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Boy dies after crash with motorbike carrying three

by Charles June 8, 2025
written by Charles

A 15-year-old boy has died and three people have been arrested after a collision between a motorbike and a car in Redditch.

Police said there had been three people on the motorbike when it collided with a white BMW on Park Farm Industrial Estate, Studley Road, at about 11:35 BST on Monday.

The boy had been taken to hospital in a critical condition but later died, West Mercia Police said.

A boy, 15, has been arrested on suspicion of causing death by dangerous driving and aggravated taking of a vehicle without consent. A man, 50, was also arrested on suspicion of causing death by careless driving and an 18-year-old man on suspicion of aggravated taking of a vehicle without consent.

Det Sgt Liam Bennett from the force's serious collision investigation unit said officers were "working hard to understand what happened".

"We're keen to hear from anyone who was in the area at the time and saw or may have dashcam footage of either the collision itself or the motorbike or car in the minutes before the collision," he added.

"The motorbike had three people on, which is unusual, so I hope this will help to jog people's memories."

June 8, 2025 0 comments
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Business

Region to get 10,000 new electric vehicle chargers

by Faith June 2, 2025
written by Faith

Ten thousand new charging points for electric vehicles are to be installed in the West Midlands, the region's mayor has said.

Mayor Richard Parker said the move would help with "reducing pollution and tackling the climate emergency head-on".

He added that the West Midlands was "the beating heart of the UK car industry" and it should be at the forefront of "a new era of electrification".

The West Midlands Combined Authority (WMCA), which is led by Parker, said there were currently more than 4,000 publicly accessible charging points on the region's road network.

The WMCA covers 18 councils in the West Midlands, including city councils in Birmingham, Coventry and Wolverhampton.

The combined authority said it would work with local councils to install the new chargers within a maximum timeframe of four years.

Ultra-fast charging stations

The initiative is due to include almost 200 charging points at nine ultra-fast filling stations, where drivers can charge their vehicles with up to 100 miles of range in less than 15 minutes.

The WMCA said the mayor had secured part of the funding for the initiative from the national government's fund for local electric vehicle infrastructure.

It added that the West Midlands currently had the fifth highest number of charging points in all English regions outside London.

Parker said earlier this month that the region was "leading the way" on green public transport, after a fleet of new electric double decker buses was unveiled.

National Express West Midlands now operates 329 electric buses in the region, about a quarter of the fleet.

June 2, 2025 0 comments
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Business

Council defends Hippodrome demolition decision

by Evan May 27, 2025
written by Evan

Derby City Council has defended its decision to use emergency powers to begin demolition work at a historical former theatre over "public safety" fears.

Contractors started pulling down parts of the Hippodrome site in Green Lane on Sunday following a fire on Friday.

It was the latest in a series of recent fires at the site and on Monday, Derbyshire Fire and Rescue Service confirmed it was started deliberately.

The decision to start demolition work at the Grade II listed site has drawn criticism but the city council said it had a "responsibility to keep people safe".

Spotted Alvaston – Original
The fire was the latest of many at the derelict site over the years

The old theatre building had been used as a bingo hall before it shut in 2007.

In February, the Derbyshire Historic Buildings Trust said it hoped to compulsory purchase the site with ambitions to bring it back into use as a music venue.

But now the council has now said it does not know if any of the building can be saved.

The Theatres Trust (TTT), the national advisory body for theatres, said it had recently awarded a grant to the historic buildings trust to progress this work, and was "devastated" by the demolition work.

Its chief executive officer Joshua McTaggart said: "Derby Hippodrome had an irreplaceable social and cultural heritage, much of which is now likely to be sadly lost for the future generations of Derby residents.

"But this is about more than just heritage.

"Until this recent series of fires, there was still a realistic opportunity to save parts of the building and bring it back into use as an independent music venue."

Mr Taggart added the trust was in touch with the council and Historic England to ascertain what remained of the building and next steps.

'Death risk'

Ashley Waterhouse, chair of the Derby Civic Society called the demolition "a great shame".

But the council's cabinet member for street pride and public safety Ndukwe Onuoha has defended the decision.

