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Health board putting ‘tents and temporary buildings up’ as virus hits west Wales

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As part of preparations for managing the COVID-19 Coronavirus pandemic, the local health board has begun to enact plans for all acute hospitals and other care facilities to ensure that they can keep patients safe while continuing to provide high standards of care.

Their latest press release states: “Each of our four hospitals in Aberystwyth, Carmarthen, Haverfordwest and Llanelli is developing plans which involve providing designated areas for an expected increase in patients who test positive for COVID-19 and require hospital admission. To do this, some services may need to move or change temporarily to allow us to provide clinical care for these patients in a more appropriate environment, while also ensuring that other essential services continue to run as smoothly as possible.

“We will also be putting temporary buildings or tents in place and people will be appropriately signposted to these as they become operational.

“From Saturday evening (21 March 2020) the Paediatric Ambulatory Care Unit (PACU) at Withybush General Hospital, also known as Puffin Ward, will be suspended so that it can be converted into a Minor Injuries Unit for adults and children for the duration of the pandemic. Families with children suffering minor injuries will still be able to access care at Withybush via the MIU but those children with acute illness will be directed to Glangwili General Hospital in Carmarthen.

“Over the coming days, weeks and months we will also be implementing changes to other care facilities to help us deal with increased cases of COVID-19 patients and the latest measures follow our postponement of non-urgent operations and outpatient appointments last week, new visiting restrictions and access arrangements for community care facilities. The Health Board is committed to keeping our communities, staff and stakeholders informed about any changes every step of the way and will provide further updates soon.

“Dr Phil Kloer, Medical Director and Deputy Chief Executive at Hywel Dda, said: “Firstly I want to reassure our communities as far as possible that our number one priority is to keep you, the public, safe and to provide as much continuity of care as we possibly can. Our staff, both clinical and non-clinical, have been working around the clock for several weeks now to get ready for this and I would like to express my deepest gratitude to them and to thank the public, our partners and stakeholders for their understanding and patience.

“We need to act now and what we are doing is in line with other health boards and trusts up and down the country as our NHS seeks to manage the COVID-19 pandemic. This means that some aspects of care may have to temporarily move, change or reduce and the public need to be prepared for that. We will continue to keep our communities, staff and stakeholders informed about any changes every step of the way and will provide further updates soon.”

 

Charity

Christmas jumper day fundraiser helps support lifesaving volunteer service

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A WEST WALES charity that delivers blood, medication and urgent medical supplies for the NHS has received a welcome funding boost thanks to the generosity of local driving examiners and instructors.

Blood Bikes Wales has thanked the West Wales Driving Examiners for raising money through a festive Christmas Jumper Day, with additional contributions from Approved Driving Instructors and staff from the Driver and Vehicle Standards Agency.

The fundraising effort has resulted in a sizeable donation that the charity says will go directly towards keeping its volunteer-run service on the road.

Blood Bikes Wales provides a free out-of-hours courier service for the NHS, transporting blood, samples, donor breast milk, medication and other urgent items between hospitals and healthcare sites. The service helps reduce costs for the health service while ensuring patients receive time-critical treatment as quickly as possible.

Mark, the charity’s West Area Representative, accepted the cheque on behalf of the organisation at a small presentation outside the local driving test centre.

A spokesperson for Blood Bikes Wales said the support would “go a long way in helping us continue supporting NHS services and patients across the region”.

They added: “We’re truly grateful for the generosity and community spirit shown by the West Wales Driving Examiners, local ADIs and DVSA staff. Every donation helps keep our bikes fuelled, maintained and ready to respond when the NHS calls.”

The group added a light-hearted note about the day, joking that while there may not have been an official “pass mark” for festive knitwear, the examiners would certainly have earned top marks.

Blood Bikes Wales is powered entirely by volunteers, who give up their time to carry out thousands of deliveries each year, often late at night and in poor weather conditions.

Anyone interested in supporting the charity, either through donations or volunteering, can find more information on the Blood Bikes Wales website.

 

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Protest at Senedd as climate groups clash on how Wales should go green

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Campaigners demand landscape protection and underground cables while environmentalists warn Wales cannot slow the clean energy transition

A PROTEST took place outside Senedd Cymru on Wednesday (Feb 11) as campaigners gathered to oppose large-scale wind farms, energy parks and new overhead pylons across rural Wales.

