News
Drakeford: ‘doesn’t listen, doesn’t read’
WHILE protestors outside the Senedd called for him to address them face-to-face, Welsh Health Minister Mark Drakeford hid behind a statement consisting of bland and complacent reassurance. The crowd called his name and cried “shame” as the former social policy academic remained inside the building. Accused of not listening to protestors and ignoring their concerns, further evidence of the Minister’s tangential grip on his brief emerged following the publication of a letter to Rebecca Evans AM for Mid and West Wales dated June 15. Rebecca Evans had drawn the Minister’s attention to Dr Martin Simmonds’ open letter to the Health Board, which slammed the Board’s plans for scrapping paediatric care at Withybush Hospital and replacing it with a lick and promise. The closing part of Professor Drakeford’s letter has caused some surprise among Withybush staff at the sharp end of the Board’s decision to slash services in Pembrokeshire. Staff have been told to relocate or else leave, with no prospect of redundancy pay if they refuse to uproot themselves and their family to work at Carmarthen. Putting it in terms that Mark Drakeford will perhaps understand, the Health Board will centralize key services at a location as remote from Pembrokeshire’s western Coast as Brecon is from his home in Pontcanna. In relation to Paediatric care, Dr Simmonds’ letter read in part [emphases added]: “I do not know of ANY paediatricians in Hywel Dda who have given their support to this service model. “Work undertaken by two senior nurses at Withybush has produced research indicating that the risk assessment for a PAU here indicates that it is neither SAFE nor resilient enough to serve the needs of the local population this remote from the hub Paediatric inpatient base.” Apparently, Mark Drakeford read Dr Simmonds’ words differently. He notes that “the Health Board will CONSIDER DELAYING implementation of the paediatric component of change to ensure the maintenance of safe services.” The response appears to indicate that, contrary to the Health Board’s repeated claims, the proposed changes are far from being “clinician-led” Note, please, the conditional expression. It is the same as that which accompanied the original conditional pledge to maintain paediatric services at Withybush in January 2013. Events have shown the true value of those words. The CHC were duped by the Board’s reassurance. If they had not been, events would have been very different. Stripped of the pretence of their changes being clinician-led, the Board’s plan to downgrade Withybush would have been laid bare for all to see. That observation rather gives the lie to another bland statement made by Mark Drakeford in his letter to Rebecca Evans: “I am advised that paediatricians support [the changes to neonatal or maternity services].” Quite how Mark Drakeford squares his assertion on the change to neonatal and maternity care with the outrage felt by clinicians at Withybush that their concerns were swept under the carpet by the Board; or worse, as Dr Simmonds suggests, the Board kept asking clinical staff questions and harassing them until it got the answers it wanted. “Please be assured that Dr Simmonds’ comments have been noted by myself and the Health Board. There is no intention to implement a service which is not supported by clinical advice or presents a material risk to patients’ health.” Quite how Mark Drakeford squares the content of his last sentence with the categorical content of Dr Simmonds’ letter is not made clear. Whether Mark Drakeford read Dr Simmonds letter or merely “noted” it, his reply to Rebecca Evans demonstrates that he has not understood it. If Mark Drakeford is unaware of the catastrophic effect on Pembrokeshire of what the Health Board is up to, it is because he and the Welsh Government are wilfully turning a blind eye and a deaf ear to the obvious.
Community
Fire leaves Letterston families homeless after homes destroyed
Two houses lost and a third badly smoke-damaged as villagers rally to support those affected
THREE families have been forced from their homes after a major fire tore through a terrace in Letterston, destroying two properties and leaving a third badly affected by smoke.
The blaze broke out at around 4:00pm on Wednesday (Apr 15), prompting a major emergency response from fire crews across west Wales.
Appliances were sent from Fishguard, Haverfordwest, Milford Haven, St Davids, Narberth, Carmarthen and Tumble as firefighters worked for hours to bring the incident under control.
Residents nearby said they first noticed what looked like a dark haze outside before realising smoke was pouring from the row of houses. As the seriousness of the situation became clear, people in neighbouring homes were told to get out.
Witnesses described seeing flames race through the roof spaces of the terrace, while windy conditions made the fire harder to contain. There were also reports of loud bangs as the blaze spread close to overhead power lines.
Fire crews remained at the scene into the evening, supported by utility workers dealing with the electricity supply. Some nearby homes were left without power until late that night.