He told the BBC: "I understand there will be people who are upset because it's a Grade II listed building but ultimately, when you compare that with a possible loss of life if that building comes to collapse whilst people are walking near it or around – then we would be having a different conversation wouldn't we?

"At the end of the day we do have a responsibility to keep residents safe."

Supplied
The building has been used as a theatre, cinema and bingo hall

The roof of the building next to Macklin Street was removed on Sunday and a wall was demolished on Crompton Street, the council said.

On Monday, the authority said the work involved "levelling the basement" so machines could be brought further into the site.

A spokesperson said: "The fire at the Hippodrome on Friday caused severe damage and the structure and integrity of the building is at risk.

"There is now imminent danger to the safety of the public, so emergency planning powers have been used to begin demolition work.

"Derbyshire Building Control Partnership visited the site on Friday and Saturday and have handed it to Cheshire Demolition Controllers to make it safe.

"This work will continue until the building no longer poses a threat to public safety. Currently, we don't know how much, if any, of the building can be saved."

Members of the public have been asked to stay away from the site while the work is ongoing.

The car park on Crompton Street has now partially reopened and Macklin Street remains closed.

Road closures on Green Lane remain in place except for access, the council added.

May 27, 2025 0 comments
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Business

Disposable vape use falling in UK ahead of ban

by Nathan May 26, 2025
written by Nathan

The popularity of disposable e-cigarettes or vapes has fallen ahead of a UK-wide ban on their sale on 1 June, a study suggests.

The percentage of people aged 16-24 who mainly use disposable vapes has dropped by nearly half in the last year from 63% to 35%, University College London (UCL) researchers say.

But researchers believe vape users are switching to refillable and rechargeable vapes in anticipation of the ban – instead of giving up.

As a result they warn the ban may only have a "limited impact" on vaping rates as it found vaping in general stalled between January 2024 and 2025 in all adults over 16 after several years of significant growth.

Getty Images
Refillable vapes (top) differ from single use vapes (bottom) as they can be recharged and refilled with vape liquid.

The UK government ban on disposable and single-use vapes is aimed at stopping littering as, in most cases, the vapes cannot be recycled and often end up in landfill or pollute natural environments.

The ban is also aimed at tackling rising rates of youth vaping and protecting children from harm.

GP Dr Helen Wall told BBC Breakfast that NHS advice is "very clear" that vaping should be used as a means to stop smoking.

"But for people who have never smoked, and for young people particularly, to turn to vaping can be quite detrimental," she said.

"Our young people are becoming quite addicted. It's affecting their concentration, they're becoming agitated, their capacity to learn is affected, their developing brain can be affected."

The UCL study looked at survey data on vaping habits in England, Wales and Scotland both before and after the ban was announced.

The study used data from the Smoking Toolkit Study, which collected data on 88,611 people aged 16 and over.

Before the ban, between January 2022 and January 2024, vaping among those aged 16 and over went up from 8.9% to 13.5%.

In young adults aged 16-24, usage increased more sharply, from 17% to 26.5%.

After the ban was announced, researchers found a decline in the number of vapers mainly using disposable e-cigarettes – in all age groups and particularly among 16-24 year olds.

The study only asked vape users about their main choice of device.

Dr Sarah Jackson, who works for the UCL Tobacco and Alcohol Research Group and is the lead author of the survey, tells the BBC she thinks "more people are turning to refillable, reusable devices" rather than stopping vaping altogether.

"We often see people change their behaviour in response to impending policy changes before they come into action," she adds.

Disposable vapes are single-use devices, which come pre-filled with vape liquid, whereas refillable and rechargeable (reusable) devices have a longer shelf-life and are often a cheaper way to vape in the long-term.

A reusable vape has vape liquid that can be refilled and a battery that can be recharged.

May 26, 2025 0 comments
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Business

'Something different in the air' as hushed Rome reckons with Pope's death

by Noah May 17, 2025
written by Noah

The seat at the Vatican had been vacant for two days when a group of grey-clad nuns stood on St Peter's Square and started to sing.

