THE SOUTH WALES FOOTBALL ASSOCIATION FINANCE SUSPENSION REPORT As at 30 June 2019

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

THE SOUTH WALES FOOTBALL ASSOCIATION FINANCE SUSPENSION REPORT As at 30 June 2019 THE SOUTH WALES FOOTBALL ASSOCIATION FINANCE SUSPENSION REPORT as at 30 June 2019 To all League and Club Secretaries: Suspensions for Failure to Pay Disciplinary Invoices. The Suspensions for Failure to Pay Disciplinary Invoices Report details those persons who have been suspended from all aspects of football in accordance with FAW Rule 49 i.e. 'failing to pay or carry out any penalty, sanction, order or ruling made under the Reduced Penalty Regulations or by the Judicial Panels'. These persons have been notified of the suspension and will remain suspended until such time as all outstanding orders have been cleared. Appended below is a complete list of all players who are still under suspension because of unpaid fines over the last ten seasons from July 2009 to 30 June 2019 relating to misconduct reports. The lists are split with players/club officials being shown together in each category, 2nd list is of all players suspended sine die by the Association, the 3rd list shows clubs suspended. The clubs indicated are those for which the players/team officials were members at the time of the misconduct and the dates are those when the cases were dealt with by the disciplinary committee. All clubs and leagues are advised that registrations CANNOT be accepted from any person whose name appears on this list until payment has been received & the person must not have active involvement with the club until it has been established with the Association Assistant Secretary (Discipline) that the outstanding fine has been paid. If a player informs a club that he has paid his fine, ask him to produce a receipt as proof. For every fine paid a receipt is issued – either to the player if the fine is paid by him/her, or to the Club through which it is paid. In addition, a clearance note is sent to the League concerned when the fine is paid. There is no doubt that many of the players on this list will endeavour to play for another club, probably where they are not known. This list has been produced for the assistance of all Leagues and Clubs and accordingly, NO EXCUSES WILL BE ACCEPTED FROM ANY CLUB FOUND TO HAVE PLAYED A SUSPENDED PLAYER. In all such cases, both club and player will be severely dealt with. Please note that under the revised procedures in force since 2006, it is possible that players will have outstanding games of suspensions even if no fines are shown. Please therefore check previous lists carefully – it is the club’s responsibility to ensure that players are eligible to play. If a player has an outstanding suspension, he/she must be registered to allow him/her to serve the suspension. Suspensions can only be transferred from one club to another with the prior written permission of the Association. In the event of any query, Leagues or Clubs must contact this Association Assistant Secretary (Discipline) for guidance. Geoff Buckingham Hon Assistant Secretary (Discipline) [email protected] Page 1 of 12 Sunday, 14 July 2019 19:57 Notes for reference: • Details to the left are the case reference number. • From this, it is possible to identify the season the offence took place. AW-1xxx relate to 2009/10 AW-2xxx relate to 2010/11 AW-3xxx relate to 2011/12 AW-4xxx relate to 2012/13 AW-5xxx relate to 2013/14 AW-6xxx relate to 2014/15 AW-7xxx relate to 2015/16 AW-8xxx relate to 2016/17 AW-9xxx relate to 2017/18 AW-10-xxx relate to 2018/9 • Where a date is quoted on the last column, the player is still suspended until that date. • Recent cases may still have suspensions outstanding by way of a number of games – these will be advised on the receipt sent by the Association. • Where