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Work set to begin on new £98k play area at Jackie Bell’s Field in Netherfield

Work to create a new £98k play area at Jackie Bell’s Fields in Netherfield is due to start next week.

Construction is expected to take around six weeks to complete and the current play area will close when works begin on April 27.

There will also be a new 25-metre zip line, multi-play climbing units, a wheelchair-accessible roundabout and trampoline, a table tennis table and a chess table. The park will re-open in the summer.

The new and improved development is thanks to funding from FCC Communities Foundation, a not-for-profit business that awards grants for community, conservation and heritage projects from funds donated by waste and resource management company FCC Environment through the Landfill Communities Fund. FCC Communities Foundation will be providing a grant total of £98,000. 

The park as it is today

The funding bid was submitted in collaboration with Gedling Borough Council and a small group of local partners. It included consultations with local children from Netherfield Junior School, young people from the Loco Centre, and local families to gather input on what they wanted to see in the park. 

Councillor Alison Hunt, Ward Councillor for Netherfield is excited that the project is starting to take shape. 

She said: “It’s great to see our vision for this vital community facility moving closer to reality. I would like to thank our small group, Cllr Russell Whiting, NCC Youth Worker Andy Foulds, and Gedling Borough Council’s Parks Development Team for the commitment and enthusiasm they have brought to this project. 

I am also seeking additional funds to support a community graffiti project on the skatepark and teen shelter, and I also hope to enhance the natural space behind the MUGA. 

We are extremely grateful for the funding from FCC Communities Foundation for the play area. We would like to thank the community for their support on this project and feel sure that it will be enjoyed by local children for many years to come.” 

Councillor Viv McCrossen, Portfolio Holder for Climate Change and Natural Habitat said: “This new play area will be a fantastic addition to the Borough, offering a wide range of facilities for children to enjoy. I am delighted that work on the site is now getting underway and that it will soon be available for the community to use. 

I would like to thank the Friends of Jackie Bell’s for working with us on the application, as well as FCC Communities Foundation for providing the funding that has made this project possible.”

For more information about FCC Communities Foundation funding visit www.fcccommunitiesfoundation.org.uk 

Reform spending 81 per cent less on travel expenses

Reform UK spent thousands of pounds less in travel expenses compared to its Conservative predecessors, with officials claiming it was “morally wrong to claim every penny” available.

New figures released on Wednesday (April 22) showed that Reform councillors at Nottinghamshire County Council claimed back £7,289 in travel expenses during the party’s first year in charge of the council.

That is down 81 per cent on the figure recorded by the Tories, who previously ran the council before the 2025 May local elections.

When comparing both parties’ travel claims for the 2025/26 financial year, the Conservatives claimed back £11,889 – that’s £4,600 more than Reform despite having 23 fewer councillors on the authority.

The current make-up of the council sees Reform UK in control with 41 seats out of 66, while the Tories have 18, Labour have four and the independent Nottinghamshire Alliance group holds three seats.

Further data released this week shows 31 per cent of Reform councillors claimed back their travel receipts in 2025/26 compared to 77 per cent of Conservative members.

This comes out at an average of £560.69 per councillor that claimed for Reform and an average of £849.21 per councillor that claimed for the Tories.

Speaking to the Local Democracy Reporting Service, Reform’s finance councillor, Stuart Matthews, said his party did not “claim every penny” for a reason.

He said: “We don’t as a group dispute that anybody can claim expenses.

“All we’re saying is in these tough economic times, the Reform group came in to do things far different – we think sometimes it’s morally wrong to claim every penny you can for expenses.”

Cllr Matthews said his group’s “two biggest takers” were the authority’s chair and vice chair who do “hundreds of miles on civic duties”.

He continued: “We’ve had enough slating about the flags. These [lower] expenses over the next three years would pay for the flags and poles if you think about it.

“I’m not suggesting they’re breaking any rules, but perhaps they’ll think about things in a different way.”

Cllr Matthews said he has not personally claimed any travel back and the four Labour councillors on the authority have not put in travel expense claims either.

The Conservatives have disputed Reform’s claims though, with Cllr Sam Smith, leader of the Tories at the council, saying they were “misleading”.

He said: “The claims made by Reform UK on councillor travel expenses are misleading and lack important context.

“In any workplace – public or private – it’s entirely normal for employees to be reimbursed for necessary travel undertaken as part of their duties. Councillors are no different.

“At a time when fuel prices remain high, it’s reasonable and appropriate that councillors, like workers in any business, can claim back the cost of travelling to carry out their job role.

