got in her house, and that she also had history of working with Celia from a farming perspective, she didn’t look innocent.

As this was happening, Ruby Miligan (Beth Cordingly) had learnt about refugee Anya potentially being dead. She managed to find her burial spot and called the police, not realising she was on Moira’s farmland.

To her horror, Ruby watched the police pull Anya’s body out of the ground, and someone else’s.

Advertisement

Moira was immediately arrested for double murder, as the other body turned out to be Celia’s.

While she was behind bars, Cain received his cancer diagnosis. He kept it to himself for quite a while, believing that Moira didn’t need to know as she had enough stress to deal with in prison.

Everything changed at the start of March though, when Cain headed to the police station to tell Moira everything.

Don’t miss a Soaps scoop! Add us as a Preferred Source

As a loyal Metro Soaps reader, we want to make sure you never miss our articles when searching for stories. We have all the latest soaps news, spoilers, videos, and interviews, with a vibrant community of highly engaged readers.

Advertisement

Click the button below and tick Metro.co.uk to ensure you see stories from us first in Google Search.

Add us as a Preferred Source

Soaps authors collage Fact box image only Picture: Metro
Now you can ensure you never miss a story from the Soaps team
Kyle watches Cain, who is being wheeled away down a hospital corridor in Emmerdale
Cain’s operation took place last month (Picture: ITV)

It was an emotional episode, as Cain broke down and admitted how terrified he was for the future.

Since then, Cain and his sons have moved into Wishing Well with the rest of the Dingles. Moira is now out of prison as well, following the discovery of some new evidence that ultimately proved her innocence and freed her.

Advertisement

Adjusting to life in the village has been difficult for Moira, as she’s had to get her head around the fact she no longer lives at Butler’s Farm.

Reconnecting with Cain was also a challenge, as he was quietly worrying about how his cancer operation would impact his marriage.

Cain had his surgery last month, and has spent the past few weeks adjusting to the side effects. This has been hugely challenging for the character, as his pride has taken a knock whenever he’s suffered with incontinence while out in public.

Is Cain Dingle leaving Emmerdale?

To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web
browser that
supports HTML5
video

Advertisement

In yesterday’s episode, Cain and Moira arrived at the hospital for a meeting with Ms Rhodes. They discovered from the consultant that – while Cain’s surgery was in fact a success – she suspects the cancer has spread and thus further tests will need carried out.

If her suspicions are proven correct, Cain will then require radiotherapy, with possibly side-effects being permanent impotence and incontinence.

Advertisement

It was absolutely devastating news for the couple, but at the moment, there hasn’t been any confirmation stating Jeff Hordley is leaving his role as Cain Dingle.

It certainly gives us hope for the future…but anything is possible in the world of soap.

Earlier this year, Jeff told us that the prostate cancer storyline was conceived as ‘The story of a man who doesn’t normally talk about his feelings. It’s bad enough having cancer but the possible side effects of this particular illness are really damaging to males and their egos. Having to talk about that and confront it is, I think, where we want to go down.’ 

He insisted that, alongside this, the entire situation is ‘a big love story’ between Moira and Cain. 

Advertisement

‘That was underpinning all this. How they get all these adverse challenges and how they deal with them – Moira being inside prison, Cain being told he’s got this illness and how bad it is.’ 

When asked whether their current ordeals could break Cain and Moira’s marriage apart or make them stronger, Jeff said he genuinely didn’t know – and it could go either way.  

‘I think that’s what’s good about this story, for Cain and Moira,’ he reflected. ‘There’s a series of obstacles and hurdles that lay in front of them that I think are really going to challenge them as a couple.

‘As to whether it makes or breaks them, I don’t think I even know just yet but it’s going to be really interesting to see.’ 

Advertisement

This article was originally published on February 17, 2026 and has been updated.

