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New bridge over Trent to be lifted into place next month ahead of Spring 2026 opening date

Nottingham’s new pedestrian and cycle bridge over the River Trent is set to be lifted into place next month ahead of a Spring 2024 opening date.

The 87metre, 175tonne bridge has been assembled and is being thoroughly checked before a huge CC6800 crawler crane lifts it into place week beginning November 10. The bridge lift is subject to the weather conditions and therefore an exact date or time cannot be confirmed by the council.

It will be confirmed what areas the public will be able to see the bridge lifted into place and is expected to take several hours. Nottingham City Council and Balfour Beatty will also share pictures and videos of the bridge lift with the public once it is complete. 

A huge CC6800 crawler crane lifts it into place

an artis’s impression on how the new Trent Bridge will look once in place

Once the bridge is lifted into place over the river, further work will take place before the bridge can be used, with ramps, steps and hard and soft landscaping being constructed. Paving, planting and lighting will also be put in place.

The bridge is expected to open in Spring 2026. 

Councillor Linda Woodings, executive member for Regional Development, Growth and Transport at Nottingham City Council, said: “We’re getting to the really exciting part of the Transforming Cities funded bridge project as we gear up for the bridge to be lifted into place in early November.  

“As we approach this milestone and the final few months of works before the new bridge opens in the spring, I know that many local people are looking forward to using the new bridge for walks, runs, commuting by bike and many other leisure activities.” 

WEEKLY WALKS: A peaceful circular walk taking you from Burton Joyce to Reed Pond Nature Reserve

Distance: 3.5 miles
Calculated time: 3.5 miles
Difficulty: Easy

This week’s circular walk takes you from the picturesque village of Burton Joyce into surrounding countryside and a nearby nature reserve.

Most of this circular walk is on flat surfaced paths, though there are some steep gradients along the way, and several kissing gates.

Some sections of the route may become muddy and slippery in bad weather, so please be cautious. For these reasons, part of the walk may not be suitable for wheelchairs and pushchairs.

Map of the walk

This route begins at the junction of Main Street and Hillside Drive in Burton Joyce. Follow the ascending path on Hillside Drive. At the top, turn left and branch right soon afterwards. Go down to the bottom of the slope, turn left and then right, down another slope to Park Lane. Cross the road and take the path round the right-hand side of the field and through the trees at the top.

Reeds Pond Nature Reserve (PICTURE: David Hallam-Jones)

Emerging into a field, head left until you see a gate on the left, allowing you into the Reed Pond Nature Reserve. Cross the road and go uphill. Continue on this path, which eventually becomes Bridle Road. Follow it all the way back into Burton Joyce.

Turn left into Main Street and return to the start.

  • Have you got a suggested walk around the borough you want to share with our readers? You can email details to news@gedlingeye.co.uk

Community joins residents for annual autumn fayre at Stoke Bardolph care home

A Stoke Bardolph care home held its annual Autumn Fayre this week, which welcomed residents, relatives, colleagues, and members of the wider community.

The grounds of Rivendell View care home were transformed into a vibrant hub of activity, with a charming pumpkin patch taking centre stage.

Families and visitors enjoyed posing for seasonal photographs among the pumpkins, while children explored the bouncy castle and joined in with a variety of traditional autumn games, including the ever-popular hook an apple.

Guests were also treated to a cosy hot chocolate station, which proved especially popular on the crisp autumn afternoon, along with an array of local stalls offering crafts, gifts, and homemade treats. To complete the festivities, visitors enjoyed lively entertainment from local performers.

In addition, raffles and fundraising activities were held throughout the event, with all proceeds going towards enhancing experiences for residents at Rivendell View.

The Fayre was especially meaningful for residents, who enjoyed spending time with loved ones, meeting new faces from the community and soaking up the joyful atmosphere. Many residents even joined in the preparations, helping to decorate the home with seasonal displays and greeting visitors as they arrived.

Cara Stockill, home manager at HC-One’s Rivendell View Care Home said: “The Autumn Fayre was a truly special day for us all here at Rivendell View. Seeing residents, families, and local neighbours come together to celebrate the season was heart-warming. Our colleagues worked incredibly hard to organise the event, and the joy it brought to our residents made every effort worthwhile.”

MP leads call for urgent reforms during baby loss debate in Parliament

Sherwood Forest MP and chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) on maternity, Michelle Welsh (Lab) delivered a powerful speech in Parliament during a baby loss debate she co-sponsored earlier this week.

