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Hancock’s half measure

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countyhallHAVING demanded an explanation from a key Council Scrutiny Committee in relation to the controversial decision to impose steep charges for day centre use, the Cabinet member responsible pronounced himself dissatisfied with the response received from the Committee.

Labour Party turncoat Simon Hancock, declared at Monday’s meeting of the IPPG Cabinet that the figure of £10 proposed by the Scrutiny Committee: “appeared to be plucked out of thin air.”

The former Labour Party member failed to alert his IPPG fellows that so flawed was the Council’s own consultation process and so few were the responses to its request for financial information from service users, that the figure of £23.70 PER DAY the Cabinet wants to charge for day centre services for the elderly is no more than guesswork itself.

Instead Councillor Hancock selected a figure half way between the Committee’s reluctant suggestion of a £10 charge per day and his own preferred option of £23.70 per day to run until September.

Labour leader Paul Miller said of his former party colleague’s scheme:

‘It doesn’t surprise me at all that Cabinet yesterday voted to ignore the recommendation of scrutiny and press ahead with huge increases in the charges for day centres across Pembrokeshire.

“While I accept that these charges are means tested, certain families and individuals who have a little but not a lot will be hit disproportionately and that is simply not acceptable.”

The Council is yet to reveal the projected additional cost to it of means-testing users of day centre services, or even whether the elderly or frail will be offered independent assistance to complete the Council’s inquisition into their financial affairs ahead of the charges’ imposition.

4 Comments

4 Comments

  1. Gary Slack

    July 9, 2014 at 1:21 pm

    Yet another show of the councils inability to consult properly, or lack of wanting to in order to get what they want, then impose their decision on the vulnerable who do not have the means or ability to challenge the mighty wealth of the councils legal system, for which we are paying for. This current council stinks to high heaven, but who has the time and money to keep challenging them?

  2. John Hudson

    July 14, 2014 at 8:41 am

    The whole points of the imposition of these increased charges for social services ( or budget cuts as preferred by the Council)was to achieve an £800,000 full year “saving” in the budget for 2014/15. This was factored into the approved budget, in advance of the final agreement on exact charges.
    However, delays in the implementation or introduction of the suite of agreed increased and new charges means that there is a shortfall of income during 2014/15.
    Has this matter been addressed or even considered by Cabinet? Of course not, it never ever bothers about the cost or effects of its decisions. This is left to officers to sort out.
    The Council, only supports those people whose needs are assessed as critical or substantial and thus qualify for financial help and will only pay up to the Cap of £50 per week depending on a means test.
    This cap has recently been increased to £55 per week, rising to £60 in 2015/16.
    If your needs are critical and substantial and under the means test you contribution was capped at £50, you could following a new means test, need to find an extra £5 per week.
    I believe the Council gets a grant towards meeting the true cost of providing service and any gap for providing services above the £55 per week cap paid by clients.

  3. Tomos

    July 14, 2014 at 11:13 am

    Why does the council appear to hate the elderly and the disabled and want them to pay the most – same with blue badge parking – hide the fact they have to pay so they pay £80 and not forty pence

  4. Roy Mcgurn

    July 15, 2014 at 3:37 pm

    The council does not hate the elderly. They just want to achieve the lowest rates in Wales by taking from, or depriving, anyone who isn’t a serious ballot box risk. The is not the land of more for less, but of less for less, with some getting even less than others!
    Think about it, some of the highest paid officers in Wales, the lowest rates – it has to come from somewhere. Peter has been robbed to pay Paul, only in this instance Peter is getting on a bit.

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Crime

Prosecution delivers powerful closing speech in Christopher Phillips trial

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Jury expected to retire shortly in Swansea Crown Court baby abuse case

THE TRIAL of Christopher Phillips, accused of inflicting catastrophic injuries on a 10-week-old baby in Haverfordwest, moved into its final stages today (Dec 5) as the last evidence was heard and the prosecution delivered a forceful closing speech at Swansea Crown Court.

Phillips, 34, of Kiln Park in Burton, is charged with causing serious physical and sexual harm to Baby C in January 2021. The infant was taken by ambulance to Glangwili Hospital in the early hours of January 24 after suffering life-threatening internal injuries.

The baby’s mother faces separate charges of allowing serious physical harm and child cruelty for allegedly failing to protect her child.

Final evidence presented

The court resumed at 11:09am, when the prosecution submitted its final exhibit: a detailed timeline reconstructed from Phillips’ mobile phone data, charting his visits to the mother’s flat in Haverfordwest.

Prosecutor Caroline Rees KC highlighted the distances between Phillips’ home, the mother’s address and Glangwili Hospital, telling the jury that the timings were central to understanding the sequence of events that night.

This concluded the evidential phase of the trial.