Softly at first then louder, as if to encourage those who joined in timidly, the nuns broke into Ave Maria.

Every so often they shuffled a few inches forward, following the queue for Pope Francis's lying in state. And all the while they sang, their faces turned to St Peter's Basilica to their left, their white veils glistening under their large sun hats.

It was a fitting sight for an extraordinary week in which Rome seemed to regain its reputation as the "capital of the world" – and St Peter's Square as the centre of the Catholic universe.

There is mourning, but also recognition that the Pope, who lived to 88, died quickly and peacefully. "At least he didn't suffer," many say. Yet this isn't the time for celebration either – that will have to wait until after the funeral, when the conclave will spark the usual frenzy of excitement, intrigue and inevitable speculation.

Before then, in Rome these in-between days have taken on a flavour of their own.

AP
Tens of thousands of people have queued to see Pope Francis's open coffin

Elena, a Romanian woman in her 50s, said she had noticed a "pensive" atmosphere in the city. "There are big crowds around but I have felt everything was a bit quieter, there is something different in the air," she told the BBC, guessing that the Pope's death was encouraging people to "look inside" more.

She added that everyone she spoke to this week – even non-believers – had been marked by his death somehow.

Her friend Lina agreed. She was standing behind the counter of her tobacconist shop in Borgo Pio, a quiet cobblestoned street lined with buildings in earthy tones and flower boxes near the Vatican. "It's neither a week of tragedy nor one of celebration," she said. "It's a chance for people to think, to reflect, and I think that's much needed."

Nearby, people slowly ambled down Via della Conciliazione – the pedestrian street that connects Italy and the Vatican city state, and the same one the Pope's coffin will travel down on Saturday as he reaches his final place of rest in the basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore.

The 4th Century church is only located around 4km away from St Peter's, but the journey there is set to take around two hours as the car carrying the Pope's coffin will move at walking pace to allow people lining the streets to see it and say their goodbyes, the Vatican said earlier this week.

Two plain-clothed police officers acknowledged that the neighbourhood was much busier than usual, but that it "felt like a Saturday," and that people had been very relaxed.

Security operation in full swing

Still, the signs of the huge security operation mounted by the Vatican and Italian authorities were everywhere.

On Wednesday, a soldier stood outside a religious goods shop brandishing a hefty bazooka-like anti-drone device. Asked whether the contraption could, for instance, disrupt drone frequencies and force them to return to their bases, he replied mysteriously: "Maybe, among other things."

EPA
Soldiers holding anti-drone devices mingled among the crowds

Next to him, a fellow soldier scanned the sky with binoculars. On the day of the funeral, they will be joined by thousands of security personnel from various branches of the police and armed forces, as well as river patrol units, bomb-sniffing dogs and rooftop snipers.

American student Caislyn, who was sat on a bench sketching the dome of St Peter's, said she was "shocked" at how safe she felt despite the number of people around.

The 21-year-old attributed that to the fact that "people are here to pay their respects to Francis, and to enjoy this beautiful city." She called the atmosphere "bittersweet," but said she saw the funeral as a "celebration of life".

"He gave such a great example to the world," she reminisced.

As Caislyn recalled Francis' commitment to the poorest of society, many others referenced his last-known trip outside the Vatican on Maundy Thursday, when he visited prisoners at the Regina Coeli jail, as he had done many times before.

'He never forgot where he was from'

"He was close to the people," Elena said fondly, adding that she understood why he "couldn't stay away" from helping those worst off.

"I work as a volunteer for homeless people and every time I try to stop, something pulls me back. Why? Because I lived like them for three months, because I come from poverty too. It's not hard for me to feel close to them," she said.

"And I think it was the same for Francis," she said, mentioning comments by Francis's sister Maria Elena who told Italian media last month that she and her siblings had grown up in poverty in Argentina.

Elena added: "He never forgot where he was from. Even when he got to the highest role, he never let it change him."

For Belgian tourist Dirk, whose wife was queuing to see the Pope lying in state in the basilica, the sombre atmosphere since the Pope's death is something that "draws people in, it's something they want to be a part of".

