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MP and Mayor thank ‘dedicated’ volunteers during Gedling Play Forum visit

Gedling MP Michael Payne and Mayor of Gedling Cllr Kyle Robinson-Payne have shown their appreciation for the commitment of volunteers at Gedling Play Forum.

They joined the Gedling Play Forum to celebrate the commitment of volunteers providing play for children in Gedling, on Friday, October 3 2025.

The Mayor presented volunteers with badges, certificates, and plaques to mark their service to the Forum.

Gedling Play Forum runs play and craft events across the borough. From their base on Wollaton Avenue they also run a Resource Centre where schools, playgroups, and families can find arts and crafts materials. Much of this is donated by local businesses to avoid it being sent to landfill.

Volunteers and guests at the Gedling Play Forum celebration event

It was also a double celebration as Rachael Ellis, chair of the Trustees, announced that the National Lottery Community Fund had awarded the Play Forum a grant worth over £220,000 towards its Sustainable Green Future Project.

“We are delighted with this amazing award” said Rachael Ellis.  “It will enable us to install solar panels to meet our objective of reducing the environmental impact of our work.”

“We are grateful to the National Lottery Community Fund for their generosity, and of course to those who play the National Lottery and make this possible”

The grant will also fund a playworker to train workers and volunteers, enhancing their skills and employment prospects, and providing more play events for children. 

“We know how important play is for children’s development, creatively, physically, and socially” added Rachael Ellis.

“But there are fewer opportunities for play these days, and the long term effects of the Covid lockdowns are still being felt. So we want to work with partner groups to increase the opportunities for children and their parents.”

Michael Payne MP paid tribute to the work of the volunteers “It was a privilege and pleasure to be here to thank the volunteers at the Play Forum who give their time to helping families. Volunteers don’t just give their time, they give their hearts to make Gedling the special place it is.”

Between them the 30 active volunteers have given 236 years of service to the Forum.

Gedling Lotto results: Winning numbers for Saturday, October 4, 2025

There is a chance to win up to £25,000 every Saturday when you play Gedling Lotto.

You just need to match six numbers to win the £25,000 jackpot.

We now publish the winning numbers after each Saturday night.

THIS WEEK’S WINNING NUMBERS (04/10/25)

9 4 2 3 7 9

How does Gedling Lotto work?

Gedling Lotto is a weekly lottery draw that raises money for good causes across Gedling Borough. All good causes supported by the lottery will benefit the Gedling Borough and its residents.

Play the lottery, support Gedling Borough – it’s that simple!

From every £1 ticket you buy, 60p will go to local good causes in the Gedling Borough and improve our community.

Some of the many causes to benefit from the Lotto include:

  • Arnbrook Primary School
  • Arnold Swimming Club
  • Gedling Play Forum
  • Gedling Conservation Trust
  • Lambley Village Cricket Club

Now open: Birds Bakery welcomes customers back to revamped store in Arnold

A well-known bakery that is a hallmark of Arnold has completed an extensive revamp of its town branch. It comes after Birds Bakery announced last year that its stores would gradually be adopting its new “spring green” colour scheme as part of a wider rebrand.

The store reopened on Thursday (2) and has been transformed with Birds’ updated branding and includes both seating and takeaway options, while ensuring there’s still plenty of room to browse and shop for all the classics.

The refurbishment forms part of Birds’ ongoing investment in its East Midlands stores, blending heritage with modern comforts to make sure every customer – long-standing regulars and new visitors alike – feels at home.

As well as the traditional bakes, pastries, and breads Birds has been known for since 1919, the Arnold store will also serve Birds’ brand new products such as Chocolate Chip Cookies and Cheese & Ham Croissants, amongst usual favourites. 

Jamie Bird, joint managing director at Birds Bakery, said: “Arnold has always been a special location for us, and we’re delighted to be reopening with a fresh new look. We’ve worked hard to make the store a welcoming, comfortable space for every customer while keeping everything people love about Birds at the heart of it.

“It’s really important to us that we invest in our communities, and we can’t wait to see both familiar and new faces enjoying the revamped store.”

Birds Bakery’s Arnold store is located at 29 Front Street and is open from 7:30am-5pm Monday to Saturday, and 8am-3pm on Sundays.

Miller Homes hands over keys to new homeowners as work is completed on Gedling housing development

More than 100 new homes have been unveiled in Gedling marking a significant step forward in providing much-needed new housing in the borough.

National housebuilder Miller Homes has completed its work on the 120-home Bonington Grange scheme, built on a triangular parcel of land which links Burton Road, Linden Grove, and the newly built Colwick Loop Road. 