“While criticising legitimate travel expenses, [Reform] have overseen £75,000 on flags and £40,000 on a council magazine delivered to every home in Nottinghamshire. These costs alone dwarf the travel expenses they seek to attack.”

Cllr Smith continued that travel expenses allow councillors to be “present” and “visible” in the communities they represent.

He added: “Higher travel claims reflect councillors who are out in their communities, attending meetings, supporting residents, and doing the job properly. If others are claiming significantly less, residents are entitled to ask whether that reflects a lower level of on-the-ground engagement.

“This is about priorities. Conservatives believe in supporting frontline representation—ensuring councillors can do the job they were elected to do. Reform’s approach appears to favour headline-grabbing comparisons while diverting attention from their own spending choices.”

Healthcare trust to replace words ‘he’ and ‘she’ with ‘they’ in updated constitution

All gender-specific language is set to be removed from a Nottinghamshire NHS trust’s documentation.

Nottingham Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust is to make the updates to its constitution, with more than 65 incidences of the words “he” and “she” edited to read “they” as part of the proposed changes.

The move is being made in order to bring the constitution level and compliant with the Equality Act 2010.

Director of Governance Keith Wilshere brought the plan before the trust’s board of directors at a meeting on March 26.

A report, explaining the updates, said: “The constitution has been drafted to be compliant with all the present legislation including the Equality Act 2010, all gender specific references have been removed.”

Nottinghamshire Healthcare’s constitution sets out how the trust is run and is required by law according to the NHS Act 2006.

Sentences changed include descriptions of how working employees can eligibly become a member of the council, rules around elections of governors and rules around telephone and internet voting.

Some parts of the document previously only used male pronouns to describe individuals.

The old version of 8.1 stated: “An individual who is employed by the Trust under a contract of employment with the Trust may become or continue as a Member of the Trust provided:

“He is employed by the Trust under a contract of employment which has no fixed term or has a fixed term of at least 12 months; or,

“He is continuously employed by the Trust under a contract of employment for at least 12 month.”

The new sentences replace “he is” with “they are”.

Other parts of the document previously used “he or she”.

On the validity of a standing candidate, paragraph 14.3 previously said: “The returning officer is to examine each nomination form as soon as is practicable after he or she has received it and decide whether the candidate has been validly nominated.”

It has been changed in order to say “they” instead of “he or she”.

Mr Wilshere told the board: “The audit and risk committee have looked at (the constitution) in a great deal of detail, I can give you an absolute guarantee on that.”

The board unanimously approved the proposals, meaning the plan will now go before the trust’s council of governors on Tuesday, April 28.

A spokesperson for Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust said: “It’s good governance practice to regularly review and update all elements of the Trust Constitution so they are in line with current language and practice and reflect any legislative or other significant changes since the previous review.

“This recent review of the constitution has no additional cost attached to it.”

Latest planning applications submitted to Gedling Borough Council

These are the latest applications to have been submitted to and validated by Gedling Borough Council over the last week.

These applications will now be decided by Gedling borough planners.

1 x double sided D6 display totem (containing digital displays and centre name plate) at St Wilfrid’s Square Shopping Centre
St Wilfrids Square Shopping, St Wilfrids Square, Calverton
Ref. No: 2026/0234

Partial demolition of bungalow. Ground floor extension and renovation. New boundary wall and entrance gates.
599, Mapperley Plains, Arnold
Ref. No: 2026/0232

T1 – pruning works to the tree
Land At West Hollinwood Lane, Calverton
Ref. No: 2026/0233TPO

Straw & Farm Machinery Shed
Ling Farm Ricket Lane, Ravenshead
Ref. No: 2026/0231

Delivery of a new-build teaching block, external and internal improvement works including demolition of buildings and reconfiguration of car parking to the Leisure Centre.
Carlton Academy, Coningswath Road, Carlton
Ref. No: 2026/0228

Application to discharge conditions 3,4 & 5 relating to Listed Building Consent approval 2025/0775
55 Main Street, Papplewick
Ref. No: 2026/0229DOC

Change of use and extension of existing building to allow for wedding and event space (Sui Generis)
Patchings Farm Art Centre, Oxton Road, Calverton
Ref. No: 2026/0215

Tree T11 (Norway Maple): Proposed removal to as close to ground level as practicable, rather than limb removal only. -Trees T1 and T31 (Ash): Proposed to pollard at the established crown break, with removal of deadwood and limbs affected by Ash dieback.
Burntstump Lodge, Burntstump Hill, Arnold
Ref. No: 2026/0216TPO

