logo
#

Latest news with #Bromsgrove

Bromsgrove residents to be consulted on green belt homes plan
Bromsgrove residents to be consulted on green belt homes plan

BBC News

time9 hours ago

  • Politics
  • BBC News

Bromsgrove residents to be consulted on green belt homes plan

People living in a rural part of the West Midlands are to be invited to take part in a consultation on plans to build thousands of new homes in the District Council voted on Thursday evening to send its Draft Development Strategy, which details plans for 9,000 homes by 2043, out to public authority has to increase its housing provision and create the associated infrastructure in order to meet government consultation will open on 30 June and run for 12 weeks. With about 90% of Bromsgrove designated green belt land, the plans have proved a third of the homes would be built in Frankley, another 2,500 in the town of Bromsgrove itself, and more than 1,200 in hundred would also be built in Alvechurch, Barnt Green, Catshill, Hagley and Stoke Prior. "This consultation is to check the long-term strategy is on the right track," said Kit Taylor, the council's cabinet member for planning."As part of our duty to plan for these government-imposed future housebuilding targets, we are ensuring residents have this early and specially extended 12-week chance to say what they think the planning issues are, in an open and transparent way."Opposition councillors on the Conservative-Independent-run authority had suggested residents should have been presented with a range of potential approaches to the building programme."This is the first sketch of what a plan could look like, drafted from the [more than] 400 sites for building suggested by developers," Taylor said."It's the start of a plan to keep our destiny in our own hands and in ways that we would want - not decided by developers and central government officials." Residents will be able to take part in the consultation on the Bromsgrove District Local Plan's website from next council said in-person events across the district would be announced in the near future. Follow BBC Hereford & Worcester on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.

‘Jeremy Clarkson is telling people the truth about abattoirs – I applaud him'
‘Jeremy Clarkson is telling people the truth about abattoirs – I applaud him'

Telegraph

time9 hours ago

  • General
  • Telegraph

‘Jeremy Clarkson is telling people the truth about abattoirs – I applaud him'

