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LCA Introduction
The Hambleton and Howardian Hills CAN DO (Cultural and Natural Development Opportunity) Partnership The CAN DO Partnership is based around a common vision and shared aims to develop: An area of landscape, cultural heritage and biodiversity excellence benefiting the economic and social well-being of the communities who live within it. The organisations and agencies which make up the partnership have defined a geographical area which covers the south-west corner of the North York Moors National Park and the northern part of the Howardian Hills Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. The individual organisations recognise that by working together resources can be used more effectively, achieving greater value overall. The agencies involved in the CAN DO Partnership are – the North York Moors National Park Authority, the Howardian Hills Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, English Heritage, Natural England, Forestry Commission, Environment Agency, Framework for Change, Government Office for Yorkshire and the Humber, Ryedale District Council and Hambleton District Council. The area was selected because of its natural and cultural heritage diversity which includes the highest concentration of ancient woodland in the region, a nationally important concentration of veteran trees, a range of other semi-natural habitats including some of the most biologically rich sites on Jurassic Limestone in the county, designed landscapes, nationally important ecclesiastical sites and a significant concentration of archaeological remains from the Neolithic to modern times. However, the area has experienced the loss of many landscape character features over the last fifty years including the conversion of land from moorland to arable and the extensive planting of conifers on ancient woodland sites. -
Riffa House Farm Harrogate Road Leathley Lifestyledetached Benefit Family Homepull out Statementwith Breath Can Taking Go to Viewstwo Orand Three Land Lines
Riffa House Farm Harrogate Road Leathley LifestyleDetached benefit family homepull out statementwith breath can taking go to viewstwo orand three land lines.. XXX35 2 X FirstRiffa Houseparagraph, Farm editorial is an impressive style, short, detached considered country headline home 11.23 benefitsoffering excellent of living accommodationhere. One or two sentencesover two floors that andconvey perfectly what youpositioned would say with in far person. reaching views across open countryside. SecondOccupying paragraph, a generous additional and private details plot of withnote eleven about theacres of good property.grass land. Wording The property to add isvalue ideal and for supportthe commuter image selection.with excellent Temroad volumlinks to is Harrogate, solor si aliquation Leeds, Yorkrempore and thepuditiunto A1. qui utatis adit, animporepro experit et dolupta ssuntio mos apieturere ommosti squiati busdaecus cus dolorporum volutem Internal Page1 Single Pic Inset FirstUpon paragraph,entry this fantastic editorial familystyle, home short, extends considered to over headline 2,800 sq ft benefitsof internal of accommodation living here. One andor two in briefsentences comprises; that convey vestibule, what a youwelcoming would say reception in person. hall, dual aspect sitting room spanning the width of the ground floor and log burning stove. To the right of the Secondhallway isparagraph, a home office, additional separate details dining of note room about with the double doors property. Wording to add value and support image selection. allowing access to the the triple aspect dining kitchen - fitted with Tem volum is solor si aliquation rempore puditiunto qui utatis adit,log burning animporepro stove. experitW/C and et separate dolupta ssuntio utility room mos areapieturere accessed off ommostianother hallway squiati which busdaecus also provides cus dolorporum access to volutem. -
The Hovingham and Scackleton Newsletter August 2016
