Home Blog Page 439

The planned roadworks and road changes in Gedling borough over the next few weeks

A number of roadworks, and changes to the roads, are set to take place on Gedling borough’s roads during the next few weeks.

The roadworks and road changes include things such as speed alterations, repair works and changing the layout of the roads. 

Most of the roadworks are being undertaken by Nottinghamshire County Council while a couple are being led by Severn Trent Water.

These are the roadworks and closures you need to know about

Ashwell Street, Netherfield

21 September – 04 October

Responsibility for works: Nottinghamshire County Council

Florence Road, Mapperley

22 September – 05 October

Responsibility for works: Nottinghamshire County Council

Priory Road, Gedling

22 September – 05 October

Responsibility for works: Nottinghamshire County Council

Lingwood Lane, Woodborough

24 September – 25 September

Responsibility for works: Severn Trent Water

Littlegreen Road, Woodthorpe

23 September – 06 October

Responsibility for works: Nottinghamshire County Council

Queens Bower Road, Arnold

22 September – 22 September

Responsibility for works: Nottinghamshire County Council

Trent Valley Road, Nottinghamshire

24 September – 25 September

Responsibility for works: Nottinghamshire County Council

Westdale Lane East, Gedling

20 September – 22 September

Responsibility for works: Severn Trent Water

Ash Grove, Woodborough

27 September – 30 September

Responsibility for works: Cadent

Breck Hill Road, Woodthorpe

26 September – 14 October

Responsibility for works: Cadent

Curzon Street, Netherfield

23 September – 27 September

Responsibility for works: Cadent

Forest Lane, Papplewick

21 September – 21 September

Responsibility for works: Openreach

Glendale Close, Carlton

22 September – 26 September

Responsibility for works: Severn Trent Water

Grenville Rise, Arnold

26 September – 14 October

Responsibility for works: Cadent

Killisick Road, Arnold

26 September – 07 October

Responsibility for works: Cadent

Kingsbridge Avenue, Mapperley

26 September – 07 October

Responsibility for works: Cadent

Lascelles Avenue, Gedling

20 September – 22 September

Responsibility for works: Severn Trent Water

Linby Lane, Papplewick

21 September – 21 September

Responsibility for works: Openreach

Linden Grove, Gedling

26 September – 14 October

Responsibility for works: Cadent

Main Street, Papplewick

21 September

Responsibility for works: Openreach

Moor Road, Papplewick

21 September

Responsibility for works: Openreach

Northcliffe Avenue, Mapperley

21 September

Responsibility for works: Severn Trent Water

Nottingham Road, Burton Joyce

25 September

Responsibility for works: Cadent

Road No 7, Colwick

26 September – 03 October

Responsibility for works: Nottinghamshire County Council

Rosegrove Avenue, Arnold

26 September – 10 October

Responsibility for works: Cadent

Shelford Road, Gedling

23 September – 24 September

Responsibility for works: Severn Trent Water

Walsingham Road, Woodthorpe

21 September – 22 September

Responsibility for works: Severn Trent Water

Wollaton Avenue, Gedling

23 September – 24 September

Responsibility for works: Severn Trent Water

Bonington Theatre and Richard Herrod Centre to screen Queen’s funeral

Gedling Borough Council has announced plans to screen the Queen’s funeral at two of its venues on Monday (19).

The State Funeral will be broadcast live at The Bonington Theatre, Arnold, and the Richard Herrod Centre, Carlton and books of condolence will also be available at both venues for visitors to sign. 

The broadcasts are free for residents to attend, details for both venues below.  

Bonington in Arnold
PICTURED: The Bonington in Arnold will be screening the funeral this coming Monday (IMAGE: Gedling Eye)

Richard Herrod Centre

Doors will open at 10am. The State Funeral begins at 11am and will be shown on the screens within the centre. There is no booking required. The centre will be open until 7pm.