the same person is listed on more than one occasion, they are likely to have a further suspension to serve which cannot begin until the first fine has been paid • A ‘Rule 8’ suspension means the individual is prohibited from playing until they have requested a personal hearing for their case. Section 1 – OUTSTANDING FINES – Players/Team Officials All those (players and team officials) who receive fines along with touchline or match suspensions will be considered to be under suspension from all aspects of football if the fine is not paid by the expiry of the suspension. Reference: AW FAW Name of Players/ Name of Club: League: Total outstanding Number: Team Officials: 2342 475 713 Aaron Tyndall Penydarren BC SWSL £60 9329 544 685 Aaron Williams AFC Bargoed SWAL £85 6236 513 705 Adam Atyeo Abercregan United Port Talbot £100 10-272 540 723 Adam Hyde Gurnos Social B Merthyr £135 4116 640 087 Adam Thomas Cardiff Rangers CDL Rule 8 8181 Adan Hassan Tiger Bay Juniors C&D £105 2209 Adrian Morris Llantwit Major Juniors VOG £25 8235 554 466 Ahmed Jama Grange Allstars Comb £105 6319 664 373 Ahmed Jama Ayanleh Butetown Bulldogs COMB £60 7204 664 369 Akinas Asamoah Marshfield Athletic COMB £45 6281 650 038 Ali Mohammed Tiger Bay COMB £120 5372 657 740 Ahmed Hassan Tiger Bay Comb £75 4258 Andrew Hovord Grangetown BGC C&D £74 4321 Andrew Hovord Grangetown BGC C&D £99 Page 2 of 12 Sunday, 14 July 2019 19:57 5371 Andrew Hovord Cardiff Corinthians Junior SWYL £100 5079 545 925 Andrew Lia Willows Albion Comb £130 10-325 478 285 Andrew Littley Margam YC Port Talbot £210 3225 Andrew O'Keeffe St Marys CDL £75 3254 613 246 Andrew Roberts St Marys CDL £25 1247 539 000 Andrew Thomas Inter Cardiff CDL £100 4313 479 126 Andy Ellaway Fairwater CDL £100 3261 545 011 Angelo Carvara Grange Albion CDL £75 3385 545 011 Angelo Carvara Grange Albion CDL £25 6202 650 774 Anthony Hassan Eastern Tigers COMB £75 5231 Anthony Jones Vale Ladies SWWGL £75 8060 Anthony Jones Cornelly United Port Talbot £155 5218 B Jones Mountain Ash FC AVFL £75 6228 Barry John Brackla Juniors B&D £50 4042 638 285 Ben Donaly FC Seamarshals Revolution LAZ £100 6151 634164 Ben Kingsley L&G Athletic LAZ £150 2272 491 546 Bradley Evans Cosmo Rhondda £50 7070 630 911 Brandon Jarmain Tynewydd FC VOG £85 8226 471 060 Brent Hewitt Aberfan Social & Democratic FC SWAL £105 10-166 638 667 Callum Chambers St. Albans SWYL £60 4148 Callum Wheeler Morgan Tavern TERV Sunday £40 10-115 657 981 Calum Jones Valley Blades SWYL £50 9299 652 897 Cameron Jones Pentrebach Labour Merthyr £60 1299 496 398 Carl Darlington Avonline 4W4S £50 8162 481 899 Carl Williams AFC Perthcelyn AVFL £80 10-126 651 014 Chad Hemming Cornelly United Juniors SWYL £100 10-167 649 668 Che Ely St. Albans SWYL £60 2014 470 774 Chris McCann Gilfach Goch Spartans Bridgend Sat £100 2152 530 776 Chris O'Donnell Cardiff Hibernian COMB £75 9177 Chris Peters Tonyrefail BGC SWYL £140 2359 575 099 Chris Sainty Inter Cardiff CDL £75 9037 527 103 Christian Peacock Cadoxton Barry VOG £150 5147 477 265 Christopher Brooks Margam YC Port Talbot £100 3183 534 271 Christopher Gallivan AFC Rumney Juniors CDL £60 1104.1 468 462 Christopher Jones Llangynwyd Rangers Bridgend Sat £50 5093 652 197 Christopher Jones Avenue Hotspurs Comb £100 9178 Christopher Martin Elympia Lazarou £110 10-252 Christopher Morris Pontprennau Pumas C&D U16's £85 6094 664 072 Colin Harvey Splotlands FC COMB £75 10-407 526 244 Corey Cotterill RAFA FC C&D £85 9295 548 929 Corey Jones Penyrenglyn Rhondda £85 9257 642 951 Corey Stephens Talbot Green TERV £210 2091 534 422 Courtnet Ennis Pentwyn Dynamo SWYL £40 1032 491 847 Craig Grainger Glyncoed Corries CDL £50 2348 491 847 Craig Grainger Glyncoed Corries CDL £25 2382 491 847 Craig Grainger Glyncoed Corries CDL £25 3179 468 589 Craig Hutcheon Temple Bar AVFL £75 4327 474 310 Craig Jenkins