Advertisement
Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

NewsBeat

County Durham NHS hospital doctors’ Great North Swim

Published

on

County Durham NHS hospital doctors' Great North Swim

Gemma Smith, a consultant in elderly care and stroke, and Lesley Charman, a physiotherapist, completed the one-mile Great North Swim in Windermere on Sunday, June 14, to raise funds for County Durham and Darlington NHS Foundation Trust.

The pair are aiming to raise at least £1,000 to help furnish a comfortable hospital quiet room for patients and their families.

Gemma and Lesley before the swim (Image: Supplied)

Dr Smith said: “We bring them into a room to talk but it needs much more comfortable surroundings, perhaps artwork for the walls, to improve conditions at one of the most difficult times of their lives.

“Stroke is a devastating thing, life-limiting, often brings profound disabilities, and leads to some very difficult conversations with relatives.”

Advertisement

Funds raised will support enhancements on Ward 4 at Bishop Auckland Hospital and Ward 2 at University Hospital of North Durham.

Gemma (Image: Supplied)

Dr Smith, who has worked with the NHS trust since 2017 and trained in the North East, said the idea for the swim came from her colleague, who encouraged her to try outdoor swimming.

She said: “Lesley does a lot of outdoor activities and got me into swimming.

“I saw a sign for the Great North Swim and am really excited about it.

Advertisement

“I did the Great North Run in 2003, and I remember how fantastic the camaraderie was.

“So, we will see how much money we can raise.”

Left, Gemma at work (Image: Supplied)

Although she has swum since childhood, Dr Smith admitted she’s not the fastest in the water.

She said: “My husband Andrew is a keen swimmer, he used to swim for county, but he laughs at my technique.

Advertisement

“I am very slow; in fact, I was once asked to move from the medium to the slow lane by a lifeguard.

“One time when I was swimming outdoors, I was overtaken by my own tow float.”

Despite this, after a 12-week training plan, she completed the swim in one hour and six minutes, while Ms Charman finished in 51 minutes.

Dr Smith said: “It was a great event, such a lovely atmosphere.

Advertisement

“Our fundraising is sitting around £1,600 at the moment, which is fantastic.”

She also praised the support from colleagues, former staff, patients, and the Stroke Association.

Dr Smith said: “Stroke is so multi-disciplinary, and the support has come from right across the trust, even staff who have left and some patients, and the Stroke Association, which is amazing.

“I fell in love with working with stroke patients after being on a placement.

Advertisement

“It is very fast paced as it’s time-dependent.

“The quicker we can act the more we can prevent disability.

“Then it moves into a phase similar to elderly care and it is lovely to see patients come out of the other end and hear about their little triumphs.

“We are there to help people, so it doesn’t take over their lives.”

Advertisement

Rich Jones, charity manager at the trust, said the funds would make a meaningful difference to patient care.

Mr Jones said: “We are incredibly grateful to Gemma and Lesley for taking on the Great North Swim in support of our stroke services.

“As a consultant and physio working closely with patients and their families every day, they understand how important it is to provide comfortable, welcoming spaces during some of the most difficult moments people face.

“The funds Gemma and Lesley raise will help us improve facilities on our stroke wards, creating environments that offer greater comfort, privacy, and dignity for patients and their loved ones.

Advertisement

“We’d also like to thank everyone who has supported their fundraising efforts so far.”

Supporters can donate via their GoFundMe page at www.gofundme.com/f/swim-for-durham-stroke-service.

Donations can also be made by texting YOURNHS to 70480 to donate £5. Texts cost £5 plus one standard rate message.

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Iconic 1970’s British TV show set for huge return to screens

Published

on

Iconic 1970's British TV show set for huge return to screens

The eco-friendly characters, created in 1968 by children’s author Elisabeth Beresford, will relaunch this summer as part of a full-scale global revival that includes new YouTube content blending original 1970s episodes with contemporary live-action and influencer-led shows.

Originally made famous by the BBC’s 1973 stop-motion series, the loveable Wimbledon Common dwellers became cultural icons for their environmental message about reusing and recycling objects they found.