The developer has sold all its private homes and handed over the final sets of keys to the occupants, including the development’s former showhome. 

As part of the work on the site, Miller Homes East Midlands also provided two separate play areas within the scheme’s public open space.

Emma Weston, sales director of Miller Homes East Midlands, said: “We are very proud to have completed work at Bonington Grange and leave behind a new community of homeowners in Gedling. 

“The development formed a key part of wider growth and infrastructure of the area, including improved transport links and new school facilities, both of which will be and already is proving to be extremely helpful to our residents at Bonington Grange.”

Plans submitted for over 170 homes near Arnold nature reserve

More than 170 new homes could be built near an Arnold nature reserve after plans were submitted to the council.

Bellway Homes has submitted plans to Gedling Borough Council for a 172-home development on land off Killisick Lane, on the edge of Arnold.

Killisick Lane currently cuts through the middle of the proposed site, which is located just to the east of Hobbucks Nature Reserve and near Dorket Head Quarry in the north.

Thirty-four of the homes – 20 per cent – have been put forward to be affordable housing, which is double the minimum amount required by most local authorities. These include 12 two-bed homes and 22 three-beds.

The remaining freehold properties would be split into 62 three-beds, 57 four-beds and 19 five-beds.

The housing types would be mixed, including bungalows, semi-detached and detached homes.

According to plans, the homes would be accessed through a new road created on the bend of Killisick Road and Howbeck Road.

Papers read: “The proposal encourages walking and cycling along safe and pleasant routes. It ensures easy access to and from the surrounding areas. The layout has an elevated level of natural surveillance to both the public and private realm.

“The proposal has no negative impact on the private
amenity spaces of existing residents and ensures that future residents have access to similarly protected space.”

Strata Homes purchased a £25 million section of land off Killisick Lane and plans for 45 new homes on this site was granted permission by the council in December 2024.

Nottinghamshire’s integrated care board has requested a £93,202 financial contribution from Bellway Homes to accommodate higher patient numbers across three nearby GPs.

The council will decide on this application at a later stage.

Countryside party venue has late night plans approved by Gedling Borough Council

A countryside party venue in Gedling borough has been granted permission to hold outdoor events until 2am – but the number of events allowed has been reduced.

Goosedale Events Ltd, which hosts weddings, private parties, conferences and business events on its 100-acre site applied for a new licence for an outdoors events space.

The company uses its converted 17th-century farm in Goosedale Lane, between Bestwood Village and Papplewick, for the events. Multiple licensed bars and banqueting suites already exist on site, and they can accommodate up to 550 people.

The decision was made in Gedling Borough Council’s licensing panel on Thursday (October 2).

The new licence applied for saw the business wanting to run 21 events each year in the outdoor space, with licensable activities from 9am until 2am every day.

But Gedling Borough Council’s licensing panel decided on Thursday (October 2) to allow the space to operate 12 events each year and permission was granted subject to conditions with Nottinghamshire Police and the environmental health officer (EHO).

The number of events being reduced from 21 to 12 was a recent amendment the company made to the EHO, and will mean 12 one-day events can run each year in the outdoor space and can run until 2am on the nights they take place.

The granted permission also means that while the sale of alcohol is granted until 2am, live entertainment will be capped at 11:30pm from Sunday to Wednesday, midnight on Thursdays and Fridays, and until 12:30am on Saturdays and until 12:30am on Sundays that directly precede a bank holiday Monday.

Some nearby residents living in the countryside surrounding the venue objected to the application for the new licence and dozens of residents from the nearby Sandy Oaks Village retirement park signed a petition against the plans.

Mr Robert Morton, resident of the retirement park and representative for its residents, said during Thursday’s meeting: “We get the bulk of the noise from your events… every event you do, the noise carries to our park which is basically a horse shoe, acts like an amphitheatre.

“Come 10 o’clock at night, you can hear a pin drop. The time you’re talking about, drinking, socialising, getting off the premises, you’re talking a minimum of three o’clock… I didn’t come here to listen to music until three.”

Resident Robert Glynn asked: “This is probably going to increase the traffic coming down [Goosedale Lane], so what are the plans you have got to upgrade or help with that public footpath?”

Mr Walaiti Rathore, from the Licensing Law Consultancy, responded: “There’s going to be better management moving forward as we propose in the conditions.”

During the meeting, Councillor Martin Smith (Con) asked: “Potentially, you could take over your existing car parking if this application was successful, so where will those cars be displaced to?”

Dominic Hayer, director of the company, replied: “We have an overflow car park, we also have overflow fields that we’ve been using for 20 years. The only issue is, if we had a circumstance we didn’t expect which is natural, sometimes we then have to adjust to that.”

