APPLICATIONS and DECISIONS 16 December 2015
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Hobnail Fibre Bonded
H Hobnail Fibre Bonded HOBNAIL Quality in every fibre Specification PRODUCT Hobnail Heavy Contract Carpet and Tiles FIBRE CONSTRUCTION 80% Polypropylene, 15% Polyamide, 5% Recycled Polyester WEIGHT 1020gm metre2 (Sheet), 4020gm metre2 (Tile) EN 14041 EN 14041 Heckmondwike FB Heckmondwike FB THICKNESS 7.20mm (Sheet), 8.00mm (Tile) Liversedge Liversedge WF15 7FH WF15 7FH ROLL WIDTH 2 metre 09 09 TILE SIZE 50cm x 50cm (Tiles are Bitumen backed) Hobnail Sheet Hobnail Tile Fibre Bonded Sheet Fibre Bonded Tile Light (BS EN ISO 105:B02) >6 Floorcovering Floorcovering COLOUR FASTNESS Wet Rubbing (BS EN ISO 105:B01) 5 intended for intended for internal use internal use Dry Rubbing (BS EN ISO 105:X12) 5 (BS5287) Assessment and labelling of Textile Floorcoverings FLAMMABILITY tested to BS4790 (Hot metal Nut test) - Low Radius of Char BS EN 13501:2002 Euroclass Cfl-s1 (Sheet) Euroclass Bfl-s1 (Tile) ANTISTATIC Suitable for use in computer rooms The method of installation should conform to BS5325. For details of subfloor preparation and a full guide to installation visit: www.heckmondwike-fb.co.uk INSTALLATION Before laying Hobnail tiles should be allowed to condition for 24 hours at the expected temperature and humidity levels. Hobnail tiles should be laid rotationally, alternating the direction of the tiles through 90° Sheet carpet should be fully adhered with F Balls F3 or ADHESIVE GUIDE F52 or Laybond L47CV. Sheet carpets can be laid into F40 as a release system. For tiles use Tackifier F41 or Laybond 79. To achieve maximum life expectancy it is essential to initiate a maintenance schedule from the date of installation. -
May 2021 FOI 2387-21 Drink Spiking
Our ref: 2387/21 Figures for incidents of drink spiking in your region over the last 5 years (year by year) I would appreciate it if the figures can be broken down to the nearest city/town. Can you also tell me the number of prosecutions there have been for the above offences and how many of those resulted in a conviction? Please see the attached document. West Yorkshire Police receive reports of crimes that have occurred following a victim having their drink spiked, crimes such as rape, sexual assault, violence with or without injury and theft. West Yorkshire Police take all offences seriously and will ensure that all reports are investigated. Specifically for victims of rape and serious sexual offences, depending on when the offence occurred, they would be offered an examination at our Sexual Assault Referral Centre, where forensic samples, including a blood sample for toxicology can be taken, with the victim’s consent, if within the timeframes and guidance from the Faculty for Forensic and Legal Medicine. West Yorkshire Police work with support agencies to ensure that all victims of crime are offered support through the criminal justice process, including specialist support such as from Independent Sexual Violence Advisors. Recorded crime relating to spiked drinks, 01/01/2016 to 31/12/2020 Notes Data represents the number of crimes recorded during the period which: - were not subsequently cancelled - contain the search term %DR_NK%SPIK% or %SPIK%DR_NK% within the crime notes, crime summary and/or MO - specifically related to a drug/poison/other noxious substance having been placed in a drink No restrictions were placed on the type of drink, the type of drug/poison or the motivation behind the act (i.e. -
Walk to Wellbeing 2011
PleaSe nOte: Walk to Wellbeing What is it ? a walk to wellbeing is: • the walks and shared transport are A programme of 19 walks specially • free free selected by experienced health walk • sociable & fun • each walk has details about the leaders to introduce you to the superb • something most people can easily do terrain to help you decide how landscape that makes Northumberland • situated in some of the most suitable it is for you. the full route National Park so special. inspirational and tranquil landscape in Walk to Wellbeing 2011 England can be viewed on Walk4life Is it for me? Get out and get healthy in northumberland national Park website If you already join health walks and would • Refreshments are not provided as like to try