Neil Blair, founding partner and agent at The Blair Partnership, which now manages The Wombles’ rights, said: “The Wombles is an iconic British brand with strong cultural appeal, distinctive characters with core values that translate and resonate globally.

Advertisement


“It is a rich content opportunity and, with rights now aligned plus a clear development pipeline in place, the property is ideally positioned for expansion across multiple platforms and categories.

“We see significant potential to build The Wombles into a multiplatform international franchise for a new generation of audiences.”

The relaunch will see the original 1970s episodes made available on a new official YouTube channel, alongside fresh content in live-action and digital formats.

This will include collaborations with social media influencers and young presenters, who will explore themes of reuse and sustainability through arts, crafts, cooking, and gardening.

Advertisement


A first-look image from the new content reveals updated versions of some of the most familiar characters.

These include Orinoco in his trademark red hat, Wellington the scientist, and Alderney, named after the Channel Island where Beresford spent her later years.

Unlike the classic stop-motion series narrated by Bernard Cribbins, the new Wombles will be brought to life using digital animation.

Plans for the franchise go well beyond YouTube.

Advertisement

The Blair Partnership has consolidated all intellectual property rights for The Wombles and is developing an interactive digital game, audio productions featuring celebrity casts, new storybooks, and expanded merchandise.



There are also opportunities for television, film, theatre, live events, and mobile apps.

This is not the first attempt to modernise The Wombles.

Advertisement

In 2020, the characters were redesigned to reflect greater diversity, including a darker-skinned Wellington and a social media presence that promoted International Women’s Day and climate action.

The reboot was dubbed the “Woke Wombles” by some.

At the time, Beresford’s son Marcus Robertson criticised the changes, calling them “insulting to her memory.”


Recommended reading:

Advertisement

Jeremy Clarkson issues heart breaking cancer update

ITV respond to rumours that Jack Shepherd is taking break

ITV commissions two new series of record-breaking hit show


Despite previous efforts, including a series announced in 2023 that never materialised, the latest relaunch has the backing of a unified rights structure and a comprehensive content pipeline.

Advertisement

The original series ran on the BBC from 1973 to 1976.

In the new programmes, influencers will join the Wombles to demonstrate how to reuse everyday objects through arts and crafts, cooking, and gardening.

Are you happy to see the return of The Wombles? Let us know in the comments

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

NewsBeat

US strike on an alleged drug boat kills 1 in eastern Pacific

Published

on

US strike on an alleged drug boat kills 1 in eastern Pacific

The U.S. military attacked a boat accused of smuggling drugs in the eastern Pacific Ocean on Tuesday, killing one man and leaving two survivors, as the Trump administration continues its monthslong campaign against alleged traffickers in Latin America.

The latest attack brings the number of people who have been killed in boat strikes by the U.S. military to at least 208 since the Trump administration began targeting those it calls “narcoterrorists” in early September.

As with most of the military’s statements on strikes in the eastern Pacific Ocean and Caribbean Sea, U.S. Southern Command said it targeted the alleged drug traffickers along known smuggling routes. The military did not provide evidence that the vessel was ferrying drugs. A video posted on X showed a boat traveling in the water before being hit by the strike and bursting into flames.

Southern Command said it “immediately notified U.S. Coast Guard to activate the Search and Rescue system for the survivors.”

Advertisement

President Donald Trump has said the U.S. is in “armed conflict” with cartels in Latin America and has justified the attacks as a necessary escalation to stem the flow of drugs into the United States and fatal overdoses claiming American lives. But his administration has offered little evidence to support its claims of killing “narcoterrorists.”

Critics have questioned the overall legality of the boat strikes as well as their effectiveness, in part because the fentanyl behind many fatal overdoses is typically trafficked to the U.S. over land from Mexico, where it is produced with chemicals imported from China and India.

The strikes have drawn intense scrutiny from some Democratic lawmakers and military legal scholars. The U.S. military’s first strike in early September drew particular concern from some lawmakers and those who study military law.

