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ORTHODONTIC COMMISSIONING INTENTIONS (Final - Sept 2018)
CUMBRIA & NORTH EAST - ORTHODONTIC COMMISSIONING INTENTIONS (Final - Sept 2018) Contract size Contract Size Units of Indicative Name of Contract Lot Required premise(s) locaton for contract Orthodontic Activity patient (UOAs) numbers Durham Central Accessible location(s) within Central Durham (ie Neville's Cross/Elvet/Gilesgate) 14,100 627 Durham North West Accessible location(s) within North West Durham (ie Stanley/Tanfield/Consett North) 8,000 356 Bishop Auckland Accessible location(s) within Bishop Auckland 10,000 444 Darlington Accessible location(s) within the Borough of Darlington 9,000 400 Hartlepool Accessible location(s) within the Borough of Hartlepool 8,500 378 Middlesbrough Accessible location(s) within the Borough of Middlesbrough 10,700 476 Redcar and Cleveland Accessible location(s) within the Borough of Redcar & Cleveland, (ie wards of Dormanstown, West Dyke, Longbeck or 9,600 427 St Germains) Stockton-on-Tees Accessible location(s) within the Borough of Stockton on Tees) 16,300 724 Gateshead Accessible location(s) within the Borough of Gateshead 10,700 476 South Tyneside Accessible location(s) within the Borough of South Tyneside 7,900 351 Sunderland North Minimum of two sites - 1 x accesible location in Washington, and 1 other, ie Castle, Redhill or Southwick wards 9,000 400 Sunderland South Accessible location(s) South of River Wear (City Centre location, ie Millfield, Hendon, St Michael's wards) 16,000 711 Northumberland Central Accessible location(s) within Central Northumberland, ie Ashington. 9,000 400 Northumberland -
In the Borough of Ashford Prow
‘Honey Hill’ and the field boundary where the path no longer follows PROW - IN THE BOROUGH OF ASHFORD the stream, for a distance of 1km. Notice of the makiNg of aN order to temporarily close There is no alternative route. public footpath AU67 iN ashford For detailed enquiries please contact Andrew Hutchinson Contact In the borough of ashford Centre no. 03000 417171 keNt couNty couNcil Or for further details on temporary closures on the Rights of Way Network see: www.kent.gov.uk/prowclosures (public footpath AU67) (prohibitioN of traffic) temporary order 2017 PROW - IN THE BOROUGH OF SWALE Road Traffic Regulation Act 1984, Section 14(1), As Amended By The Road Traffic (Temporary Restrictions) Act 1991 Notice of the makiNg of aN order to temporarily close kent county council has made an order the effect of which is to restricted byWays ZSX47, ZSX48 aNd ZSX90 iN the town of temporarily close public footpath AU67, between its junction with sheerNess public footpath AU66 and tQ 9939 4386 from the 13th November In the borough of Swale 2017. keNt couNty couNcil The path will be closed for a maximum of six months, although it is expected that it will reopen before the end of December 2017. (restricted byWays ZSX47, ZSX48 aNd ZSX90) (prohibitioN of traffic) temporary order 2017 The path is closed because works are planned on or near it. Road Traffic Regulation Act 1984, Section 14(1), As Amended By The The alternative route is via the tarmac track through Lodge Wood and Road Traffic (Temporary Restrictions) Act 1991 will be signed for the duration of the closure. -
Appendix B KENT YOUTH SERVICE
Appendix B KENT YOUTH SERVICE: NEEDS ANALYSIS AND OUTCOMES FRAMEWORK FOR THE COMMISSIONING OF YOUTH WORK PROVISION IN KENT 1. Introduction 1.1 The publication ‘Bold Steps for Kent’ outlines the medium term plan for Kent County Council for the next four years; one of its three aims is to ‘put the citizen in control’: “power and influence must be in the hands of local people and local communities so they are more able to take responsibility for their own community and service needs, such as creating new social enterprise”. In line with this aim, Kent Youth Service is seeking to commission a range of providers to deliver youth work within local communities. This document lays out the intended outcomes for young people and the communities in which they live as a result of this commissioning process. 