Aber Valley YMCA SWAL £75 4262 Craig Thomas Bar Ash TERV Sunday £75 Page 3 of 12 Sunday, 14 July 2019 19:57 4120 527 773 Dale Smith Penywaun AVFL £100 1054 541 777 Damon Pimlot St Athan VoG £75 2213 492 270 Dan Taylor Pentwyn Corries LAZ £50 9110 607 521 Dane Griffiths USW BUCS £135 10-029 536 001 Daniel Brides Glamorgan Vikings Lazarou £110 10-030 536 001 Daniel Brides Caerau Albion C&D £110 9152 619 787 Daniel Dudley QPR Merthyr £85 8218 478 847 Daniel Edwards Porthcawl Town Athletic Port Talbot £60 4210 630 409 Daniel Griffiths Ferndale BGC SWAL £60 8174 578 899 Daniel Harvey AFC Rumney Juniors (Sunday) LAZ £155 6182 532 712 Daniel Howard Fairwater Social Juniors SWYL Rule 8 10-013 535 003 Daniel Pike Cardiff Corinthians FC SWAL £160 7216 671 067 Daniel Slack Master Mariner VOG £65 7196 520 984 Darran Hughes Llantrisant VETS £100 7091 Dave Chapman Canton Rangers SWYL £85 4097 478 060 David Barry Pentwyn Dynamos SWSL £60 1073 536 327 David Harvey Treorchy BGC Rhondda Rule 8 1078 536 327 David Harvey Treorchy BGc u-17 Rhondda Rule 8 9249 473 435 David Parfitt Penrhiwceiber Cons AVFL £170 9162 Dean Whitlock Barry Wolves VOG U12's £60 2400 Dean Williams Tiryberth Dynamoes TERV £50 8342 671 696 Dewi Hopkins Abercregan United Port Talbot £105 10-100 545 409 Dylan Ford Pontlottyn SWAL £60 7285 688 891 Elliot Gully FC Dragons SWYL £45 4073 474 669 Fuad Zaid Hamadryad LAZ £100 10-372 478 343 Gareth Coleman St. Josephs SWAL £85 7139 578 704 Gareth Courtman Barry Albion VOG Rule 8 8262 578 704 Gareth Courtman Caerdydd Wanderers LAZ Rule 8 8364 578 704 Gareth Courtman AFC Whitchurch SWAL Rule 8 10-000 578 704 Gareth Courtman Caerdydd Wanderers Laz £150 10-122 495 200 Gareth Humphreys Treforest FC TERV £85 10-024 487 477 Gareth Moses Carnetown SWAL £125 3104 556 040 Gareth Stickler Cardiff Argyle LAZ £127 9125 542 695 Gareth Witts Llanharan FC B&D £255 1051 Garry Morton Coedely Bridgend Sunday Rule 8 10-141 467 150 Gavin Price Gurnos Social B Merthyr £85 10-383 Gavin Richardson Pencoed BGC B&D U16's £80 8031 547 380 Gavin Thomas Aberdare Town ARJFL £45 6214 529 655 Glyn Thomas
Recommended publications
  • Cardiff Bay 1 Cardiff Bay
    Cardiff Bay 1 Cardiff Bay Cardiff Bay Welsh: Bae Caerdydd The Bay or Tiger Bay Cardiff Bay Cardiff Bay shown within Wales Country Wales Sovereign state United Kingdom Post town CARDIFF Postcode district CF10 Dialling code 029 EU Parliament Wales Welsh Assembly Cardiff South & Penarth Website http:/ / www. cardiffharbour. com/ Cardiff Harbour Authority List of places: UK • Wales • Cardiff Bay (Welsh: Bae Caerdydd) is the area created by the Cardiff Barrage in South Cardiff, the capital of Wales. The regeneration of Cardiff Bay is now widely regarded as one of the most successful regeneration projects in the United Kingdom.[1] The Bay is supplied by two rivers (Taff and Ely) to form a 500-acre (2.0 km2) freshwater lake round the former dockland area south of the city centre. The Bay was formerly tidal, with access to the sea limited to a couple of hours each side of high water but now provides 24 hour access through three locks[2] . History Cardiff Bay played a major part in Cardiff’s development by being the means of exporting coal from the South Wales Valleys to the rest of the world, helping to power the industrial age. The coal mining industry helped fund the building of Cardiff into the Capital city of Wales and helped the Third Marquis of Bute, who owned the docks, become the richest man in the world at the time. As Cardiff exports grew, so did its population; dockworkers and sailors from across the world settled in neighbourhoods close to the docks, known as Tiger Bay, and communities from up to 45 different nationalities, including Norwegian, Somali, Yemeni, Spanish, Italian, Caribbean and Irish helped create the unique multicultural character of the area.