Two men on the boat initially survived the attack that killed nine others, and they were clinging to the wreckage when the vessel was struck again, killing them. The White House confirmed the follow-up strike, insisting it was done “in self-defense” to ensure the boat was destroyed and in accordance with the laws of armed conflict.

Advertisement

But some legal scholars said a second strike killing survivors would have been illegal under any circumstance, armed conflict or not.

The Pentagon’s watchdog said in May that it plans to look into whether the U.S. military followed an established targeting framework when carrying out the strikes.

However, the evaluation is focused specifically on what’s known as the six-phase Joint Targeting Cycle and not on the legality of the strikes, the inspector general’s office said.

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Rex Heuermann to be sentenced in New York’s Gilgo Beach serial killings

Published

on

Rex Heuermann to be sentenced in New York’s Gilgo Beach serial killings

RIVERHEAD, N.Y. (AP) — A Long Island architect who lived a secret life as New York’s Gilgo Beach serial killer is being sentenced Wednesday after admitting in court that he murdered eight women.

Rex Heuermann faces the likelihood of a life prison sentence when he goes before a judge in Riverhead, New York. Family members of his victims are expected to address the court.

The sentencing caps an extraordinary investigation that solved one of New York’s most perplexing mysteries — one that began as a series of seemingly unconnected, and largely unmarked disappearances of young women, but became the focus of true-crime documentaries, books and podcasts after police began discovering the victims’ skeletal remains in the sandy scrub along a coastal parkway.

Heuermann, who has remained largely silent through multiple court appearances since his 2023 arrest, will also have a chance to speak Wednesday, but it’s not immediately clear if he will. His lawyers didn’t respond to messages seeking comment.

Advertisement

Asa Ellerup, his ex-wife, and their two grown children have said through their lawyers that they won’t be attending the sentencing out of respect for the victim’s families.

Heuermann, 62, of Massapequa Park, pleaded guilty in April to charges that he murdered seven women: Megan Waterman, Melissa Barthelemy, Amber Lynn Costello, Maureen Brainard-Barnes, Valerie Mack, Jessica Taylor and Sandra Costilla.

Though he was never charged in her death, he also admitted in court to killing an eighth victim, Karen Vergata. Heuermann said he strangled his victims, many of them sex workers, and dismembered some of their bodies.

Most of the women disappeared between 2000 and 2010, and most of their remains were found on a desolate parkway not far from Long Island’s Gilgo Beach, some 50 miles (80 kilometers) from Manhattan.

Advertisement

But two of the killings took place years earlier. Costilla’s remains were found in 1993, more than 60 miles (100 kilometers) away in the Hamptons, while Vergata’s remains were found in 1996 on Fire Island, more than 20 miles (32 kilometers) east of Gilgo Beach.

The case spilled into view in 2010, when investigators started to find remains along Ocean Parkway while looking into the disappearance of another sex worker, Shannan Gilbert, whose death was ultimately ruled an accidental drowning.

The search for the killer of the other women, though, went cold for years until a renewed investigation identified Heuermann as a potential suspect in 2022.

Detectives linked him to a pickup truck that a witness reported seeing when one of the victims disappeared in 2010.

Eventually, they matched DNA from a pizza crust Heuermann had discarded in a Manhattan trash can to genetic material extracted from highly degraded hair fragments found on the women’s remains.

Investigators amassed other evidence against Heuermann, including cellphone and tracking data showing Heuermann arranged meetings with some of the victims shortly before their disappearances.

Advertisement

Then in 2024, after Heuermann’s arrest, prosecutors recovered what they described as a “blueprint” for the killings from his computer files. Among the documents was a series of checklists with reminders to limit noise, clean the bodies and destroy evidence.

As part of his guilty plea, Heuermann has agreed to cooperate with the FBI’s behavioral analysis unit to help catch other serial killers.

He’s been housed in the county jail in Riverhead since his arrest in July 2023, but will serve out his term in a state prison to be determined later.