By the time the fire was out, two houses had been completely gutted. A third remained standing but was left uninhabitable because of heavy smoke contamination inside.
Among those affected was a young family with a three-month-old baby. Although their house was not destroyed structurally, smoke damage is understood to have ruined furniture, clothing and other possessions, including items for the child.
All three households have since moved in with relatives or friends while they deal with the aftermath.
Despite the scale of the incident, nobody was injured.
The fire has shocked the village, but local people have quickly stepped in to offer help, with fundraising appeals launched to support those who have lost their homes and belongings.
How to help
Fundraising appeals can be found at:
gofundme.com/f/help-young-family-return-home-after-smoke-damage
gofundme.com/f/friends-house-destroyed-by-fire-f24y5
gofundme.com/f/the-families-effected-by-the-fire
Crime
Man cleared after prosecution offers no evidence at Crown Court
Swansea Crown Court entered formal not guilty verdicts on all counts, bringing the case to an end
A HAVERFORDWEST man has been cleared after the prosecution offered no evidence against him at Swansea Crown Court.
Luke Phillips, 23, of Woodlands Park, Haverfordwest, had previously faced charges relating to indecent images of children and extreme pornography.
The case came before His Honour Judge Thomas KC on Monday (Apr 13).
When the matter was called on, the prosecution offered no evidence on all counts.
Formal not guilty verdicts were then entered on each count, bringing the proceedings to an end.
Phillips was represented by barrister Ian Ibrahim.
The outcome means there is no further action to be taken in relation to the case.
It is understood that property seized during the investigation can now be returned following the conclusion of the proceedings.
Community
Pembrokeshire among worst-hit areas as accidental deaths rise
PEMBROKESHIRE and Carmarthenshire have been named among the worst-affected areas in England and Wales for accidental deaths, according to new figures from the Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents.
Newly-published data shows Pembrokeshire recorded an accidental death rate of 55.18 per 100,000 people in 2023, with Carmarthenshire close behind on 55.15. Both figures are rounded to 55 and place the two west Wales counties in the top 10 highest local authority areas across England and Wales.
Pembrokeshire ranked eighth on the list, while Carmarthenshire was ninth.
The figures form part of RoSPA’s latest Annual Review of Accidents, which warns that preventable deaths and injuries are continuing to rise across the UK.
Wales as a whole recorded an accidental death rate of 44.25 per 100,000 people in 2023, far above the UK-wide figure of 33.97. Only Scotland recorded a higher national rate.
The report paints a worrying picture for Wales, where RoSPA says accidental deaths have risen by 43 per cent over the past decade and now claim more than 1,200 lives a year.
Falls remain the biggest single cause of accidental death. In Wales, 733 people died in falls in 2023, up from 560 the previous year. That equates to a fatal falls rate of 23.15 per 100,000 people across the country.
The local breakdown suggests falls are also a major factor in west Wales. Pembrokeshire recorded a falls death rate of 28.79 per 100,000, while Carmarthenshire stood at 27.31. Carmarthenshire also had a notably higher accidental poisoning death rate than Pembrokeshire.
Across the whole of the UK, RoSPA estimates around 23,000 people died in accidents in 2023, while almost 900,000 people were admitted to hospital because of accidental injuries in 2023–24.
Becky Hickman, chief executive of RoSPA, said too many families were suffering life-changing loss from incidents that could often have been prevented.
She said: “Accidents devastate lives in an instant.
“They are often sudden, violent, and shocking, leaving families and communities to cope with consequences that can last a lifetime.
“What makes this devastation even harder to bear is the knowledge that so many of these incidents are entirely preventable.”
RoSPA has called for stronger action from governments across the UK, including a national strategy to reduce accidental deaths and serious injuries.
Ahead of the 2026 Senedd election, the charity has also launched its Stronger, Safer Wales campaign, urging the next Welsh Government to treat accident prevention as a major public health priority.
The charity says the risks in Wales are particularly acute in areas such as falls, accidental poisonings, rural roads, machinery-related incidents and water safety.
Ms Hickman said: “Our Annual Review of Accidents shows we are still not doing enough to reduce avoidable harm, life-changing injuries and personal tragedies.
“From our roads to our workplaces, the homes we live in to where we spend our leisure time, people in Britain are at increasing and unacceptable risk of suffering a serious accident.”
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