    [Show full text]
  • Review of 20,000 Saints
    Review of Twenty thousand saints , a novel by Fflur Dafydd Talybont (Ceredigion), Alcemi, 2008, pp 251 Why should an award-winning young Welsh writer turn to English for her third novel? To reach a wider audience, according to conventional wisdom. But for Fflur Dafydd, who won the prose medal at the 2006 Eisteddfod with her Welsh language novel Atyniad, the answer is not that simple. It is about finding her voice: 'Writing in Welsh is completely different to writing in English; because fewer writers are writing in Welsh, there is so much more to be done, and there is real opportunity to be innovative with the way that you use the language. English is different; less vulnerable as a language and therefore more robust and exacting, so that when writing in English I’m less concerned with language innovation and more concerned with finding my own voice and identity within that language.' The novel, 'Twenty Thousand Saints', (Alcemi, 2008) is set on the tiny island of Bardsey, off the north east coast of Wales. Today Bardsey is known (if at all) as a bird watching paradise, but in the 6th century it was an established centre of pilgrimage on a par with Lindisfarne and Iona; three visits to Bardsey were worth a pilgrimage to Rome. There are Arthurian associations, too, as there are almost everywhere in Wales: Merlin is alleged to be buried here (along with twenty thousand Celtic saints, hence the title of the novel), and one theory at least identifies Bardsey as the Isle of Avalon, the last resting place of Arthur and Guinevere.
    [Show full text]
  • Jane Hutt: Businesses That Have Received Welsh Government Grants During 2011/12
    Jane Hutt: Businesses that have received Welsh Government grants during 2011/12 1 STOP FINANCIAL SERVICES 100 PERCENT EFFECTIVE TRAINING 1MTB1 1ST CHOICE TRANSPORT LTD 2 WOODS 30 MINUTE WORKOUT LTD 3D HAIR AND BEAUTY LTD 4A GREENHOUSE COM LTD 4MAT TRAINING 4WARD DEVELOPMENT LTD 5 STAR AUTOS 5C SERVICES LTD 75 POINT 3 LTD A AND R ELECTRICAL WALES LTD A JEFFERY BUILDING CONTRACTOR A & B AIR SYSTEMS LTD A & N MEDIA FINANCE SERVICES LTD A A ELECTRICAL A A INTERNATIONAL LTD A AND E G JONES A AND E THERAPY A AND G SERVICES A AND P VEHICLE SERVICES A AND S MOTOR REPAIRS A AND T JONES A B CARDINAL PACKAGING LTD A BRADLEY & SONS A CUSHLEY HEATING SERVICES A CUT ABOVE A FOULKES & PARTNERS A GIDDINGS A H PLANT HIRE LTD A HARRIES BUILDING SERVICES LTD A HIER PLUMBING AND HEATING A I SUMNER A J ACCESS PLATFORMS LTD A J RENTALS LIMITED A J WALTERS AVIATION LTD A M EVANS A M GWYNNE A MCLAY AND COMPANY LIMITED A P HUGHES LANDSCAPING A P PATEL A PARRY CONSTRUCTION CO LTD A PLUS TRAINING & BUSINES SERVICES A R ELECTRICAL TRAINING CENTRE A R GIBSON PAINTING AND DEC SERVS A R T RHYMNEY LTD A S DISTRIBUTION SERVICES LTD A THOMAS A W JONES BUILDING CONTRACTORS A W RENEWABLES LTD A WILLIAMS A1 CARE SERVICES A1 CEILINGS A1 SAFE & SECURE A19 SKILLS A40 GARAGE A4E LTD AA & MG WOZENCRAFT AAA TRAINING CO LTD AABSOLUTELY LUSH HAIR STUDIO AB INTERNET LTD ABB LTD ABER GLAZIERS LTD ABERAVON ICC ABERDARE FORD ABERGAVENNY FINE FOODS LTD ABINGDON FLOORING LTD ABLE LIFTING GEAR SWANSEA LTD ABLE OFFICE FURNITURE LTD ABLEWORLD UK LTD ABM CATERING FOR LEISURE LTD ABOUT TRAINING
    [Show full text]
  • Restoring the 'Mam'
    Restoring the ‘Mam’: Archives, Access and Research into Women’s Pasts in Wales MANDI O’NEILL The history of Welsh people has often been camouflaged in British history yet women have been rendered inconspicuous within their own Welsh history.1 t has been suggested that ‘Welsh women are culturally invisible’2 in a country which has had a predominantly male workforce in its modern history which resulted in a strong cultural identity around I 3 rugby and male voice choirs which excluded women. Welsh women were strongly identified with the domestic sphere and have been represented as a sort of nostalgic, idealised mother: the ‘mam’, the matriarch of the home, waging a constant battle, often in the face of economic deprivation, to keep her home and family clean and well-fed, often at the expense of her own health. ‘Cleanliness is next to godliness’, Public History Review Vol 18 (2011): 47–64 © UTSePress and the author Public History Review | O’Neill could have been her mantra: her