"It might just be temporary, it'll probably be over by Monday," he laughed.

  • IN PICTURES: Symbolism on show as Pope lies in open coffin
  • PROFILE: Acting head of the Vatican Cardinal Kevin Farrell
  • EXPLAINER: A visual guide to Pope Francis's funeral
  • WATCH: How previous Popes were laid to rest
  • Are you in Rome for the Pope's funeral? Get in touch.

Dryly, he remarked on the number of homeless – and often disabled – people around the Vatican. "I saw a woman who was walking almost bent over, and people in clergy clothes completely ignored her, in fact they looked in the other direction so they wouldn't have to be confronted with it," he said.

"So it remains shocking, the wealth of these churches around us and the poverty of the people sleeping on their doorsteps." He shook his head. "The contrast is jarring to me."

NurPhoto via Getty Images
A nun holds a picture of Pope Francis as the faithful gather for Rosary prayers in honour of Pope Francis at St. Peter's Square

Katleho – an upbeat young woman from Lesotho – told the BBC that she felt "special, happy" when she received Pope Francis's Easter blessing on the day before he died, when he appeared on St Peter's balcony. "I thought: I'm a real Catholic now!," she laughed.

She said she felt "so privileged to be joining a multitude of people" who were paying their respects to Pope Francis this week. "It's a real shared experience, it's so wonderful," she said, skipping off to catch up with the rest of her group.

For three days this week, tens of thousands of people streamed into St Peter's to bid their last farewell to the Argentinian Pope who – as he put it when he was elected – had come "from the end of the world".

Father Ramez Twal, from Jerusalem, was the last in line in the queue to see Pope Francis's body.

"It's amazing that we as a group from the Holy Land get to say the last goodbye for our late Pope Francis," he said.

"For us, it's a really emotional moment to say thank you to him for being with us during this terrible time in the Holy Land.

"He means a lot to me, because he gave us a spiritual way of thinking, he had a love he gave for all, and he taught us to respect each other. We will miss him."

As they entered the basilica after hours of queuing, visitors and pilgrims proceeded towards Francis's body, lying in a casket by the high altar built over the tomb of St Peter, the Catholic Church's first pope. Some brandished selfie sticks, others clutched their rosaries or their children's hands. All were very quiet.

NurPhoto via Getty Images
The eyes of the world are centred on Rome

Outside, under the warm April sunshine, groups of joyous African pilgrims in flashy head wraps ate gelato by the Bernini fountain, seagulls circling overhead.

Retired Californian couples fanned themselves under the square's colonnades, and journalists from around the world shouted questions in shaky Italian at any cardinal who looked like they may have a vote in the upcoming conclave.

Holding his phone out to show a caller back home his surroundings, a Brazilian priest spun on himself, laughing.

May 17, 2025 0 comments
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Business

Sports clubs hope to host festivals at stadium

by Ella April 24, 2025
written by Ella

A football and rugby stadium may host regular live music events over several days if the clubs are successful in securing planning permission.

Melksham Town Football Club and Melksham Rugby Club hope to host music events at Oakfield Stadium lasting between one and four days, with a build and break phase before and after each event.

The clubs want permission to erect temporary structures including stages, bars and marquees, with the hope of hosting the Wiltshire Throwback Festival as its first live music event on 20 and 21 June.

It is anticipated the festival will attract up to 3,000 people per day, with the line-up including Boney M's Liz Mitchell, So Solid Crew, and Tinchy Stryder.

April 24, 2025 0 comments
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Business

Hospice charity facing £1m hole in finances

by Vanessa April 19, 2025
written by Vanessa

A hospice is facing a deficit of more than £1m this year.

St Oswald's Hospice chief executive Steph Edusei said escalating costs, including a rise in employers' national insurance contributions, had left the charity with a "very big" financial shortfall.

She told Newcastle City Council's health scrutiny committee that the Gosforth-based organisation had reserves it could fall back on, but could not sustain this position "year on year".

She also said inflation rate hikes, keeping pace with NHS pay rises and national minimum wage increases had also pushed up St Oswald's bills.