The Hovingham and Scackleton Newsletter August 2016 Welcome to the Hovingham and Scackleton Newsletter Welcome to our summer newsletter. At last we have had some warmth and sunshine. But the summer solstice is long past. What is happening to our weather? Here we see its impact on animals: fewer hedgehogs, butterflies and bees, but loads of rabbits. Elsewhere some birds, such as plovers, are already migrating. And the early flooding has been taken over by dry gardens and dry allotments, let's hope for a dry harvest.. Some of the benefits of the improved weather are illustrated in our newsletter by the lovely local wedding pictures, and by the fundraising successes of the coffee mornings in the gardens (£600) and by Hovingham Village market. In the 7 years since it started £62,000 has been raised. And moving on to the past, this newsletter includes fascinating histories of Hovingham Church, Pickering Bridge and of our local connections with World War 1 and the Somme. Enjoy. Margaret Bell Pasture Lane - still no response from Trilandium to enforcement order I have spoken to the Planning Officer at Ryedale District Council and he tells me that they have had no response to the enforcement order re the paving of the road and pathways. Trilandium and Stirling Mortimer [the land owners] had until the 12th of July 2016 to respond. The Council have now written to them both again and they now have two weeks to respond. If at the end of that time they have not replied then the legal department will get involved. -
Place Marketing As a Planning Tool
PLACE MARKETING AS A PLANNING TOOL JANE GOODENOUGH MPHIL TOWN PLANNING UNIVERSITY COLLEGE LONDON ProQuest Number: 10044386 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. uest. ProQuest 10044386 Published by ProQuest LLC(2016). Copyright of the Dissertation is held by the Author. All rights reserved. This work is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States Code. Microform Edition © ProQuest LLC. ProQuest LLC 789 East Eisenhower Parkway P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, Ml 48106-1346 UNIVERSITY COLLEGE LONDON LIBRARY ABSTRACT This study examines place marketing as a planning tool for local authorities, focusing on the type of marketing designed to attract jobs and investment to an area. Two strands of research emerge from a literature review. Firstly a need to update a 1984 study of local authority marketing activity as place marketing has evolved and escalated since then, and secondly, a need to determine the outcomes from place marketing. A survey of local authorities revealed a 96.5 per cent involvement in place marketing activities in 1995 and an analysis of the same local authorities’ marketing brochures demonstrates both innovative and common approaches. These brochures also show that although many local authorities are operating an equal opportunities policy, these ideals are not filtering through to all aspects of their work. -
Trade Directories 1822-23 & 1833-4 North Yorkshire, Surnames
Trade Directories 1822-23 & 1833-4 North Yorkshire, surnames beginning with P-Q DATE SNAME FNAME / STATUS OCCUPATIONS ADDITIONAL ITEMS PLACE PARISH or PAROCHIAL CHAPELRY 1822-1823 Page Thomas farmer Cowton North Gilling 1822-1823 Page William victualler 'The Anchor' Bellmangate Guisborough 1822-1823 Page William wood turner & line wheel maker Bellmangate Guisborough 1833-1834 Page William victualler 'The Anchor' Bellmangate Guisborough 1833-1834 Page Nicholas butcher attending Market Richmond 1822-1823 Page William Sagon attorney & notary agent (insurance) Newbrough Street Scarborough 1822-1823 Page brewer & maltster Tanner Street Scarborough 1822-1823 Paley Edmund, Reverend AM vicar Easingwold Easingwold 1833-1834 Paley Henry tallow chandler Middleham Middleham 1822-1823 Palliser Richard farmer Kilvington South Kilvington South 1822-1823 Palliser Thomas farmer Kilvington South Kilvington South 1822-1823 Palliser William farmer Pickhill cum Roxby Pickhill 1822-1823 Palliser William lodging house Huntriss Row Scarborough 1822-1823 Palliser Charles bricklayer Sowerby Thirsk 1833-1834 Palliser Charles bricklayer Sowerby Thirsk 1833-1834 Palliser Henry grocery & sundries dealer Ingram Gate Thirsk 1822-1823 Palliser James bricklayer Sowerby Thirsk 1833-1834 Palliser James bricklayer Sowerby Thirsk 1822-1823 Palliser John jnr engraver Finkle Street Thirsk 1822-1823 Palliser John snr clock & watch maker Finkle Street Thirsk 1822-1823 Palliser Michael whitesmith Kirkgate Jackson's Yard Thirsk 1833-1834 Palliser Robert watch & clock maker Finkle -
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. -
Towards a Model of Child Protection
