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Politics

Price kicks off Plaid campaign

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‘There is a better way’: Plaid Cymru Assembly candidate Adam Price

‘There is a better way’: Plaid Cymru Assembly candidate Adam Price

PLAID CYMRU has officially launched its campaign for the National Assembly election in May presenting three ambitions and nine steps forward to create “a well, well educated, wealthier Wales.”

The party’s launch, which took place on Wednesday (Feb17), set out an ambitious programme for government focusing on 9 key policies in the fields of health, education and the economy.

Former MP and Plaid Cymru’s candidate for the Carmarthen East and Dinefwr constituency, Adam Price, kicked off the campaign launch with a rousing key note speech on why, after 17 years of Labour rule, Wales needed a change of government.

Plaid Cymru’s three ambitions and 9 steps forward are:

A Well Wales: Cure and Care NHS

  1. National Commitment on Cancer: 28 day diagnosis guarantee
  2. Cut waiting times by investing in an additional 1000 doctors and 5000 nurses
  3. Abolish home care charges for the elderly and people with dementia A Well-Educated Wales: Cradle to Career Education
  4. Free universal pre-school care for children from 3 years of age
  5. A National Premium for teachers: raising standards in our schools
  6. Pay off £18,000 worth of debt for graduates who work in Wales and create 50,000 new apprenticeships

A Wealthier Wales: Building our Economic Engine

  1. Major investment in our transport, energy and green infrastructure
  2. A WDA for the 21st century to sell our products and ideas to the world
  3. Cut business rates and give more public contracts to Welsh firms

Addressing the campaign launch, Adam Price said: “I admit I’m an optimist. But so were we as a nation once. I was born into a council house, went to a comp, survived on free school meals, never had a car or a holiday growing up. I’m fairly typical of many in my generation.

“But the one thing we did have was hope, the fervent foundation of selfbelief in which we were all brought up, that the future would be better than the past, that through a combination of individual application and collective effort we could improve our own lot and the lives of others.

“The thing that makes me angry, the thing that brought me back into politics is the extinguishing of hope – the sense of resignation, that the state that people are in is the sum total of our reasonable expectations.

“That shorter lives, lower wages, fewer qualifications is an accident of birth, not a cancer we can cure together.

“Well it doesn’t have to be that way. There is a better way – a new Welsh way, a new way forward together.

“A way to be well, to be welleducated, to be wealthier. Modest ambitions for most countries, but for Wales these are aspirations that can only be met with a radical break with the present.”

Turning his attention to his home county of Carmarthenshire, Adam Price said: “In many specialties Carmarthenshire residents are waiting longer for medical treatment than the rest of Wales. Our ambulance service is under immense pressure and has seen the worst response times in the entire country for several years. Close to a third of our GPs will be retiring in the coming years with little sign of anything being done to replace them.

“Our young people are leaving Carmarthenshire to study with few incentives to return home to utilise their skills and talent within our local economy and public services. The transport, connectivity and housing needed to help build sustainable rural communities all require a Welsh Government that will prioritise and invest in every corner of the country.

“Whether it’s 1,000 extra doctors, 5,000 extra nurses, free dementia care, tuition fee debt write-off for graduates, a record number of apprenticeships, free childcare, supporting our teaching profession, supporting our small businesses or delivering the largest investment in our transport infrastructure, we have a vision and determination to realise a new vision for Carmarthenshire and Wales.”

 

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Business

Redevelopment plans at Clunderwen dairy farm approved

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PLANS for new livestock buildings at a Pembrokeshire dairy farm, aimed at “improved animal husbandry” will not lead to an increase in herd size, councillors heard.

In an application recommended for approval at the February meeting of Pembrokeshire County Council’s planning committee, Mr Roblin of Clynderwen Farm, Clunderwen, sought permission for two livestock building at the 210-hectare dairy farm of 280 cows and 235 head of young stock.

A report for members said each livestock accommodation building would have a length of 77 m, a width of 33m, an eaves height of 3.6m and a ridge height of 8.9m.

Both buildings would be parallel to each other and would cover a footprint of 5,082sqm (2,541sqm each). The proposal includes a total of 308 cubicles, loafing and feed areas, with a central feed passage in the middle.

It said the buildings at the site, some 200 metres from the nearby Redhill school and just over a kilometre from Clunderwen, would sit a little lower than those already on site, and the proposals would not lead to any increase in herd size.

Speaking at the meeting, agent Gethin Beynon said the scheme would lead to “improved animal husbandry to serve the existing milking herd and to support the next farming generation”.

He told members the application was accompanied by environmental enhancements and screening, with no objections from members of the public or any statutory bodies.