Heuermann has spent the past three years alone in a segregated cell, reading crime novels, occasionally being visited by his lawyers or family, and striking up a brief correspondence with the infamous “Happy Face Killer,” according to Suffolk County Sheriff Errol Toulon, who oversees the Riverhead jail.

Advertisement

___

Follow Philip Marcelo at https://x.com/philmarcelo

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Public support for Cauwood Day Centre in Malton grows

Published

on

Public support for Cauwood Day Centre in Malton grows

Families, councillors and supporters gathered in Malton Market Place on Saturday to demonstrate their support for Cauwood Day Centre and collect further signatures for the petition opposing its proposed closure.

The petition has now reached 1,200 signatures – with support growing every day.

The campaign is being led by parents Caroline Garrod and Stuart Moss, alongside North Yorkshire Councillor Keane Duncan.

Advertisement

It has also secured backing from Kevin Hollinrake MP, the mayors of Malton, Norton and Pickering, Ryedale Special Families and councillors from across the political divide, including Joy Andrews (Pickering), and Steve Mason (Ampleforth and Amotherby).

Cauwood Day Centre, based in Old Malton Road, provides specialist support for disabled adults with complex needs and is described by families as a “vital lifeline”.

Cllr Keane Duncan said: “We are united for Cauwood and standing together as a community with the vulnerable people and families who rely on this vital service.

“Thank you to everyone who has signed the petition so far. The strength of support from across Ryedale and beyond has been overwhelming.

Advertisement

“North Yorkshire Council initially planned to close Cauwood Day Centre without any consultation whatsoever. We believed that was deeply flawed, unfair and potentially unlawful.

“Efforts by families, councillors and the wider community secured a very welcome reprieve – but the fight to save Cauwood is far from over.

“We are incredibly grateful to our MP, councillors, town mayors and charities for their support. It can be unusual for politicians to agree across the political divide, so this support shows the importance of Cauwood.

“We would also like thank every single one of the 1,200 people who have now signed the petition. The message is clear: Cauwood is needed, valued, and must be saved.”

Advertisement

Kevin Hollinrake MP said: “I pay tribute to the determination of this campaign, led by parents Caroline and Stuart, alongside Cllr Keane Duncan, who have worked tirelessly to highlight the importance of the services provided by Cauwood Day Centre.

“With more than 1,200 people now backing the petition, it is clear there is deep concern about the proposed closure without any consultation or plan for alternative provision.

“I am pleased to support this cross-party effort and will continue pressing for assurances that these vital services will continue. At present, it is far from clear how that will be achieved if the council’s closure plans proceed.”

Parent Caroline Garrod said: “We’re not giving up on the fight. We’re keeping on going until they accept that this facility is needed and must be saved.”

Advertisement

Jason Aldrich, Mayor of Malton, said: “Vulnerable residents and their families deserve stability, dignity and proper support – not the sudden withdrawal of essential services.

“We are united at Malton Town Council in our condemnation of this decision.

“It is astounding that the proposal was put forward without proper consultation with families and carers who would be devastated by the impact of the proposed closure.

“Malton will not stand by while vital care is taken away from those in our community who are in the most need.”

Advertisement

Mayor of Norton, Cllr Di Keal said: “This closure will have a wholly detrimental impact on users who suffer from physical disabilities, alongside their parents and/or carers. There are no facilities with the specialised equipment and staff to client ratio available in Malton and Norton that their loved ones with moderate to severe conditions could attend as an alternative facility. They will inevitably be forced to travel to access such specialised care, which is unacceptable for the service users and their families.

“Many parents of users of the centre are older residents of our towns and describe Cauwood as a ‘lifeline’ for them in the sometimes difficult and physically demanding circumstances of caring for an adult disabled person.

“If the centre were to close, and no suitable alternative provided, this will place an even greater emotional and physical strain on these families, which could lead to a crisis requiring more serious intervention from social services and the NHS. This closure is a false economy.”

