News
Penally Community Council criticised by Auditor report
PENALLY COMMUNITY COUNCIL has been criticised by the Auditor General for Wales for failures within its finance management.
The Penally ward failed to prepare its annual accounts for both 2015/16 and 2016/17 on time, did not prepare a budget for those two years, failed to approve the council tax precept, and also failed to maintain payroll and PAYE correctly.
In the report, a ‘former clerk’s tardiness’ is blamed for many of the failings, but goes on to say that the council must also take responsibility.
The report states: “The council itself must take a degree of responsibility for this failure. I have found no evidence that the council took any steps in relation to the overdue accounts.”
Assistant Auditor General, Anthony Barrett, said about the report: “I was unable to find evidence the council prepared a budget for the 2015-16 or the 2016-17 financial years.
“The council has prepared a budget for 2017-18, however, this budget does not fully comply with the requirements of the Act.
“There are some 735 local town and community councils in Wales. The vast majority work to a very high standard. It is disappointing, therefore, that a relatively small but persistent number do not meet the standard expected of public bodies and officials.
“The four councils are already taking action to address the issues highlighted in the report.”
In response, the council have said that they received incorrect details provided by the audit team, who were not ‘pro-active’.
Penally Community Council now have to discuss the report at a full meeting within a month of the issue date. The meetings are held on the second Wednesday of the month at the village hall, starting at 6:30pm.
Councillors must decide if the recommendations made are accepted and if any further action is required.
Crime
Police issue warning over illegal use of private e-scooters
POLICE in Haverfordwest, Fishguard and St Davids are reminding residents that privately owned e-scooters cannot legally be used on roads, pavements or other public spaces.
E-scooters are treated as motor vehicles under road traffic law. This means riders would need to meet the same legal requirements as other motorists, including having a valid licence, insurance and tax.
However, because privately owned e-scooters cannot currently be insured for use on public roads, they cannot legally be ridden in public places. They may only be used on private land, with the permission of the landowner.
Anyone caught riding an e-scooter illegally could face a fixed penalty notice, including a £300 fine and six penalty points for riding without insurance. Riders may also face a fine of up to £100 and three to six penalty points for riding without the correct licence.
Police say riders may also be committing further offences if they are caught riding on pavements, using a mobile phone while riding, going through red lights, or riding while under the influence of alcohol or drugs.
The penalties for drink or drug riding are treated in the same way as if a person was driving a car, and could include a court-imposed fine, a driving ban or imprisonment.
Officers are urging parents and young people to understand the rules before buying or using an e-scooter.
Health
Wales begins early NHS winter planning after long waits and ambulance pressure
Ministers say health boards and councils must act now to ease pressure on hospitals, ambulances and social care before winter
THE WELSH GOVERNMENT has told NHS Wales and social care partners to start planning earlier for winter, after a difficult year for emergency care and recent heatwave pressure on ambulance services.
Health and Care Minister Mabon ap Gwynfor said the aim was to make ambulance, emergency department and hospital services safer and more resilient during the colder months, while also recognising that pressure on the NHS is no longer confined to winter.
The announcement will be closely watched in west Wales, where Hywel Dda University Health Board runs Withybush, Glangwili, Bronglais and Prince Philip hospitals.
Latest published figures show Hywel Dda performing better than the Wales average on emergency department waits in May, with 66.5% of patients admitted, transferred or discharged within four hours and 9.9% waiting more than 12 hours. However, the health board remains well short of the Welsh Government’s 95% four-hour target, and therapy waiting times in Hywel Dda were worse than the Wales average.
Across Wales, 64.4% of patients attending emergency departments in May spent less than four hours there, while 11,066 patients waited 12 hours or more. Official figures also showed more than 1,300 “pathway of care” delays on the day data was collected, meaning patients were clinically ready to leave hospital but were still waiting for the right care, support or accommodation.
The Welsh Government says this year’s winter plan will focus on five key areas: preventing illness through improved vaccination uptake, keeping more people well at home, freeing up hospital beds through better infection control and earlier discharge, helping patients leave hospital safely when they are ready, and keeping services running under pressure while supporting staff.
An expansion of the RSV vaccine to people aged over 65 who are clinically at risk will begin in September. Ministers also want stronger uptake of vaccination among people at greatest risk, NHS and care staff, and children.
A new communications campaign is also being developed to help people understand where to go for care, so that emergency departments and ambulances are preserved for those with the most serious needs.
Mr ap Gwynfor said: “Our fantastic NHS and social care staff worked incredibly hard last winter, and we are being clear with health boards and partners more needs to be done.
“Last winter was tough. Too many people waited too long for the care they needed, and that’s not good enough. Early planning and action are key, and I’ve also asked officials to begin planning now so we’re better prepared for the winters ahead.
“I am also clear that this is not just a winter challenge. The recent period of extreme heat is a clear reminder that pressures and risk can arise at any time of year.
“Our ambition is simple: safe services all year round that protect ambulance and hospital capacity for those who really need them, ensuring people get the right care, in the right place, at the right time.”
The statement follows renewed concern from emergency medicine doctors about long waits and so-called corridor care. The Royal College of Emergency Medicine has warned that poor patient flow, delayed discharges and a lack of inpatient beds are leaving too many patients stuck in emergency departments for long periods.