In the debate, Michelle Welsh MP called for urgent reforms to fix the country’s broken maternity system and ensure that no more families suffer preventable heartbreak.

Speaking in the House of Commons, Michelle Welsh MP shared her own experience as a harmed mother and paid tribute to the bereaved and campaigning families who have fought tirelessly for change.

“We must stop whispering about baby loss in the shadows,” she told the House.

“We must speak about the preventable errors, missed opportunities and systemic failures in our maternity services that have turned dreams into dust. Grief is a fact, but these failures are not inevitable.”

Michelle Welsh is Chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) on Maternity

Health Secretary Wes Streeting echoed her call for change during the debate

The debate marked a deeply emotional moment for bereaved families and campaigners from across Nottinghamshire and beyond, many of whom travelled to Westminster to hear MPs share their constituents’ accounts and push for progress on maternity safety.

Welsh called for a renewed focus on continuity of care, workforce support, and true accountability, highlighting that too many women are still not listened to, and too many families are left fighting for answers.

She said: “Almost one in five stillbirths and neonatal deaths in this country could have been prevented through better care,” she said. “Every woman deserves a birth experience where she feels heard, respected and, above all, safe.”

Addressing the stigma around different types of birth, the MP urged a culture change:

“For too long, the narrative has been poisoned by judgment. The safest birth is the most informed birth.”

She also issued a challenge to regulators, including the CQC, NMC and GMC, to take responsibility for past failings:

“In Nottinghamshire, those organisations were informed over and over again about what was happening – and nothing was done. To this day, no one has been held accountable.”

Closing her speech, The MP paid tribute to the families whose babies’ memories continue to inspire change:

“All of us here are bound by a shared, heartbreaking truth: no parent should have to say goodbye before hello. We must pledge to them and to ourselves that we will fix maternity services and build a legacy of safety so powerful that their short lives will forever protect the long lives of others – and we will do it for good.”

Health Secretary Wes Streeting echoed her call for change during the debate.

He told the House: “In the spirit set out by my honourable friend, the Member for Sherwood Forest, that ‘grief must be the engine of change’, the stories I have heard from those families firsthand will be the steel in my spine to deliver the change they need.”

Gedling borough’s latest petrol and diesel prices – and where’s the cheapest to fill up

Gedling Eye has compiled a list of the cheapest petrol pumps in Gedling borough. The data is sourced from PetrolPrices.com, which covers major service stations including brands like BP, Shell, and Texaco as well as supermarkets, smaller chains and independent stations.

The website combines price data from Catalist with its own crowdsource data, which comes from website users and forecourt owners. The site says it hopes to have “the most up to date and reliable price data across the industry”.

The UK’s average fuel price is 135.19p per litre for Unleaded and 143.01p per litre for diesel, according to data from RAC

The following prices were reported locally on 16/10/25

Here are the latest prices from across the borough…

UNLEADED…

Arnold

Sainsbury’s Arnold – 129.9p

Asda Arnold129.7p

BP Daybrook (Mansfield Road) – 132.9p

Esso Maid Marion (Mansfield Road) – 132.9p

Carlton

Texaco Burton Road – 134.9p

Texaco Carlton Square – 134.9p

Texaco Westdale Lane (East Lane Service Station) – 134.9p

Petrol_pump

Colwick

Sainsbury’s Colwick -131.9p

Lambley

Lambley Motors – N/A

Mapperley

Asda Express Mapperley – 132.9p

Netherfield

Morrisons – 131.9p

DIESEL…

Arnold

Sainsbury’s Arnold 136.9p

Asda Arnold135.7p

BP Daybrook – 138.9p

Esso Maid Marion (Mansfield Road) – 141.9p

Carlton

Texaco Burton Road – 142.9p

Texaco Carlton Square – 143.9p

Texaco Westdale Lane (East Lane Service Station) – 143.9p

Colwick

Sainsbury’s Colwick – 138.9p

Lambley

Lambley Motors – N/A

Mapperley

Asda Mapperley – 141.9p

Netherfield

Morrisons – 138.9p

Arnold care home expansion to help ‘growing local demand’ for dementia support

An Arnold care home is set to expand to “address growing local demand” for support for people with dementia.