walking a bit further in beautiful Some useful websites: part of the walk. countryside - Yes! To find out the latest news from • Meeting points along Hadrian’s Wall If you’ve never been on a health walk but Northumberland National Park: can be easily reached using the would like to try walking in a group, with a www.northumberlandnationalpark.org.uk leader who has chosen a route of around Hadrian’s Wall Bus (free with an For more information on your local over 60 pass) 4 miles which is not too challenging and full of interest -Yes! Walking For Health • Please wear clothing and footwear group:www.wfh.naturalengland.org.uk (preferably boots with a good grip) Regular walking can: For more information on West Tynedale appropriate for changeable weather • help weight management Healthy Life Scheme and other healthy and possible muddy conditions. -
227 Halifax Road Liversedge WF15 6NR
227 Halifax Road Liversedge WF15 6NR Bramleys 27 Westgate Heckmondwike WF16 0EN Tel: 01924 412644 home information pack contents 1. Index 2. Energy Performance Certificate 3. Sale Statement 4. Title Information including Leasehold/Commonhold (as applicable) 5. Local Authority and Water and Drainage Enquiries 6. Authorised Documents home information pack 1 1 Index Home Information Pack Index 227 Halifax Road Liversedge WF15 6NR Required Documents (Inc.) - Included Date of Further information/details of steps being Home Information Pack document (N/I) - Not Included document taken to obtain documents not included (N/A) – Not Applicable 1. Index 24/06/2008 Inc. N/I N/A 2. Energy Performance Certificate 10/06/2008 Inc. and Home Condition Report N/I where applicable N/A 3 Sale Statement 17/06/2008 Inc. N/I N/A 4. Title & Lease Information (as applicable) 4.1 Land Registry individual 17/06/2008 Inc. Register N/I N/A 4.2 Land Registry title plan 17/06/2008 Inc. N/I N/A 4.3 Official search of Land Inc. Registry index map N/I N/A 4.4 Deduction of title documents Inc. N/I N/A 4.5 The lease or proposed lease if a Inc. new property N/I N/A 4.6 Leases, tenancies or licences Inc. for properties where part of the N/I property in a sub-divided building N/A not sold with vacant possession 5. Search Reports 5.1 Local land charges & local 23/06/2008 Inc. enquiries N/I N/A 5.2 Optional/additional local Inc. -
Northeast England – a History of Flash Flooding
Northeast England – A history of flash flooding Introduction The main outcome of this review is a description of the extent of flooding during the major flash floods that have occurred over the period from the mid seventeenth century mainly from intense rainfall (many major storms with high totals but prolonged rainfall or thaw of melting snow have been omitted). This is presented as a flood chronicle with a summary description of each event. Sources of Information Descriptive information is contained in newspaper reports, diaries and further back in time, from Quarter Sessions bridge accounts and ecclesiastical records. The initial source for this study has been from Land of Singing Waters –Rivers and Great floods of Northumbria by the author of this chronology. This is supplemented by material from a card index set up during the research for Land of Singing Waters but which was not used in the book. The information in this book has in turn been taken from a variety of sources including newspaper accounts. A further search through newspaper records has been carried out using the British Newspaper Archive. This is a searchable archive with respect to key words where all occurrences of these words can be viewed. The search can be restricted by newspaper, by county, by region or for the whole of the UK. The search can also be restricted by decade, year and month. The full newspaper archive for northeast England has been searched year by year for occurrences of the words ‘flood’ and ‘thunder’. It was considered that occurrences of these words would identify any floods which might result from heavy rainfall. -
Roman Roads of Britain
