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Councillor urges public to create ‘holy hell’

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Raising awareness: Cllrs Michael Williams, Jonathan Preston, and Jacob Williams

Raising awareness: Cllrs Michael
Williams, Jonathan Preston, and
Jacob Williams

RESIDENTS in the south-east of the county are being urged to attend a public meeting on Monday night over the future of the Tenby Library and Learning Centre.

Cllrs Michael Williams (Tenby North) Jonathan Preston (Penally) and Jacob Williams (East Williamston) say it’s vital that users of the building speak out and let the council know just how important this facility is for Tenby and the surrounding area.

The three, photographed outside County Hall, are due to attend a presentation to members by council officers at the authority’s Haverfordwest headquarters this afternoon (Friday) ahead of Monday night’s public meeting in Tenby.

Two separate public consultation meetings were held earlier in the summer over the future of the library and adult education classes, which, along with the youth club are services delivered at the town’s former Greenhill Grammar School.

The public consultation process followed a highly controversial decision taken by the county council’s cabinet earlier this year to close Tenby learning centre from August 2016, without having undertaken any consultation whatsoever.

In February Cllr Jacob Williams set about halting the cabinet’s decision and referred it to a council committee for further scrutiny. Cllr Preston co-signed Cllr. Williams’ demand along with Cllrs Viv Stoddart (Milford Hubberston) Tessa Hodgson (Lamphey) and Peter Stock (Haverfordwest Portfield.)

Following further scrutiny of the cabinet’s decision it was agreed that Fishguard and Pembroke Dock learning centres – which were due to be closed down last month – would be given at least a year’s reprieve, and that further consultation would take place with the public in the interim over all planned closures, including that of the Haverfordwest centre.

Speaking to the Herald, Cllr Jacob Williams said: “For many years the authorities have looked into relocating the Tenby library but nowhere suitable has yet been found. It’s clear to me that the cabinet tried to slip in a decision to close Tenby’s learning centre – which uses the bulk of the building – hoping nobody would notice. If the learning centre closes it’s obvious the library will be in jeopardy, so it’s vital that users express their feelings. The council has a ruthless streak and a lack of compassion, and I have no doubt that both the library and learning centre will be closed down and the listed building will be sold off to a hotel or housing developer if users don’t create holy hell.”

Cllr Preston told us: “I understand cuts are coming and the ways services are delivered are changing, but I’m adamant that the library needs to remain central. It is currently in a convenient location for its users. One proposal would see it relocated to the leisure centre site but I don’t think that’s appropriate. It would also remove yet another important service away from the town which wouldn’t be fair.”

The public meeting, arranged by PCC, will be held in the main hall at Tenby’s Library and Learning Centre, at 7.30pm on Monday September 14.

 

2 Comments

2 Comments

  1. idris

    September 23, 2015 at 2:29 pm

    Jacob shouldn’t be a councillor, much too young he should be outside playing football and leave the important stuff to our IPiG betters

  2. Ieuan

    September 30, 2015 at 7:02 pm

    You are very wrong Idris, we need MORE Councillor’s Like Jacob Williams and less of the IPPG

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Crime

Haverfordwest sex offender jailed over child abuse material

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Registered offender used library computers to hide social media accounts

A HAVERFORDWEST sex offender who used public library computers to exchange child abuse material and discuss the sexual abuse of minors has been jailed for 20 months.

Euwyn Draper, aged 22, of Hill Street, Haverfordwest, appeared at Swansea Crown Court after admitting four breaches of a sexual harm prevention order.

Recorder Greg Bull KC told him the courts had “bent over backwards” to assist him in the past, but said those efforts had failed.

He told Draper: “I’m not going to lecture you because I would be wasting my breath. You knew you had to comply with the order.”

Secret accounts

The court heard that Draper had been made subject to a 10-year sexual harm prevention order in 2024 after earlier convictions for possessing and distributing indecent images of children.

The order banned him from holding social media accounts in any name other than his own and required him to disclose relationships or friendships to police when asked.

Despite this, Draper secretly maintained accounts on a number of platforms, including X, formerly Twitter, Instagram, Snapchat and BlueSky. The BlueSky account had been registered under a false name.

His use of Snapchat was specifically prohibited because of the platform’s auto-delete function.

Library computers

Prosecutor Megan Williams said Draper’s latest offending came to light on May 5 this year during a routine meeting with his offender manager at Haverfordwest police station.

When asked about his internet use, Draper claimed he only went to the library to watch YouTube and listen to Spotify. He denied having any social media accounts or communicating with anyone online.

But as questioning continued, he became “flustered” and admitted he had been chatting to a male online and had an X account which had not been disclosed to police.