The hospice has been providing short breaks and end-of-life care for babies and children in Northumberland, Tyneside, Sunderland and County Durham since 2003.

It opened as a result of a fundraising campaign, the Jigsaw Appeal, which began in 1999.

Ms Edusei also criticised the abolition of NHS England, saying the shifting sands within the nation's healthcare system was a "nightmare", according to the Local Democracy Reporting Service.

She said: "We are okay because we have some reserves, but we are only okay for a few years.

"We cannot maintain that kind of position year on year."

Committee chair Wendy Taylor called it "utterly ridiculous" that NHS funding did not fully cover hospices' costs.

The Liberal Democrat said it was "crazy situation" at a time when health chiefs were trying to stop unnecessary trips to A&E.

The government announced in March that it would be abolishing the "arms-length" body NHS England and was taking management into the Department of Health and Social Care.

Ms Edusei called the decision an "absolute nightmare" and said that repeated reorganisations had already caused disruption to attempts to improve services and plan for the future.

St Oswald's was awarded £252,524 as part of a £25m release of government funding in February for hospice upgrades and refurbishment.

Care minister Stephen Kinnock called it the "largest investment in a generation to help transform hospice facilities across England".

April 19, 2025 0 comments
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Business

Homeless veterans 'get lives back in the kitchen'

by Rebecca April 5, 2025
written by Rebecca

An army veteran has said a cookery session put on to teach life skills have given men "their life and independence back".

Those living in Imjin House in Gloucester, a facility for homeless veterans, are learning critical life skills in a joint partnership with two other charities in the city.

Roy Smith, a veteran and Imjin House resident, worked in logistics when he was in the army but had previously worked as a chef.

He said the session helps the men "in a lot of ways – more than people realise".

Wiggly, a Gloucester-based charity that provides inclusive cookery tuition has partnered with Alabare, a charity that helps people overcome the barriers of homelessness and mental health to put on the sessions.

Veterans get the chance to prepare healthy breakfast options using tinned items commonly found in their pantries.

Mr Smith said: "The cooking today – its important because there's some people who don't know how to cook.

"They get some of their life back, they get some of their independence back."

Mr Smith said many of the veterans had "struggled" to get a hot meal in the past.

"Without stuff like this people would be sat in their rooms doing nothing or not interacting with people," he added.

"It's really important for the guys because sometimes they don't have the interaction and they're out of their comfort zone."

April 5, 2025 0 comments
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Business

Harvard agrees to transfer photos of enslaved people to black history museum

by Claire March 31, 2025
written by Claire

Harvard University has agreed to hand over a set of historic photos believed to be among the earliest depicting enslaved people in the United States.

The agreement ends a long legal battle between the institution and Tamara Lanier, an author from Connecticut who argues she is a descendant of two people shown in the photos.

The images, taken in 1850, will be transferred to the International African American Museum in South Carolina, where the people shown in the photos were enslaved.

Harvard said it had always hoped the photos would be given to another museum. Ms Lanier said she was "ecstatic" with the result.

The images are daguerreotypes, a very early form of modern-day photographs and were taken 15 years before the 13th Amendment to the US Constitution abolished slavery.

The photos were rediscovered in storage at Harvard's Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology in 1976.

The 15 images feature people identified by the Peabody Museum as Alfred, Delia, Drana, Fassena, Jack, Jem, and Renty. According to Ms Lanier, the settlement would mean the transfer of all the images not just the ones about Renty and Delia.

The photos were commissioned by Harvard professor and zoologist Louis Agassiz as part of discredited research to prove the superiority of white people. He espoused polygenism, a now debunked belief that human races evolved separately.

The case formed part of public debate around how America's universities should respond to their historic links to slavery. In 2016, Harvard Law School agreed to change a shield that was based on the crest of an 18th Century slaveholder.

Harvard did not comment on the details of the settlement but a university spokesperson said it "has long been eager to place the Zealy Daguerreotypes with another museum or other public institution to put them in the appropriate context and increase access to them for all Americans."

The spokesperson added that Ms Lanier's "claim to ownership of the daguerreotypes created a complex situation, especially because Harvard has not been able to confirm that Ms Lanier is related to the individuals in the daguerreotypes."