The Bonington Theatre

The State Funeral is also being screened at the Bonington Theatre, Arnold. This is a free event but booking is required and spaces will be limited. Doors open at 10am and the screening begins at 11pm. The Bonington will be open until 2pm.

To book a free place, go to the booking page on The Bonington Theatre website. 

Three-year plan to offer support for county’s struggling bus services

Nottinghamshire County Council is drawing up a three-year plan to support struggling bus services as passenger numbers fail to return to pre-Covid levels.

The Conservative-led authority will review the entire county network this autumn to assess all bus routes and identify the services most in need of financial support.

Figures show the bus sector is struggling across Nottinghamshire, with usage currently only back to 80 to 85 per cent of the numbers seen prior to the pandemic.

Usage is even lower for concessionary pass holders at about three-quarters of the pre-pandemic level.

It means operators have begun to face losing money on some routes while keeping services going.

141 bus
PICTURED: The struggling 141 bus service has already been saved

The authority says this is a national trend resulting from changing work patterns, more online shopping and a reluctance to use buses due to the “legacy of Covid”.

Many bus providers are also experiencing staff shortages, causing hundreds of services to be cancelled each week.

Operator Trentbarton, which provides dozens of services in the East Midlands, revealed earlier this month it currently has 130 vacancies in its driver workforce.

The company said this was the cause of 1,614 individual services being cancelled in just two weeks in August.

Now the county council says it will draw up a three-year plan to address gaps in the market across Nottinghamshire and offer long-term certainty to providers once a Government recovery grant ends.

The authority says it has received £3.9m from the Government’s Bus Service Improvement Plan (BSIP) pot to improve local bus services over the three years.

It will follow a review of the 80 services currently financially supported by the authority, with 20 struggling routes having already been provided financial backing until next April.

In a report, Adrian Smith, the council’s corporate director for place, said: “It is intended to use the £3.9m of funding to support current services and, if possible, to provide transport where gaps have been identified in the network following the review.

“The council is continuing to have a dialogue with bus operators and other local authorities to develop plans to support the bus sector’s recovery.

“Included in these discussions is joint work to promote bus usage, tailored to specific users including concessionary fare users to help the sector recover.”

In the summer, Trentbarton also announced the removal of the 141 service – which connects Ashfield and Mansfield with Nottingham – saying dwindling passenger numbers made the route unaffordable to run.

The county council did, however, step in following widespread public concern, and provided a year’s worth of funding to continue the service through a 12-month contract with rival provider Stagecoach.

Councillor Neil Clarke (Con), the authority’s cabinet member for transport and environment, will approve the moves during a delegated deicison this week.

Speaking last month, Cllr Clarke told the Local Democracy Reporting Service: “We are working with operators to ensure we can keep as many of the services going as we possibly can.

“They might not be able to stay exactly as they are now, and I’ve no doubt there will be some sort of changes, but the intention is to keep services running as best we can.

“No decisions have been made at all and there is no intention to axe anything.

“It’s a question of taking the time out to review and make sure we can keep services going.”

REVEALED: East Midlands Ambulance Service failed to hit serious call response targets for 12 months

East Midlands Ambulance Service failed to hit response time targets in Nottinghamshire for the most serious calls for 12 months in a row.

Longer-than-anticipated patient handovers to hospitals have been blamed, with bosses saying the service is under “immense, sustained pressure”.

Category one ambulance calls – those classed as life-threatening, time-critical incidents – should be attended to in an average of seven minutes from the call first being made.

However, figures show crews failed to hit this target in Nottinghamshire in each of the 12 months to July 2022.

June and July saw some of the longest response times for serious calls in the year – the average in both months hit eight-and-a-half minutes or above.

Ambulance_Gedling
(PICTURE: EMAS)

Besides Nottinghamshire, the service also covers Derbyshire, Leicestershire, Rutland, Northamptonshire, Lincolnshire.