Residents from mid and west Wales, including farming families, countryside groups and community activists, assembled on the steps of the Welsh Parliament holding banners reading “Hands off Mid Wales”, “Rural life matters” and “Protect Welsh bogs”.

Many said they support renewable energy in principle but fear that current proposals would industrialise rural landscapes while delivering little benefit to local people.

Among those addressing the crowd was Jane Dodds, leader of the Welsh Liberal Democrats, who renewed calls for ministers to require electricity cables to be placed underground rather than carried on new lines of pylons.

Calls for underground cables

Dodds said Wales must not lose its countryside in the rush to decarbonise.

“We cannot afford to lose our countryside,” she told protesters. “Once these wind turbines and pylons are in place, the impact on our landscapes will be long lasting and, in many cases, irreversible.

“Local people feel their concerns are being overlooked while large developers push ahead with major projects. That is not how the transition to green energy should work.”

She pointed to a recent budget agreement which secured £1 million for a Visual Impact Innovation Fund to trial undergrounding technologies and explore alternatives to overhead infrastructure in sensitive areas.

“We need a balanced approach,” she said. “We must move away from fossil fuels, but we must also protect the beauty and character of rural Wales.”

Why people are protesting

Speakers and attendees raised concerns about:

• visual impact of turbines and pylons on open countryside
• effects on peatland, wildlife and habitats
• loss of productive farmland
• heavy construction traffic through small villages
• profits flowing to distant shareholders rather than host communities

Several campaigners argued that decisions feel “done to” communities rather than shaped with them, with limited consultation and little long-term return.

Some called for smaller-scale, locally owned schemes instead of what they described as “mega-projects”.

Climate groups defend renewables

In response to the protest, Climate Cymru said Wales must not step back from wind power and other renewables, warning that continued reliance on fossil fuels would worsen both the climate and cost-of-living crises.

Stan Townsend, spokesperson for the group, said: “Rising energy bills and energy insecurity are already affecting families, farmers and businesses across the country.

“Turning away from renewables would mean deeper dependence on volatile, expensive, polluting fossil fuels. We need clean, home-grown energy to protect people and the planet.”

He said Wales has some of the best wind resources in Europe and a major opportunity to cut bills, create skilled jobs and strengthen energy security.

Community ownership ‘key to support’

Community Energy Wales said many objections could be eased if local people had ownership or a financial stake in developments.

Leanne Wood, co-executive director, said: “If communities can part own developments, many of the objections to new wind turbines can be overcome. Ownership brings control.

“This would lock the profits into those communities and potentially reduce bills.”

The organisation is working to enable locally generated renewable electricity to be sold directly to local consumers so that wealth stays within towns and villages.

A wider debate

The demonstration highlights a growing divide over how Wales meets its net zero targets.

While environmental groups stress the urgent need to expand renewable energy quickly, rural campaigners say the Wales-wide push must not come at the expense of landscapes, farming and community consent.

Dodds urged the Welsh Government to strengthen planning, consultation and benefit schemes so that communities see clear advantages.

For many at the Senedd, the message was clear: renewable energy is necessary — but only if local people share the control, the profits and the decisions.

 

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West Wales Together Alliance launch in Haverfordwest

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A NEW alliance bringing together community groups, trade unions, faith leaders and campaigners from across west Wales is set to launch in Haverfordwest next month.

The West Wales branch of the Together Alliance will officially begin with a public meeting at 7:00pm on Wednesday (Feb 18) at Haverfordwest Mosque, Cherry Grove.

Organisers say the event will unite local politicians, farmers, artists, anti-racist organisations and faith groups in response to what they describe as growing “voices of division” in national and local politics.

In a statement, the alliance said: “Those who preach division are becoming more confident. Their false promises seize on very real economic problems and scapegoat migrants, Muslims and refugees.

“But we can change things together. The voices of unity can grow stronger. Strength lies in solidarity and working together for hope, not despair.”

The group aims to build cooperation between communities and challenge racism and extremism through grassroots organising. It says hundreds of organisations and individuals nationwide have already signed up.

The Haverfordwest launch forms part of a wider mobilisation ahead of a major national demonstration planned for London on March 28.

Several high-profile supporters have also backed the campaign, including comedian and campaigner Lenny Henry, who said: “We stand for love over hate, hope over fear and unity over division. We’re coming together against racism.”

Singer Paloma Faith added: “There is no world that I want to live in where discrimination is acceptable for anything.”

Organisers say anyone interested in promoting inclusion, equality and community solidarity is welcome to attend.

 

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