News
Tenby MIU business case delayed
MID AND WEST AM Simon Thomas has pressed the Welsh Government over the proposed re-opening of the Minor Injuries Unit in Tenby.
The Plaid Cymru representative has asked questions in the National Assembly.
During the summer, the Tenby Minor Injuries Unit temporarily re-opened from July 18 until September 5.
Simon Thomas, Plaid Cymru AM, welcomed the return of the summer service to Tenby but argued that it did not go far enough. He called for the unit to be open permanently.
Party of Wales Assembly Member Simon Thomas said: “We were promised the re-opening of the Minor Injuries Unit. The partial re-opening was successful. Plaid Cymru is asking the Welsh Government when it will happen permanently. I’ve tabled questions in the National Assembly seeking answers from the Cabinet Secretary for Health, Well-being and Sport.
“Resurrecting the service at Tenby would reduce pressure on GPs locally. The issue of a scarcity of GPs is a subject I’ve also raised with the Welsh Government and last month with the First Minister.
“Re-opening the Minor Injury Unit would ease the strain on GPs and primary care providers in the town. It would make coming to Tenby more attractive for doctors to work in the area.”
We asked the Health Board to respond to Mr Thomas’ words.
Jill Paterson, Interim Director of Commissioning, Primary Care, and Therapies and Health Sciences, told us: “Earlier in the year, the board set out the governance arrangements to be followed prior to the business case being considered at a public board meeting.
“Unfortunately, both the November and December meetings of the Health Board’s Business Planning Performance and Assurance Committee (BPPAC) were cancelled, so the business case is now scheduled for the BPPAC meeting to be held on January 10, 2017, where this important service development will be considered alongside other service priorities. Following this, the business case will be considered by the board at the public board meeting to be held on January 26, 2017.
“We appreciate that there will be a number of practical, service and financial challenges to consider within this business case and, as a part of that process, the Chair and Chief Executive will be meeting with the Tenby Practice early in the New Year.”
Carmarthen West and South Pembrokeshire AM Angela Burns told us: “I have raised this consistently with the Health board on a number of occasions.
“It is a very sensitive and controversial subject but it appears to me that we have an excellent unit in Tenby which needs to be fully utilised.
“Any solution which can help alleviate the pressure from our district general hospital needs to be seriously considered.”
News
Lib Dems call for emergency VAT cut for hospitality as families ‘priced out’
THE WELSH LIBERAL DEMOCRATS are calling for an emergency 5% VAT cut for pubs, restaurants and other hospitality and entertainment businesses in next week’s Budget — part of a bold £12 billion plan to tackle the cost-of-living crisis that has made “going out an unaffordable luxury” for many families.
Under the proposals, VAT would be reduced from 20% to 15% on hospitality, accommodation and visitor attractions. The move would boost struggling high streets and bring down prices for hard-pressed families across Wales.
The plan forms part of a two-pronged “cost of living and cost of doing business rescue package,” which also calls on the Chancellor to cut household energy bills by scrapping the current renewables obligation levy. Together, these measures — to remain in place until April 2027 — would save a typical family around £270 over the next 18 months.
Funding would come from a new windfall tax on big banks, originally proposed by the IPPR think tank. The tax could raise an estimated £30 billion between now and 2030, with less than half of that needed to cover the cost of the VAT cut (£7.5bn) and the removal of the renewables obligation levy (£4.5bn).
The Liberal Democrats say their proposals would give a vital boost to Welsh pubs, restaurants and entertainment venues currently struggling under the “double whammy” of high taxes and falling customer spending.
Recent research by More in Common found that almost two in three Britons (59%) believe restaurant meals are now unaffordable for most people, while over half (51%) said the same about a night out at the pub, and 45% about a trip to the cinema.
David Chadwick, Welsh Liberal Democrat Westminster Spokesperson, said: “People are working with their nose to the grindstone all month and have next to nothing left over after sky-high bills and spiralling food prices.
In years gone by, people could look forward to fish and chips on a Friday or a weekend trip to the cinema. Now those small joys – the ones that make life worth living – are becoming an unaffordable luxury for too many.
High street businesses have been hammered by Labour’s jobs tax, so it’s no wonder so many treasured pubs, restaurants and cafés are closing their doors, taking with them vital jobs and community spaces.
It doesn’t have to be that way. With a new voting system in the Senedd, every single vote for the Welsh Liberal Democrats will count and deliver change with fairness at its heart.
Our plans to cut VAT on hospitality and energy bills would put £270 back into people’s pockets, making it easier to heat their homes and spend a little more locally. This would help restore our high streets, drive economic growth and give the country a much-needed morale boost.”
Crime
Haverfordwest man fined for damaging car wing mirror
Victim later retracted statement, court hears
A HAVERFORDWEST man has been fined after admitting to damaging a car wing mirror belonging to a woman in the town earlier this year.
Luke Owen, 33, of Wayside Close, Simpson Cross, appeared before Haverfordwest Magistrates’ Court on Tuesday (Nov 12), where he pleaded guilty to criminal damage.
The court heard that on May 7, 2025, Owen damaged the wing mirror of a black Peugeot 2008.
Prosecutor Sian Vaughan said the damage was minor, and a victim personal statement was not presented to the court as the complainant had since retracted it.
Owen, represented by Mike Kelleher of Welch & Co Solicitors, was fined £40.
He was also ordered to pay £20 in compensation, £85 in prosecution costs, and a £16 victim surcharge.
Magistrates allowed the fine to be deducted from Owen’s benefits.
Crime
Whitland woman’s no-insurance charge discontinued
A WHITLAND woman accused of aiding another person to drive without insurance has had her case discontinued at Haverfordwest Magistrates’ Court.
Louise Mary Hook, 52, of Compton House, Llanfallteg, was alleged to have aided and abetted Christopher Rone in using a Fiat Ducato van without insurance on High Street, Narberth, on May 15.
The prosecution claimed that Hook had encouraged or permitted Rone to drive the vehicle when no valid insurance policy was in force.
However, when the case came before magistrates on Tuesday (Nov 12), the Crown Prosecution Service confirmed that the matter had been discontinued and no further action would be taken.
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