Draft Policies, Sites & Places Development Plan Document
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Stepping Forward November 2016 – February 2017
Stepping forward November 2016 – February 2017 For further information visit: www.southglos.gov.uk/walking Please see the front of this leaflet for theWalking for Health programme of shorter walks. www.southglos.gov.uk Welcome to the Stepping Forward programme of walks for November 2016 - February 2017 Stepping Forward walks are perfect for people who prefer something slightly longer and more strenuous than our Walking for Health walks but who might not want to go on a day long ramble. Most of these walks are between three and four miles so take between 90 minutes and two hours. There is usually somewhere to go for refreshments after the walk. This season’s front cover shows our Our walk leaders are fully trained lovely Filton/Patchway Stokes group on and insured, but you do walk at your a varied and interesting walk along the own risk. Dogs are welcome unless Severn Way at Severn Beach. This walk otherwise stated, but please do keep was part of the National Walking Festival them on a lead. in September. For information about the key symbols, As always, a huge thank you to all the please see the front of our Walking For volunteer leaders for their commitment Health programme and the warm welcome they always give to the walkers. I know I say this every Several of the groups have a mobile programme, but some of our walks phone so you can contact them if really need more volunteers. The leaders needed. Please only ring to check give up so much time and energy and if a walk is happening if there is bad we could just share the load to support weather, or if you require more details. -
Statute Law Repeals: Consultation Paper Repeal of Turnpike Laws
Statute Law Repeals: Consultation Paper Repeal of Turnpike Laws SLR 02/10: Closing date for responses – 25 June 2010 BACKGROUND NOTES ON STATUTE LAW REPEALS (SLR) What is it? 1. Our SLR work involves repealing statutes that are no longer of practical utility. The purpose is to modernise and simplify the statute book, thereby reducing its size and thus saving the time of lawyers and others who use it. This in turn helps to avoid unnecessary costs. It also stops people being misled by obsolete laws that masquerade as live law. If an Act features still in the statute book and is referred to in text-books, people reasonably enough assume that it must mean something. Who does it? 2. Our SLR work is carried out by the Law Commission and the Scottish Law Commission pursuant to section 3(1) of the Law Commissions Act 1965. Section 3(1) imposes a duty on both Commissions to keep the law under review “with a view to its systematic development and reform, including in particular ... the repeal of obsolete and unnecessary enactments, the reduction of the number of separate enactments and generally the simplification and modernisation of the law”. Statute Law (Repeals) Bill 3. Implementation of the Commissions’ SLR proposals is by means of special Statute Law (Repeals) Bills. 18 such Bills have been enacted since 1965 repealing more than 2000 whole Acts and achieving partial repeals in thousands of others. Broadly speaking the remit of a Statute Law (Repeals) Bill extends to any enactment passed at Westminster. Accordingly it is capable of repealing obsolete statutory text throughout the United Kingdom (i.e. -
South Gloucestershire Council Boundary Review Liberal Democrat Group Submission June 2017
South Gloucestershire Council Boundary Review Liberal Democrat Group Submission June 2017 This submission is from the Liberal Democrat group on South Gloucestershire Council. The Lib Dems are the second largest group on the council, and one of only two to ever have had an overall majority. As such, there is a good understanding of community links, and history, across much of the district. In our submission we have focussed upon the areas where we have deep community roots, stretching back over 40 years. In those areas we know the communities well, so feel we can make submissions which reflect the nuances of natural communities. However, there are some areas where we do feel others are better placed to