Single storey rear and side extension and conversion of existing garage to beauty room
25, Salcombe Drive, Redhill
Ref. No: 2026/0213

First floor extension to side of dwelling.
54, Buxton Avenue, Carlton
Ref. No: 2026/0204

Maple T13 – Remove
Burntstump Lodge, Burntstump Hill, Arnold
Ref. No: 2026/0227TPO5

Outline application for the erection of a detached house in rear garden of detached property ( Adjacent to no 6 Birch Lea)
243, Mansfield Road, Arnold
Ref. No: 2026/0226

Banyan Tree launches money-off deal in run up to closure as thank you to customers over past two decades

An Arnold restaurant has put in place a 20th anniversary farewell offer as it prepares to close its doors for good.

The Banyan Tree on the outskirts of Redhill will serve customers for the final time at the end of June.

As a mark of appreciation, they are offering £10 off per person when they order a starter and a main when dining in at the restaurant.

Advance booking required and the offer isn’t available on Saturdays.

Diners must mention the farewell offer on ordering or booking – using the notes field on the booking system when making a reservation online.

The offer is available now until June 30 when it closes.

A spokesman said: “Two decades of great food and memories at The Banyan Tree, sadly everything comes to an end, so it is with heavy heart we announce our closure at the end of June 2026.

“Customers past and present, focus not on doom and gloom, celebrate 20 years of success with this tremendous dine-in offer

Roadworks and closures planned for Gedling borough this week

Take a look at the roadworks and closures scheduled for Gedling borough’s roads for the week beginning April 20.

Make sure to plan your journey and check before your travel as these planned works could affect you. 

Gedling Road, Arnold
23 April – 27 April
Roadworks, Delays likely
Responsibility for works: Openreach Ltd

Mansfield Road, Papplewick
23 April
Roadworks, Delays likely
Responsibility for works: Openreach Ltd

Nottingham Road, Burton Joyce
23 April – 25 April
Roadworks, Delays likely
Responsibility for works: Openreach Ltd

Porchester Road, Mapperley
21 April – 22 April
Road closure
Responsibility for works: Severn Trent Water

Queens Bower Road, Arnold
27 April – 29 April
Roadworks, Delays likely
Responsibility for works: Nottinghamshire County Council

St Albans Road, Arnold
22 April – 24 April
Road closure
Responsibility for works: Severn Trent Water

Arnot Hill Road, Arnold
22 April – 23 April
Roadworks, Delays possible
Responsibility for works: Nottinghamshire County Council

Calverton Road, Arnold
24 April – 27 April
Roadworks, Delays possible for pothole repairs
Responsibility for works: Nottinghamshire County Council

Chatsworth Avenue, Carlton
22 April – 23 April
Roadworks, Delays possible
Responsibility for works: Nottinghamshire County Council

Church Street, Carlton
23 April – 24 April
Roadworks, Delays possible
Responsibility for works: Nottinghamshire County Council

Coningswath Road, Carlton
23 April – 24 April
Roadworks, Delays possible
Responsibility for works: Nottinghamshire County Council

Gedling Road, Arnold
23 April – 24 April
Roadworks, Delays possible
Responsibility for works: Nottinghamshire County Council

Georges Lane, Calverton
22 April – 23 April
Roadworks, Delays possible
Responsibility for works: Severn Trent Water

Highfield Drive, Carlton
22 April – 23 April
Roadworks, Delays possible
Responsibility for works: Nottinghamshire County Council

Holme Close, Woodborough
24 April
Roadworks, Delays possible
Responsibility for works: Nottinghamshire County Council

Howbeck Road, Arnold
24 April – 27 April
Roadworks, Delays possible
Responsibility for works: Nottinghamshire County Counci


Kenia Close, Carlton
22 April – 23 April
Roadworks, Delays possible
Responsibility for works: Nottinghamshire County Council

Kenrick Road, Mapperley
23 April – 24 April
Roadworks, Delays possible
Responsibility for works: Nottinghamshire County Council

Lambley Avenue, Mapperley
23 April – 24 April
Roadworks, Delays possible
Responsibility for works: Nottinghamshire County Council

Lambley Lane, Gedling
23 April
Roadworks, Delays possible
Responsibility for works: Severn Trent Water

Main Road, Ravenshead
23 April – 24 April
Roadworks, Delays possible
Responsibility for works: Nottinghamshire County Council

Main Street, Woodborough
21 April
Roadworks, Delays possible
Responsibility for works: Severn Trent Water

Moor Lane, Woodborough
21 April – 21 April
Roadworks, Delays possible
Responsibility for works: Nottinghamshire County Council