Parent Stuart Moss said: “Our fight to keep Cauwood open is so important because it’s a vital lifeline to me as a parent and to Matthew as one of the service users.

Advertisement

“The news of this potential closure is devastating, and that’s why we must fight to stop this decision.”

Heidi Ridgewell, family support worker at Ryedale Special Families, said: “Cauwood provides a valuable service for adults in the Ryedale area.

“There is nothing else of its type. Sensory rooms, Changing Places toilet — these are facilities that have had a lot of investment put into them and we would hate to see it close.

“Where are these young adults going to go? That’s an answer no one is getting. Ryedale is very rural. Cauwood is very unique and at present there is no plan B.”

Advertisement

North Yorkshire Council has said it is committed to supporting people across the county with a wide range of care services and our priority is making sure adults with learning disabilities, autism or other care needs.

Campaigners are encouraging more residents to sign the petition, available here: form.jotform.com/cllrkeaneduncan/save-cauwood

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

What kind of cancer does Jeremy Clarkson have?

Published

on

Wales Online

Jeremy Clarkson revealed his devastating cancer diagnosis to Kaleb Cooper and Charlie Ireland, who were distraught.

Clarkson’s Farm is back with the final episodes of season five and the series took a tragic turn as Jeremy Clarkson announced a shocking health diagnosis.

Advertisement

The start of the season saw the former Top Gear host open up about his heart scare, but he had more bad news to reveal in episode seven.

Clarkson pulled land agent Charlie Ireland and farm manager Kaleb Cooper in for a meeting where he tried to hold back tears as he announced: “I’ve got cancer.”

“I’ve known since May”, he told Kaleb, who was in disbelief and was seen wiping away tears. “I had a medical, you know, back in May. I disappeared off the other week and I had a biopsy done and it is cancer, and it’s aggressive, but it’s really early.”

He hoped he would be able to have treatment after the harvest, but Kaleb urged him to “look after himself” and leave the farm to others to deal with.

Advertisement

“I just wish you a very, very speedy recovery,” Charlie replied, with Clarkson reassuring him: “I promise I’ll be fine.”

After dealing with the harvest, Clarkson announced the cancer was in his prostate and that he had undergone a procedure to remove part of it.

He confirmed: “The prostate, 10 per cent of it’s dead. The 10 per cent where the cancer is.”

Advertisement

Later in the episode, he shared from a hospital bed that some of the treatment had “gone awry”.

“I’m going to be here for a little while,” he said. “I don’t know what’s going to happen. What I wanted to say was if this is all successful, I’ll see you in season six, and if it isn’t, I won’t. Take care, everyone.”

Before the final episodes of season five aired, Clarkson took to Instagram to warn viewers they would be “really, really difficult” to watch.

Advertisement

He shared: “Hello everybody, I have got some good news and some sombre news. Good news is Hawkstone [brewery] has finally had an advert accepted and it’ll be shown just before kick-off in the England match.

“Sombre news, Clarkson’s Farm. Ordinarily we try to keep the show charming and cheerful, but the final two episodes which drop in the middle of the night tonight are none of those things really.

“They are a difficult watch, they are really, really difficult.”

Since the release of the episodes, the star has not given any further updates about his health.

Advertisement

Clarkson’s Farm season 5 is on Prime Video

Source link

Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Asian shares are mixed and oil stays below $80 as world awaits details on US-Iran deal

Published

on

Asian shares are mixed and oil stays below $80 as world awaits details on US-Iran deal

HONG KONG (AP) — Asian shares were mixed and oil was trading below $80 a barrel on Wednesday as markets watched for details on the interim agreement between the U.S. and Iran to end the war.

U.S. futures edged higher ahead of the Federal Reserve’s policy decision announcement and after Wall Street closed mixed near their record highs.

Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 was 0.8% higher at 69,926.08 near its all-time high set this week, after official data showed Japan’s exports jumped 17% in May from a year earlier, helped in part by strong demand for high-tech products.