Judge issues legal directions

Late this morning (Friday, Dec 5) Judge Paul Thomas KC delivered his directions to the jury, outlining the legal tests required for convictions against both Phillips and the child’s mother. He reminded jurors to consider each charge separately and to apply the law only to the evidence they had heard.

Prosecution closing speech

In her closing address at early this afternoon, Rees KC told the jury that 10-week-old Baby C had been a “happy little baby” who showed “no signs of distress” in a video recorded by his father on January 23, 2021.

She said that within hours, by the early morning of January 24, the infant was in hospital with what she described as a “gaping tear in his anus”.

Rees KC argued that the evidence of who caused the injuries “points in one way – towards Christopher Phillips”.

Turning to the baby’s mother, she said the prosecution’s case was that she was “not without blame”, telling the jury that the mother had “failed in her duty to keep her baby safe”.

“She at the very least ought to have realised that her baby was at serious risk from the man she brought into her home,” Rees KC said. “She didn’t take any steps to keep that baby safe. She prioritised Christopher Phillips over her own child.”

Jury expected to retire

No defence closing speech was delivered today and no further evidence is scheduled. The jury is expected to retire shortly to begin its deliberations.

The case continues at Swansea Crown Court.

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Farming

FUW urges government action as plunging dairy prices threaten family farms

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THE FARMER’s UNION OF WALES has sounded the alarm over a sharp and sustained collapse in dairy prices, warning that the situation is placing intolerable pressure on family farms already grappling with regulatory change, rising costs and wider economic uncertainty.

The Union convened an emergency meeting of its Animal Health and Dairy Committee last week to assess the scale of the crisis. Representatives from across Wales reported widespread anxiety, with many members seeing milk prices fall dramatically through the autumn. Processors are now signalling further cuts in early 2026, while commodity markets offer little sign of stability heading into spring.

Farmers, fearful of jeopardising commercial relationships, have approached the FUW confidentially to express grave concern about projected milk payments for the coming months. Many say the offers being made will fall far below the cost of production.

Average milk prices are forecast at just 30–35 pence per litre, against estimated production costs of 39–44 pence per litre (Kite Consulting). On current trajectories, the FUW warns a typical Welsh dairy farm could lose thousands of pounds per month for as long as the downturn persists.

Following its committee meeting, the Union raised the matter directly with Deputy First Minister Huw Irranca-Davies MS during talks in Cardiff on Wednesday, December 3. Officials stressed the immediate threat facing family-run dairy farms and called for urgent consideration of government support to prevent long-term damage to the sector.

Gerwyn Williams, Chair of the FUW Animal Health and Dairy Committee, said the pace of the price crash was “unprecedented”.

“Farmers are facing an impossible situation where input costs remain high while the value of their product plummets. The viability of many family farms is now at serious risk. We need immediate assurances that this crisis is being treated with the urgency it deserves.

“Some can weather a short storm, but rumours that this could continue into summer 2026 will see businesses shut. These modest family farms have already invested heavily to meet regulatory requirements. Cuts on this scale will severely impact their ability to service repayments.”

FUW Deputy President Dai Miles warned that the consequences extend far beyond farm gates.

“Dairy farming underpins thousands of jobs in Wales and is central to the economic, social and environmental fabric of rural communities. When prices fall this sharply, it isn’t just farmers who suffer — local businesses, services and entire communities feel the impact.

“We have made it clear to the Deputy First Minister that government must work with the industry to provide immediate stability and a long-term resilience plan.”

The FUW says it will continue to work with the Welsh Government, processors and supply-chain partners to seek solutions and secure fair, sustainable prices for producers.

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Community

Haverfordwest’s first memory tree brings community together this Christmas

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Spud Box is delighted to launch a brand-new festive initiative for the people of Pembrokeshire – Haverfordwest’s first Memory Tree, now open to the public at our premises.

The idea, inspired by Drew from The Big Pembs Panto, invites members of the community to write and hang personal messages on the tree. These can be tributes to loved ones, cherished memories, or simple Christmas wishes.

The project has been created to give people a meaningful way to connect during the festive season. All materials – including paper, plastic pockets and ribbon – are provided free of charge. Visitors are also welcome to enjoy complimentary hot drinks, kindly supplied by Connect: Pembrokeshire, along with mince pies donated by Brakes.

Anyone who prefers to create their message at home can bring it in, and the team will be happy to help attach it to the tree.

Donations are being encouraged in support of Sandy Bear Children’s Bereavement Charity, making the Memory Tree both a reflective and charitable community event.

The tree itself looks spectacular thanks to Sion from DSR Batteries, who supplied the lighting. The project has also received generous support from Marty at Sandy Bear Children’s Bereavement Charity and Pure West Radio. Spud Box welcomes other community groups or organisations who wish to get involved.

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