Comment
Manorbier deserved honesty — not false hope
After a fire destroyed the village school, rebuilding was described as the “preferred option”. Three years later, councillors have voted to close it instead.
WHEN Manorbier Church in Wales VC School was devastated by fire in October 2022, the community did what communities always do in the face of adversity: it rallied.
Teachers carried on teaching.
Parents carried on supporting.
Children carried on learning.
Classes moved into temporary accommodation at Jameston Community Hall and, despite the upheaval, the school community stayed together.
And crucially, the council itself appeared to signal that this was only temporary.
In March 2023 Pembrokeshire County Council announced it had backed what it described as “positive steps towards rebuilding” the school. Council documents went further, describing full reinstatement as the “preferred option.”
Pupils would continue learning in temporary accommodation while rebuilding work took place.
Those words mattered. They created hope.
Not unrealistic hope. Not wishful thinking.
Hope based on what the council itself was saying.
So the community carried on.
Parents campaigned to save the school.
A petition was launched.
The Diocese of St Davids objected to the closure proposals.
Bishop Dorrien Davies visited the school community in their temporary classrooms.
Through all of it, the assumption remained the same: the school would eventually return.
But this week that hope was extinguished.
Despite a consultation in which more than 90 per cent of responses opposed closure, councillors voted to proceed with plans to discontinue the school.
The explanation offered is that the insurance settlement following the fire fell far below the cost of rebuilding the school, while falling pupil numbers and surplus places in nearby schools mean the facility is no longer considered viable.
Those may be the financial and strategic realities the council now faces.
But they do not erase the uncomfortable truth at the centre of this story.
For three years a community was allowed to believe its school would be rebuilt.
Then, quietly, the direction of travel changed.
To be fair, the council now insists that no promise was ever made. The decision in 2023, it says, was simply to commission a feasibility study and explore options.
Technically, that may well be correct.
But leadership is not just about technicalities. It is about clarity, honesty and managing expectations.
If rebuilding was unlikely, the community should have been told that plainly from the start.
Instead, hopeful language about reinstatement allowed a very different belief to take hold — that Manorbier School would one day reopen.
Even Cabinet Member for Education Cllr Guy Woodham acknowledged during Thursday’s debate that those expectations existed.
“There may have been a general perception that a decision had been made to reinstate the school,” he told councillors.
That perception did not appear out of thin air.
It came from the words the council itself chose to use.
The result is a decision that now feels, to many residents, less like an unavoidable policy choice and more like a betrayal.
Manorbier is not simply losing a building. It is losing a village school, a community hub and a Church in Wales education provision that has served generations.
Rural schools across Wales face difficult challenges. Falling pupil numbers and financial pressures are real issues.
But when communities are asked to accept painful decisions, they deserve something in return: honesty.
Communities can cope with difficult truths.
What they struggle to accept is the feeling that they were allowed to hope for something that was never really going to happen.
For the children who continued learning in a community hall after the fire, and for the parents who believed their school would return, that hope has now gone.
And many in Manorbier will be left asking the same question:
Why were we led to believe otherwise?
Cllr Huw Murphy said in the council chamber in December: “If there ever was a template written on how not to deal with a catastrophic incident at a school, we have written it here.”
He’s right.
Comment
OPINION: Wales pays for HS2 — but gets left on the platform
As HS2 balloons towards £100bn with fresh delays, the case for fair rail funding for Pembrokeshire and west Wales has never been stronger
THE MOST absurd aspect of HS2 is no longer just its eye-watering cost. It is the sheer scale of the broken promises — and the fact that Wales is still expected to help foot the bill while seeing almost none of the benefit.
Once hailed as a high-speed revolution connecting London, Birmingham, Manchester and Leeds, HS2 has shrunk dramatically. The Manchester and Leeds legs are gone. The line may run slower than planned. Euston station remains uncertain. And the first passengers may not board until the late 2030s.

When people see photographs of vast HS2 works stretching into open countryside, it is easy to understand why many now ask whether Britain has spent tens of billions building infrastructure for a railway that no longer knows where it is going.
Latest estimates put the cost at between £87.7bn and £102.7bn. Billions have already been spent on structures, junctions and works linked to routes that no longer exist. What remains is a shorter, slower, vastly more expensive project than the one sold to the public over a decade ago.
Yet Wales is still counted in the “England and Wales” project.