2. Service Context 2.1 The Education and Inspections Act 2006 (Section 6) places a duty on local authorities to provide for young people aged 13-19 (and up to 24 for those with learning difficulties and/or disabilities) sufficient recreational and educational leisure time activities and facilities for the improvement of young people’s well-being and their personal and social development. 2.2 The focus on the ages 13-19 reflects the fact that these ages are commonly understood to represent a transition period for young people during which the engagement in positive leisure time activities as described in the Education and Inspection Act 2006 can offer significant benefits to young people. The statutory guidance for this duty states that local authorities should be clear that they are able to secure access to positive activities in order to accommodate individuals with early or delayed transitions. -
Shopping Assessment GL Hearn June 2008
Rother District Wide Shopping Assessment June 2008 PREPARED BY GL Hearn Property Consultants 20 Soho Square London W1D 3QW Tel: +44 (0)20 7851 4900 Fax: +44 (0)20 7851 4910 Email: [email protected] www.glhearn.com Date: June 2008 Ref: J: Planning/Job Files/J019130/Reports/Rother District Wide Shopping Assessment - Final Rother District Wide Shopping Assessment 1 INTRODUCTION 1.1 GL Hearn was instructed by Rother District Council in October 2007 to undertake a District-wide Shopping Assessment. The purpose of this assessment is to inform and guide retail planning in the District and to form a robust evidential base for the preparation of the Council’s Local Development Framework Core Strategy. 1.2 The main objectives of the Assessment were set out in the Council’s Brief (Appendix 1) and these comprised: a) Current, and trends in (over the last 10 years), shopping rental levels in each town using published data; b) An assessment of the position of town shopping centres in Rother within the sub-regional retail hierarchy, drawing on comparative data on existing floorspace, catchments, accessibility, etc factors (to include Eastbourne, Hastings, Tunbridge Wells, Ashford and Folkestone); c) A residents survey for these catchment areas (a statistically representative 1% sample) on where they shop for convenience goods, comparison goods, and service trade services, on how often they shop in the various locations and their view of future provision for additional shopping in Rother District; d) The views of key stakeholders and the implications -
Greater Ashford: a Vision in Peril?
A CPRE Kent report Greater Ashford: a vision in peril? November 2007 2 FOREWORD Ashford, at the heart of a thriving rural area of Kent, has been the focus of much attention since the announcement of the Government’s Sustainable Communities Plan in 2003. It is one of the four ‘Growth Areas’ established by this plan to ease the housing shortages of the South East. CPRE Kent believes that Ashford has the potential to become an exemplar of the way in which we can build truly sustainable communities for the 21st century. However, Five years into the 30-year period that is proposed for Ashford’s transformation we fear that this transformation may be losing its focus. On the face of it, Ashford should be the easiest of the Growth Areas to plan and to deliver: unlike the other areas identified in the Plan, (the Thames Gateway, Milton Keynes/South Midlands and Stansted-Cambridge-Peterborough), it spans only one region, one county and one administrative district. This report details our major concerns regarding the critical balance of infrastructure, jobs and housing. We must push for the creation of a thriving, energetic town, not a commuter dormitory which relies on the job markets of London or beyond. The growth in the number of jobs in Ashford is falling far short of the growth in its homes. Worse still, those jobs that are being created appear to focus heavily on the retail sector, rather than the high-skill, high-value professions that Ashford needs to create a thriving economy. Plans for the new Discovery Centre which was to have been a major deliverable of the development have been abandoned, and we see this as an early symptom of the widening gap between aspiration and achievement. -