Roman Roads of Britain A Wikipedia Compilation by Michael A. Linton PDF generated using the open source mwlib toolkit. See http://code.pediapress.com/ for more information. PDF generated at: Thu, 04 Jul 2013 02:32:02 UTC Contents Articles Roman roads in Britain 1 Ackling Dyke 9 Akeman Street 10 Cade's Road 11 Dere Street 13 Devil's Causeway 17 Ermin Street 20 Ermine Street 21 Fen Causeway 23 Fosse Way 24 Icknield Street 27 King Street (Roman road) 33 Military Way (Hadrian's Wall) 36 Peddars Way 37 Portway 39 Pye Road 40 Stane Street (Chichester) 41 Stane Street (Colchester) 46 Stanegate 48 Watling Street 51 Via Devana 56 Wade's Causeway 57 References Article Sources and Contributors 59 Image Sources, Licenses and Contributors 61 Article Licenses License 63 Roman roads in Britain 1 Roman roads in Britain Roman roads, together with Roman aqueducts and the vast standing Roman army, constituted the three most impressive features of the Roman Empire. In Britain, as in their other provinces, the Romans constructed a comprehensive network of paved trunk roads (i.e. surfaced highways) during their nearly four centuries of occupation (43 - 410 AD). This article focuses on the ca. 2,000 mi (3,200 km) of Roman roads in Britain shown on the Ordnance Survey's Map of Roman Britain.[1] This contains the most accurate and up-to-date layout of certain and probable routes that is readily available to the general public. The pre-Roman Britons used mostly unpaved trackways for their communications, including very ancient ones running along elevated ridges of hills, such as the South Downs Way, now a public long-distance footpath. -
Parish Profile
Parish Profile This form is designed to give an overview of a parish to be used in a vacancy for the appointment of a new parish priest. It will be accepted as the "statement describing the conditions, needs and traditions of the parish" required by the Patronage (Benefices) Measure 1986. Additional information may be given by way of printed documents or written submissions. Please write in black ink These numbers are mainly based on the 2011 Census, so while they are not “new” we do not expect the numbers to have changed significantly since. I. Parish Information 1(a) Name of parish(es) to which this information Birstall, West Yorkshire relates: (b) Name(s) of parish church(es): St Peter’s 2. Name(s) of other C of E church(es)/centres for Methodist Church, Birstall Community Church, public worship in the parish: St Patrick’s RC Church 3. Cluster or group of parishes within which you We work informally with St Saviour’s Brownhill, work (formally or) informally: e.g. sharing Ash Wednesday morning/evening, and cover for vicar’s absence. 4. Deanery: Dewsbury and Batley 5. Population: The 2018 population of the Birstall Parish is 5861. We are not aware of any new house The 2011 census information gives the building or other factors which would have following figures. Please indicate how this changed this significantly away from longer term 1 might have changed since then. demographic trends. 6(a) Number on Electoral Roll: 90 (b) Date of APM when this number was declared: 16/09/2020 7. -
Appeal Statement by the Objectors' Group 'Keep the Wannies Wild'
Keep The Wannies Wild Appeal Statement Ref 3244389 Planning appeal Ref: APP/P2935/W/20/3244389 Cold Law, Northumberland Construction of a publicly accessible landmark, commissioned to commemorate Queen Elizabeth II and the Commonwealth Appeal statement by the objectors’ group ‘Keep the Wannies Wild’ (KTWW) About the KTWW group 1. This group was formed on 12 June 2019 in urgent response to the Northumberland County Council (NCC) Strategic Planning Committee’s deliberations of June 4th 2019. At that meeting NCC officers had recommended the proposal be granted but, following the number and nature of representations received, the councillors voted to defer the decision for a site visit. They carried this out on the morning of July 2nd 2019 and at the Strategic Planning Committee meeting later that day a resolution was passed by 13:3 votes to refuse permission, leading to this appeal. 2. Between these two committee meetings the size of the KTWW group grew exponentially and is still increasing. This statement is made on behalf of its over 1900 members and others who objected at application stage. Some 128 letters, e mails and online comments were made then and more are expected at the current appeal stage. This strength of feeling is despite some local tenants and employees of the Ray estate feeling unable to voice their objections publicly. The Wannies area extends between and beyond the A68 and A696 roads which are circuitously linked by the unclassified Wannies Road C195. 3. Many residents and visitors were unaware of the proposal until June 2019; some on the Council’s notification list did not receive their letters. -