Officers attended the library with Draper the following day to examine his digital activity.

After he logged in using his library ID and opened his Google account, police reviewed his X profile and found sexually explicit conversations between Draper and another male in which the pair discussed sexual activity involving children aged five and above.

The court heard that explicit photographs had also been exchanged.

Police also discovered that Draper had reinstalled Instagram after previously deleting the account in front of officers.

Previous offending

Draper has three previous convictions for 14 offences.

In April 2024 he was given a suspended prison sentence and made subject to the sexual harm prevention order for possessing and distributing child sex abuse images.

Within months, he breached the order by maintaining an undisclosed social media account. In September 2024 he was jailed for 16 months for possession of further indecent images.

When interviewed about the latest breaches, Draper answered “no comment” to all questions.

‘Immature young man’

Alex Scott, defending, described Draper as an “immature young man” who lived an isolated life in rented accommodation and acted “impulsively” in relation to social media.

He said Draper had co-operated with police by accompanying officers to the library and recognised the need to address the underlying causes of his behaviour.

Jailed

Draper had previously pleaded guilty to four counts of breaching a sexual harm prevention order.

After giving him a one-third discount for his early guilty pleas, Recorder Bull sentenced him to 20 months in prison.

Draper will serve up to half of the sentence in custody before being released on licence to complete the remainder in the community.

 

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Local Government

Milford Haven school redevelopment moves a major step closer

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£141.6m scheme could transform education in the town

A MAJOR step forward has been taken in the long-awaited Milford Haven Schools Redevelopment project after Pembrokeshire County Council’s Cabinet approved the Outline Business Case for the £141.6 million scheme.

The decision, made on Wednesday (May 27), means the business case can now be submitted to the Welsh Government for consideration.

The ambitious project would see a new combined campus built on the current Milford Haven School site, bringing an English-medium primary school together with the secondary school, with some shared facilities.

The plans also include a 40-place Flying Start centre and a specialist Learning Resource Centre for 24 pupils with additional learning needs.

A new Welsh-medium primary school is also planned for Milford Haven, providing Welsh language education in the area.

Alongside the schools redevelopment programme, a new leisure centre will be created. Thornton Sports Hall is set to be demolished as part of the wider changes.

The next stage will be for the council to submit a Full Business Case to the Welsh Government before final approval can be given and construction can begin. Contractors are expected to be on site next year, with the new school buildings due to open in 2030.

The scheme has been discussed for many years, with local families, pupils, staff and the wider community waiting for meaningful progress towards modern education facilities for the town.

There has also been criticism locally over the slow pace of the process, including concerns about Welsh Government bureaucracy and the requirement for repeated business case approvals before funding decisions are finalised.

However, the Cabinet decision marks a significant milestone for one of the largest education projects ever proposed in Pembrokeshire.

If delivered, the redevelopment has the potential to transform education, childcare, Welsh-medium provision, additional learning needs support and leisure facilities for future generations in Milford Haven.

 

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Business

M&S closure ends 69 years on Swansea’s Oxford Street

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SWANSEA city centre loses one of its best-known stores today as Marks & Spencer closes its Oxford Street branch for the final time.

The shop, which opened in 1957, has been part of Swansea’s post-war retail story for 69 years and was regarded by many shoppers as one of the city centre’s anchor stores.

The closure affects around 92 staff and leaves a major gap on one of Swansea’s most prominent shopping streets.

M&S said the decision formed part of its wider plan to reshape its store estate and invest in locations that better meet customer needs. The company has said the Swansea store had suffered a sustained decline in sales and that the ageing building would require significant investment.

End of an era

For generations of Swansea shoppers, M&S was more than a shop. It was a meeting point, a reliable food hall, a place for school uniforms, work clothes, Christmas shopping and weekly routines.

Its closure will be seen as another serious blow to traditional city centre retail, following years of changing shopping habits, online competition, out-of-town retail parks and pressure on large high street stores.

Although M&S says it remains committed to serving Swansea customers through nearby stores and online, the loss of the Oxford Street branch means many city centre shoppers — particularly older residents and those relying on buses — will no longer have easy access to a full-line M&S in the heart of the city.

Impact on Swansea

The decision has caused concern about footfall, empty retail units and confidence in Swansea’s main shopping area.

Council leaders had hoped to keep M&S in the city centre and have described the closure as deeply disappointing. The authority is continuing regeneration work in Swansea, including investment around the arena, the city centre and former department store sites, but the loss of M&S is a symbolic setback.

The question now is what happens next to the large Oxford Street building — and whether Swansea can attract a replacement capable of bringing shoppers back into the city centre.

Pic: M&S on Oxford Street, Swansea, closes today after 69 years.

 

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