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Town Council requests sixth form consultation extension

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Milford Haven Town Council

ON the eve of the Extraordinary Council meeting to discuss sixth form provision in Pembrokeshire, Milford Haven Town Council has asked that the consultation period be extended.

Members of the Town Council’s Public works and Planning meeting feel that there hasn’t been sufficient time to discuss the matter.

The meeting took place at Milford Town Hall on Monday, April 13.

Cllr John Cole said this issue would affect the whole of Pembrokeshire.

The Mayor, Eric Harries said that the effect of the reorganisation varies from school to school and the interpretation was that it would have very little effect on Milford other than to bolster its numbers and questioned whether that was correct.

Cllr John Cole said: “This raises all sorts of issues. I have had a look at a document which is full of wonderful ideas but in my view they have forgotten some of the major issues about staffing, staffing contracts and salaries.

“If you downgrade a school, you downgrade finances and if you downgrade finances you downgrade what’s available to members of staff.

“This is such a complex issue and I would suggest that we invite the senior director of children and schools to meet with full council to give us her briefing and answer our questions.

“They’re talking about moving Sixth formers from Fishguard, St Davids and those from Tasker Millward and Sir Thomas Picton and creating a sixth form unit on the college campus. The college organisation is not part of Pembrokeshire County Council and they are under major financial pressures at this time.”

Mayor Eric Harries highlighted a consultation meeting in Milford Comprehensive School on April 22 concerning secondary education and that representatives from the School have been invited to a meeting of the council saying: “The school is most anxious to demonstrate and exercise that it is very much a part of the community and that it wants to play a full part in it.”

The Mayor later moved that the council ask for the date of completion of the consultation period to be put back as there has been ‘insufficient time to discuss the matter’.

Councillors did not want to set an end date but felt that the current deadline of May 5 should be extended until the end of May. That proposal was accepted by all councillors.

 

1 Comment

1 Comment

  1. robert hogggins

    April 14, 2015 at 2:52 am

    this is a time when pupils are making exam dicisions for their future and to be disrupted at this time could wreck their future
    school enviroment is what they want when exams and familier teachers
    around them who have supported them throuout

    pembroke college funded from a vary different pot of money to that of the schooling funds and pembrokeshire college is under hardship as it is and how are all these pupils going to get to the college will the council pay for the transport

    it will be parents paying but consider those on low incomes and benifts and single parents i dont think this has been fully revised who ever thaught of this should go back to school themselves

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Crime

Man accused of Milford Haven burglary and GBH remanded to Crown Court

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A MILFORD HAVEN man has appeared in court charged with burglary and inflicting grievous bodily harm, following an incident at a flat in the town earlier this week.

Charged after alleged attack inside Victoria Road flat

Stephen Collier, aged thirty-eight, of Vaynor Road, Milford Haven, appeared before Llanelli Magistrates’ Court today (Friday, Dec 5). Collier is accused of entering a property known as Nos Da Flat, 2 Victoria Road, on December 3 and, while inside, inflicting grievous bodily harm on a man named John Hilton.

The court was told the alleged burglary and assault was carried out jointly with another man, Denis Chmelevski.

The charge is brought under section 9(1)(b) of the Theft Act 1968, which covers burglary where violence is inflicted on a person inside the property.

No plea entered

Collier, represented by defence solicitor Chris White, did not enter a plea during the hearing. Prosecutor Simone Walsh applied for the defendant to be remanded in custody, citing the serious nature of the offence, the risk of further offending, and concerns that he could interfere with witnesses.

Magistrates Mr I Howells, Mr V Brickley and Mrs H Meade agreed, refusing bail and ordering that Collier be kept in custody before trial.

Case sent to Swansea Crown Court

The case was sent to Swansea Crown Court under Section 51 of the Crime and Disorder Act 1998. Collier will next appear on January 5, 2026 at 9:00am for a Plea and Trial Preparation Hearing.

A custody time limit has been set for June 5, 2026.

Chmelevski is expected to face proceedings separately.

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News

Woman dies after collision in Tumble as police renew appeal for witnesses

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POLICE are appealing for information after a woman died following a collision in Tumble on Tuesday (Dec 2).

Officers were called to Heol y Neuadd at around 5:35pm after a collision involving a maroon Skoda and a pedestrian. The female pedestrian was taken to hospital but sadly died from her injuries.

Dyfed-Powys Police has launched a renewed appeal for witnesses, including anyone who may have dash-cam, CCTV footage, or any information that could help the investigation.

Investigators are urging anyone who was in the area at the time or who may have captured the vehicle or the pedestrian on camera shortly before the collision to get in touch. (Phone: 101 Quote reference: DP-20251202-259.)

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Greyhound Bill faces fresh scrutiny as second committee raises “serious concerns”

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THE PROHIBITION of Greyhound Racing (Wales) Bill has been heavily criticised for a second time in 24 hours after the Senedd’s Legislation, Justice and Constitution (LJC) Committee published a highly critical Stage 1 report yesterday.

The cross-party committee said the Welsh Government’s handling of the legislation had “in several respects, fallen short of the standard of good legislative practice that we would normally expect”.

Key concerns highlighted by the LJC Committee include:

  • Introducing the Bill before all relevant impact assessments (including a full Regulatory Impact Assessment and Children’s Rights Impact Assessment) had been completed – a step it described as “poor legislative practice, particularly … where the Bill may impact on human rights”.
  • Failure to publish a statement confirming the Bill’s compatibility with the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). The committee has recommended that Rural Affairs Minister Huw Irranca-Davies issue such a statement before the Stage 1 vote on 16 December.
  • Inadequate public consultation, with the 2023 animal-licensing consultation deemed “not an appropriate substitute” for targeted engagement on the specific proposal to ban the sport.

The report follows Tuesday’s equally critical findings from the Culture, Communications, Welsh Language, Sport and International Relations Committee, which questioned the robustness of the evidence base and the accelerated legislative timetable.

Industry reaction Mark Bird, chief executive of the Greyhound Board of Great Britain (GBGB), described the two reports as leaving the Bill “in tatters”.

“Two consecutive cross-party Senedd committees have now condemned the Welsh Government’s failures in due diligence, consultation and human rights considerations and evidence gathering,” he said. “The case for a ban has been comprehensively undermined. The responsible path forward is stronger regulation of the single remaining track at Ystrad Mynach, not prohibition.”

Response from supporters of the Bill Luke Fletcher MS (Labour, South Wales West), who introduced the Member-proposed Bill, said he welcomed thorough scrutiny and remained confident the legislation could be improved at later stages.

“I have always said this Bill is about ending an outdated practice that causes unnecessary suffering to thousands of greyhounds every year,” Mr Fletcher said. “The committees have raised legitimate procedural points, and I look forward to working with the Welsh Government and colleagues across the Senedd to address those concerns while keeping the core aim of the Bill intact.”

A Welsh Government spokesperson said: “The Minister has noted the committees’ reports and will respond formally in due course. The government supports the principle of the Bill and believes a ban on greyhound racing is justified on animal welfare grounds. Work is ongoing to finalise the outstanding impact assessments and to ensure full compatibility with the ECHR.”

The Bill is scheduled for a Stage 1 debate and vote in plenary on Tuesday 16 December. Even if it passes that hurdle, it would still require significant amendment at Stages 2 and 3 to satisfy the committees’ recommendations.

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