Nottinghamshire Police originally said the information given with the plans was “not sufficient enough to promote or uphold the licensing objectives”.

The force suggested the installation of CCTV, the training of all staff members in the retail sale of alcohol and that an incident log book be held to note any problems and to keep record – these conditions have been agreed and imposed as part of the granted permission.

Another condition imposed on the granting of the licence is that car park marshals will be deployed to manage vehicles at the venue for the entire duration of an event – not just during peak times.

Frustrated Gedling borough residents welcome council’s planned improvements as brown bins missed

Residents and councillors have welcomed planned changes to garden waste bin collections across Gedling borough

Gedling Borough Council admitted that brown bin collections—used for garden waste—have been “consistently missed” in the past few months.

The authority has pledged to make changes by March next year after a raft of complaints, including rethinking the routes bin lorries take.

The problems have affected residents in various parts of Gedling borough, including Burton Joyce and the new Hallows Rise estate off Colwick Loop Road.

The service runs every year from the start of April to the end of March the following year – with no collections in January and February. PHOTO: GBC

Gedling Borough Council admitted that brown bin collections—used for garden waste—have been “consistently missed” in the past few months.

Mark Owen, who has lived in Church Road in Burton Joyce for seven years, told the Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS) his brown bin collection has been missed on four consecutive occasions.

He welcomed the planned changes, but urged the council to inform residents if collection days change.

“It should have been collected last Friday, but it was only just collected on Tuesday,” he said.

“We’ve got quite a big garden. I don’t want to have to buy two bins, and it would be fine if they collected it.

“Originally, I thought it was just me, but I spoke to a few others here, and their bins had not been done.

“It has only been a problem for the last two or three months. The annoying thing is we have to pay for this.”

Another resident of Church Road said her brown bin had only been missed once, and said the council had been “very nice” on the phone.

“I called because if it was going to be another fortnight I would have had to take a trip to the tip,” she added.

The problem has also been plaguing the new Hallows Rise estate, off Colwick Loop Road near Netherfield.

Samantha Stackhouse, who has lived in Magpie Street for a year, said her garden waste bin had been missed three times.

“I started paying in June,” she said. “They have got better; we had to fill out the [complaint] form two times. You have to pay [for the service] as well, which is frustrating.”

The service runs every year from the start of April to the end of March the following year – with no collections in January and February.

The cost for the 2025/26 service is £45 for one brown bin, and any additional brown bins cost £23 each.

Director of operations at the council, Sarah Troman, said: “We know it is not sustainable to deliver it with the crews that we have got, with the customer base we have got, so, as soon as we start to slow down – which should be in the next six weeks or so – we are going to look at completely revamping those rounds,” she said.

“There will be a little bit of pain in terms of lots of collections, days might change, but it means when we start again in March we will be in a much stronger position.

“We know there have been lots of consistently missed bins, and the numbers have improved a lot over the last few weeks, but we are now down to the sticky ones.”

Cllr Sam Smith (Con), who represents the Trent Valley ward, told the LDRS: “It should help as the council has now finally accepted that it doesn’t have the capacity to meet the current route demands.

“So re-routing will hopefully add that capacity in and reduce the number of missed collections, although it will mean a change of collection dates.”

Boy, 15, to appear in court after his e-bike crashes into car on road in Daybrook

A teenager is due to appear in court after a car was damaged in a collision with an electric bike.

Police were called to Sherbrook Road around 10am on Saturday, September 27, following reports a bike had crashed into a vehicle and the rider had fled the scene.

Officers arrested a suspect in a nearby alleyway and seized the bike following further inquiries.

A 15-year-old boy, who cannot be named for legal reasons, has been charged with failing to stop after an accident, driving without due care and attention and driving without a licence or insurance.

He is expected to appear at Nottingham Magistrates’ Court on October 8 2025.

Police Constable Michael Callan, of the Gedling North neighbourhood policing team, said:“We are receiving frequent reports of antisocial behaviour involving the illegal use of electric bikes in our communities.

“Neighbourhood officers have recently held days of action to target the issue in Gedling and discussions with our partners about it are ongoing.

“Following this incident a bike has been taken off the streets and a suspect placed before the courts.”

Councils slam Reform leader over ‘untrue’ statement on boundary shake-up plans

A dispute has broken out between councils across Nottinghamshire over plans to redraw boundaries and create two new local authorities.

Nottinghamshire County Council leader Mick Barton (Ref) shared a video statement on social media stating the authority had “hardly” been involved in a public consultation exercise over council shake-up plans.