Slaughterman David Partridge can't answer when I ask what his abattoir smells like. 'I can't smell anything,' he explains, suggesting, slightly irritably, that once I get in there, I should tell him. He gives short shrift. He started hosing blood and skinning carcasses aged nine, working here in his teens. The business was first opened by his grandfather Frederick in 1880, then run by his father Charles, although older generations ran another abattoir with a butcher's shop on the nearby high street. So the smell to him is simply undetectable; it's the air he has always breathed, it's part of him – and he doesn't have much patience with newcomers who don't understand that. I've asked because smell is what you brace for, perhaps more than the sight of carcasses, when you walk through the plastic strip curtains into the closed world of a slaughterhouse for the first time. Partridge, 72, has allowed The Telegraph to visit his, adjoining his farm in Bromsgrove, Worcestershire, on a Thursday morning about half an hour after the killing of a 300kg ('dead weight') 18-month-old bullock, and an hour after the killing of eight lambs, which now all sway on hooks, their heads and organs removed. Yet the odour is not the metallic tang of flesh and blood I had expected. It is something more earthy, a faintly warm, manure-like smell of animal. Partridge seems happy that I'm surprised. He is a prickly man, but proud; pride is broadcast unspoken by the crisp, short-sleeved shirt and blue and yellow striped tie under his blue overalls, and his neatly combed grey curls. He brings out photographs of his ancestors, including grandfather Frederick at his gas lamp-lit butcher's shop in the late 19th century. 'It was taken to show off,' Partridge chuckles. 'Look at the fat,' he says, pointing excitedly to the bounty of carcasses. Partridge, whose own son, Andrew, 48, with his dad's blue eyes and quick smile, now runs their butcher's shop, Partridge CE & Son, down the road, nods that he feels the hefty legacy of all this sepia. The expectation to uphold 'the reputation we have always had for good quality'. Now it is at risk of being lost forever. Despite continuing to toil from 6am to 6pm as his dad did, as his grandfather did, at risk of regular injury – he has broken his ribs twice when livestock kicked out – Partridge is continually in his overdraft, assailed by a storm of rising costs. These shoot from all directions: rising utility bills and official Food Standards Agency (FSA) vet and inspector fees; bureaucracy; and chancellor Rachel Reeves' national insurance employer contribution and minimum wage hikes. These come on top of the discontinuation of a small abattoir fund introduced by the last government for capital grants, and an FSA discount scheme for vets' fees for small abattoirs hanging in the balance. A reluctant young workforce also adds to the difficulties; the average age of a slaughterman (slaughterwomen do seem rare) is in the 60s. This is by no means Partridge's individual battle. He's actually a survivor, one of fewer and fewer small abattoirs in Britain (classified as processing under 5,000 animals annually). It has been reported that the number of small abattoirs in England fell from 64 in 2019 to just 49 in 2023, with five closing in 2024. A 2022 FSA report claimed small abattoirs closing at the rate of 10 per cent per year – set to vanish completely by 2030. Partridge says there used to be seven local to him – now he's alone. It took Jeremy Clarkson to bring the issue to public attention in the latest series of Clarkson's Farm. His own local abattoir, Long Compton in Shipston-On-Stour, Warwickshire, just 13 miles from his farm, has closed. This leaves him to travel further to get his livestock slaughtered at greater cost and stress to the animals. He has been forced to liftshare to make it viable. Once there, large abattoirs do not usually accept rare breeds. 'The legislation from the Government makes it virtually impossible to run an abattoir,' a flummoxed Clarkson complained. Partridge is uncharacteristically exuberant when it comes to Clarkson. 'Jeremy is telling people what the truth is and I'm all for it,' he says. ' Countryfile just talks about silly birds… [but] people listen to Jeremy, I applaud him. He tells it as it is.' Another of Clarkson's neighbours, first generation farmer John Weaver, 38, now travels 40 miles to use Partridge's abattoir after the closure of Long Compton. Partridge says some 200 farmers come to him now from as far afield as Ludlow, and he averages the slaughter of 60 to 70 animals a week. Weaver, who has diversified to sell direct from his farm shop, lobbied a collection of local shareholders – including, he says, a vegetarian – to save Long Compton (to no avail, the owner sold elsewhere). He is now exploring further fundraising to try and build a new one. Clarkson came to his first meeting. 'Jeremy's concerns were the same as everyone else, of welfare and viability,' he says. 'He was one of us in the room… it's adding masses of food miles on to his production. 'Everyone is being pushed further away, where is that going to stop? If we don't do something now it will be too late.' He's eloquent, but you can hear the panic. 'You stack up time, mileage, fuel, the margins selling meat directly from your farm are shrinking considerably,' he says. 'We are trying to do anything to secure ourselves, we would have to rethink big style (if the farm shop closed).' David Bean of The Countryside Alliance is equally passionate. He explains that for farmers, selling meat locally is 'one of the ways they're adapting to a harsh business environment to survive'. He says: 'Every time a small abattoir closes, local farmers have to travel further to bring their animals to slaughter and the provenance of their products frays a little more. Many of us are rightly enthusiastic about buying local… but abattoirs are essential to our ability to do that.' Weaver's hope to 'buck the trend' is admirable, but he says his group badly needs the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA) to support them financially. 'They have acknowledged there is an issue and they are willing to assist but they haven't got any funding. It is essential [they offer support],' he says. DEFRA declined to comment specifically. It did acknowledge the closure of the small abattoir fund last September but gave no reason, only agreeing: 'small abattoirs provide a competitive route to market for producers of rare and native breeds and we're committed to working with the meat processing sector in tackling the challenges they face', while reiterating a £5 billion investment in the farming sector. David Barton, the livestock board chairman of the National Farmers Union (NFU) is clear. 'It is important DEFRA recognises their role in the rural economy and ensures the right support and investment is available. As a start, we'd like to see a review into the way official controls are applied, as well as maintaining the discount scheme for regulatory checks for small and medium sized abattoirs.' Back at his abattoir, Partridge badly needs the help. His electricity bill is around £1,200 a month. The fridges are vast, you can feel the cold through the 12ft slate-grey door. Water, of which he uses some 140,000 litres a month (largely to hose down), is £500 to £600 a month. The cost of disposing of waste – such as carcass heads – is around £200 a week. He says they have all risen. Fees for FSA vets and meat hygiene inspectors (who must be present for killings) have increased too, by nearly 18 per cent for vets and over 11 per cent for inspectors. Small abattoirs are charged the same as large operations. 'It costs £600 for four days,' says Partridge. He points out a silent man in a white coat in the slaughterhouse inspecting the carcasses in the hanging room under the deafening whirr of the chillers. 'He's checking the kidneys for infection,' says Partridge, as the vet stamps them. The FSA doesn't shy from these upped costs. Dr James Cooper, the deputy director of Food Policy says: 'While we understand concerns about rising charges, the reality of global vet shortages and wider pressures being felt across the economy mean these checks now cost more to carry out.' Nonetheless, after a meeting in June, FSA chair Susan Jebb acknowledged both that 'smaller businesses face a disproportionately greater cost of regulation' and noted 'the importance of the discount [scheme] to their viability'. She added that the board would 'develop proposals for a potential new scheme' but that the decision would ultimately rest with the government. Partridge has had to install eight CCTV cameras at the cost of around £4,000. But the employer national insurance hike was the final nail. 'To save money we no longer trade in the abattoir or shop on Mondays,' he says. Do they make a profit? He grunts. 'Barely,' he says. 'What saves us is we own the property. If we rented we wouldn't be here.' Whatever your views on the reality of a slaughterhouse's work, it is sad to think of this historic business falling silent. Partridge and his team are passionate about what they do. They work intently in the chill, surrounded by metal pulleys and hooks silently butchering hanging carcasses which gleam under the strip lights. There is a kind of reverence around the vast swaying bullock as it is heaved from the slaughter hall where beasts are shot after being stunned, and lambs and pigs are electrocuted. The butcher's shop, 'carnivore diet' sign outside, is teeming with produce, all meat from the farm with no mileage; marbled, ruby red cuts, plump sausages, homemade pies. Andrew mixes faggots in the kitchen. This could all be at risk if the abattoir closes. They would need to source their meat elsewhere as there isn't an abattoir near enough to travel to. 'And people come to us for quality,' says Partridge. You can tell he's thinking about that black and white photograph. Perhaps his most moving words are spoken about his livestock. 'I really care about my animals,' he explains. 'We don't love them,' he corrects me, 'we respect them.' The animal rights protesters who have shown up at the farm might not agree. Yet he is adamant the animals should not travel long distances for slaughter. 'The stress levels are not good for them,' he says. He grapples to find the words for the business which has been his life. 'I just want to keep it going,' he says. 'I don't want it to finish.'

