Local Government
Carmarthenshire Councillor raises concerns over costly Debenhams revamp
AN OPPOSITION councillor has asked the Plaid Cymru-Independent administration for an inquiry into its costly Debenhams redevelopment project at a key budget meeting.
Cllr Kevin Madge, of Labour in Carmarthenshire, said it was needed to “restore public confidence.” He also wanted to know when work would start on long-awaited new Ysgol Heol Goffa special school.
It came during a debate about the council’s five-year capital budget. This is money for things like new schools, care homes, refuse lorries, and town centre regeneration schemes.
Local authorities have to approve a five-year capital budget and a majority of councillors went on to approve Carmarthenshire’s £149.7m programme with £68m of that pencilled in for 2026-27.
It doesn’t include underspends on existing projects which are now estimated, according to a budget report, at around £71m.
The five-year programme includes a phased £16.7m relocation of Llanelli indoor market to the former Woolworths building in nearby Vaughan Street and a £2m demolition of the car park above the market.
Cllr Alun Lenny, cabinet member for resources, said this move had been agreed “step by step” with market traders.
There’s £13.6m for a new council care home in Cwmgwili in 2026-27 with £7m to be carried over from the current financial year.
Meanwhile £5.2m is allocated to the ongoing extension of Ysgol Bryngwyn, Llanelli, £3.5m for refuse vehicles, and £3.7m for the Debenhams revamp in Carmarthen.
The council stepped in when Debenhams went into administration in 2021 and work is well under way on a new council, leisure, and health hub – to be called Atriwm – at the empty St Catherine’s Walk Shopping Centre store in Carmarthen.
But costs have risen considerably and it emerged last month that a structural defect had been identified that hadn’t been picked up during inspections and surveys. It’s forecast the conversion will cost £41m with £28.2m coming from the UK and Welsh Governments and £12.8m from the council.
Cllr Lenny said: “It will be a fantastic resource for the town and its rural hinterland.”
Cllr Madge called for an independent inquiry into the scheme. His party, he said, had “tremendous concerns over governance and project control” and wanted to know what ongoing maintenance costs would be.
He said: “An independent review of this project is now warranted to ensure transparency and restore public confidence.”
Cllr Lenny said the council had a choice in 2021 to step in or “wash our hands of it” and opted for the former. He thanked residents for putting up with the works-related traffic lights. He has previously asked for a full report for councillors and the public about the structural defect.
Cllr Lenny also referred to a report by a retail analyst firm called MRI Software which said Carmarthen town centre had experienced a 19% footfall surge in 2025 compared to the previous year – a rise second only to Ballycastle in Northern Ireland.
Cllr Madge also asked when a new Ysgol Goffa special school would finally be built in Llanelli. It follows years of preparations and delays. Cllr Lenny said a schedule of accommodation for the new 150-place school had been completed and that designs were being finalised.
Planning permission and Welsh Government backing would be needed. The council, he said, remained in constant communication with Ysgol Heol Goffa.
Cllr Madge also wondered when new schools in Ammanford, Llanybydder, and Llandeilo would be built.
Among the projects included in the programme for next year are £4.85m for roads including drainage work, £2.2m to complete the 15-mile Towy Valley cycle path, a £1.2m demolition of the former Llanelli leisure centre, £1.2m for mobile classrooms at Carway Community Primrary School, Kidwelly, following its closure due to a structural issue, a £1m Burry Port harbour investment, £1m for a children’s residential home, and £200,000 for flood mitigation works.
The capital budget will be funded by government grants, the sale of council assets, and borrowing and reserves.
Cllr Madge said Labour supported some but not all of the proposed budget and that it wouldn’t be voting for it in its current format.
Cllr Lenny said no alternative budget or amendments had been put forward by Labour and, reeling off several of the projects mentioned above, he said: “If you vote against the budget you vote against the lot.”
Local Government
Foster Wales Pembrokeshire enhances support for local foster carers
FOSTER Wales Pembrokeshire is committed to building better futures for local children, ensuring they can remain in their communities with the support of dedicated foster families.
As part of this ongoing commitment, Pembrokeshire County Council has announced an increase in foster carer allowances from April 2026.
The updated allowances are designed to better reflect the real cost of providing day-to-day care and to recognise the vital role foster carers play in children’s lives. Full details of the new rates will be shared with foster carers.
Head of Children’s Services, Chris Frey-Davies said: “Foster carers play a vital role in providing stability, care and hope for children who need it most. We want to ensure they receive the right support to carry out this life-changing work, and these enhanced allowances are an important part of that. We are incredibly proud of the difference our foster carers make in Pembrokeshire.”
Pembrokeshire is also introducing a new two-year pilot initiative offering reduced Council Tax payments for eligible foster carers. The foster carers will be contacted directly with information on how the scheme will work.
Anyone considering fostering can benefit from a wealth of local support, including access to specialist teams, dedicated social workers, strong community networks and the opportunity to help children stay close to home.
To find out more about becoming a foster carer in Pembrokeshire, call 01437 774650, email [email protected] or visit https://pembrokeshire.fosterwales.gov.wales/
Local Government
44 candidates for Ceredigion Penfro Senedd elections
44 CANDIDATES are fighting for your vote in Pembrokeshire and Ceredigion in the forthcoming Senedd elections.
For the May 7 elections, Wales will have 16 constituencies instead of the current 40.
Democracy and Boundary Commission Cymru created the new constituencies for Wales and the Senedd will have 96 members instead of 60, each constituency electing six members.