15-19 North Street Ashford, Kent, Tn24 8Lf 15-19 North Street, Ashford, Kent, Tn24 8Lf 2
FREEHOLD TOWN CENTRE OFFICE INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY WITH REDEVELOPMENT POTENTIAL 15-19 NORTH STREET ASHFORD, KENT, TN24 8LF 15-19 NORTH STREET, ASHFORD, KENT, TN24 8LF 2 INVESTMENT SUMMARY Located in Ashford town centre, close to the High Street and within walking distance of Ashford International train station. Three self contained office buildings comprising 9,461 sq ft in total, with 10 car parking spaces Freehold Multi-let to three tenants on three separate leases AWULT of approximately 0.73 years to break options and 3.55 years to lease expiries Barclays in occupation of no. 17 have exercised their break in September 2016, leaving 5,340 sq ft (NIA) vacant and prime for alternative use or re-letting Current rent of £104,415 per annum, equating to an average rent of £11.04 per sq ft Asset Management Initiatives • Explore change of use on vacant space • Let vacant space • Settle dilapidations with Barclays Offers are invited in excess of £800,000 (Eight Hundred Thousand Pounds), reflecting a Capital Value of £85 per sq ft (assuming purchaser’s costs at 5.49%) A10 M1 M50 15-19 NORTH STREET, ASHFORD, KENT, TN24 8LF M40 3 A44 Colchester . Gloucester T S HA RDIN GE H ROA D T KEY R A40 W N E O M1 O Y M5 R W E LOCATION N M11 R L L A IL Oxford B H S D A1(M) S 11 E Chelmsford A T A D L O O R S L A40 E T R Bus route OM ER M25 E SE SET E R The property is located in Ashford, Kent, a historic market town T ER GH ROAD RO N M R A W A12 O O BU D M25 R S DIN W E H approximately 55 miles to the South East of London and 15 T A420 Watford O Knoll LanePARK MALL . -
Farmers. Dixon William, Joiner and Cartwright, Pelutho Anderson J Oseph (Hind), N Ewtown Edmondson Wm., Grocer, Provision Dealer, Ham Anm;Trong Mrs
• • 224 NORTHERN OR ESKDALE PARLIAMENTARY DIVISION. Akeshaw, that is, Oakwood, is situated on the north bank of the Crummock Beck, five miles from the Abbey. At Overby is a small Reading Room and Library containing about fifty volumes, established in 1897. CHARITIES. The late John Longcake, Esq., of Pelutho, left by will in 1873 the interest of £600 to the poor cottagers of this parish, and the residue of his estate, after the payment of certain legacies, he ordered to be invested in the names of seven trustees, and the interest thereof to be devoted to the promotion of religion and education in the townships of Holme Abbey, Holme Low, and Holme St. Cuthbert's. " The testator bequeaths to the incumbent and church wardens of Holme St. Cuthbert's, a scholarship of £40, for three years, to assist any clever boy attending the school, in obtaining a higher education, and to the incumbent and churchwardens of Holme Abbey £10 for Aldoth School; £20 to the Abbey School; and to the incumbent and wardens of St. Paul's, for Silloth School, £20 per annum, to assist any deserving boy, and the trustees are directed that within twelve months after his death to set apart, and transfer into the names of the several incumbents sufficient Government stock as wo11ld answer the several endowments. The sum of £14 18s. is distributed annually to the poor. HOLME ST. CUTHBERTS. School Board--William Edmondson, chairman; Robert Biglands, John Ostle, Joseph Osbome, Tom Beaty. Clerk to the Board G. Wood Turney, solicitor, Maryport. Post Office at William Edmondson's, Mawbray. -
Durham E-Theses