identify the nuances. In those areas we have not sought to offer detailed solutions. We believe communities and individuals in those areas are best placed to provide their local solutions. We have submitted specific plans for the district over the areas where we have a good understanding, and believe our proposals are powerful, rooted in strong community identities, and efficient local government. All of the proposals are within the permissible variance from the new electoral quota with 61 Councillors, and we do not believe this needs to be modified up or down to make the map work. South Gloucestershire elects in an “all-up” manner, which means under Commission guidance, a mixture of 1, 2, and 3 member wards is appropriate, which we have proposed. We have proposed no ‘doughnut’, or detached wards, and many of the proposals allow for the reunification of communities which have previously been separated by imposed political boundaries. -
NOTICE of ELECTION Election of Parish Councillors
NOTICE OF ELECTION South Gloucestershire Council Election of Parish Councillors for the Parishes listed below Number of Parish Councillors to Number of Parish Councillors to Parishes Parishes be elected be elected Acton Turville Five Marshfield Nine Almondsbury, Almondsbury Four Oldbury-on-Severn Seven Almondsbury, Compton Two Oldland, Cadbury Heath Seven Almondsbury, Cribbs Causeway Seven Oldland, Longwell Green Seven Alveston Eleven Oldland, Mount Hill One Aust Seven Olveston Nine Badminton Seven Patchway, Callicroft Nine Bitton, North Common Six Patchway, Coniston Six Bitton, Oldland Common Four Pilning & Severn Beach, Pilning Four Bitton, South Four Pilning & Severn Beach, Severn Six Beach Bradley Stoke, North Six Pucklechurch Nine Bradley Stoke, South Seven Rangeworthy Five Bradley Stoke, Stoke Brook Two Rockhampton Five Charfield Nine Siston, Common Three Cold Ashton Five Siston, Rural One Cromhall Seven Siston, Warmley Five Dodington, North East Four Sodbury, North East Five Dodington, North West Eight Sodbury, Old Sodbury Five Dodington, South Three Sodbury, South West Five Downend & Bromley Heath, Downend Ten Stoke Gifford, Central Nine Downend & Bromley Heath, Staple Hill Two Stoke Gifford, University Three Doynton Five Stoke Lodge and the Common Nine Dyrham & Hinton Five Thornbury, Central Three Emersons Green, Badminton Three Thornbury, East Three Emersons Green, Blackhorse Three Thornbury, North East Four Emersons Green, Emersons Green Seven Thornbury, North West Three Emersons Green, Pomphrey Three Thornbury, South Three -
Public Forum Public Forum for 7Th July Meeting of Full Council
Public Forum Public Forum for 7th July meeting of Full Council Date: Tuesday, 7 July 2020 Time: 6.00 pm Venue: Virtual Meeting - Zoom Committee Meeting with Public Access via YouTube Issued by: , Democratic Services City Hall, Bristol, BS1 5TR E-mail: [email protected] Public Forum – Public Forum Public Forum 1. Public Petitions and Statements Public Petitions – none received or this meeting. Public Statements Ref No Name Title Registered to Speak PS01 Thomas Pearce Councillor Comments Attending to speak PS02 Ben Anthony BS3 asthma Clean-Air-For-Life No PS03 Ollie Fortune Merchant Venturers Attending to speak PS04 Suzanne Audrey Backbench and opposition members No access to information PS05 Tom Bosanquet Totterdown side of Victoria Park traffic No and road crossings PS06 Colin Davis Clean Air Zone No PS07 Andrew Varney The Importance of ELT schools to the Attending to speak Bristol Economy PS08 SWTN/ RFS Transport Attending- David Redgewell to speak as representative PS09 David Redgewell Transport Attending to speak PS10 Osei Johnson Black Lives Matter Attending to speak PS11 Esther Kelly-Levy Education Attending to speak PS12 FoSBR (Christina Biggs) Covid/ development of the local rail Attending to speak network PS13 Jendaye Selassie Rastafari Cultural Centre in St Pauls Attending to speak PS14 Martin Upchurch Colston Statue No PS15 Pat Ross Care of black disabled children in Bristol No PS16 Mary Page Pay Gaps report, City of hope, and No improving Inclusion 2. Questions from Members of the Public Ref No Name Title Registered -
Fed-Up Traders Wait 6 Months for Phone Fault to Be Fixed