Collections Guide 2 Nonconformist Registers
COLLECTIONS GUIDE 2 NONCONFORMIST REGISTERS Contacting Us What does ‘nonconformist’ mean? We recommend that you contact us to A nonconformist is a member of a religious organisation that does not ‘conform’ to the Church of England. People who disagreed with the book a place before visiting our beliefs and practices of the Church of England were also sometimes searchrooms. called ‘dissenters’. The terms incorporates both Protestants (Baptists, Methodists, Presbyterians, Independents, Congregationalists, Quakers WYAS Bradford etc.) and Roman Catholics. By 1851, a quarter of the English Margaret McMillan Tower population were nonconformists. Prince’s Way Bradford How will I know if my ancestors were nonconformists? BD1 1NN Telephone +44 (0)113 393 9785 It is not always easy to know whether a family was Nonconformist. The e. [email protected] 1754 Marriage Act ordered that only marriages which took place in the Church of England were legal. The two exceptions were the marriages WYAS Calderdale of Jews and Quakers. Most people, including nonconformists, were Central Library therefore married in their parish church. However, nonconformists often Northgate House kept their own records of births or baptisms, and burials. Northgate Halifax Some people were only members of a nonconformist congregation for HX1 1UN a short time, in which case only a few entries would be ‘missing’ from Telephone +44 (0)1422 392636 the Anglican parish registers. Others switched allegiance between e. [email protected] different nonconformist denominations. In both cases this can make it more difficult to recognise them as nonconformists. WYAS Kirklees Central Library Where can I find nonconformist registers? Princess Alexandra Walk Huddersfield West Yorkshire Archive Service holds registers from more than a HD1 2SU thousand nonconformist chapels. -
Kirklees Council, Highway Operations Group Engineer (Honley Depot, Huddersfield and Headlands Depot, Liversedge)
Kirklees Council, Highway Operations Group Engineer (Honley depot, Huddersfield and Headlands depot, Liversedge) Kirklees Council and Highways Service has retained its own in house service delivery team over many decades. Its service delivery role is not just about highway construction but also delivering a severe weather response (eg. winter maintenance, flooding) and dealing with emergencies. Highway construction work ranges from reactive (eg. pothole repairs, paving repairs, street lighting faults, gully emptying) to larger schemes delivering the Highways Capital Plan and supporting the Council’s many ambitions, especially the Huddersfield and Dewsbury Blueprints. Highway Operations is also supporting the West Yorkshire Combined Authority in delivering transportation projects to deliver its Transport Strategy. Highway Operations is based at two operational depots – one near Honley in south east Kirklees and one near Liversedge in north east Kirklees. It comprises about 130 employees – approximately 100 site skilled employees, 30 engineers and business support officers. The turnover in Highway Operations across all its functions is about £20 million per year. It remains as a ‘traded service’ with the Council so needs to ‘balance its books’, matching costs and income. A Group Engineer manages each operational depot with an Operational Manager for Highway Operations who reports to Head of Highways. Highway Operations, (within and) together with Highways Service has a massive transformational agenda. The role is crucial in the leadership and management of a depot environment with a large male dominated front line workforce. Your people skills, emotional intelligence, patience, understanding and empathy are paramount including the handling of mental health issues. Your decision making skills must be strong, firm and also reflective. -
WEST YORKSHIRE Extracted from the Database of the Milestone Society a Photograph Exists for Milestones Listed Below but Would Benefit from Updating!