South Korea’s Kospi edged 0.2% lower to 8,706.10 with losses in big technology stocks tracking a sell-off of artificial intelligence-related shares on Wall Street. Samsung Electronics, the country’s most valuable company, fell 1.9%.

Advertisement

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng lost 0.8% to 24,273.95, while the Shanghai Composite index slipped 0.1% to 4,089.26.

Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 climbed 0.5% to 8,965.30.

Taiwan’s Taiex fell 0.5%. India’s Sensex rose 0.3%.

Oil prices stabilized after falling sharply earlier on optimism of an end to the war and a possible reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, crucial for oil and gas transit worldwide. But challenges remain, including if the peace deal includes Israel’s withdrawal from Lebanon.

Advertisement

Brent crude, the international standard, traded 0.3% lower at $78.76 per barrel early Wednesday after falling more than 5% on Tuesday. It was still elevated compared to the roughly $70 a barrel level in late February before the war started.

Benchmark U.S. crude was down 0.4% to $75.78 a barrel.

“Normalizing (oil) flows will take time,” economists at HSBC wrote in a note this week. “Hurdles include mine clearance, insurance reinstatement, emptying excess Gulf oil storage, repositioning ships, and restarting idled production fields.”

In the U.S., the Fed on Tuesday began its two-day meeting, the first under its new chair Kevin Warsh, that would discuss interest rates with a decision announcement set for Wednesday.

Advertisement

U.S. President Donald Trump has been pressing the Fed for lower rates to help stimulate the U.S. economy, but fresh worries are rising on worsening inflation over the Iran war-caused energy shock.

Analysts are broadly expecting that the Fed will keep the benchmark rate unchanged. In the bond market, the yield on the U.S. 10-year Treasury fell to below 4.44% from 4.47% late Monday.

Advertisement

“With weak wage growth and rent growth, underlying forces are pointing to inflation falling sharply once the energy price shock recedes. We don’t expect the Fed to hike rates in 2026,” Preston Caldwell, chief U.S. economist at Morningstar wrote in a commentary.

On Tuesday, Wall Street’s benchmark S&P 500 fell 0.6% to 7,511.35 after setting an all-time high earlier this month, the Dow Jones Industrial Average added 0.6% to 51.999.67, hitting another all-time high.

The technology-heavy Nasdaq composite dropped 1.2% to 26,376.34 following losses of some big tech stocks over renewed worries about an AI bubble.

Shares of Nvidia fell 2.4%. Chipmaker Broadcom dropped 4.4% and Micron Technology lost 6.2%.

Advertisement

SpaceX, Elon Musk’s rocket company, was up 4.8%, gaining for the third straight day since its Wall Street debut.

Yum Brands was up 1.9%, after it announced it is selling Pizza Hut for $2.7 billion with most restaurants purchased by private equity firm LongRange Capital.

In other dealings early Wednesday, the U.S. dollar fell to 160.30 Japanese yen from 160.42 yen. The euro was trading at $1.1612, up from $1.1608.

___

Advertisement

AP Business Writers Elaine Kurtenbach, Stan Choe and Matt Ott contributed to this report.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Thomas Tuchel defends ‘strange’ decision to call up Trevoh Chalobah decision | Football

Published

on

Thomas Tuchel defends 'strange' decision to call up Trevoh Chalobah decision | Football

Close Overlay

In The Mixer’s World Cup special

Everything you need to know about the World Cup – England updates, the games to watch and stories you missed – in five minutes, at 1pm, every day.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Is England’s ITV curse real? Three Lions record on BBC and ITV ahead of World Cup opener | Football

Published

on

Is England’s ITV curse real? Three Lions record on BBC and ITV ahead of World Cup opener | Football

Close Overlay

In The Mixer’s World Cup special

Everything you need to know about the World Cup – England updates, the games to watch and stories you missed – in five minutes, at 1pm, every day.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2025