THE WEEK IN East Bristol & North East Somerset FREE Issue 555 12th December 2018 Read by over 40,000 people each week Fed-up traders wait 6 months for phone fault to be fixed Traders in Hanham who have been plagued by phone Bernard Jackson, who runs Fleurtations florist in the High connection on 17 occasions – the longest period being five connection problems for six months hope that the promise Street, says he and five neighbouring businesses have days. Connection was lost again for three consecutive that the fault is finally being fixed will ensure they have a been affected. days in November, which is when an exasperated Mr good Christmas. Since May he says he has lost phone and internet Jackson contacted The Week in to highlight the problems that traders have been facing. Mr Jackson said that when an underground service engineer first came out in May, he’d identified a length of faulty cable which needed replacing and had even marked the spot on the pavement. Mr Jackson says he and other business owners have lost trade over the last six months, are fed up with the temporary fixes and want the fault sorted once and for all. Openreach is a functional division of telecommunications company BT plc, that owns and maintains the telephone wires, ducts, cabinets and exchanges that connect nearly all homes and businesses in the UK to the national broadband and telephone network. Continued on page 3 Also in this Kingswood dog Why S. Glos exam New book about Spotlight on parents’ fight fears reignited results have been so 1940s Keynsham bad parking week’s issue . -
Oldland Common - £695,000 5 Bed Detached House 60 North Street, BS30 8TR a Substantial 5 Bedroom Detached Family Home in the Village of Oldland Common
Oldland Common - £695,000 5 bed detached house 60 North Street, BS30 8TR A substantial 5 bedroom detached family home in the village of Oldland Common. With stunning large gardens to the rear and plenty of parking on the private driveway to the front, this property sits on the edge of Bristol and is only a 15 minute drive from the beautiful Georgian city of Bath. Upon entering the property you will find yourself in a spacious hallway with original oak block floor and feature window. The cloakroom/WC is to the side of the hallway. The sitting room is the full length of the property with a rounded bay window to the front and a French door bay opening onto the rear garden. This room features a period fireplace and unique corner window to the side. The fully fitted kitchen boasts integral appliances throughout and windows to 2 elevations. This opens onto a large open-plan family-come-dining room creating a versatile living area. Additionally to the ground floor is also a utility room and a further storage/play room. On approaching the first floor the stairs branch in both directions giving 2 landing areas. The master bedroom features a recently fitted en suite shower room and fitted wardrobe. There are an additional 2 bedrooms and a family bathroom to this side with a further 2 bedrooms and a family shower room on the opposite landing. There are also 2 large loft rooms to the floor above. Externally the property boasts a large south facing garden to the rear with established trees and shrubs and plenty of lawn. -
GLOUCESTERSHIRE Extracted from the Database of the Milestone Society
Entries in red - require a photograph GLOUCESTERSHIRE Extracted from the database of the Milestone Society National ID Grid Reference Road No. Parish Location Position GL_AVBF05 SP 102 149 UC road (was A40) HAMPNETT West Northleach / Fosse intersection on the verge against wall GL_AVBF08 SP 1457 1409 A40 FARMINGTON New Barn Farm by the road GL_AVBF11 SP 2055 1207 A40 BARRINGTON Barrington turn by the road GL_AVGL01 SP 02971 19802 A436 ANDOVERSFORD E of Andoversford by Whittington turn (assume GL_SWCM07) GL_AVGL02 SP 007 187 A436 DOWDESWELL Kilkenny by the road GL_BAFY07 ST 6731 7100 A4175 OLDLAND West Street, Oldland Common on the verge almost opposite St Annes Drive GL_BAFY07SL ST 6732 7128 A4175 OLDLAND Oldland Common jct High St/West Street on top of wall, left hand side GL_BAFY07SR ST 6733 7127 A4175 OLDLAND Oldland Common jct High St/West Street on top of wall, right hand side GL_BAFY08 ST 6790 7237 A4175 OLDLAND