Mr Beynon went on to say the herd was currently housed in historic farm site buildings that “fall short of current standards,” with a farm move towards Holstein cattle which need more space.


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“It will improve animal husbandry and efficiencies in what is currently a challenging market,” he concluded.

Approval was moved by Cllr Alan Dennison, seconded by Cllr Brian Hall, and unanimously backed by committee members.

 

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Community

Pembrokeshire Hakin council ward seat election in March

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A BYELECTION for a Pembrokeshire county council ward vacant following the death of “fearless campaigner for truth and justice” Cllr Mike Stoddart is to take place next month.

Cllr Mike Stoddart, who passed away last month, represented Milford Haven’s Hakin ward, and had been a county councillor for more than two decades, having first been elected in 2004, with wife Vivien and daughter Tessa Hodgson also having county seats, Hubberston and Lamphey respectively, with Tessa also serving as Cabinet Member for Adult Social Care.

Cllr Stoddart, who passed away on January 4, was well-known as an outspoken councillor, critical of failings and injustices, as he had been when he set up the Milford Mercury newspaper with his family before he became a councillor.

In later years, Cllr Stoddart also held an often-critical mirror to council and councillor activities through his popular Old Grumpy website.

Paying tribute to Cllr Stoddart, Pembrokeshire County Council Leader, Cllr Jon Harvey, had said: “Mike was the prime example of what someone in local politics should be – working for and demanding better for his constituents.

“Mike was unashamedly forthright. He would argue his corner with conviction and always with facts on his side.

“He has kept me and many predecessors as leader firmly on our toes. The chamber and Pembrokeshire as a whole will be much poorer for his loss.”

Cllr Jacob Williams, a friend and fellow blogger, said Cllr Stoddart had left “a formidable legacy”.

“I was first elected to the council with Mike in 2012, and he’s been an enormous part of my life ever since. To say he was my mentor wouldn’t do him justice – I couldn’t have wished for a better friend, and I’ll miss him dearly.”

If the Hakin seat is contested an election will take place on March 17; nomination papers should be delivered to the returning officer at County Hall, Haverfordwest no later than 4pm on February 18.

Applications to register to vote must reach the Electoral Registration Officer by midnight on February 27.

The election for the Hakin ward follows a recent byelection for the Fishguard North-East ward following the death of Cllr Jordan Ryan.

That election, held on February 10, saw a seven-way fight for the seat, with Plaid Cymru candidate Billy Shaw winning.

The results for that seat were: Caleb Charles Churchill, Welsh Liberal Democrats, 135; Paul Stephen Howe, Welsh Labour, 83; Peter Martin John, Reform UK, 95; Brian Andrew Murphy, Welsh Conservative Party, 69; Teresa Ruth Tannahill, Independent, 79; Adrian John Adrian Tyrrell, Independent, 35; and William Cuthbert Linton Shaw, Plaid Cymru – The Party of Wales 253.

 

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Farming

Housing restriction at Hayscastle farm site removed

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A CALL to remove an agriculture condition imposed back in 1989 on a Pembrokeshire farm site which is said to be “economically unviable” as a farm has been given the go-ahead.

In an application recommended for approval at the February meeting of Pembrokeshire County Council’s planning committee, Rosalyn Jayne Evans sought permission for the removal of an agricultural worker-only condition for residence at Upper Hayscastle Farm, Hayscastle, near Haverfordwest.

The original condition was imposed as part of a 1989-approved planning application.

A report for members said the land, some 26.3 hectares,” is, following independent valuation, not considered to be an ‘economically viable unit in its own right’.”

“The report author contends this was also likely to have been the case at the time when [the 1988 scheme] was originally granted as no housing for livestock, crop or slurry storage was provided as part of the original consent or since the approval.

“The report also states that whilst the land is productive for uses such as grazing and crops, the lack of building(s) would restrict the economic viability of Dolfach as a separate agricultural holding.

“If investment were to now be made at the holding in relation to dairy or beef farming, the report contends that this would be economically unviable, due to the holding at Dolfach being unable to support a sufficient number of animals to produce the financial return required to sustain the business. The report also highlights that building(s) for livestock would be essential in relation to the prevalence of Bovine TB in the locality.”

It added: “It is considered that the information provided by JJ Morris is sufficient to indicate that the scale of the land holding and the lack of infrastructure would make a farming enterprise at the site an economically unviable proposition.”

It recommended “the existing Section 52 agreement be discharged to remove the requirement for the dwelling to be tied to the land in agriculture at Upper Hayscastle Farm and for the dwelling to be occupied by a person solely or mainly employed before retirement in agriculture”.

The recommendation of approval was moved by Cllr Brian Hall and unanimously backed by committee members.

 

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