Families, Relationships and Societies • vol x • no x • xx–xx • © Policy Press 2016 • #FRS Print ISSN 2046 7435 • Online ISSN 2046 7443 • http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/204674316X14552878034622 article Let’s stop feeding the risk monster: Towards a social model of ‘child protection’ Brid Featherstone,1 [email protected] University of Huddersfield, UK Anna Gupta, [email protected] Royal Holloway University of London, UK Kate Morris, [email protected] University of Sheffield, UK Joanne Warner, [email protected] University of Kent, UK This article explores how the child protection system currently operates in England. It analyses how policy and practice has developed, and articulates the need for an alternative approach. It draws from the social model as applied in the fields of disability and mental health, to begin to sketch out more hopeful and progressive possibilities for children, families and communities. The social model specifically draws attention to the economic, environmental and cultural barriers faced by people with differing levels of (dis)ability, but has not been used to think about ‘child protection’, an area of work in England that is dominated by a focus on risk and risk aversion. This area has paid limited attention to the barriers to ensuring children and young people are cared for safely within families and communities, and the social determinants of much of the harms they experience have not been recognised because of the focus on individualised risk factors. key words child protection • risk • parenting • social model Introduction In this article we argue that it is time to question a child protection project that colludes with a view that the greatest threats to children’s safety and wellbeing are posed by their parents or carers’ intentional negligence or abuse. -
Local Environment Agency Plan
EA-NORTH EAST LEAPs local environment agency plan SOUTH YORKSHIRE AND NORTH EAST DERBYSHIRE CONSULTATION REPORT AUGUST 1997 BEVERLEY LEEDS HULL V WAKEFIELD ■ E n v ir o n m e n t A g e n c y Information Services Unit Please return or renew this item by the due date Due Date E n v ir o n m e n t A g e n c y YOUR VIEW S Welcome to the Consultation Report for the South Yorkshire and North East Derbyshire area which is the Agency's view of the state of the environment and the issues that we believe need to be addressed during the next five years. We should like to hear your views: • Have we identified all the major issues? • Have we identified realistic proposals for action? • Do you have any comments to make regarding the plan in general? During the consultation period for this report the Agency would be pleased to receive any comments in writing to: The Environment Planner South Yorkshire and North East Derbyshire LEAP The Environment Agency Olympia House Gelderd Road Leeds LSI 2 6DD All comments must be received by 31st December 1997. All comments received on the Consultation Report will be considered in preparing the next phase, the Action Plan. This Action Plan will focus on updating Section 4 of this Consultation Report by turning the proposals into actions with timescales and costs where appropriate. All written responses will be considered to be in the public domain unless consultees explicitly request otherwise. Note: Whilst every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of information in this report it may contain some errors or omissions which we shall be pleased to note. -
July 2017 at the Glapwell Centre
GLAPWELL PARISH COUNCIL Minutes of meeting of Glapwell Parish Council held on Thursday 27 July 2017 At the Glapwell Centre Present: David Clough Tricia Clough Clive Fleetwood Jackie Hole John Jepson Tony Trafford (Chair) Also in attendance – Sue O’Donnell (Parish Clerk), Keith Woollen 77/17 Apologies for Absence – Rachel Hibbert, Councillor Ann Syrett, Councillor Clive Moesby 78/17 Declarations of Interest – None 79/17 Public Forum Complaint - An email had been received outlining incidents of anti -social behaviour at the playground on Saturday 22nd July. It was agreed that the CAN Rangers be contacted to see if they could patrol the area. 80/17 Minutes th Council Meeting held on 25 May 2017 The minutes were agreed as a correct record of the meetings and signed by the chair of the meeting. 81/17 Matters Arising 71/17 – Noticeboard The noticeboard was due to be replaced by the supplier. 