Greg Cox, divisional director for Nottinghamshire at East Midlands Ambulance Service (EMAS), told the Local Democracy Reporting Service: “We are currently experiencing immense, sustained pressure on our service.

“Our staff are continuing to work hard to prioritise the sickest and most severely injured patients.

“We continue to work closely with all our health and social care colleagues across Nottinghamshire in response to the ongoing high levels of demand being experienced across the wider NHS system.”

Councillor David Martin (Ash Ind), vice-chairman of Nottinghamshire County Council’s adult social care and public health scrutiny committee, recently met EMAS bosses to discuss the problems facing crews.

He said: “What is clear is that EMAS have an extremely challenging job and need more support.

“Our paramedics do a wonderful job but speak of spending whole shifts sat queuing outside hospitals – morale is at an all-time low.

“Our ambulance crisis will only get worse with the winter coming fast and the cost of living crisis biting.

“We’ve all heard the horror stories of people with life-threatening conditions turning to taxis to get to A&E, and others waiting hours for an ambulance.  Sorting out our ambulance crisis should be a key priority.”

Wider regional targets say nine out of 10 category one calls should be responded to within 15 minutes and, in Nottinghamshire, EMAS managed to hit this target in all months except July.

But for category two calls – those classed as an emergency but not immediately life-threatening – crews significantly missed their target across the county.

Category two incidents should be reached within 18 minutes of a call being made.

This was missed across Nottinghamshire in each of the 12 months.

July saw the longest response times for any month, with crews taking about 57 minutes on average to arrive at the scene for category two calls made in the county.

The longest response time for a Nottinghamshire category two incident in July was about two hours and nine minutes.

This was significantly above wider regional targets stating 90 per cent of category two incidents should receive a response in no longer than 40 minutes.

But EMAS says response times have lengthened as crews face longer-than-expected turnaround times for transferring patients into hospitals.

On average, patient turnaround took between 36 and 43 minutes across all months from August to June, with July’s figure at about the 45-minute mark.

This was three times more than the systemwide target of 15 minutes from ambulance to hospital bed.

The organisation adds long turnarounds caused Nottinghamshire EMAS crews to lose about 73 hours per day in July, with the year total of lost hours at about 22,200 for incidents in the city and county.

EMAS bosses will present the figures to councillors on the authority’s health scrutiny committee on September 20.

Plans submitted to transform former Netherfield cinema into new homes

A former cinema in Netherfield could soon be converted into nine new homes if plans get the green light from Gedling Borough Council.

The building on the corner of Kenrick Street and Wright Street was once the Cosy Cinema was built in the early 20th century.

It remained a cinema until 1955.

The building has since been used as workshop and storage space. 

If plans were given the go ahead the cinema building would be converted into two three-bed homes and the neighbouring property – described as ‘dilapidated’ – would be demolished to help make way for more properties.

The building on the corner of Kenrick Street and Wright Street was once the Cosy Cinema was built in the early 20th century. PHOTO: Gedling Eye

Developers said they hope to “sympathetically convert the former cinema and workshop”.

A planning document, submitted on behalf of CP Development, said the development was considered ‘appropriate’ for the area.

It said: “The scale, form and sitting of the proposed development is such that the character and appearance of the area will not be harmed, and will enhance the current site and visual outlook.”

The planning application will now be considered by Gedling Borough Council.

History of the Cosy Cinema in Netherfield

Built next to the railway line just off Victoria Street, the Victoria Picture Palace was opened on July 25, 1911.

In 1913 a circle was added, giving an extra 150 seats and the seating capacity was increaed to 600. It re-opened and was re-named Alexandra Picture Palace, and this operated into the late-1920’s when it closed as a silent cinema.

It was re-opened on October 30, 1930 as the Cosy Cinema and was operated by Joseph Wardle of the Bonnington Cinema in Arnold, Nottingham.

In its final years it was operated by Levin’s Cinema Circuit of Nottingham, and they closed the Cosy Cinema on April 30, 1955. It became a workshop for a carpentry business.

