Politics
Leanne Wood visits Tenby

Leanne Wood: Vowing to speak to ‘as many people in Wales as possible’
during the year
PLAID CYMRU leader Leanne Wood was in Tenby to hold a public meeting on the next steps for Wales last week.
She headed to the busy seaside town along with Plaid Cymru’s candidate for Carmarthen West and South Pembrokeshire Simon Thomas to discuss how the party’s plans will help Tenby’s businesses, improve services, and help Wales flourish.
Fresh from a string of high profile media appearances during the Westminster election campaign, Leanne Wood has fired the starting gun on the 2016 Welsh General Election campaign, vowing to speak to ‘as many people in Wales as possible’ during the year.
After the meeting in the Catholic Church House, Ms Wood said: “Plaid Cymru’s focus is on improving Wales – our public services and our economy – and that is the message that we are taking to communities everywhere.
“People want to see things get better in their lives, in their GP surgery, their school; their hospital and in their workplace. Plaid Cymru’s programme for the Welsh Government will be about delivering that.
“In Tenby, people wanted to talk about how the Tory government’s damaging cuts have affected public services, such as the health service, and how Plaid Cymru’s plans to protect our local hospitals and train and recruit a thousand extra doctors will protect the services we depend on.
“Plaid Cymru will also keep Tenby’s high street bustling. By bringing small businesses out of paying business rates, and by reducing VAT for the tourism sector to just 5%, Plaid Cymru will give Tenby’s economy the support it needs.
“I was pleased to see so many people at the meeting, and am grateful to them for an interesting and far-reaching discussion.”
Party of Wales Shadow Education Minister, Mid and West AM Simon Thomas said: “I was very pleased that my first public engagement as the new Plaid Cymru Assembly candidate for Carmarthen West and South Pembrokeshire was to chair such a well-attended and vibrant public meeting.
“I have been meeting businesses all week in Pembrokeshire and at the Royal Welsh and it did not surprise me that many of the questions asked related to the economy and better transport links.
“Residents were also concerned about the NHS and hospital services at Withybush in particular. I was able to tell of the work I have done to date and my concerns that the latest change to A&E admissions to Withybush and Glangwili seem to be based on administrative convenience and not clinical judgement.
“I will be raising this with the Health Board and the Welsh Government. Plaid Cymru’s message in the next Assembly elections will focus strongly on the need to recruit 1,000 new doctors in Wales and more certainty around rural health services.”
Business
New facilities at Haverfordwest Target Shooting Club agreed
A CALL by a Pembrokeshire shooting club for more disability-friendly facilities has been given the go-ahead by county planners.
In an application to Pembrokeshire County Council, Haverfordwest Target Shooting Club, through agent Andrew Sutton Architecture, sought permission for an extension to existing target shooting club building at The Firing Range, Withybush Road, Haverfordwest to improve accessibility and internal facilities, together with associated landscaping works.
A supporting statement said: “The club’s own published history states it was founded in 1968, moved from the Drill Hall to the old wartime airfield butts at Withybush by the early 1970s, and had developed facilities over time, including the clubhouse by 1999. The established leisure/community use has existed on the site for a number of years and the proposal does not seek to intensify the core activity beyond that already authorised/established.”
It added: “The primary objective of the scheme is to improve inclusive access to the club’s facilities for disabled users and those with reduced mobility. The internal arrangement will provide adequate entrance and lobby space, clear accessible routes and appropriately designed sanitary accommodation, including an accessible wetroom/shower and separate WC.”
It also said accessible parking and surfacing designed to provide a firm, even, slip-resistant route from parking to the principal entrance.
It added: “The Equality Act 2010 places duties on service providers to make reasonable adjustments so that people with additional access needs are not placed at a substantial disadvantage.
“The proposal is therefore a positive enhancement to a community/leisure facility and supports wider policy objectives for inclusive environments.”
It went on to say: “The club operates within a highly controlled environment, and the proposed works will maintain and enhance safety and security measures.”
The application was conditionally approved by planners.
News
Watchdog criticises health board over £10m GP contract checks
A HEALTH board has been criticised by Audit Wales after GP contracts worth more than £10m were awarded without sufficient due diligence checks.
Aneurin Bevan University Health Board allowed a GP partnership associated with eHarley Street Primary Care Solutions to take on eight GP contracts in south-east Wales, with a combined annual value of around £10.1m.
Audit Wales said the board should have carried out greater scrutiny before approving the arrangements, including checks on financial resilience, workforce plans, business risks and the partnership’s ability to manage several practices at once.
However, the watchdog found no evidence of fraud and noted the board was dealing with significant pressure in general practice, including vacant contracts and limited interest from other bidders.
The report said weaknesses in governance and scrutiny contributed to later disruption and uncertainty for patients and staff when problems emerged.
Concerns included financial and workforce pressures, unpaid invoices, and issues relating to tax and pension payments. Some contracts were later handed back, requiring the health board to step in to protect services.
Natasha Asghar MS, Welsh Conservative Shadow Cabinet Minister for Health and Social Care, said the findings were “deeply concerning”.
She said: “Patients and staff were left facing disruption and uncertainty because proper scrutiny was not carried out before these contracts were awarded.
“The Welsh Conservatives believe lessons must be learned to ensure robust checks are in place, protect frontline services and restore confidence in primary care across Wales.”
Aneurin Bevan University Health Board accepted the recommendations and said it had already strengthened its processes.
Audit Wales said the case highlighted the need for stronger checks before GP contracts are transferred, particularly when a single partnership is taking on multiple practices in a short period.
News
Welsh Conservatives demand clarity over EHRC guidance in schools
THE WELSH CONSERVATIVES have called on the Welsh Government to clarify whether new Equality and Human Rights Commission guidance will be implemented in schools across Wales.
Shadow education minister Sam Rowlands MS has written to Cabinet Minister for Education and the Welsh Language Anna Brychan MS following the UK Supreme Court ruling on the Equality Act.
Mr Rowlands said schools, teachers, governors and parents needed clear answers on how the guidance would apply in practice, including on single-sex spaces, safeguarding, changing facilities and sports participation.
He said: “Parents, teachers and pupils deserve clarity from the Welsh Government.
“Schools cannot be left in limbo while ministers avoid making a decision on such an important safeguarding and legal issue.
“The Equality Act applies in Wales, and schools now need clear guidance on what this means in practice.”
In his letter, Mr Rowlands asks whether updated guidance will be issued to schools in Wales, whether schools will be expected to amend existing policies, and what advice will be given to headteachers on safeguarding and compliance with the Equality Act.
He also asks whether the Welsh Government intends to diverge from the approach set out by the EHRC.
The letter says schools and parents require “clear and consistent guidance” to ensure the rights, dignity and safety of all pupils are respected.
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