Stoke Prior residents criticise green belt housebuilding plans
Stoke Prior residents criticise green belt housebuilding plans

BBC News

timea day ago

  • Politics
  • BBC News

Stoke Prior residents criticise green belt housebuilding plans

"We're a countryside village - we're not a town, we're not a city."People living in Bromsgrove, Worcestershire, have spoken out against plans to build 9,000 new homes in the coming years, many of which will go on green belt land - which makes up 90% of the are due to meet on Thursday to discuss the blueprint for the new homes, which has been drawn up to meet government housebuilding Bright, a parish councillor in Stoke Prior, said plans to build 500 homes in the village, on the Ryelands Farm site, were "ridiculous". "The infrastructure that we have in this village is just not going to take it at obviously the school... I couldn't get my children in there, so they've had to go to Hanbury First School [three miles away], which is now at its capacity as well."Mr Bright added that he was also concerned about the ability of the roads to handle the extra traffic. In order to meet government housebuilding targets, Bromsgrove district council has put forward a draft plan of potential sites for more than 9,000 houses, for between now and the criticism from residents - as well as Liberal Democrat councillors, the council's Tory-Independent administration warned of the risk of Whitehall intervention if the draft is not put out to public consultation for 12 weeks from 30 June."I absolutely accept that we need to build more houses, but concreting fields is not the answer," said Dr David Nicholl, the Lib Dem councillor for Nicholl would rather see a range of options for building presented to residents."[Stoke Prior] will no longer be a village, it'll be a town," he Tolley's home backs directly onto Ryelands Farm."Every morning I wake up, I open my curtains, you've got people walking their dogs, you've got people chatting," she said. "Cows come up to the fence."Ms Tolley said some of her neighbours had already talked about moving away, and she struggled to get GP appointments at the local surgery."How are we supposed to take on another 500 houses worth of people?" she asked. "We all know that houses do need to be built," said Mr Bright. "But our infrastructure here cannot handle it."And actually, Bromsgrove as a whole can't handle the extra houses that are already being built now, down on Whitford Road, Perryfields Road. It can't handle it."So, a village taking another 500 houses - it'll just be absolute carnage."Besides Stoke Prior, the plans would also see 1,800 homes built to the northeast of Bromsgrove itself, 1,200 in Wythall, 600 in Catshill and 500 in both Alvechurch and Hagley. Follow BBC Hereford & Worcester on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X, and Instagram.