The British Medical Association in Wales has also called for clearer recording and reporting of corridor care, arguing that without better data it is harder to understand the scale of the problem and hold decision-makers to account.
There was a further warning last week when the Welsh Ambulance Service declared a critical incident during the extreme heat. The service said 999 call volumes had risen by 31% compared with two weeks earlier, with around 400 additional emergency calls a day. The critical incident was later stood down, but ambulance chiefs said demand remained high.
The political test for the Plaid-led Welsh Government will be whether early planning can translate into visible improvements by winter. Health boards and councils will be expected to work together more closely, but many of the problems ministers are trying to solve depend on social care capacity, staffing, available beds and community services.
For patients and families in Pembrokeshire, Carmarthenshire and Ceredigion, the key question will be whether the plan leads to shorter ambulance waits, fewer long delays in A&E, and quicker support for people well enough to return home from hospital.
Education
Skills warning as chemistry contributes £1.9bn to Welsh economy
CHEMICAL science contributed £1.9bn to the Welsh economy in 2023, according to a new report which warns that skills shortages and pressure on universities could put future growth at risk.
The Royal Society of Chemistry says the sector is one of Wales’ most productive, generating £99,500 in Gross Value Added per worker. That compares with £73,300 per worker across the wider UK workforce and places Wales among the strongest-performing parts of the UK for chemistry-related economic output.
The findings are contained in The Contribution of Chemistry, a report commissioned by the Royal Society of Chemistry and carried out by Metro Dynamics. It examines the role of chemistry in economic activity, workforce development, research, innovation and regional growth.
The report says chemistry is often “hidden” within wider economic statistics, despite being embedded across major industries such as clean energy, advanced materials, healthcare, food and drink, construction, agriculture and manufacturing.
Across the UK, nearly half of chemistry-using professionals work in government priority growth sectors, compared with just over a quarter of the wider workforce. The RSC says this shows how important chemistry is to industrial strategy, local prosperity and high-value employment.
However, the report also warns that the skills pipeline is under pressure. Universities are described as playing a critical role in supplying graduates, supporting businesses and helping research move into commercial use. The RSC says funding pressures in higher education could make it harder for Wales and the wider UK to maintain access to the talent and facilities needed for future growth.
Helen Pain, Chief Executive of the Royal Society of Chemistry, said the figures showed the “enormous significance” of the sector.
She said: “With chemistry injecting nearly £2bn in GVA contribution to the Welsh economy, our report underlines the enormous significance of our sector to both Wales and the UK.
“As more and more universities across the country face funding cuts, it’s more important than ever that both the Welsh and the UK governments recognise how central chemistry is to the economy within wider innovation and skills strategies and ensure opportunities to study chemistry do not fall away.”
The report also highlights the value of chemistry graduates to the labour market, saying 83% go into high-skilled roles. It says maintaining that pipeline will depend on stronger links between schools, colleges, universities, technical training and employers.
For Wales, the issue is not only about university departments, but also about the businesses and local economies that depend on chemistry skills. The report argues that sectors relying on chemical science can be affected if there are shortages in skilled workers, research capacity, laboratory space or scale-up support.
The Royal Society of Chemistry is calling on local, devolved and UK governments to make chemistry a core part of economic, science, industrial, innovation and skills strategies. It also wants reforms to higher education and research funding to recognise the cost and importance of chemistry teaching and research, including the need for laboratories, equipment, specialist staff and consumables.
The report says chemical sciences GVA across the UK grew by 18% between 2019 and 2023, but warns that growth could be held back without better access to lab space, pilot facilities and support for businesses trying to scale up new products and technologies.
Ms Pain added: “Chemistry is critical to many local growth ambitions, straddling sectors ranging from clean energy and advanced materials to healthcare and manufacturing.
“A sustainable chemicals and materials sector is vital for national resilience and local growth, providing both the everyday products we need and vital supply chains for many more economic sectors.”
Fiona Tuck, Director at Metro Dynamics, said the report showed why leaders needed to look beyond traditional sector labels when planning for growth.
She said: “Now more than ever, leaders need to understand what really underpins growth in places. Too often, the capabilities that matter most are not the easiest to count.
“Chemistry shows why this matters: it is woven through our research base, industrial supply chains and priority sectors, but its contribution can be hidden when we look only through traditional sector lenses, or at technology alone.”
Dr Alexander Reip, Chair of Enterprise Oxfordshire, trustee of the Royal Society of Chemistry and a member of the project steering group, said chemistry should be treated as essential economic infrastructure.
He said: “Chemistry’s contribution to the UK economy is substantial, and this report finally puts hard numbers to what many in the sector have long understood.
“Chemistry-intensive activity runs through the industrial base of communities across the UK, underpinning jobs, supply chains and innovation capacity in ways that rarely get the visibility they deserve.”
He added that local and devolved governments needed to support the education pathways, laboratory facilities and commercialisation support that allow research to become real economic activity.
The report says supporting chemistry-based businesses at the scale-up stage is particularly important, because promising innovations can fail to reach commercial success without the right facilities, finance and skilled workforce.
The Royal Society of Chemistry says the sector has a major role to play in future challenges including clean energy, healthcare, environmental protection, secure food and water supplies, and resilient manufacturing.
The full report can be found on the Royal Society of Chemistry website.
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