A three-storey extension will be built at The Manor Residential Home in Church Street, Arnold, after expansion plans were approved by Gedling Borough Council on Monday (October 13).

Plans say a “significant proportion” of residents will have dementia and limited mobility, requiring full-time care and the extension is “designed in line with increasing demand of the day care in the area” and give existing residents better facilities.

The existing care home provides long-term care for adults aged 65 and over who are no longer able to live independently.

An expansion to the site aims to offer assistance and support for those who require care “beyond what can be provided at home”, through family care or in a day care setting, according to plans.

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Planning documents also say the expansion will help “ease pressures on the NHS” by offering a variety of housing options for residents with different care needs and also generate various new jobs “across different skill levels”.

The new “contemporary” build will be built on the existing car park and will include 16 en-suite bedrooms, a hair salon, a communal bath, a communal area and two disabled toilets. The new building will be linked to the existing care home through a corridor.

Fourteen new parking spaces will be made at the front of the extension, along with a new entrance and exit made for the site.

Pre-application plans originally sought to have a four-storey extension to the care home which would have increased the available bedrooms from 27 to 49 but the fourth floor wad removed from plans following “concerns regarding its scale”.

In terms of potential overlooking impacts on nearby existing properties, planning papers say: “There are no side windows proposed on the main large extension at the front of the site, that would overlook neighbouring properties.”

Prickly patients receive cash boost from global packaging firm for ‘game-changing’ scanner

A Nottinghamshire charity dedicated to rescuing and rehabilitating hedgehogs has received a welcome boost thanks to a £1,000 donation from Colwic-based global packaging firm, The Wilkins Group.

The Beeston-based charity called Hedgepigs, founded by Deborah Brown in 2018, has used the funds to purchase an ultrasound scanner – helping it to diagnose and treat injured or sick hedgehogs more effectively, while also supporting other local animal rescue groups.

The donation forms part of The Wilkins Group’s ‘12 Months of Giving’ campaign, which sees the Colwick-headquartered company donate £1,000 each month to a different Nottinghamshire charity or community organisation throughout 2025.

Deborah said: “Our vet bills are always one of our biggest costs, so having our own ultrasound is a game-changer for us. It allows us to detect issues such as pregnancy or heart problems early, meaning faster treatment and better outcomes for the hedgehogs in our care.

“We’re also sharing the scanner with other local rescue centres, including Brinsley Animal Rescue, Charlie’s Place and The Little Garden Farm Animal Rescue. It’s already helped diagnose everything from a pregnant guinea pig to a mother cat and her kittens!

“We’re incredibly grateful to The Wilkins Group for their support, and it’s lovely to see a local business taking such a genuine interest in the small creatures that share our environment.”

Since its launch, Hedgepigs has rescued, rehabilitated and released hundreds of hedgehogs across Nottinghamshire, maintaining an impressive 75 per cent release rate.

Hedgepigs also forms part of a close-knit network of wildlife rescuers across the East Midlands. Deborah often works alongside a former NHS wound care nurse in Stapleford, with the pair regularly exchanging animals needing specialist support.

Deborah said: “If a hedgehog comes in with serious wounds, she’s the expert. And if one of hers needs an ultrasound or heart scan, it comes to me. It’s a brilliant example of the rescue community pulling together and using our different skills to give these little creatures the best possible chance.”

Justin Wilkins, Joint Managing Director of The Wilkins Group, said: “We love helping our local wildlife, and supporting Hedgepigs is just one way we can give back to the creatures that share our community.

“Hedgehogs are gentle, iconic animals whose numbers are sadly in decline. It’s easy to assume someone else is helping, but often it’s the small local charities doing the hardest work, with the fewest resources. 

“Hedgepigs provides exceptional care, and it’s been incredibly rewarding to know that our donation contributed to the purchase of an ultrasound scanner to detect pregnancies – along with supporting many other vital needs.” 

Justin added: “Sometimes the smallest creatures need the biggest help – and we’re proud to play our part. Nottingham is our home, and our year of giving is all about shining a light on the incredible local groups improving lives, protecting wildlife and supporting our communities.”

The Wilkins Group, a family-run firm founded in 1963, produces food packaging for leading brands including Pukka, Pizza Express, Harrods and Cadbury. Alongside its Nottingham headquarters, the company operates sites in China, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, and has won multiple awards for its innovations in reducing single-use plastics.