List of supermarkets closing stores or reducing opening hours for Queen’s funeral

Supermarkets across Gedling borough will be closing their doors next Monday on the day of Queen Elizabeth II’s funeral.

Her Majesty’s state funeral has been declared a bank holiday and several major retailers and businesses have also decided to close, out of respect.

We list all the stores and businesses that will be closing their doors on Monday, September 19, or will be reducing their hours.

Tesco

Tesco has said it will close all of its large stores on Monday so staff can pay their respects.

The supermarket giant said its express stores, like the one based on Carlton Hill, will be open until 5pm.

A spokesman said: “We want to express our deepest condolences to the Royal Family, as well as our gratitude to Her Majesty The Queen for her unwavering service.”

Asda

Asda is to close all its stores from midnight on Sunday, September 18, to 5pm on Monday – reopening after the funeral service.

They have a supermarket in Arnold.

The supermarket giant is also pausing its delivery services.

The spokesman added: “As a mark of respect for Her Majesty The Queen, all Asda stores will be closed on Monday, September 19, until 5pm to allow our customers and colleagues to recognise the passing of our late Monarch and commemorate her steadfast service to our nation.”

Co-op

Co-op is to close its borough stores until 5pm on Monday, September 19.

They will the reopen to customers following the funeral service.

Delivers will also resume after 5pm.

Aldi sign

Aldi

Aldi will shut all its UK stores to customers on the day of Queen Elizabeth II’s funeral.

The budget supermarket posted on its Twitter page this afternoon to let customers know that stores would be shut.

The post read: “Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II – As a mark of respect, all Aldi stores across the UK will close on Monday, September 19 to allow our store colleagues to pay tribute to Her Majesty The Queen.”

Lidl

Lidl has confirmed that, as a mark of respect, it will close all its stores across England, Scotland and Wales on the day of the funeral.

A spokesman said: “We are grateful to all Lidl customers for their understanding and will be keeping all who mourn Her Royal Highness in our thoughts during this time.”

Morrisons

All Morrisons supermarkets will be closed on Monday, as a mark of respect.

Morrisons said it wanted its staff to be able to pay tribute to Her Majesty.

At 5pm it will reopen its petrol filling stations.

Iceland

Iceland said it will close stores on September 19.

A spokesman said: “As a mark of respect to Her Majesty The Queen and to allow its colleagues to mourn in their own way, Iceland has made the decision to close all of its stores.”

Sainsbury’s and Argos

Sainsbury’s and Argos have announced all its UK stores will close to customers on the day of Queen Elizabeth II’s funeral.

A spokesman said:  “We are deeply saddened by the passing of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II.

“In honour of Her Majesty and so our colleagues can pay their respects, all Sainsbury’s supermarkets and Argos stores will be closed on Monday, 19th September. “

This will also include groceries online and Argos fast track delivery.

Sainsbury’s said its convenience stores and petrol filling stations will be open between 5pm-10pm on the day to allow our customers to pick up essential items.

Gedling WBA featherweight champion Leigh Wood forced to postpone WBA featherweight title defence vs. Mauricio Lara due to injury

Gedling WBA featherweight champion boxer Leigh Wood has been forced to withdraw from his title defence against Mauricio Lara due injury.

Wood was due to defend his WBA ‘regular’ featherweight title on 24 September 24 against Mauricio Lara at the Motorpoint Arena Nottingham.

Matchroom chairman Eddie Hearn said Wood had suffered a torn bicep.

The fight will be now be rearranged.

The card will still go ahead with Maxi Hughes v Kid Galahad now the main event.

Leigh-wood
PICTURED: Gedling boxer Leigh Wood (PHOTO:Leigh Wood/Twitter)

Hearn told the BBC: “We’re gutted to lose such an explosive headliner in Leigh Wood vs. Mauricio Lara so close to fight week but unfortunately Leigh suffered a torn bicep during sparring and there’s no way he can get in the ring against such a dangerous opponent with only one arm.