reputation – which was all-important – was one of hard work, thrift and piety. Rarely, if ever, working outside the home, social activities revolved around the chapel. Pubs and politics were for the men.4 Government statistics have tended to reinforce the somewhat homogenous, domestic view of Welsh women. In the mid interwar period, only twenty-one percent of women in Wales were recorded as economically active5 although oral history interviews reveal that women did take on additional work, often in the home, to supplement family income.6 While the idealised ‘mam’ is rooted firmly in the coalmining communities of the South Wales Valleys, there were plenty of women in urban areas such as Cardiff and Swansea and large parts of rural Wales who did not conform to this image.
    [Show full text]
  • Inspiring Patagonia
    + Philip Pullman Growing up in Ardudwy John Osmond Where stand the parties now Inspiring Gerald Holtham Time to be bold on the economy Ned Thomas Patagonia Cultural corridor to the east Sarah Jenkinson A forest the size of Wales Gareth Rees The PISA moral panic Virginia Isaac Small is still beautiful Mari Beynon Owen Wales at the Venice Biennale Trevor Fishlock Memories are made of this Peter Finch Joining a thousand literary flowers together Peter Stead The Burton global phenomenon www.iwa.org.uk | Summer 2011 | No. 44 | £10 The Institute of Welsh Affairs gratefully acknowledges funding support from the Joseph Rowntree Charitable Trust, the Esmée Fairbairn Foundation and the Waterloo Foundation. The following organisations are corporate members: Private Sector • Nuon Renewables • Cyngor Gwynedd Council • UWIC Business School • A4E • OCR Cymru • Cyngor Ynys Mon / Isle of • Wales Audit Office • ABACA Limited • Ove Arup & Partners Anglesey County Council • WLGA • Alchemy Wealth • Parker Plant Hire Ltd • Embassy of Ireland • WRAP Cymru Management Ltd • Peter Gill & Associates • Environment Agency Wales • Ystrad Mynach College • Arden Kitt Associates Ltd • PricewaterhouseCoopers • EVAD Trust • Association of Chartered • Princes Gate Spring Water • Fforwm Certified Accountants • RMG • Forestry Commission Voluntary Sector (ACCA) • Royal Mail Group Wales • Gower College Swansea • Age Cymru • Beaufort Research Ltd • RWE NPower Renewables • Harvard College Library • All Wales Ethnic Minority • British Gas • S A Brain & Co • Heritage Lottery Fund
    [Show full text]
  • The Slave Trade and the British Empire
    The Slave Trade and the British Empire An Audit of Commemoration in Wales Task and Finish Group Report and Audit 26 November 2020 The Slave Trade and the British Empire An Audit of Commemoration in Wales Report and Audit The Task and Finish Group: Gaynor Legall (Chair) Dr Roiyah Saltus Professor Robert Moore David Anderson Dr Marian Gwyn Naomi Alleyne Professor Olivette Otele Professor Chris Evans Supporting research and drafting was undertaken on behalf of the task and finish group by Dr Peter Wakelin. Front cover image – British Library, Mechanical Curator Collection © Crown copyright 2020 WG41703 Digital ISBN 978-1-80082-506-2 Mae’r ddogfen yma hefyd ar gael yn Gymraeg / This document is also available in Welsh Contents 1. Background ............................................................................................................ 2 2. Introduction ............................................................................................................ 3 3. Scope ..................................................................................................................... 3 4. Method ................................................................................................................... 4 5. Audit results ........................................................................................................... 5 6. People who took part in the African slave trade (A)................................................ 6 7. People who owned or directly benefitted from plantations or mines worked by the enslaved
    [Show full text]
  • A History of the Welsh English Dialect in Fiction
