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Sunday, 19 August 2018

Vote for Ryde Carnival

NEED YOUR VOTE TO PUSH RYDE FROM SECOND TO FIRST PLACE

Road-Scene-Dancers
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Vote for Ryde Carnival to win the UK's Most Popular Carnival Award 2018. 


You have until midnight on 21 August to make your vote count and help us be recognised nationally as the UK's 

Most Popular Carnival.


Monday, 11 June 2018

Cowes Week Ltd to take over shoreside events - Isle of Wight News from OnTheWight

Cowes Week Ltd to take over shoreside events
The Isle of Wight council used to lease the area to an events company, but the organiser of the world-famous regatta will now take responsibility for shoreside activities on the Parade and Esplanade.
Cowes Week Panorama
Cowes Week Limited (CWL) is to take on responsibility for the Parade Village at the Lendy-sponsored regatta from August.
Previously, the Isle of Wight Council leased the area to an event management company (Taylor events) but now CWL will co-ordinate the shoreside activities on the Parade and Esplanade.
CWL will be responsible for the Parade Village, highways arrangements and the famous fireworks display, including crowd management at Princes Green.
Cllr Wayne Whittle, Cabinet member for events, said:
"This agreement allows Cowes Week Ltd to deliver the event at a very local level.
"They're in the heart of the town and have all the expertise to ensure Lendy Cowes Week continues to grow and develop as one of the best events of its kind in the world.
"While withdrawing from its role, the council has agreed that CWL will work with Cowes Business Association and Cowes Town Council to ensure the whole town continues to reap the benefits."
CWL Director: "Delighted"
Kate Johnson, commercial and marketing director for CWL, said:
"We're delighted to have taken on responsibility for the Cowes Parade Village.
"As the Isle of Wight Council withdraws from its role on the Parade, this development ensures CWL can manage one of the key shoreside venues during the regatta, continuing to deliver an experience on Cowes Parade that is popular with both competitors and spectators.
"We look forward to continuing to work with local businesses and stakeholders to achieve this."

Article by the Isle of Wight council, in their own words.
Image: Ron Saunders47 under CC BY 2.0

Sunday, 10 June 2018

Does extended hours provide access to GP appointments?

Extended hours giving most patients better access to GPs
Patients on the Isle of Wight have gone from no access to extended GP hours, to 80% being able to book an appointment at weekends or outside the normal surgery hours on weekdays.
waiting room
Patients should be finding it easier to get a doctor's appointment due the extended hours being offered by GPs working in the Isle of Wight Clinical Commissioning Group.
Latest figures from the NHS show that 80% of people registered with a GP can book an appointment on Saturday, Sunday and outside the normal surgery hours on weekdays. In March 2017 no patients has access to all these extended hours.
A further 20% of patients can get to see a doctor on one or more of these extended hours periods.
13 out of 16 offer extended hours
The data was gathered by the NHS from 96% of GP practices in England.
Of the 16 practices that provided data in the area, 13 offer appointments on all extended hours and three do so for one or more of the periods.
The Government says that everyone should have "more convenient access to GP services, including appointments at evening and weekends."
It has set a target date of 1st October for all patients to have access to extended hours.
BMA: Improve core GP services
Dr Richard Vautrey, BMA GP committee chair, said:
"While schemes like this are rolled out and are successful in providing the services they are commissioned to do, we still believe the money invested in such programmes would be better spent improving core GP services.
"We know that patients are frustrated with being unable to get timely appointments during regular working hours, owing to increased demand and unmanageable GP workloads, and therefore it is these services that should be a priority for proper funding."
The national picture
There are 7,153 GP practices in England. Currently, just over 6,000 of them offer some access to appointments on Saturdays, Sundays and during extended weekday hours.
The best record is in Herefordshire, and Rushcliffe in Nottinghamshire where all patients can make appointments in extended hours seven days a week. The poorest record is in South Sefton on Merseyside, where no patients have access to extended hours every day but 37% do receive some extended hours service.
In most instances, practices get together to form hubs or federations that provide the service, so patients may not see their usual doctor.
The most common days for extended hours to be offered on the Isle of Wight are Thursday, Saturday and Sunday. The least common days are Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday.

Article shared by Data Reporter, Gary Rogers, as part of the OnTheWight's collaboration with Press Association and Urbs Media
Image: christinawelsh under CC BY 2.0
Friday, 18th May, 2018 6:24pm
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Sunday, 20 May 2018

Government action to end letting fees

Government action to end letting fees

A new government bill to ban letting fees across England is set to save tenants millions of pounds and make the market fairer and more transparent.