Bath Road, N Common; 50m S Southway Drive on wide verge GL_BAFY09 ST 6815 7384 UC road SISTON Siston Lane, Webbs Heath just South Mangotsfield turn on verge GL_BAFY10 ST 6690 7460 UC road SISTON Carsons Road; 90m N jcn Siston Hill on the verge GL_BAFY11 ST 6643 7593 UC road KINGSWOOD Rodway Hill jct Morley Avenue against wall GL_BAGL15 ST 79334 86674 A46 HAWKESBURY N of A433 jct by the road GL_BAGL18 ST 81277 90989 A46 BOXWELL WITH LEIGHTERTON near Leighterton on grass bank above road GL_BAGL18a ST 80406 89691 A46 DIDMARTON Saddlewood Manor turn by the road GL_BAGL19 ST 823 922 A46 BOXWELL WITH LEIGHTERTON N of Boxwell turn by the road GL_BAGL20 ST 8285 9371 A46 BOXWELL WITH LEIGHTERTON by Lasborough turn on grass verge GL_BAGL23 ST 845 974 A46 HORSLEY Tiltups End by the road GL_BAGL25 ST 8481 9996 A46 NAILSWORTH Whitecroft by former garage (maybe uprooted) GL_BAGL26a SO 848 026 UC road RODBOROUGH Rodborough Manor by the road Registered Charity No 1105688 1 Entries in red - require a photograph GLOUCESTERSHIRE Extracted from the database of the Milestone Society National ID Grid Reference Road No. -
Free Swimming Pilot for Pregnant Women Launched
PRESS RELEASE January 2020 Free swimming pilot for pregnant women launched From 1 February, pregnant women living in South Gloucestershire will be able access free swimming as part of a year‐long pilot scheme from the region’s Active Lifestyle Centres. The scheme is being run as a joint partnership between Circadian Trust, the not‐for‐profit organisation operating the Active Lifestyle Centres, and South Gloucestershire Council. The pilot will run for a year, which will be monitored and reviewed, and the findings used to inform any future decision. Swimming is a highly beneficial way to stay active during pregnancy and can be performed safely in all three trimesters. Widely recognised as a low‐impact method of aerobic exercise, swimming provides a more comfortable environment for expectant mothers to maintain their physical health – as the water both keeps them cool and supports the additional weight. In addition, researchers are now discovering that regular aerobic exercise during pregnancy has the potential to improve the mental and physical health of children well into adulthood. To be eligible for the scheme, women will need to present their Maternity Exemption Certificate, supplied by their doctor or midwife, and will also need to show proof of address before their first session. Mark Crutchley, Chief Executive at Circadian Trust, said: “As an organisation with health and wellbeing at its core, we’re committed to making exercise accessible to all. Therefore, it’s an absolute pleasure to be helping women to swim throughout their pregnancies for free. “There are a vast number of benefits to exercising during pregnancy, from maintaining a healthy weight to reducing health‐related complications for the mother and baby – and these benefits can have long‐term effect on a child’s development beyond birth. -
South Gloucestershire Council Conservative Group
COUNCIL SIZE SUBMISSION South Gloucestershire South Gloucestershire Council Conservative Group. February 2017 Overview of South Gloucestershire 1. South Gloucestershire is an affluent unitary authority on the North and East fringe of Bristol. South Gloucestershire Council (SGC) was formed in 1996 following the dissolution of Avon County Council and the merger of Northavon District and Kingswood Borough Councils. 2. South Gloucestershire has around 274,700 residents, 62% of which live in the immediate urban fringes of Bristol in areas including Kingswood, Filton, Staple Hill, Downend, Warmley and Bradley Stoke. 18% live in the market towns of Thornbury, Yate, and Chipping Sodbury. The remaining 20% live in rural Gloucestershire villages such as Marshfield, Pucklechurch, Hawkesbury Upton, Oldbury‐ on‐Severn, Alveston, and Charfield. 