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Father calls for gas heater ban following son's death

Father calls for gas heater ban following son's death

BBC News16-06-2025

A father has called for a ban on the sale of portable gas heaters, 10 years after his son died from carbon monoxide poisoning.Tom Hill, 18, died in 2015 at a holiday cottage near Tarfside in Scotland, when a gas heater malfunctioned in the bathroom. He had been on holiday with his girlfriend's family at the time, who tried desperately to revive him.Tom's father Jerry, who lives in Salisbury, said: "We think that some thought should be given to whether those [gas heaters] should be legal or not."A Department of Business and Trade spokesperson said manufacturers "are required by law to place only safe gas heaters on the market".
An inquest into Tom's death was held earlier this month, with the coroner recording a conclusion of accidental death. He added that he would prepare a preventing future deaths report about the lack of warnings on liquid petroleum gas (LPG) heaters.Mr Hill, who is also supporting a campaign for greater clarity over what you should do if a carbon monoxide alarm goes off, said there were a number of issues that contributed to his son's death."The portable gas heater, which shouldn't have been in the bathroom, had a ceramic element, which had a crack in it," he said."When the fire was lit it would burn behind the element and (it caused) a catastrophic malfunction that released a lethal amount of carbon monoxide."He added that with the carbon monoxide alarm in the kitchen, it failed to go off because the door to the bathroom was shut.
The inquest, which was held in Winchester, heard Tom was in the locked bathroom when those he was staying with were unable to get a response from him. They broke open the door and found him collapsed by the bath. Extensive efforts were made to revive Mr Hill but he was pronounced dead on the way to hospital.Owners of the cottage, Burghill Farms and Piers Le Cheminant, who sub-let the property to holidaymakers, were prosecuted for health and safety breaches in 2021, with the farm being fined £120,000 and Le Cheminant being fined £2,000.The Hill family have been working with the charity CO-Gas Safety to raise awareness of the dangers posed by the gas."In large amounts it can kill you, but in small amounts, it can make you very ill and it causes permanent damage," said Mr Hill.He added that he would like to see regulation of portable gas heaters and better safety warnings."You can buy them anywhere, and you can basically install them yourself in your front room. Normally you'd have to get a gas fitter to install it," he said."They're not regulated in any way and they vent directly into the room."If an alarm sounds in a rental property, there's nothing to tell people what to do."
Stephanie Trotter, president of the CO-Gas Safety charity which is supporting the family, also called for the devices to be banned and for a public safety information campaign to be held on the dangers of carbon monoxide.A Department of Business and Trade spokesperson said they "extend every sympathy to Tom's family and any injury or death from carbon monoxide is a terrible tragedy for those affected".They added: "Manufacturers are required by law to place only safe gas heaters on the market and to include clear instructions on how they should be used."

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Boy racers putting lives at risk, Bury St Edmunds residents say
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  • BBC News

Boy racers putting lives at risk, Bury St Edmunds residents say

Residents said boy racers were forcing homeowners out of the area and putting lives at Police dispersed a group of 20 drivers who had congregated at the Sybil Andrews Academy car park in Bury St Edmunds last week after reports of anti-social behaviour. The force handed out fines, seized a car and called the operation a success, but local people said they remained concerned as it had been a serious problem for some West said there was a risk of a fatality: "Most definitely, people are walking with their children, their dogs. It is really, really dangerous." The 72-year-old said he regularly saw cars "drifting" around the nearby roundabouts and motorcyclists "speeding up and down doing wheelies".He likened the noise to fighter aircraft going by his house."These people need to be taken off the road and have their vehicles seized – if that was to happen more often it would stop this in its tracks," he said. Carl Hui, 52, said he regularly heard cars being revved and "doing doughnuts" near his home."They are very selfish and they are just rather deluded - they don't know how to behave like decent human beings."Adi Maddali, 38, who lives with his partner and two young children, has decided to leave the area after seven years."When we go on family walks, we are constantly having to look around and be careful, despite being on the pavement," he said."We are hoping to move out of here in the next month to a more quiet area - we've decided enough is enough and it's time to go." Jane Gunsman, 68, meanwhile, said troublemaking teenagers were proving just as problematic as the boy racers and she had also considered moving out."A neighbour recently had a big tub of cream cheese thrown across her door, so it's very upsetting because it used to be a really nice area," she said."It has been spoilt by children, teenagers and cars at night - there is someone who regularly comes past of a night blowing their horn." Police officers can disperse large groups of drivers using Public Space Protection Orders and have the powers to seize can also issue Traffic Offence Reports for more minor traffic violations and demand personal details if they reasonably believe someone has engaged in anti-social Police believes its latest action in Bury St Edmunds will show this type of behaviour is not chair of the Morton Hall Residents' Association Andy McGowan thinks there are wider issues that need looking said: "I think we lack things for teenagers to do and if young people haven't got places to go and things to do, then the risk of them making decisions they shouldn't increases." Suffolk Police said officers were working with the nearby school and gym to "not only look at disruption and enforcement, but prevention work".A spokesperson for Sybil Andrews Academy said: "We understand the concern of local residents about the anti-social activity in our school car park. "We welcome the recent actions of the police." Follow Suffolk news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.