Michelin-trained chef creates ‘wild' new ice cream flavour – & insists odd combo ‘works' – would YOU try it?
Michelin-trained chef creates ‘wild' new ice cream flavour – & insists odd combo ‘works' – would YOU try it?

The Sun

time13-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Sun

Michelin-trained chef creates ‘wild' new ice cream flavour – & insists odd combo ‘works' – would YOU try it?

A RISING kitchen star has created a potato ice cream — topped with bits of bacon. Michelin -trained Poppy O'Toole, 31, is touting the sweet-meets-savoury version and insists: 'It works!' 2 2 The self-titled 'Potato Queen' of the internet mixes Maris Piper spuds with condensed milk, double cream, vanilla and salt to make the no-churn treat. She suggests adding pieces of maple bacon or crispy potato sticks to complete the offering. Poppy, who has 5.5 million internet followers, said: 'People might know me for my roasties, but now it's time for potato-based desserts to enter the chat. 'Sounds a bit wild, I know — but trust me, it works. I love showing how everyday ingredients can surprise you.' Poppy, of Bromsgrove, Worcs, added: 'Maris Pipers give it that velvety, creamy texture while keeping the sweetness in check, and topped with a bit of maple bacon or potato sticks . . . you're in summery dessert heaven.' Savoury ice creams are gaining popularity, with chefs experimenting with ingredients such as olive oil, miso and beetroot in sweet and salty pairings. Poppy has linked up with Ocado to market hers. A spokesman said the recipe showed un­usual flavour combinations can create 'bold, surprising takes on everyday classics'. It added: 'It's fun, unexpected, easy to make and delicious.' 3 ingredients are all you need to whip up an Italian showstopper

Bromsgrove man's daily 5K runs to help construction workers talk
Bromsgrove man's daily 5K runs to help construction workers talk

BBC News

time28-05-2025

  • General
  • BBC News

Bromsgrove man's daily 5K runs to help construction workers talk

A Bromsgrove man has been running 5km every day in May to raise awareness of mental health issues in the construction Baker is raising funds for the Project 7,000 - The Lost City campaign, which is raising awareness of the high rate of suicide in the construction project's name is based on the premise that the 7,000 construction workers who have taken their own lives over the past decade could have built a Baker said he had struggled with mental health issues and addiction, particularly during the pandemic, but working in construction had saved him, and he wanted to send a message to other men that it's "OK to talk". 'It can get easier' Four weeks into the challenge, Mr Baker said his legs were "a little bit sore".He said: "I've struggled massively with my own poor mental health, specifically through Covid. I struggled with addiction."He said working in the building industry helped him to recover, adding: "I wasn't actually in construction at the time, and I believe construction has actually saved me and had the opposite effect."Mr Baker said it was important to break down the stigma about talking, adding: "It's okay to talk and do you know what – when you do talk about your problems and you open up, it can get easier for you." Mr Baker said there was support available for people, including The Band of Builders, the national construction charity, which offers a 24/7 support helpline via text. He said Construction Sport , a charity set up to offer sporting opportunities across the industry, also ran events to help organisation creates opportunities for construction workers to have downtime from tools, laptops and stress, and address their mental Baker said he had received a huge amount of support for his challenge, with people sending messages of encouragement and "talking and opening up about the way that they potentially felt".The runner has raised nearly £1,600 and is aiming to get to £2,000 before the end of the month. If you have been affected by this story or would like support then you can find organisations which offer help and information at the BBC Action Line. Follow BBC Hereford & Worcester on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store