3. South Gloucestershire has lower than average unemployment (3.3% against an England average of 4.8% as of 2016), earns above average wages (average weekly full time wage of £574.20 against England average of £544.70), and has above average house prices (£235,000 against England average of £218,000)1. Deprivation 4. Despite high employment and economic outputs, there are pockets of deprivation in South Gloucestershire. Some communities suffer from low income, unemployment, social isolation, poor housing, low educational achievement, degraded environment, access to health services, or higher levels of crime than other neighbourhoods. These forms of deprivation are often linked and the relationship between them is so strong that we have identified 5 Priority Neighbourhoods which are categorised by the national Indices of Deprivation as amongst the 20% most deprived neighbourhoods in England and Wales. These are Cadbury Heath, Kingswood, Patchway, Staple Hill, and west and south Yate/Dodington. -
Local Plan 2018-2036
SUPPORTING DOCUMENT FEBRUARY 2018 South Gloucestershire LOCAL PLAN 2018-2036 Gypsy and Traveller Accommodation Assessment (GTAA) 2017 Explanatory Note February 2018 www.southglos.gov.ukPAGE 3 Planning for our future South Gloucestershire Gypsy & Traveller Accommodation Assessment (GTAA) 2017 – Explanatory Note Introduction The Council, in its capacity as the local planning authority (LPA) is required by national policy to make their own assessment of ‘travellers’ accommodation needs for the purposes of planning. In August 2015, the Government published revised planning guidance in ‘Planning Policy for Traveller Sites’ (PPTS). The most significant amendment was a change to the definition of Gypsy and Travellers and Travelling Showpeople (‘travellers’). The new definition effectively regards those who have ceased to travel on a permanent basis as falling outside of the definition of what it means, for the purposes of planning, to be a Gypsy/Traveller or Travelling Showperson. The revised definition (from Annex 1) is as follows: “Persons of nomadic habit of life whatever their race or origin, including such persons who on grounds only of their own or their family’s or dependants’ educational or health needs or old age have ceased to travel temporarily, but excluding members of an organised group of travelling showpeople or circus people travelling together as such. In determining whether persons are “gypsies and travellers” for the purposes of this planning policy, consideration should be given to the following issues amongst other relevant matters: a. whether they previously led a nomadic habit of life b. the reasons for ceasing their nomadic habit of life c. whether there is an intention of living a nomadic habit of life in the future, and if so, how soon and in what circumstances.” This change to national policy has resulted in the Council needing to update its Gypsy and Traveller evidence base (the GTAA) in progressing its Local Plan. -
Tickets Are Accepted but Not Sold on This Service
May 2015 Guide to Bus Route Frequencies Route Frequency (minutes/journeys) Route Frequency (minutes/journeys) No. Route Description / Days of Operation Operator Mon-Sat (day) Eves Suns No. Route Description / Days of Operation Operator Mon-Sat (day) Eves Suns 21 Musgrove Park Hospital , Taunton (Bus Station), Monkton Heathfield, North Petherton, Bridgwater, Dunball, Huntspill, BS 30 1-2 jnys 60 626 Wotton-under-Edge, Kingswood, Charfield, Leyhill, Cromhall, Rangeworthy, Frampton Cotterell, Winterbourne, Frenchay, SS 1 return jny Highbridge, Burnham-on-Sea, Brean, Lympsham, Uphill, Weston-super-Mare Daily Early morning/early evening journeys (early evening) Broadmead, Bristol Monday to Friday (Mon-Fri) start from/terminate at Bridgwater. Avonrider and WestonRider tickets are accepted but not sold on this service. 634 Tormarton, Hinton, Dyrham, Doyton, Wick, Bridgeyate, Kingswood Infrequent WS 2 jnys (M, W, F) – – One Ticket... 21 Lulsgate Bottom, Felton, Winford, Bedminster, Bristol Temple Meads, Bristol City Centre Monday to Friday FW 2 jnys –– 1 jny (Tu, Th) (Mon-Fri) 635 Marshfield, Colerne, Ford, Biddestone, Chippenham Monday to Friday FS 2-3 jnys –– Any Bus*... 26 Weston-super-Mare , Locking, Banwell, Sandford, Winscombe, Axbridge, Cheddar, Draycott, Haybridge, WB 60 –– (Mon-Fri) Wells (Bus Station) Monday to Saturday 640 Bishop Sutton, Chew Stoke, Chew Magna, Stanton Drew, Stanton Wick, Pensford, Publow, Woollard, Compton Dando, SB 1 jny (Fri) –– All Day! 35 Bristol Broad Quay, Redfield, Kingswood, Wick, Marshfield Monday to Saturday