Getty Images
One of the images depicts Renty with his daughter Delia

Ms Lanier sued Harvard in 2019, arguing the images were taken without consent and accusing the university of profiting from them through large licensing fees.

In 2022, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court upheld an earlier ruling that dismissed Ms Lanier's claim to ownership. She was, however, allowed to claim damages for emotional distress. It ruled Harvard had "complicity" in the "horrific actions" surrounding the creation of the images.

"Harvard's present obligations cannot be divorced from its past abuses," it added.

Ms Lanier told the BBC, she was "ecstatic" about the settlement. "I have always known first of all that I could never care for the daguerreotypes at the level they would require," she said.

"There are so many ties that bind Renty and Delia and the other enslaved people to that particular part of South Carolina that to repatriate them there would be like a homecoming ceremony."

The South Carolina museum helped Ms Lanier with her genealogy claims but was not involved in the legal battle. Its president said they intend to hold and display the images "in context with truth and empathy."

"These are not gentle images and the story behind how they came to be is even more difficult to hear," Tonya Matthews told the BBC.

"So to be in a space that has already created room for conversations about the inhumanity of slavery and enslavement and how far those implications echo even to today is what we do and it's our mission."

March 31, 2025 0 comments
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Business

Cancer survivor's inspirational running club

by Matthew March 31, 2025
written by Matthew

A breast cancer survivor who found staying active helped her recovery has launched an inclusive running group for others with long-term illnesses.

Michelle Hewitt, 45, co-founded Worlingham RoadRunnerz, near Beccles, Suffolk, in April 2020 before her own cancer diagnosis last year.

She revealed being active and outdoors was important for her cancer journey, so she then set up the Together We Run squad within the club for others going through similar battles.

Ms Hewitt said it had been "amazing" to see the friendships forming between group members and it showed "anyone can run".

Jonny Michell/ BBC
Michelle Hewitt spends the session doing running and walking intervals with other people battling illness and mobility issues

"What really helped me get through my diagnosis was being active," she explained.

"Running when I could, walking when I couldn't run. Being outside, with the group just really helped.

"This group has got an aim for anyone who is going through diagnosis, cancer or long term illness to help them get out and feel the benefits.

"I love seeing the friendships and the community that is made."

Jonny Michell/ BBC
The group has the support of the Sunday Slow group, which is designed for people taking their first strides in running

'Quash the stigma'

Ms Hewitt underwent surgery for her breast cancer before getting the all-clear, and added that the mental benefits of being active were "so important to me".

The Together We Run group forms part of the club's Slow Sunday sessions with group members enjoying both running and walking intervals.

"We have a lady going through treatment, another with a tumour and another with a hip problem," Ms Hewitt added.

"I want to quash the stigma. Anyone can run."

Jonny Michell/ BBC
Rachel Pavet (left) and Susan Oglesby (right) are some of the first members of the Together We Run group

Rachel Pavet, 44, and Susan Oglesby, 74, are members of the Together We Run group and have long term illnesses.

Ms Pavet recently rejoined the group, having previously been a half marathon runner

"It's very easy to sit at home and mope about your situation but coming here makes things instantly better," she said.

Ms Oglesby spoke of the importance of the group to her.

"When you have a life changing diagnosis, it can consume you," she said.

"In this group, it doesn't matter who you are, or how little you can do.

"It's being out in a group, talking with people on the same journey."

Jonny Michell/ BBC
Coach Sophie Riseborough uses a whistle to indicate to the runners when to set off on 45 second to a minute intervals before slowing down again to a run

Sophie Riseborough coaches the Slow Sunday group after joining two years ago as a beginner.

"It shows people that don't think they can run, that they can," she explained.

"For people like me, being a bit bigger, you can injure yourself by going too quick.

"This way, you meet people, make friends and start to enjoy running."

Ms Riseborough said Ms Hewitt had inspired the whole club.

"Even if we don't feel like running – when you see her out, given everything she's been through, nothing can hold us back if she's doing it while fighting cancer."

March 31, 2025 0 comments
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