This is the bitterest pill. No HS2 track reaches Wales. No station serves us. No journey times from Pembrokeshire, Carmarthenshire or Ceredigion are transformed. Commuters on the line from Milford Haven to Cardiff still battle ageing rolling stock, unreliable services and Victorian-era infrastructure that feels a world away from “high-speed Britain.”
The Treasury’s defence — that rail infrastructure is not devolved and HS2 benefits the wider England-and-Wales network — has always stretched credibility. Today, with the project scaled back, it looks untenable.
Scotland and Northern Ireland receive Barnett consequentials from HS2 spending. Wales, despite having no HS2 line, does not.
Independent estimates and repeated calls from Welsh politicians and parliamentary committees have long suggested Wales is owed billions in fair-share funding. Figures in the region of £4bn to £5bn have been cited — money that could upgrade west Wales lines, improve reliability, add capacity and modernise stations.

Local reality check
Would anyone in Pembroke Dock, Haverfordwest or Fishguard seriously claim they have gained from HS2?
When services are disrupted by signalling faults, track defects or rolling stock shortages, the idea that west Wales is already “benefiting” from a London-to-Birmingham railway rings hollow. Pembrokeshire’s rail connections remain among the most challenging in the UK, limiting economic opportunities, tourism and daily commutes.
This is not anti-rail investment. Britain needs better infrastructure. The problem is fairness.
Successive governments talk of “levelling up” and rebalancing the economy, yet Wales consistently receives a disproportionately low share of rail enhancement spending relative to need.
At a time when HS2 has become a symbol of mismanagement for many, telling Welsh taxpayers they have already had their share — while our own services lag — fuels a deeper sense of being at the back of the queue. It risks feeding cynicism about how Westminster treats Wales.
The solution is straightforward.
If HS2 is genuinely an England-and-Wales project delivering meaningful benefits here, show us the railway.
If not, reclassify it and deliver the Barnett consequentials Wales is owed.
That money could fund real improvements: better frequencies on the west Wales line, electrification, station upgrades and resilience works that actually touch Pembrokeshire communities.
Westminster must stop pretending. Local MPs, the Welsh Government and campaigners should keep pressing this case — because transport fairness is economic fairness.
Pembrokeshire deserves better than being asked to pay into a project that delivers its rewards somewhere else.
Comment
OPINION: Why Pembrokeshire should back DARC
This is not the time to turn our backs on jobs, security and our proud defence heritage
PEMBROKESHIRE is once again being asked a simple question: do we want to be a county that helps shape Britain’s future, or one that says no to opportunity when it matters most?
The growing row over the proposed DARC project at Brawdy has generated more heat than light in recent days. With Eluned Morgan now calling for the scheme to be paused because of Donald Trump, and campaigners demanding it be scrapped altogether, it is worth stepping back from the noise and looking at what is really at stake.
Of course people are right to be alarmed by some of Trump’s behaviour. His rhetoric, his antics, and his bizarre attempts to wrap politics in religious theatre deserve criticism, ridicule even. If politicians want to condemn that kind of behaviour, fair enough. But serious decisions about Pembrokeshire’s future cannot be based on one man’s latest stunt.
Trump will not be President forever. By the time DARC is fully built, operational and delivering benefits, he will almost certainly be long gone. To throw away a major long-term opportunity for Pembrokeshire because of short-term panic over a single US President would be a serious mistake.
What is being proposed at Brawdy is not some passing political gimmick. It is a major defence and infrastructure project that would help secure the future of an existing military base, create jobs during construction, support permanent roles once operational, and ensure Pembrokeshire continues to play a serious role in national security.
That matters.
For this county, DARC is not an abstract foreign policy argument. It is a chance to protect the long-term future of a strategic site that has served Britain for decades. It is a chance to keep Brawdy alive, relevant and useful in a changing world, rather than letting it slowly drift into uncertainty and decline.
It is also a jobs issue, however much opponents try to talk that down. Construction work means contracts, wages and money circulating in the local economy. Once complete, the site would still need to be run, maintained, secured and supported. In a county where stable, skilled jobs are never to be sniffed at, that should matter to every sensible politician.
And then there is the wider issue of safety.
We are living in a more unstable world. Space is no longer some distant science-fiction sideshow. It is central to communications, intelligence, navigation and defence. Any country that cannot see what is happening above it is leaving itself dangerously exposed. Supporting DARC is not warmongering. It is common sense. It is about readiness, awareness and protecting the systems modern life now depends on.
