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Leaked report could spell end for PCC

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pcc endA WELSH Government report into the future of local government in Wales has suggested that key services will be delivered by multi-council consortia while the number of local authorities in Wales will be halved.

The Commission, chaired by Sir Paul Williams, a non-executive director of Natural Resources Wales, was set up by First Minister Carwyn Jones in April 2013. At the time, the Welsh Government said the panel would “look hard, honestly and objectively at ways public services are delivered”.

The Commission’s report has already been delayed from the end of the last calendar year, when a special amendment had to be placed before the Senedd to extend its remit, and it is now due to present its findings at the end of January.

The plans to cut the number of Welsh councils will hardly be a surprise. As reported in Pembrokeshire’s Best Magazine in May of last year and The Pembrokeshire Herald in October, senior figures in the Welsh Government regard the current set-up of 22 local authorities delivering services as unsustainable.

In October 2013, the First Minister said:

“There is almost no one now who says that the current structure of 22 local authorities is the right one for Wales. “No one says it.”

The plans tie in with other Welsh Government plans to strip out the organisation of education from the responsibilities of individual authorities, replacing it with a system of multi-council or multi-provider consortia. The Welsh Government is widely reported as despairing of the ability of local authorities to deliver positive education outcomes, with five authorities, including Pembrokeshire, having had some form of Welsh Government intervention in the last two years.

If Pembrokeshire and Carmarthenshire Councils merged, an upward readjustment in Pembrokeshire’s Council Tax bills would almost certainly be necessary, the average bill in the neighbouring authority area being around £200 higher than that in Pembrokeshire. The Welsh Local Government Association claimed in its submission to the Commission that plans to cut local authorities would cost 15,000 jobs and cost anything up to £400m in 2016/17, the earliest point at which reorganisation could take place.

A particular difficulty the Welsh Government faces is that many of the smallest authorities are located in the South Wales Valleys, from which the Labour administration draws much of its support in the Senedd. Responding to the leaked content of the report, Pembrokeshire County Council leader Jamie Adams told The Pembrokeshire Herald:

“Assuming the speculation regarding the Commission’s recommendation is correct, it comes as no surprise to me that some form of local government reorganisation has been suggested.

“The majority of senior Assembly Members have been inclined towards local government reorganisation for some time. Such a move would also be consistent with the drift towards centralisation that we have started to see with other public services in Wales.

“In my view, retaining local democratic representation is of the utmost importance. Decisions about Pembrokeshire should be taken in Pembrokeshire.

“Furthermore, given that we currently charge, by some margin, the lowest Council Tax in Wales, any merger with another local authority is likely to result in a significant increase in the level of Council Tax Pembrokeshire residents would be expected to pay.”

 

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Education

Reform MS takes Church school row to Welsh Government

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Claire Archibald says proposals affecting Cilgerran and Manorbier show rural families risk losing real parental choice

A REFORM UK Senedd member has asked the Welsh Government to intervene over the future of Church schools in West Wales, following growing concern about proposals affecting rural schools in Pembrokeshire and Ceredigion.

Claire Archibald MS, who represents Ceredigion Penfro, has written to Education Minister Anna Brychan asking what safeguards are in place to protect Church schools, Christian education and parental choice.

Manobier School

Her intervention follows months of controversy over the future of rural education provision, including proposals affecting Cilgerran Church in Wales Voluntary Controlled School and Manorbier Church in Wales Voluntary Controlled School.

Pembrokeshire County Council has consulted on plans to discontinue Cilgerran Church in Wales VC School and establish a new 3-11 community school in its place.

In Manorbier, the council has also progressed proposals to discontinue the village’s Church in Wales school, which has been at the centre of a long-running row following a serious fire.

Ms Archibald said the issue should not be treated as a simple administrative change.

She said: “Christianity has helped shape Wales for generations. It is part of our history, our values, and the life of many of our villages and towns.

Cilgerran School

“Church schools matter. They give parents the choice of a Christian education for their children, and in rural areas that choice can be lost very easily when a school is closed, reorganised, or stripped of its Church status.

“I fully understand that councils face financial pressures and difficult decisions, but we cannot allow those pressures to quietly erase Christian school provision from rural Wales.

“These are not just technical changes. They affect parental choice, community life, and the future of Christian education in Wales.”