Durham E-Theses The development of education in the North Ridings of Yorkshire 1902 - 1939 Jennings, E. How to cite: Jennings, E. (1965) The development of education in the North Ridings of Yorkshire 1902 - 1939, Durham theses, Durham University. Available at Durham E-Theses Online: http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/9965/ Use policy The full-text may be used and/or reproduced, and given to third parties in any format or medium, without prior permission or charge, for personal research or study, educational, or not-for-prot purposes provided that: • a full bibliographic reference is made to the original source • a link is made to the metadata record in Durham E-Theses • the full-text is not changed in any way The full-text must not be sold in any format or medium without the formal permission of the copyright holders. Please consult the full Durham E-Theses policy for further details. Academic Support Oce, Durham University, University Oce, Old Elvet, Durham DH1 3HP e-mail: [email protected] Tel: +44 0191 334 6107 http://etheses.dur.ac.uk Abstract of M. Ed. thesis submitted by B. Jennings entitled "The Development of Education in the North Riding of Yorkshire 1902 - 1939" The aim of this work is to describe the growth of the educational system in a local authority area. The education acts, regulations of the Board and the educational theories of the period are detailed together with their effect on the national system. Local conditions of geograpliy and industry are also described in so far as they affected education in the North Riding of Yorkshire and resulted in the creation of an educational system characteristic of the area. -
Ap P E N D Ix 1 P U B D E Ta
Appendix 1 Pub DetailsPub Page 30 Appendix 2 Previous Landlords Date Publicans and other details 1847 Joseph Messenger Henry Osborne 1851 Margaret Roper 1858 Henry Bishop 1883 1897 Sarah Bishop 1901 Sophie Rome 1906 John Kendal 1910 John Creighton 1914 John Kendal 1924 Albert Collister 1929 Tom Graham – Blacksmith 1934 / 1938 / 1954 1968 Gilbert & Elsie Harrison (daughter of Tom Graham) 1975 H Kirkbride 1976 Tom & Elsie Pigg 2004 Landlady Elsie Pigg died. Pub shut for 18 months 2005 Oct 22 1st Public Meeting, 56 attend incl Mandy Hodgson (Elsie’s niece who inherited the pub). 2005 Dec Hopes Estate Agents advertise pub for sale £350,000 2006 Apr Independent Valuation £175,000 2006 Jun Hopes disengaged. New Agents, Bar Agency, instructed to sell pub for £299,000 2006 Aug Offer made by Dawn Lindsay & Andrew Mattinson. Pub bought close to asking price 2006 Dec Pub reopens 2012 Pub closed and up for sale 2013 Dec Morven & Jay Anson buy pub. £95,000. Rename ‘The Lowther. Village Pub and Dining’ 2014 Jul Pub opens after refurbishment 2018 Jan Pub discreetly placed on market with Sidney Phillips May Stop serving food Dec 23 Pub Closes 2019 Mar 30 Application for Change of Use to a dwelling May 16 Parish Council Meeting to discuss the pub May 26 First Public Meeting and Public Consultation June 23 Lowther Arms Community Project formed. Jul 11 Allerdale BC suggest Jay & Morven Anson withdraw planning application Jul 18 LACP accepted onto Plunkett Foundation ‘More Than A Pub’ (MTAP) programme Jul 20 Parish Council apply for Asset of Community Value (ACV) Jul 30 ACV granted by Allerdale BC. -
The Council of the Borough of Middlesbrough (Woodlands Road / Southfield Road / Fern Street) Temporary Traffic Regulation Order 2020
THE COUNCIL OF THE BOROUGH OF MIDDLESBROUGH (WOODLANDS ROAD / SOUTHFIELD ROAD / FERN STREET) TEMPORARY TRAFFIC REGULATION ORDER 2020 NOTICE is hereby given that on 21st April 2020 Middlesbrough Council made an Order which prevents vehicles from using the lengths of road set out below due to redevelopment / improvement works by Teesside University taking place on or near the road because of the likelihood of danger to the public. Access for pedestrians and the emergency services will be maintained at all times. Access will also be provided for vehicles used in connection with maintenance and works carried out by statutory undertakers. The roads will be closed during the programmed dates shown below for up to 18 months or until the works have been completed and there is no longer a danger to the public. If the works are not completed within 18 months, the Order may be extended with the approval of the Secretary of State. Dated 23rd April 2020 Charlotte Benjamin Director of Legal and Governance Services Town Hall Middlesbrough TS1 9FX Location Description Programmed Dates Woodlands Road from its junctions with the southern kerbline of Clarendon 8/6/20 - 10/8/20 Road to the northern kerbline of Southfield Road. Southfield Road from a point 5m west of its junction with the western 20/7/20 - 10/8/20 kerbline of Woodlands Road to a point 15m east of its junction with the eastern kerbline of Woodlands Road. Southfield Road (northern parking bays only) from a point 6m west of its 27/4/20 - 10/8/20 junction with the western kerbline of Fern Street for a distance of 18m in a westerly direction. -