For Pembrokeshire and Ceredigion, the new Ceredigion Penfro constituency is made up of the Ceredigion Preseli UK Parliamentary constituency and the Mid and South Pembrokeshire UK Parliamentary constituency, stretching from north of Aberystwyth to Angle in the southwest and Llanteg in the southeast.
The new voting system is based on a ‘closed proportional list system’; you vote for a political party (rather than individuals) or an independent candidate, the ballot paper showing the full list of candidates in your constituency.
If a party wins enough votes, they will win one or more seats in the Senedd; if an independent candidate wins enough votes, they will win a seat in the Senedd.
Seats will reflect the percentage of votes each party or independent candidate gets.
The six Welsh Conservatives candidates are: Paul Windsor Davies, Samuel Deri Kurtz, Claire Victoria George, Brian Andrew Murphy, Gill Evans, and Claire Malaina Jones.
Plaid Cymru – The Party of Wales has eight candidates: Elin Jones, Kerry Ferguson, Anna Nicholl, Cris Tomos, Colin Nosworthy, Clive Davies, Owain Jones, and Matt Adams.
Wales Green Party has six candidates: Amy Nicholass, Tomass Jereminovics, James Henry Purchase, Morgan Hope Phillips, Rosie O’Toole, and Kezia Autumn Hine.
Reform UK also has six candidates: Susan Claire Archibald, Paul Marr, Michael Timothy Allen, Elisa Bessie Gonzalez Randall, Peter Martin John, and Bernard Holton.
Welsh Labour / Llafur Cymru is fielding seven candidates: Eluned Morgan, Marc Tierney, Joshua Phillips, Margaret Greenaway, Tansaim Hussain-Gul, Luke Davies-Jones, and Peter Huw Jenkins.
Welsh Liberal Democrats have six candidates: Sandra Louise Jervis, Alistair Ronald Cameron, Tom Hughes, Lee Dennis Thomas John Herring, Andrew Christopher Lye, and Maggie Robinson.
One candidate Gwyn Wigley Evans is standing for Gwlad – Gall Cymru Fod Yn Well / Gwlad – Wales Can Be Better, and one, Elizabeth Davies, for Heritage Party – Keep Our Countryside Green.
Also standing as Independents are: Aaron Carey, George Alexander Chadzy, and Paul Haywood Dowson.
Several candidates are listed as: “If a candidate has been a member of any registered political party, other than the party on whose list they appear as a candidate, at any time during the period of 12 months ending on the day on which the notice of election was published (March 23, 2026).”
Those are: Eluned Morgan, Margaret Greenaway, and Tansaim Hussain-Gul all listed under the Co-operative Party; George Alexander Chadzy listed under Advance UK and Paul Haywood Dowson under Restore Britain.
Ceredigion chief executive Eifion Evans is the Constituency Returning Officer; the May 7 polling day running from 7am-10pm.
If you’re aged 16 or over and live in Wales, you can vote in the 2026 Senedd Election.
Business
Call for all-weather horse-riding arena in Lamphey refused
A CALL for an all-weather horse-riding arena and self-catering ‘pods’ near Pembrokeshire’s historic Lamphey Bishop’s Palace & Lamphey Court has been refused.
In an application to Pembrokeshire County Council, James White sought permission for a 20 by 40 metre all-weather turnout and horse-riding arena along with two accommodation pods at Lower Lamphey Park, The Ridgeway, Lamphey, near Pembroke.
The proposed site forms part of a walled garden and agricultural land to the south of Lower Lamphey Park under 500m from Scheduled Monument, Lamphey Bishop’s Palace, Lamphey and inside the boundaries of Registered Park and Garden, Lamphey Bishop’s Palace & Lamphey Court.
The walled garden is located approximately 75m to the south of Grade-II-Listed Buildings, Barn at Upper Lamphey Barn and Grade-II*-Listed Building, Four Mediaeval House at Upper Lamphey Park Farm.
The application was supported by local community council Lamphey, but Natural Resources Wales (NRW) raised concerns regarding the location of the proposal within a Marine Special Area of Conservation (SAC) catchment.
The council’s landscape officer – objected, saying there was an “under-representation of site features for the walled garden, lack of cultural appreciation of building and landscape qualities of the garden and lack of design input to the horse area”.
An officer report recommending refusal said an initial description in the application of the ‘pods’ being temporary had, by email from the applicant, being confirmed as not, being secured to the ground with waste connections, their intended use being self-catered units.
The application was refused on the grounds the pods would “result in an unjustified and harmful impact on the character and appearance of the open countryside,” and, due to the lack of a Heritage Impact Assessment (HIA) it is not possible to conclude that there would not be an adverse effect on the historic environment.
It was also refused for reasons including insufficient information provided to conclude that increases in nutrient inputs in the Pembrokeshire Marine SAC can be ruled out, and in the absence of an appropriate habitat and protected species survey “the proposal fails to demonstrate that the development would not adversely affect protected species, thereby reducing biodiversity”.
-
Community6 days agoPolice intervene after post raises fears of planned Pembroke Dock fight
-
News6 days agoParty leaders on the spot in BBC programme live from Pembrokeshire College
-
Crime6 days agoMan arrested after alleged child sexual assault in Haverfordwest
-
Crime3 days agoOver 500 arrests at latest Palestine Action protest in London
-
News6 days agoBBC brings election debate to Pembrokeshire College
-
News4 days agoSenedd election candidates confirmed as vote.wales goes live
-
Charity6 days agoDrive care forward: Help keep end-of-life care moving in Pembrokeshire
-
News6 days agoPlaid manifesto launch sparks political clash over Wales’s future