However, a separate group involving several other councils has hit back and said his statement was not true, with all nine councils involved in the process – and Cllr Barton having chaired the meeting during which the consultation process was agreed.

The Labour government’s proposal to reorganise local councils, introduced last December, has been contentious from the start.

The Government has argued it could “create more efficient and effective local government”, streamlining services and making cost savings for residents – at a time when many councils have been going effectively bankrupt due to soaring service demand, over a decade of austerity-led funding cuts, and inflated costs.

Concerns have been raised about some boroughs and districts joining the city due to its past financial woes, but city leaders say the situation has since vastly improved.

Councils across the city and county have been discussing their preferred options over the last few months, with plans to submit these to the Government by November for review.

An independently-run survey recently ran for six weeks, asking residents for their thoughts on two preferred core options: Option 1b and option 1e.

Option 1b would see a new unitary authority created combining Nottingham, Broxtowe, and Gedling, with a second new unitary authority for the rest of Nottinghamshire; Mansfield, Ashfield, Newark and Sherwood, Bassetlaw and Rushcliffe.

Option 1e would see a new unitary authority combining Nottingham, Broxtowe, and Rushcliffe, with a second new unitary authority for the rest of Nottinghamshire; Mansfield, Ashfield, Newark and Sherwood, Bassetlaw and Gedling.

City residents were also asked a supplementary question about a boundary review, after city leaders suggested only taking in urban sections of surrounding boroughs, rather than the whole area.

It received around 11,000 responses.

However on Wednesday (October 1) a fresh row broke out over the consultation, with the Reform-led county council and Conservative-ruled Rushcliffe Borough Council claiming the results of the survey were irresponsibly “rushed” out.

In a video Cllr Mick Barton, the Reform leader of Nottinghamshire County Council, went further to claim the process “was done by the Bassetlaw council in Worksop, and the city, and some other districts within the county – Labour-run districts, I will add.”

The video was published on social media by the county council. In it Cllr Barton continues: “We wasn’t involved in that, hardly at all.

“We are very disappointed with our engagement within it. Just to let you know [it was sent out to one million people], the population of the county, 58 per cent have gone back and said they don’t want reorganisation at all. That is the one thing that stands out for me.

“That sends a message out to me that we need to look at it. But we are still going to get on with our 1b option.”

Cllr Barton said his group’s preferred option –  1b – “will deliver” for residents, but emphasised the county council will be holding its own consultation in the next couple of weeks.

However all but one of the remaining councils including Bassetlaw, Broxtowe, Gedling, Mansfield, Newark and Sherwood, and Nottingham city – but excluding Ashfield – say the statement made by Cllr Barton is “not true”.

The councils say the engagement exercise was “a jointly commissioned, independent exercise and paid for by all nine councils.”

They say Nottinghamshire County Council was fully involved in the exercise, and that Cllr Barton had himself “chaired the meeting in which the approach was agreed.”

The county council made reference to the consultation on its own website on August 4, and again on August 22, which demonstrates its involvement, the councils add.

The seven councils asked that the report was published in the interests of transparency, but Nottinghamshire County Council and Rushcliffe Borough Council argued “its publication now does not provide the full analysis or the full data and with such a short amount of time to consider the report”.

The Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS) understands councils had agreed not to publish the survey results in full after Nottinghamshire County Council and Rushcliffe Borough Council said they didn’t want it shared.

However, after Cllr Barton’s video was shared on social media, the report was then published in full.

Some of the seven councils say the results show the creation of a new unitary council covering Bassetlaw, Mansfield, Newark and Sherwood, Ashfield, and Gedling – and another covering Broxtowe, Nottingham City, and Rushcliffe – was the public’s preferred option.

This is known as option 1e – which Rushcliffe Borough and Nottinghamshire County Council has previously publicly rejected.

A press release published by Mansfield District Council on October 1 says around a third of all respondents viewed a north and south arrangement as the best available solution to Government plans to reorganise the nine councils across Nottinghamshire.

Meanwhile the county council and Rushcliffe Borough Council say the key findings highlight that fewer than 30 per cent of residents see the advantages of any restructuring – and in some parts of Nottinghamshire over 70 per cent feel very satisfied or somewhat satisfied with services as they stand without the need for change.

The LDRS approached Cllr Barton for comment, and asked him to confirm he had chaired a meeting to press ahead with the consultation.

He said: “We agreed to do it together, but this report isn’t good enough for our residents, and to rush it out before we can do it justice is disappointing.”

Cllr Barton added: “I said I’m really disappointed with the work Bassetlaw District Council and [Nottingham] City Council did for us all regarding the consultation.