Collection Fund Surplus and Council Tax Base 15-16
PR.37 14/15 Policy and Resources Committee 15 January 2015 Subject: Collection Fund – Council Tax Surplus & Council Tax Base 2015/16 Report by: Director of Resources (S151) Contact Officer: Group Accountant 01427 676560 Purpose / Summary: The report sets out the declaration of the estimated surplus on the Council’s Collection Fund relating to Council Tax at the end of March 2015 and how it is shared amongst the constituent precepting bodies. It also sets out the Council tax base calculation for 2015/16. The tax base is a key component in calculating both the budget requirement and the council tax charge RECOMMENDATION(S): 1) That Members note that the estimated surplus of £711,000 be declared as accruing in the Council’s Collection Fund at 31 March 2015 relating to an estimated Council Tax surplus. 2) That the Council uses its element of the Collection fund surplus in calculating the level of Council Tax in 2015/16. 3) That the calculations of the Council’s tax base for 2015/16 as set out in Appendix A be approved, and that in accordance with the Local Authorities’ (Calculation of Council Tax Base) Regulations 1993 (as amended), the tax base for each part of the Authority’s area shall be as set out in Appendix B. 4) That this report be referred to Council for approval. 1 IMPLICATIONS Legal: It is a requirement under the Local Government Finance Act 1992 that the Council calculates the tax base for council tax purposes. This must be done before 15 January prior to the financial year to which the tax base relates. -
TRADE~. J"AR 37Ls
CT"MBERLAND. J TRADE~. J"AR 37lS Hodgson Miss Maria, Ashgill, Ga.rri· Holliday J. Low mill, Murrah,Penrith Howell Robert Walke~ Riddings, gill, AlstQD Holliday Joseph, Mawbray Hayrigg, 'rhrelkeld, Penrith Bodgson M. Stainton, Birkby, Bootle Holme St. Cuthbert, Silloth Howson George, Skelton, l»enrith Bodgson Rd. Burgh-by-Sands, Carlisle Holliday Joseph, Ruthwaite, High Howson Isaac, Tod rigg, Stoddah, Bodgson Rd. Little Bampton, Wigton Ireby, Mealsgate Penruddock, Penrith Bodgson Robert, Drumburgh castle, Holliday Richard, High Rigg, Un· Howson James (exors. of), Primrose Drumburgh, Carlisle thank, Penrith bank, Skirwith, Langwathby Hodgson Mrs. Sarah, Hollin root, Holliday Robert, Beckgrange, Cald· Huddart Mrs. M. Abbey town,Carlisle Burns,St.John-in-the-Vale, Keswick. beck, Wigton Huddart Thomas, Cleamire, Brockle- Hodgson Thomas, Beaumont, Carlisle Holliday Robt. Plumbland, Aspatria bank, Westward, Wigton Hodgson ·rhomas, Chapel house, Holliday Robert, Tarraby, Carlisle Huddleston T. High Bog ho.Thwaites, Talkin, Brampton Junction, Carlisle Holliday Solomon, Aikton, Wigton Broughton-in-Furness (Lanes) Hodgson Thomas, Cleator Moor Holliday T. High Ireby, Mealsgate · Huddlestone Wm. Acre walls, Wed- Hodgson Thomas, Harringtonling, Holliday T. Plumpton Street, Penrith dicar, Whitehaven Southwaite, Carlisle Holliday Thomas Graham, Whitrigg. Hudson John,Thackmire, Southernby Hodgson Thom:1s, Lonscale, Under- Hutton-in-the-Forest., Penrith Bound, Hesket Newmarket, Wigton skiddaw, Keswick Holliday 'Ihomas Wm. Lungwathby Hudson Mrs. Sarah, Banks ho. How Hodgson Thomas, Mawbray, Maryport Holliday .v. Bnckabank, Dalston Bound, Hesket Newmarket, Wigton Hodgson Thomas, Ratten row, High Holliday William, Barrow mill, Iton- Hudson Mrs. Sarah, Whelpo Head?- Blackwell, Carli;;le field, Carlisle Caldbeck, Wigton Hodgson Thomas H. W1Jod house, Holliday William, Bi1·kby, Maryport Hudson T.