WEST YORKSHIRE Extracted from the database of the Milestone Society A photograph exists for milestones listed below but would benefit from updating! National ID Grid Reference Road No. Parish Location Position YW_ADBL01 SE 0600 4933 A6034 ADDINGHAM Silsden Rd, S of Addingham above EP149, just below small single storey barn at bus stop nr entrance to Cringles Park Home YW_ADBL02 SE 0494 4830 A6034 SILSDEN Bolton Rd; N of Silsden Estate YW_ADBL03 SE 0455 4680 A6034 SILSDEN Bolton Rd; Silsden just below 7% steep hill sign YW_ADBL04 SE 0388 4538 A6034 SILSDEN Keighley Rd; S of Silsden on pavement, 100m south of town sign YW_BAIK03 SE 0811 5010 B6160 ADDINGHAM Addingham opp. Bark La in narrow verge, under hedge on brow of hill in wall by Princefield Nurseries opp St Michaels YW_BFHA04 SE 1310 2905 A6036 SHELF Carr House Rd;Buttershaw Church YW_BFHA05 SE 1195 2795 A6036 BRIGHOUSE Halifax Rd, just north of jct with A644 at Stone Chair on pavement at little layby, just before 30 sign YW_BFHA06 SE 1145 2650 A6036 NORTHOWRAM Bradford Rd, Northowram in very high stone wall behind LP39 YW_BFHG01 SE 1708 3434 A658 BRADFORD Otley Rd; nr Peel Park, opp. Cliffe Rd nr bus stop, on bend in Rd YW_BFHG02 SE 1815 3519 A658 BRADFORD Harrogate Rd, nr Silwood Drive on verge opp parade of shops Harrogate Rd; north of Park Rd, nr wall round playing YW_BFHG03 SE 1889 3650 A658 BRADFORD field near bus stop & pedestrian controlled crossing YW_BFHG06 SE 212 403 B6152 RAWDON Harrogate Rd, Rawdon about 200m NE of Stone Trough Inn Victoria Avenue; TI north of tunnel -
£125,000 600 Halifax Road
600 Halifax Road £125,000 Liversedge, WF15 8HU Property Description Wonderful character cottage which offers deceptively spacious living FIRST FLOOR LANDING accommodation. Situated in this popular location within easy access for shops A staircase leads to the second floor. Access to the loft via a drop down and schools. The accommodation briefly comprises: entrance hall, lounge, ladder. dining kitchen, cloaks WC, cellar, three bedrooms and family bathroom. Externally there are low maintenance gardens to the front and rear. BEDROOM TWO 11' 9" x 7' 4" (3.58m x 2.24m) ENTRANCE HALL A uPVC door leads into the entrance hall. BEDROOM THREE 7' 5" x 6' 7" (2.26m x 2.01m) Built in wardrobe. LOUNGE 16' 6" x 13' 1" (5.03m x 3.99m) Spacious room with feature inglenook style FAMILY BATHROOM fireplace with stone hearth and multi fuel stove. Contains a three piece modern white suite comprising of shaped bath with shower over, low flush WC and wash hand basin inset in vanity unit. Mirror DINING KITCHEN with lighting, tiled walls and heated towel rail. 13' 11" x 11' 6" (4.24m x 3.51m) Stunning dining kitchen fitted with a modern range of wall and base units, double Belfast sink and complementary work SECOND FLOOR BEDROOM ONE surfaces. Breakfast bar and seating area. Feature range cooker with extractor 16' 3" x 9' 10" (4.95m x 3m) over. Integrated dish washer. Timber flooring and part tiled walls. EXTERIOR REAR ENTRANCE HALL To the front of the property is a low maintenance garden area. To the rear is Access to rear garden via uPVC part double glazed door.