    _________________________________________________________________________Swansea University E-Theses A History of the Welsh English Dialect in Fiction Jones, Benjamin A. How to cite: _________________________________________________________________________ Jones, Benjamin A. (2018) A History of the Welsh English Dialect in Fiction. Doctoral thesis, Swansea University. http://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa44723 Use policy: _________________________________________________________________________ This item is brought to you by Swansea University. Any person downloading material is agreeing to abide by the terms of the repository licence: copies of full text items may be used or reproduced in any format or medium, without prior permission for personal research or study, educational or non-commercial purposes only. The copyright for any work remains with the original author unless otherwise specified. The full-text must not be sold in any format or medium without the formal permission of the copyright holder. Permission for multiple reproductions should be obtained from the original author. Authors are personally responsible for adhering to copyright and publisher restrictions when uploading content to the repository. Please link to the metadata record in the Swansea University repository, Cronfa (link given in the citation reference above.) http://www.swansea.ac.uk/library/researchsupport/ris-support/ A history of the Welsh English dialect in fiction Benjamin Alexander Jones Submitted to Swansea University in fulfilment of the requirements
    [Show full text]
  • The BARRY STORY
    The BARRY STORY Barry is unique in Britain. Nowhere else offers international industrial history and golden seaside resort in such proximity. Indeed, there are few places in the world that combine coal and candyfloss, ships and chips, bananas and bumper-cars so seamlessly. Our town fits snugly between Wales’s capital city of Cardiff to the east and our international airport a few miles to the west. Add to that a rail service that connects Barry to the capital in under 20 minutes, a glorious, golden coastline, fantastic green spaces, a brand new international enterprise zone, a hinterland of historic villages, market towns and oodles of heritage, and we have one great story to tell and one fantastic place to share with the world. A PLACE OF PILGRIMAGE From the Early Medieval to the Middle Ages, Barry was an important destination for pilgrims. Four pilgrimages to St Baruc’s church on Barry Island were considered equivalent to one to Rome. Later, workers from all four corners of the globe journeyed to Barry to capitalise on the town’s industrial boom years. Hot on their heels came miners, industrial workers and their families from across South Wales to worship the sun on our golden beaches. The tradition of pilgrimage continues today with Gavin and Stacey fans who come in droves to pay homage to the sights and locations of the internationally popular TV show. TREASURE ISLAND, GOLD COAST The port attracted workers from around the globe, creating a rich multicultural community. In the midst of the industrial boom, day trippers began flocking in their thousands to Barry Island’s strip of glistening sand, on the railway built to carry coal.
    [Show full text]
  • Cardiff Bay & Techniquest
    Bu t e S t d r oa e R e t ay w ng Explore the waters out on M4 i DIRECTIONSem H 33 From M4 J33 follow signs for Cardiff Bay & Techniquest The nearest parking is at Havannah Street, Cardi Bay d BOAT Self-Drive a CardiffSat NavBay use CF10 5BW n o w A4232 T o R (Next To St David’s Hotel) t HIRE TIMES h e Great family t k e u n B i L Boat Hire THROUGHOUT t adventure e F e A48 r l THE YEAR o t S u BUTETOWNA4232 r Operating times subject to i s A48 s d l h l a seasonal variations and e a h A4050 b r weather conditions. e A4119 m A4232 i P Please check u Cardiff D BayBute Pl C Street larence Road James A d Roald e l a Dahl i d e Plass S y t a r u e Mermaid H e Q t a Quay r b ia reet o n St u n r a t i rt r a tu B S Techni uest ? H a D v a r i From M4 n v na e h A4232 S t Hamadryad r To M4 e Park e t 2 HOW TO FIND US 3 2 The Boathouse booking kiosk at 4 A Cardiff Bay is located on the quayside at St. David’s The Old Graving Dock behind Techniquest. (next to the old blue quayside crane) 2013 Cardiff ltd. ©digital-mapping.co.uk THE SIGHTS ON AND AROUND CARDIFF BAY Cardi bay formally the old Cardi successful regeneration projects 0 200m Docks (Tiger Bay) was formed by in the UK.