Much of the argument against the project has been emotional. We hear a great deal about appearance, about symbolism, about fears of what the radar might represent. But leadership means weighing those concerns against reality. Pembrokeshire cannot afford to reject every major development on the basis that change makes people uncomfortable.
There is an uncomfortable truth here for DARC’s opponents. Protecting Pembrokeshire is not just about preserving a postcard view. It is also about protecting livelihoods, maintaining strategic assets, and making sure this county does not become a beautiful but economically sidelined corner of Wales where every serious opportunity is driven away.
A live military base with a renewed purpose is better than a fading one with none.
A project that brings jobs, investment and national relevance is better than managed decline dressed up as moral virtue.
And a serious defence asset in west Wales is better than the slow erosion of infrastructure while politicians pretend symbolism pays wages.
This newspaper understands why people care deeply about Pembrokeshire’s landscape and identity. So do we. But we also understand that counties survive by adapting, by staying useful, and by having the confidence to back projects that serve both local and national interests.
DARC does all of those things.
It would bring construction jobs. It would help sustain long-term operational roles. It would preserve the use of an important military base. And it would place Pembrokeshire at the heart of a serious national security project at a time when the world is becoming less safe, not more.
What Pembrokeshire needs now is not panic, hedging, or election-time theatrics. It needs backbone.
If politicians want to criticise Donald Trump, they are welcome to do so. But they should not use him as an excuse to duck a decision that could benefit Pembrokeshire for decades to come.
Trump is temporary.
The opportunity for Pembrokeshire is not.
Comment
Attack on Jewish ambulances: When hatred burns, nobody wins
THE IMAGES from Golders Green this week should stop all of us in our tracks.
Ambulances, not symbols of power, not political offices, not even property tied to profit, but ambulances, vehicles dedicated to saving lives, were set alight in the early hours of the morning. Oxygen tanks exploded. Families were forced from their homes. Volunteers who give their time freely to help others were targeted.

If that does not cross a line, then we have lost sight of where the line is.
Police are treating the attack as antisemitic. It is hard to see it as anything else. And it should be said plainly: there is no cause, no grievance, no anger about events abroad that can justify targeting Jewish communities in Britain, least of all those providing emergency care.
But if we are honest, this did not come out of nowhere.
Across Europe, and yes, in parts of the UK, tensions linked to the Israel-Gaza conflict have been bleeding into our streets, our conversations, and increasingly, our behaviour. What begins as outrage about war risks mutating into something darker: collective blame, dehumanisation, and eventually violence.

We have seen this pattern before in history. It never ends well.
At the same time, we cannot pretend that outrage only travels in one direction. Reports from the West Bank of settler violence, homes torched, communities terrorised, are deeply disturbing. Innocent people are suffering there too, often with little protection and even less accountability.
These are different situations, with different causes and different responsibilities. But they are connected by one dangerous thread: the erosion of empathy.
When people stop seeing individuals and start seeing “sides”, everything becomes easier to justify.
Burning an ambulance becomes, in someone’s mind, an act of resistance.
Torching a home becomes, in someone else’s mind, a matter of security.
Both are wrong.
And both depend on the same lie, that the person on the receiving end somehow deserves it.
Britain now faces a choice.
We can import the hatred of a conflict thousands of miles away, allowing it to fracture communities that have lived side by side for generations. Or we can draw a firm line and say: not here.
That means something uncomfortable for everyone.
Those who stand with Israel must be willing to speak out when Palestinians are attacked unjustly. Silence in those moments undermines credibility and fuels resentment.
Those who stand with Palestine must be equally clear in condemning antisemitism, not hedging it, not contextualising it, not quietly ignoring it when it appears on “their side”.
Because once you start excusing hatred when it suits your position, you are no longer arguing for justice, you are just choosing your victims.
The attack in Golders Green is not just about four burnt-out vehicles. It is a warning sign.
If ambulances are fair game, what is not?
Britain has long prided itself on being a place where different communities can live together, disagree, protest, and still recognise each other’s humanity. That tradition is under strain.
The truth is, anger is easy. Outrage is easy. Social media makes both effortless.
Restraint is harder. Nuance is harder. Refusing to hate, especially when confronted with images of suffering, is one of the hardest things we can ask of people.
But it is also the only thing that prevents society from sliding into something far worse.
The flames in Golders Green were put out.
What matters now is whether we put out the ones that lit them.
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