Rural school concerns

The Herald has previously reported on strong opposition to changes at Cilgerran, where many parents and residents have argued that the school’s Church status is part of its identity and community role.

The Manorbier case has also attracted significant local attention, with campaigners arguing that the village school should be protected following the disruption caused by the fire and the temporary relocation of pupils.

Ms Archibald said the pattern across rural Wales was worrying.

She has also raised concerns about proposals affecting village schools in Ceredigion, including Ysgol Llanfihangel y Creuddyn, a community school on a Church in Wales-owned site.

She said: “Parents should not be told they have choice on paper when the nearest realistic alternative may be many miles away.

“In rural areas, distance matters. Transport matters. Community matters.

“I have asked the Education Minister to set out what safeguards are in place to protect Church schools, Christian education, rural communities, and parental choice before these decisions are allowed to go ahead.”

Questions for ministers

In her letter, Ms Archibald asked the Welsh Government to confirm what assessment has been made of Church schools closed, discontinued, or proposed for category change in Wales.

She has also asked whether stronger guidance will be issued to councils considering proposals that affect Church schools.

The MS has requested that the minister meet affected parents, governors, local representatives and the relevant dioceses.

Councils have previously argued that school reorganisation proposals must take account of pupil numbers, building conditions, budgets, educational standards and long-term sustainability.

However, campaigners say that in rural communities the closure or reclassification of a school can have consequences beyond education, including the loss of community identity, longer journeys for children and fewer realistic choices for parents.

 

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Charity

Henry Tufnell visits St Davids RNLI lifeboat station

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MP pledges to raise funding and regulation concerns after meeting volunteer crew at St Justinian

HENRY TUFNELL MP has visited St Davids RNLI lifeboat station to hear first-hand about the work of its volunteer crew.

The Mid and South Pembrokeshire MP met crew members at St Justinian, where he was briefed on some of the rescue missions carried out by the station off the Pembrokeshire coast.

Mr Tufnell said the visit had highlighted both the dedication of the lifeboat crew and the pressures facing the service.

He said: “It was a privilege to visit the RNLI St Davids Lifeboat at St Justinian and hear first-hand about some of the remarkable rescue missions the crew have undertaken.

“They do extraordinary work keeping our community safe.”

Mr Tufnell added that crew members had also raised concerns about ongoing challenges, including funding and regulation.

He said: “It was also important to hear about the ongoing challenges they face, particularly regarding funding and regulation.

“As your MP, I will continue to champion and protect the interests of our community heroes in Westminster.”

The RNLI station at St Davids is one of Pembrokeshire’s key coastal rescue bases, serving a busy and often challenging stretch of coastline popular with walkers, kayakers, boat users and visitors.

The charity relies on volunteer crews and public support to continue its lifesaving work.

 

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Crime

Farmers fined in bovine TB scandal face fresh court action

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Hartt family members listed at Haverfordwest Magistrates’ Court over unpaid penalties linked to major cattle prosecution

TWO PEMBROKESHIRE farmers convicted in a major bovine tuberculosis-related cattle case are due back before the courts this week over unpaid financial penalties.

Henry Hartt, 66, of Ciffig, Whitland, and Edward William Henry Hartt, 48, of Llandewi Velfrey, are both listed to appear at Haverfordwest Magistrates’ Court on Thursday (June 11).

Court records show both men face proceedings relating to the non-payment of fines of £94,739.64 imposed on March 4, 2024. Separate applications to lodge committal warrants are also listed, relating to unpaid fines of £22,300 and £22,400 respectively.

The pair were among three members of the Hartt family sentenced at Swansea Crown Court in March 2024 following a major prosecution brought by Pembrokeshire County Council involving bovine TB controls.

The court heard that cattle known to have reacted to bovine tuberculosis tests were knowingly kept on-farm, while substitute animals were allegedly presented for slaughter instead.

At the time, Henry Hartt, Edward Hartt and Charles Hartt admitted a total of 12 cattle identification offences connected to Longford Farm, Clynderwen.

The case centred on failures to comply with bovine TB restrictions and cattle tracing rules designed to prevent the spread of the disease.

Each defendant was fined £24,000, while confiscation orders and prosecution costs running into hundreds of thousands of pounds were also imposed.

Thursday’s hearing is expected to deal with enforcement proceedings connected to the unpaid financial orders rather than the original criminal offences.

The Herald will be attending court.

 

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