Quarry Road, Ravenshead
21 April – 23 April
Roadworks, Delays possible
Responsibility for works: Openreach Ltd

Rutland Road, Gedling
21 April – 22 April
Roadworks, Delays possible
Responsibility for works: Severn Trent Water

Stiles Road, Arnold
21 April – 23 April
Roadworks, Delays possible

Westdale Lane West, Mapperley
23 April – 23 April
Roadworks, Delays possible
Responsibility for works: Cadent Gas Ltd

Wollaton Avenue, Gedling
21 April – 22 April
Roadworks, Delays possible
Responsibility for works: Nottinghamshire County Council

Woodthorpe Drive, Woodthorpe
21 April – 22 April
Roadworks, Delays possible
Responsibility for works: Nottinghamshire County Council

Yew Tree Lane, Gedling
23 April – 24 April
Roadworks, Delays possible
Responsibility for works: Nottinghamshire County Council

The key to managing healthcare workforce fluctuations

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Healthcare staffing has never been a simple equation. Patient volumes shift without warning, providers call out sick, and seasonal surges can leave your team stretched dangerously thin. If you work in healthcare administration, you already know that the gap between the staff you have and the staff you need can open up in a matter of hours. The good news is that managing these fluctuations is not only possible, but it is also something you can get ahead of with the right strategies in place.

Start With A Flexible Staffing Model

When your census spikes or a key physician unexpectedly takes leave, the fastest solution is often to hire a temporary provider to fill the gap while you stabilize. This approach keeps your doors open, protects your permanent staff from burnout, and maintains the quality of care your patients expect. Temporary providers, whether locum tenens physicians, travel nurses, or per diem allied health professionals, have become a core part of how modern healthcare organizations stay functional during unpredictable stretches.

Building a relationship with a reputable staffing agency before you need one is critical. Do not wait for a crisis. When you have a trusted partner already vetted and familiar with your credentialing requirements, you can move fast.

Know Your Data

You cannot manage what you are not measuring. Pull your historical staffing data and look for patterns. You might find that your ED volume climbs every December. Maybe your rural clinic loses two or three providers every spring when residency contracts end. Whatever your pattern is, knowing it gives you a window to plan.

Track these key metrics:

  • Average daily census by department and season
  • Time-to-fill for open positions
  • Overtime hours per pay period
  • Agency spend versus internal labor costs
  • Provider turnover rate by role and location

These numbers tell a story. Once you read it clearly, you can build a staffing strategy that anticipates rather than reacts.

Build An Internal Float Pool

An internal float pool is one of the most cost-effective tools available to you. It is a group of cross-trained staff who can move between departments based on need. Float pool employees often appreciate the variety, and organizations benefit from reduced agency dependency.

Yes, building one takes time. You need to invest in cross-training, create fair scheduling policies, and offer compensation that reflects the flexibility you are asking for. But the return on that investment shows up quickly when a unit is short-staffed, with qualified people ready to step in without the lead time or premium cost of an outside agency.

Communication Is Your Secret Weapon

Workforce fluctuations do not just create operational problems. They create morale problems. When your permanent staff repeatedly absorbs extra shifts or works alongside unfamiliar faces, frustration builds. Be transparent with your team about what is happening and what you are doing about it. Ask for their input. They are often the first to spot scheduling inefficiencies you cannot see from the administrator’s chair.

Short check-ins, open feedback channels, and honest conversations go a long way. People can handle hard stretches when they feel informed and valued.

Put A Plan On Paper

Managing workforce fluctuations will never be perfectly smooth. But with flexible staffing tools, solid data, and a proactive culture, you can turn a chronic headache into a manageable part of running a high-performing healthcare organization.

Five Ways to Unwind After a Busy Day

As the boundaries between our professional and personal lives continue to blur in 2026, finding a genuine sense of calm requires more than just sitting on the sofa.

While technology now handles the heavy lifting of our daily schedules, our brains still carry the weight of constant cognitive demands.

Real relaxation comes when you intentionally signal to your nervous system that the pressure has ceased, lowering cortisol levels and allowing your body to transition from high-alert productivity into a state of restorative quiet.

The Wellness Snack

Modern wellness advocates suggest that waiting until the end of the day to recover often leads to total exhaustion. Instead, you can integrate ‘wellness snacks’ into your evening routine.

These ninety-second bursts of intentional rest, such as splashing cold water on your face or practicing deep breathing, instantly stimulate the vagus nerve.

By choosing these brief moments of physiological regulation, you prevent the traditional post-work crash and maintain a steady level of energy throughout your evening.