    [Show full text]
  • Immigration and Inclusion in South Wales Terry Threadgold, Sadie Clifford, Abdi Arwo, Vanessa Powell, Zahera Harb, Xinyi Jiang and John Jewell
    Immigration and inclusion in South Wales Terry Threadgold, Sadie Clifford, Abdi Arwo, Vanessa Powell, Zahera Harb, Xinyi Jiang and John Jewell This research explores the impact of new migration on established communities in south-east Wales, in particular on the issues of community, integration and cohesion. It documents everyday life for both migrants and receiving communities. It explores the views and experiences of people from a range of ethnically diverse geographical areas, and different kinds of migrants. The study explores: • the responses to new migration of settled receiving communities and geographical areas of south-east Wales, both historically and over the past ten years; • people’s understandings of key policy terms (e.g. community, integration, inclusion, community cohesion) at a number of levels: administrative, community leadership and grassroots; • the way both new migrants and settled communities experience the major ‘indicators of integration’ or inclusion in their everyday lives: English language learning, interpretation and translation, education, housing, employment, healthcare, policing and community safety; • what can support, and what can hinder, community cohesion. This publication can be provided in other formats, such as large print, Braille and audio. Please contact: Communications, Joseph Rowntree Foundation, The Homestead, 40 Water End, York YO30 6WP. Tel: 01904 615905. Email: [email protected] Immigration and inclusion in South Wales Terry Threadgold, Sadie Clifford, Abdi Arwo, Vanessa Powell, Zahera Harb, Xinyi Jiang and John Jewell The Joseph Rowntree Foundation has supported this project as part of its programme of research and innovative development projects, which it hopes will be of value to policy- makers, practitioners and service users.
    [Show full text]
  • Clic-It Cymru Clic-Itnews from Wales and the World Cymru News from Wales and the World
    Issue 16 / September 2020 Clic-it Cymru Clic-itNews from Wales and the World Cymru News from Wales and the World Authors: Haf Llewelyn, Mali Williams Editor: Karen MacIntyre Huws CORAL BACK TO SCHOOL... By now most Welsh pupils have returned to school, some for the first time for almost six months. According REEF to Kirsty Williams, Education Minister for Wales, it was more dangerous for pupils to keep staying at home than for them to return to school. She said: “Every decision we have made has been backed by the latest available scientific and medical guidance. Thanks to Wales’s cautious and careful approach, Covid’s presence in our communities is declining. In DATES FOR the expectation that this will continue, the advice to me DIARY is that schools can open in September, with all pupils Bonfire Night POSITIVE present.” and more! In the opinion of most doctors, scientists and the NEWS? Welsh Government, keeping schools closed would What are Coral Reefs? cause pupils to miss out on their education and have a PAGE 2 The Great Barrier Reef lies in the sea off the coast of long term effect on wellbeing and mental health as Australia, and it is habitat to a vast array of plants and well as the negative effect on learning. animals. Parts of the reef began forming over 50 million years ago. Over the last years, scientists have been concerned that the coral has been affected badly by rising sea temperatures. The coral showed signs of bleaching, due to the destruction of the algae which the coral feeds off.
    [Show full text]
  • Cathays in Cardiff. Working Papers in Translanguaging and Translation (WP
    Working Papers in Translanguaging and Translation Paper 3 Changing Landscapes: Cathays in Cardiff Jaspal Naveel Singh & Frances Rock A report on Phase One of the Cardiff case study of AHRC-funded Translating Cultures project, ‘Translation and Translanguaging: Investigating Linguistic and Cultural Transformations in Superdiverse Wards in Four UK Cities’. (AH/L007096/1) Please reference as: Singh, J. N.and Rock, F. (2018). Changing Landscapes: Cathays in Cardiff. Working Papers in Translanguaging and Translation (WP. 3). (http://www.birmingham.ac.uk/generic/tlang/index.aspx) Contents 1. Introduction ......................................................................................................................................... 3 2. Description of Cathays today .............................................................................................................. 4 2.1. Cathays’ boundaries: Official and lived ....................................................................................... 4 2.2 Cathays’ built environment ........................................................................................................... 6 2.3 Population characteristics: Ethnic identities and age structure in Cathays ................................. 10 3. Overview of the history of Cathays and Cardiff ............................................................................... 12 3.1 Cardiff Castle .............................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]