45/17 – Co-option of New Member – The clerk reported that the vacancy had been advertised and electors given an opportunity to call for an election. There had been no response and the Council were now in a position to pursue the Co-option proposed in April. Keith Woollen was duly welcomed to the Council as a co-opted member until May 2019. 82/17 Reports Police-There was no report available. Derbyshire County Council – Councillor Moesby had arranged for speed monitors to be installed on The Hill. A report from this exercise will be available in September. Bolsover District Council- Councillor Syrett had provided the following report. Carnival – She sent her congratulations on the success of the recent carnival. -
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. -
Explanatory Memorandum to the City of Leeds (Mayoral Referendum) Order 2012
GROUPED EXPLANATORY MEMORANDUM TO THE CITY OF BIRMINGHAM (MAYORAL REFERENDUM) ORDER 2012 THE CITY OF BRADFORD (MAYORAL REFERENDUM) ORDER 2012 THE CITY OF BRISTOL (MAYORAL REFERENDUM) ORDER 2012 THE CITY OF COVENTRY (MAYORAL REFERENDUM) ORDER 2012 THE CITY OF LEEDS (MAYORAL REFERENDUM) ORDER 2012 THE CITY OF LIVERPOOL (MAYORAL REFERENDUM) ORDER 2012 THE CITY OF MANCHESTER (MAYORAL REFERENDUM) ORDER 2012 THE CITY OF NEWCASTLE-UPON-TYNE (MAYORAL REFERENDUM) ORDER 2012 THE CITY OF NOTTINGHAM (MAYORAL REFERENDUM) ORDER 2012 THE CITY OF SHEFFIELD (MAYORAL REFERENDUM) ORDER 2012 THE CITY OF WAKEFIELD (MAYORAL REFERENDUM) ORDER 2012 2012 Nos. [XXXX] 1. This grouped explanatory memorandum has been prepared by the Department for Communities and Local Government and is laid before Parliament by Command of Her Majesty. 2. Purpose of the instruments Each of these Orders require the local authority named therein to hold a referendum, on 3 May 2012, on whether it should start to operate a mayor and cabinet executive form of governance (i.e. have a directly elected mayor). 3. Matters of special interest to the Joint Committee on Statutory Instruments None. 4. Legislative Context 4.1 Part 1A (Arrangements with respect to local authority governance in England) and new Schedule A1 (Executive arrangements in England: further provision) of the Local Government Act 2000 (“the 2000 Act”) (as inserted by section 21 of, and Schedule 2 to, the Localism Act 2011 (“the 2011 Act”)), make provision for the governance of local authorities in England. One of the permitted forms of governance, under these provisions, is the mayor and cabinet executive. 4.2 Section 9N of the 2000 Act gives the Secretary of State the power by order to require a specified local authority to hold a referendum on whether the authority should have a directly elected mayor. -
Land at Blacksmith's Arms
Land off North Road, Glossop Education Impact Assessment Report v1-4 (Initial Research Feedback) for Gladman Developments 12th June 2013 Report by Oliver Nicholson EPDS Consultants Conifers House Blounts Court Road Peppard Common Henley-on-Thames RG9 5HB 0118 978 0091 www.epds-consultants.co.uk 1. Introduction 1.1.1. EPDS Consultants has been asked to consider the proposed development for its likely impact on schools in the local area. 1.2. Report Purpose & Scope 1.2.1. The purpose of this report is to act as a principle point of reference for future discussions with the relevant local authority to assist in the negotiation of potential education-specific Section 106 agreements pertaining to this site. This initial report includes an analysis of the development with regards to its likely impact on local primary and secondary school places. 1.3. Intended Audience 1.3.1. The intended audience is the client, Gladman Developments, and may be shared with other interested parties, such as the local authority(ies) and schools in the area local to the proposed development. 1.4. Research Sources 1.4.1. The contents of this initial report are based on publicly available information, including relevant data from central government and the local authority. 1.5. Further Research & Analysis 1.5.1. Further research may be conducted after this initial report, if required by the client, to include a deeper analysis of the local position regarding education provision. This activity may include negotiation with the relevant local authority and the possible submission of Freedom of Information requests if required.