Watchdog calls for price cap on vet prescriptions

Pet owners could soon be paying less at the vets if price caps are placed on prescriptions.

The Competition and Markets Authority, which has been investigating the sector since 2023, revealed owners could be paying twice as much for commonly prescribed medicines from vet practices than they could pay online.

The watchdog found customers could be paying “hundreds of pounds more” for commonly prescribed medicines from vet practices than they could pay online.

It wants to introduce a prescription fee cap of £16 and said vets should be required to tell customers about savings they could make by buying medicines online.

The CMA said “These measures will help prompt consumers to consider buying medication online and protect them from having to pay excessive prices for the prescriptions they would need to do so.”

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“Pet owners pay 16.6% more on average at large vet groups than at independent vets. For at least three of those large groups, average prices increased faster at practices they bought than at practices that remained independent.

“The current regulatory system is not fit for purpose. It only regulates individual veterinary professionals and not vet businesses, despite the majority of practices being part of a large corporate group.”

The CMA’s 21 proposed measures include:

• A requirement for vet businesses to publish comprehensive price lists
• Changes to make it easier for pet owners to access cheaper medicines online
• Requiring vets to give clear price information to pet owners arranging a cremation
• Giving pet owners clear price information when they are choosing a treatment, with prices in writing for treatments over £500 and itemised bills

Martin Coleman, chair of the inquiry group, said: “We believe that our proposals would enable pet owners to choose the right vet, the right treatment, and the right way to purchase medicine – without confusion or unnecessary cost.”

Firms will have until November 12 to respond to the CMA’s provisional decision.

A final decision is due in March.

1940s Steam Fair taking place this weekend at Papplewick Pumping Station

The 17th 1940s Steam Event takes place this weekend at Papplewick Pumping Station.

The event on October 18/19 is the latest popular steam fair with something for everyone.

An array of military and civilian re-enactors will be on display throughout the two day event as well as period vehicles from the 1940s – which is the theme of the event.

There will also be a number of displays and encampments, trade stalls and a popular live-action skirmish taking place in the pumping station’s Cooling Pond at 2pm.

Visitors can enjoy live entertainment from Jayne Darling & Kevin Mac on Saturday and Johnny Victory & Lula May on Sunday, who will be recreating sounds of the 40s.

The Lincoln Green Brewery will be attending the event to provide a wide selection of ales to those seeking refreshment.

The events takes place this Saturday and Sunday between 10am-4pm.

Tickets can be bought online HERE

A spokesman said: “If possible, please buy your tickets online as it helps reduce the admin work for the Front of House volunteers and speeds up your entry.”

Gedling borough pensioners being warned about winter fuel payment text scam

Pensioners in Gedling borough are being warned to look out for Winter Fuel Payment text message scams following a surge in activity from opportunistic criminals ahead of next month’s payments.

New data from HMRC shows reports of scam texts more than doubled in the last week of September when compared to the previous week

These scams – which see fraudsters exploit pensioners by posing as government officials processing Winter Fuel Payment applications – had begun to drop off after a peak in June but are now increasing again ahead of payments being made next month.

Winter Fuel Payments are made automatically, and the government will never ask for bank details by text. Anyone who receives a text message inviting them to apply for a payment should not engage with it and instead forward it to 7726.

Work and Pensions Secretary Pat McFadden said: “If you get a text message about Winter Fuel Payments, it’s a scam. They will be made automatically so you do not need to apply.

“These despicable attempts by criminals to target people are on the rise. We are raising awareness to make it harder for fraudsters to succeed.

If you receive a suspicious message about Winter Fuel Payments, don’t engage – forward it to 7726 and delete it immediately.

Independent Age Chief Executive Joanna Elson CBE said: “Scammers are shamefully exploiting the Winter Fuel Payment to target older people living on low incomes. This entitlement is a vital lifeline that helps protect those facing financial hardship during the colder months.

“Our helpline has received calls from older people who have been sent these fraudulent messages. Many of them are already anxious about being able to afford to heat their homes this winter, and these scam texts may wrongly lead them to believe they must take action to receive their payment.

“The key message is clear: you do not need to do anything to receive your Winter Fuel Payment. If you are eligible, it will be paid automatically.

Winter Fuel Payments will automatically be paid into people’s bank accounts with eligible pensioners receiving a letter in October or November saying how much they will receive.

Payments will be made between mid-November and December 2025.