To Let sign





Unexpected letting fees and high deposits can cause a significant affordability problem for tenants and are often not clearly explained – leaving many residents unaware of the true costs of renting a property.
Introduced into Parliament today (2 May 2018), the Tenant Fees Bill will bring an end to costly letting fees and save tenants around £240 million a year, according to government figures.
The Bill will also give tenants greater assurances that the deposit they pay at the start of the tenancy cannot exceed 6 weeks' rent.
Housing Secretary Rt Hon James Brokenshire MP said:
This government is determined to build a housing market fit for the future. Tenants across the country should not be stung by unexpected costs.
That's why we're delivering our promise to ban letting fees, alongside other measures to make renting fairer and more transparent.
The Tenant Fees Bill will stop letting agents from exploiting their position as intermediaries between landlords and tenants and prevent unfair practices such as double charging for the same services.
It will also help to increase competition between agents and landlords, which could help drive lower costs overall and a higher quality of service for tenants.
Other key measures in the Bill, which reflects feedback from a recent public consultation and pre-legislative scrutiny from the Housing, Communities and Local Government Select Committee, include:
  • capping holding deposits at no more than one week's rent. The Bill also sets out the proposed requirements on landlords and agents to return a holding deposit to a tenant
  • capping the amount that can be charged for a change to tenancy at £50 unless the landlord demonstrates that greater costs were incurred
  • creating a financial penalty with a fine of £5,000 for an initial breach of the ban with a criminal offence where a person has been fined or convicted of the same offence within the last 5 years. Financial penalties of up to £30,000 can be issued as an alternative to prosecution
  • requiring Trading Standards to enforce the ban and to make provision for tenants to be able to recover unlawfully charged fees via the First-tier Tribunal
  • prevents landlords from recovering possession of their property via the section 21 Housing Act 1988 procedure until they have repaid any unlawfully charged fees
  • enabling the appointment of a lead enforcement authority in the lettings sector
  • amending the Consumer Rights Act 2015 to specify that the letting agent transparency requirements should apply to property portals such as Rightmove and Zoopla
  • local authorities will be able to retain the money raised through financial penalties with this money reserved for future local housing enforcement
Alongside rent and deposits, agents and landlords will only be permitted to charge tenants fees associated with:
  • a change or early termination of a tenancy when requested by the tenant
  • utilities, communication services, and Council Tax
  • payments arising from a default by the tenant such as replacing a lost key
The new measures are subject to Parliamentary timetables and will be introduced in law next year.
The Tenant Fees Bill builds on government's work this year to protect tenants and landlords through the introduction of new rogue landlord database, banning orders for rogue landlords and property agents as well as a new code of practice to regulate the letting and managing agents sector.

Further information

All proposals relate to England only. The ban on letting fees will apply to assured shorthold tenancies and licenses to occupy in the private rented sector.
A ban on letting fees was announced at Autumn Statement 2016, it was also a commitment in the 2017 Conservative Manifesto.
The Tenant Fees Bill reflects feedback from the recent public consultation, which ran from April to June 2017 and received over 4,700 responses. 58% of respondents (93% of tenants) agreed with government's proposed approach to banning letting fees to tenants with the exception of a holding deposit, refundable tenancy deposit and tenant default fees.
draft Tenant Fees Bill was published by the government on 1 November 2017 and underwent pre-legislative scrutiny by the Housing, Communities and Local Government Select Committee who published their report on 29 March 2018.
The Committee agreed that the Bill has the potential to save tenants in the private rented sector hundreds of pounds as well as making the market more transparent. The government has carefully considered the Select Committee's report and accepted the majority of their recommendations. Read the government response to the Select Committee report.

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Booming Bitterns heard on the Isle of Wight for first time ever

LISTEN: Booming Bitterns heard on the Isle of Wight for the first time ever
The warden of RSPB Brading Marshes says that hearing a booming bittern on a wetland reserve is "like receiving a Michelin star as a restaurant".
American bittern
Britain's loudest bird, the bittern, had never been heard booming on the Isle of Wight before this spring, when its distinctive mating call was heard a RSPB Brading Marshes.
As the volume grew so did the excitement, as the presence of one of the UK's rarest birds is both an indicator that the species is continuing to recover and that RSPB's recently restored wetland is flourishing. For conservationists, attracting breeding bitterns is widely considered one of the best indicators of successful wetland management.
Highly secretive wetland birds 
Bitterns are highly secretive wetland birds and live most of their time within dense stands of reed, making them very difficult to survey. However, scientists count bitterns by listening for the male's foghorn-like booming call, an indicator that a male is searching for a mate.
The UK bittern population had fallen to just 11 booming males in 1997, but thanks to intensive conservation efforts the population is now recovering. However, there are still less than 200 bitterns at fewer than 75 UK sites, making the discovery of male trying to breed on the Isle of Wight even more remarkable as the population grows.
Other new arrivals
Expert habitat management at RSPB Brading Marshes reserve has already seen three new wetland species; marsh harrier, little egret and great crested grebe, successfully breed on the Isle of Wight.
The RSPB hopes that this booming bittern's mating call will be successful in attracting a female, and that they too will successfully breed on the reserve; becoming yet another first for the island.
Hearing a booming bittern on a wetland reserve is like receiving a Michelin star 
Keith Ballard, warden of RSPB Brading Marshes said;
"Hearing a booming bittern on a wetland reserve is like receiving a Michelin star as a restaurant; it's one of the highest marks of success we could hope for. Bitterns have very selective habitat needs, and to attract them you need a truly thriving ecosystem.
"The work we have done to manage the reserve for insects, fish, reptiles and mammals, as well as birds, now means we have one of the most UK's most sensitive species choosing the Isle of Wight as its home."
Staff at the reserve will be monitoring the bird over the coming week.
Hear a booming Bittern
If you're wondering what they sound like, listen out on this short video for the booming

Luke Gaskin shared this great news from RSPB Brading Marshes. Ed
Image: cuatrok77 under CC BY 2.0



Tuesday, 15th May, 2018 9:50am
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