Enter the World of Cosy Gaming

If sitting in silence feels too demanding for a restless mind, low-stakes digital hobbies offer a perfect middle ground. Many people find solace in gentle gaming that involves relaxed tasks, like virtual gardening or organising digital spaces.

For a simple and rhythmic experience, you might enjoy the meditative qualities of playing on a bingo app. The repetitive action of tapping numbers and the visual satisfaction of daubing provide a gentle distraction that quietens mental chatter without the stress of high-pressure competition.

Somatic Movement and Gentle Flows

Your body physically stores the adrenaline and tension that accumulate throughout a frantic shift. Somatic movement offers a direct way to shake off this residue.

You can spend ten minutes performing ‘somatic shaking’, literally vibrating your limbs to release pent-up energy, or resting with your legs up in the air. This specific inversion encourages blood flow back to your heart and significantly lowers your heart rate, physically preparing you for a night of deep sleep.

Sensory Bathing Rituals

You can elevate a basic hygiene routine into a deliberate self-care ritual.

This practice focuses on the tactile and olfactory experience of the water. By hanging eucalyptus in the steam or using a textured body scrub, you engage all your senses simultaneously.

The sustained warmth of the water acts as heat therapy, loosening tight muscles and signalling to your internal clock that the day has officially ended.

The Digital Sunset

To protect your sleep quality, you should implement a wind-down routine starting around 8 pm. This involves moving your devices to a separate room to eliminate the temptation of infinite scrolling or late-night notifications.

By picking up a physical book or writing in a journal, you engage your hands in tactile, analogue activities. This grounds you in the physical world and ensures your brain enters a dream-ready state without the interference of blue light.

PayPal scam warning issued to Gedling borough users over new 1p scam

Paypal users in Gedling borough have been warned of a new 1p scam targeting PayPal accounts.

PayPal has warned everyone with an account to “stay vigilant” for the scam, telling users to be aware of scammers trying to create a sense of urgency to steal information.

The scam sees criminals use a non-existent or hacked business account on PayPal to send 1p to your account.

At first, the deposit triggers a genuine email from PayPal.

PayPal users will then receive an email suggesting that a larger sum of money is due to be deposited into their account, and that the 1p was sent just to check your account is active.

The deposit also includes a note that says you have been sent the email ‘because your PayPal account processed a payout by small deposit confirmation’.

The email then advises you to contact PayPal Customer Care to secure your account and request a refund if you didn’t authorise the payment.

But when you call the number, you will actually be put through to a scammer, who will try and steal your personal and financial information.

They could then use this information to gain access to your bank account – and savings.

This is an example of a remote access scam, where fraudsters ask you to download software that gives them access to your device.

Which? is warning people who receive these emails to not call the number or reply to the email.

A PayPal spokesman told the consumer group: “We do not tolerate fraud and are committed to protecting customers from scams like phishing.

“We encourage people to stay vigilant – scammers often create urgency or use fake support numbers to steal information.

“PayPal will never demand urgent action or include phone numbers in payment messages.

“Always log in directly to the official app or website to review activity and report suspicious emails to phishing@paypal.com, then delete them.”

People and community groups across Gedling borough invited to join charity quilt project

Hundreds of social groups, schools and care homes are helping to create a community quilt for Framework to represent 25 years of working together to end homelessness. 

More than 80 groups – from care homes to schools – have already signed up to be part of the collaborative art project with the charity calling out for more to get involved. 

The 250 individual panels will be professionally stitched together to create a powerful tribute to the 250,000 lives changed by Framework over the last 25 years. 

Now ndividuals, families, schools, organisation across Gedling borough are being invited to make an individual panel with the charity supplying free starter packs.  The panels will form one large, meaningful artwork to be hung as a beautiful tapestry. 

Loren Shore, Community Fundraiser, Framework, said: “A quilt is more than an artwork – it is a symbol of warmth, safety and security. For many of the people Framework supports, these are things that have been missing. Rough sleeping often means facing cold, isolation and insecurity, sometimes with nothing more than a cardboard box for protection. In this context, the quilt becomes a powerful visual metaphor for what everyone deserves: warmth, care, dignity and a sense of belonging.”

The quilt will be showcased for the first time at Framework’s annual Carol Service at Southwell Minster in December, followed by Lincoln Cathedral and a Nottingham city centre location. 

2026 is a year-long celebration of the collective power of people coming together to help others in need with events and exhibitions to share stories of hope and transformation.

To find out how to take part in the Community Quilt, go to https://www.frameworkha.org/community-quilt/