IBO Lightweight title holder Maxi Hughes will still be taking on Sheffield’s former IBF Featherweight World Champion Kid Galahad in a Yorkshire derby on the night and Terri Harper will be leaping up in weight to challenge Scotland’s Hannah Rankin for her IBO and WBA Super-Welterweight World Titles.

Tickets for the fights at Motorpoint Arena Nottingham are available to purchase online: https://www.motorpointarenanottingham.com/online/article/artist-wood-lara

Changes to Gedling borough’s Monday bin collections following Queen’s death

Changes to bin collections have been announced by Gedling Borough Council following the death of the Queen.

The local authority has confirmed changes to bin collections due to Queen Elizabeth II’s state funeral.

Her Majesty’s state funeral will take place on Monday, September 19, and has been declared a national bank holiday.

Following the announcement of the bank holiday on Monday 19, bins scheduled to be emptied on that day will now be emptied on Saturday, September 17.

The council said: “Please have bins out for collection from 6am.”

Rivendell View Care Home in Stoke Bardolph voted one of the region’s best

Rivendell View in Stoke Bardolph has been chosen by residents and their families as one of the top 20 care homes in the region.

There are 1,454 homes in the East Midlands with the top 20 receiving an award from the UK’s leading reviews guide to care homes, carehome.co.uk.

The award is based on reviews of the care home written by their residents, as well as their friends and relatives.

There are over 17,000 care homes in the UK caring for around half a million people. Over 12,000 of these care homes support older people aged 65 and over, while the rest care for people with learning disabilities and mental health issues.

Amanda Hopkins, review manager of carehome.co.uk, said: “We now have nearly 250,000 reviews of care homes on carehome.co.uk so we are able to give people a real insight into what a care home and its staff are like.

“Our reviews reveal the quality of their care, activities and nutrition as well as if the care home is value for money and the standard of their facilities.

“Reviews of Rivendell View show they provide an excellent standard of care and we would like to congratulate them on being a Top 20 care home in the East Midlands. It is a huge achievement to be named as a top rated care home by the residents who actually receive the care as well as their family and friends.

“Choosing a care home can be daunting for both the person going to live there as well as their family, so we hope our awards which are given to the highest rated homes will help make the search easier.”

Lisa Tungate, manager of Rivendell View, said: “I am extremely proud of our caring team at Rivendell View for making our home such a warm and welcoming home for our residents and their families.

“We are so grateful the lovely reviews written by our residents and those who visit us. This award is testament to the daily dedication of our staff that makes Rivendell View such a great place to live and work.”

Arnbrook Primary School ‘thrilled’ by ‘Good’ rating from Ofsted

Staff at a school in Arnold are ‘thrilled’ after Ofsted reported them ‘Good’.

Arnbrook Primary School was judged to be good in all areas after an inspection on 28th and 29th June 2022.

The inspectors recognised the school has significantly improved since its last inspection in 2018, where the school was deemed as ‘requires improvement’.

The report commented that pupils ‘learn something new every day’ and enjoy coming to school.

The inspectors said they were particularly impressed by pupils’ behaviour and relationships between staff and children, a well developed, rich curriculum with a love of reading evident across the school, good opportunities to attend clubs and engage with their local community, improved attendance amongst pupils and effective safeguarding.

Headteacher Peter Fowlie, said: “We’re thrilled with our latest Ofsted report and are really pleased that the comments of the inspector recognises the hard work and progress we have made”

“I would like to thank all the pupils, parents & staff for their continued support and dedication to the school.”

“Of course, our efforts don’t stop there. We’re driven by a desire to make a difference to every pupil. Our children are very special to us and we’ll continue to build on this success.”

The full Ofsted report will be available following the official period of mourning for tThe Queen at www.reports.ofsted.gov.uk and is available from the school’s website now.

To find out more about Arnbrook Primary School, visit www.arnbrookprimary.net