Chef Aldo Zilli's mother-in-law says e-bike crash ruined her life
Chef Aldo Zilli's mother-in-law says e-bike crash ruined her life

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time2 hours ago

  • BBC News

Chef Aldo Zilli's mother-in-law says e-bike crash ruined her life

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But responsibility for managing dockless e-bikes in London such as Lime does not rest with the mayor of London, or any devolved mayor in England. Some local councils have limited powers to manage designated no-parking zones and work with operators through voluntary agreements, but they can not regulate schemes; that falls to the Department of Transport.A spokesperson for the mayor of London said: "The mayor and Transport for London continue to lobby government about the dangers of unregulated e-bikes."The government has announced plans to provide cities with the powers to manage dockless e-bikes, and improved safety should be at the centre of better regulation in the future." 'Tiny minority' The government is looking at ways of updating the decades-old cycling legislation, with new offences of causing death or serious injury by dangerous cycling to be debated soon in the forthcoming Crime and Policing Bill. Mandatory sentences of five years for serious injury and life in prison for causing death are being proposed for those found guilty.A Department for Transport spokesperson told the BBC: "Dangerous cycling is completely unacceptable, and the safety of our roads is a key priority for this government."That's why the government is proposing new offences and penalties for dangerous cycling, updating legislation that is over 160 years old, to ensure that the tiny minority who recklessly disregard others face the full force of the law." 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Jaison Patel, a trauma and orthopaedic surgeon at the Royal London Hospital, said he saw a lot of patients injured from the powered bikes. "There's definitely been a spike, we see quite frequently that people have e-bike injuries," he Patel added injuries were more severe when compared with conventional bikes. "We're seeing things like broken collar bones, arm fractures, wrist fractures as people are falling awkwardly on their sides. We're also seeing head injuries - that's a life-changing injury for sure."He added the majority of patients were users of e-bikes, rather than pedestrians. Despite the trauma they cause, e-bikes were "good for London" Mr Patel added, but said they needed better regulations to make them safer. He also said more needed to be done to maintain the bikes as he has had patients whose brakes had failed while others have used bikes where the wheels had not been Patel added that the British Orthopaedic association had begun collecting data from hospitals to monitor injuries from e-bikes, with a view to the data being used to inform regulations around e-bike use. 'Rare' incidents Maureen and the Zilli family have found getting in touch with the right department at Lime to be a frustrating experience. Despite repeated attempts to contact Lime for information, the Metropolitan Police has also been unable to establish who was riding the bike at the time. A Metropolitan Police spokesperson said officers were called to the incident in Molesworth Road at 11:15 BST on 2 said the pedestrian suffered "life-changing injuries" but "after extensive inquiries there was insufficient evidence to progress the case, and the investigation was filed".A Lime spokesperson told the BBC that they were "deeply shocked and saddened" and that their thoughts were with the individual involved and her loved ones."The majority of Lime riders use our service responsibly and incidents like this are rare, however individual rider behaviour is not always within our control."The spokesperson added: "Lime takes incidents of this nature very seriously and has well-established systems to help us work closely with the police. "In this case, the incident was not reported via our dedicated law enforcement reporting portal, which exists to help us share customer data with the police in a way that's compliant with UK law. "We will continue to work alongside law enforcement bodies in London to ensure these types of incidents are dealt with quickly and appropriately." For Maureen, now 84, it will be a long road back to said she used to be a social butterfly, regularly out meeting friends and going to fitness classes, but now she is mainly confined to moving around slowly in the downstairs of her home."It's made me slow down. I used to go out on the buses and trains but I can't do that now."I'm just trying to get my confidence back."

Channel Seven star Alissa Ballin reveals her horrific encounter with a knife-wielding man while doing a live cross - and opens up about her marriage to a footy great
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Daily Mail​

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Channel Seven star Alissa Ballin reveals her horrific encounter with a knife-wielding man while doing a live cross - and opens up about her marriage to a footy great

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