“We had less than 24 hours to review the full report. The report does not give a full analysis of the full data. The consultation only reached 11,000 – that’s less than one per cent of the population.

“That’s why I said we need to keep consulting with residents. We are still fully committed to reaching the November deadline for putting the best proposal forward for residents. We will continue to work with other councils in a constructive way.

“The two main options on the table are 1b and 1e. No final decision’s been made yet.

“I’m very disappointed with how they have rushed to put out the report without taking the time to let us fully understand what residents are telling us.”

In Nottinghamshire, local services are currently delivered under what is known as a ‘two-tier’ council structure.

Nottinghamshire County Council runs services such as social care, education, and road maintenance, while several smaller district and borough councils are responsible for more localised services, including waste collection and leisure centres.

Meanwhile, Nottingham City Council operates as a unitary authority, meaning it provides all council services within the city boundary.

Under the plans, all nine existing local authorities would be abolished to create new unitary councils, covering a higher population in a bid to reduce costs,  overlap, and duplication.

The Government is expected to make a final decision in March 2026, and they say the new-look councils will be established in 2028.

The consultation results can be viewed in full here: https://www.newark-sherwooddc.gov.uk/media/nsdc-redesign/documents-and-images/news/2025/october/Nottingham-and-Nottinghamshire-LGR-Engagement—Final-report.pdf

Letters: Netherfield would really benefit from for new leisure centre

Our readers from across the borough give their weekly take on the biggest issues impacting Gedling and beyond.

Join the debate by sending your letter to letters@gedlingeye.co.uk . Please put ‘Letters’ in the subject line. You can also submit a letter by filling in the simple form below, and it may appear online.

Some letters refer to past correspondence which can be found by clicking HERE

Names and addresses will be withheld by request but must be included in the email. We reserve the right to edit letters. Letters published do not reflect the views of Gedling Eye

Netherfield could benefit from new leisure centre

Sir,

I am quite angry that Netherfield was not considered by the council as a location for the new leisure centre that will replace the two Carlton facilities.

The town gets no funding whatsoever and there is nothing to do for youngsters who live there.

I think Netherfield would an ideal location for the proposed leisure centre. It would help tackle the obesity in local children and improve fitness of those that live there.

It seems again that Netherfield has been overlooked. Unless you have a car there is no easy access for residents to leisure facilities. The town is being neglected.

G Talbot,
Netherfield


Leisure centre investment ‘welcomed’

Sir,

I am glad to see that Carlton’s leisure centres are going to get some much-needed investment. As a member of Gedling Leisure. I think this is money well spent and will keep people in Carlton active and healthy.

The facilities and the staff are good at both centres, but to give them a funding boost will make it even better.

Mark Desgranges,
Carlton


E-scooter menace in ruining town centre

Sir,

Does the council think Netherfield has vanished?

Maybe they could visit for a day and count the numbers of illegal e-scooters that come through Netherfield on their way to the shops and to work in Colwick. They come through with no hesitation and no helmets or care for other road users. All they have for protection are masks and balaclavas and at the speed they come through its quite dangerous for them and other people.

We see very few members of the police and this means they get away with immunity – please ask that Gedling Borough Council to think about the small areas and not just about the Carlton and Arnold areas.

Mr Martin,
Netherfield


Young generation believes everything should be free

Sir,

We worked nine-hour shifts daily, and some were on shifts or even permanent night shifts. 

Our standard annual holiday was only two weeks, not today’s four- to six-week holidays.

We only got two days at Christmas and one day at New Year, not like today’s long 10-day break.

My generation appreciated the sacrifices our parents made during the war when things were hard.

Food was rationed, sweets were non-existent, and ordinary working families did not have a car.

You either walked to work or took a bus or tramcar.

There is nothing wrong with improving living conditions.

My parents worked hard to provide me with a better education and an opportunity to have a better life than they had, and so we follow their example.

There is definitely a feeling among the younger generation that everything should be supplied free.

Unfortunately, the old British Empire is long gone, and the Commonwealth also. Britain is now a poor, third-world-rated country, and we have to accept that.

Ian Ross
Arnold


Starmer can make Britain ‘great again’

Sir,

What a great speech from Sir Keir Starmer to the Labour Party Conference.

Just as the right wing tabloids were writing him off and parts of the media were in a leadership frenzy, up stood the Prime Minister to deliver a speech exposing Reform for what they really stand for and to set out Labour’s achievements to date and his own vision for the future.

Be it green jobs, kids free meals, or a fair deal for carers, this was the vision of a Prime Minister hungry for more success and the chance to continue to make Britain great again.

Geoffrey Brooking
via email

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