Quote of the week

Life isn't about finding yourself, it is about creating yourself'

George Bernard Shaw
If you cannot mould yourself entirely as you would wish, how can you expect other people to be entirely to your liking?
Read more at: http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/keywords/wish.html

Wednesday, August 13, 2014

Hundred Mile hike for Charity.


Martello Tower on the Coastal Path

Graham Newman who is a Cabinet Member at the County Council and who is also the Mayor of Felixstowe is today embarking on a fund raising hike from Cattawade to Lowestoft.  This is a 100 mile walk which takes in the Stour and Orwell and the Suffolk Coast Path Walks.  Accompanying Graham will be his 12 year old daughter, Rebecca.

Graham writes:  This is not a Lesley Dolphin-style exercise of walking the whole route without stopping - we will be doing a gentle 15 miles or so per day, taking the whole week to do it, starting each day from the point at which we previously left off.’ 

All proceeds from sponsorship of the walk will be donated to the Mayor’s Charities, which this year are the Level 2 Youth Project and the Felixstowe Citizens Advice Bureau.

If you would like to make a donation and support Graham’s efforts you should click here.

It is now too late to join Graham on the first part of the walk, but he is inviting walkers to join him on August 16th at 10 a.m. as he starts the Suffolk Coast Path walk from the car park at Felixstowe's Landguard Fort, pictured below





Monday, August 11, 2014

New Chief Executive for the West Suffolk Hospital

Hot off the press this morning is the announcement that Stephen Dunn, pictured here, is to become the new Chief Executive of the West Suffolk Hospital.

A local man, who lives near Bury St Edmunds, he fought off keen competition from elsewhere, to secure the role for which he seems very well suited.  Dr Dunn has a PhD in Economics and has held a number of leading roles in the Midlands and the East of England in the National Health Service and in H.M. Treasury.

Dr Dunn will start work in November.   He will arrive at a challenging time for the hospital, as the financial environment is as difficult in the Health Service as it is elsewhere.  Top of the agenda from the perspective of the County Council, is the hospital's active participation in Health and Adult Social Care integration, which, if it can be achieved should, both save money and meet every growing demand from Suffolk's ageing population.

Sunday, August 10, 2014

Should school holidays be staggered?



Taking children out of school during term time has become a hot topic recently.

At a recent Suffolk County Council Cabinet meeting, in accordance with revised Government guidelines, we voted to bring in a new protocol which, among other things, increases penalties for parents who decide to take children out of school.  There were good reasons for doing this, not least because we believed that educational standards in the county would not improve if absence from school is tolerated.  However, many believe that this approach is misguided when it comes to giving leave of absence for family holidays.  They cite the high prices charged by holiday companies for departures during the school holidays and also the fact that travel on holiday can be of educational benefit.

It seems that there may be some merit in the latter argument.  Today the Sunday Times reports that the head of a primary school in Reading has analysed the national maths, science and English test results of his 11 year old pupils over the past two years and has found that those who have been taken on family holidays in term time outperformed those who had not.

I have been challenged about this issue by a number of people in the Division as I have done my rounds.   While not supporting random truancy, I think that it is true that from time to time one does hear stories about head teachers who have seemed to be very unreasonable in refusing to allow leave of absence.  I also have a hunch that travel does actually broaden the mind.

A suggestion has been made that schools might choose to stagger their holiday periods.  This would mean that holiday companies would be able to fill their capacity more evenly across the year and accordingly charge less.  This might be a solution to the expensive holiday issue, but it would present the County Council with another, potentially very costly, problem.

At present each year it costs Suffolk County Council a massive £18m or so to transport children to and from school each day. Such efficiencies as we are able to achieve in this area depend on children attending schools between the same dates, and arriving and leaving at more or less the same time.  If schools choose to alter these long standing arrangements the cost of school transport would grow dramatically…something that is simply not affordable in the current financial environment.

Perhaps, under the circumstances therefore, it might be better to allow Head Teachers to exercise a bit more discretion when approached by parents who wish to take children out of school for a break.

Saturday, August 9, 2014

The future for Belle Vue?





I understand that later in the month there is to be a consultation about the future of the Belle Vue area in Sudbury.

I am not sure what is now being proposed for the redbrick late Victorian pile, Belle Vue House. There are people, I know, who are vehemently opposed to its demolition.  In my view however this is based on sentiment rather than the house’s claims to any particular architectural merit. It would also need a lot of money spent on it to restore it to a good state of repair.

I have looked on the Babergh website where some plans are available, but think that in order to get the full picture I will need to go to one of the proposed ‘engagement events’ and ask some questions. Having worked at the CAB for several years I do not have particular happy memories of Belle Vue House.  Prior to the recent, largely cosmetic, remodelling of the interior, it was not a comfortable place to be.  We endured cold in winter, heat in summer, tiny rooms and a seriously creepy, damp and spider infested cellar. On one occasion the former manager leant against the wall of the ‘billiard room’ and suddenly found herself in the open air as part of the damp pervaded wall crumbled away.  The house does however have some charms.  Some rooms retain traces of their former glory, it has a pleasant view over the park, and I recall that the stained glass window on the staircase is attractive and probably worth conserving.

The current Victorian house replaced a far more attractive eighteenth century construction.  This was built by Thomas Gainsborough’s first cousin on his mother’s side, Nathanial Burrough.  He was a successful London grocer, who founded a Fortnum and Mason’s type establishment in Throgmorton Street. Having made his fortune in the groceries trade he returned to Sudbury and built the first Belle Vue.  If it were the future of this long gone villa that was under threat I think I would be more concerned.

The former Belle Vue House in 1840

The proposals for the Belle Vue area are available to view on the Babergh website, and there is an opportunity to express your views here.  For those wishing to know more there are three public engagement events later in August.  Two will be held on August 14, one at Sudbury Town Council Offices in the Mayor’s Parlour from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m., and the other at Belle Vue House itself from 6 p.m. until 8 p.m.  The third event will take place on Saturday 23 August from 12 noon until 3 p.m. in Belle Vue Park (near the Cabin)


Thursday, August 7, 2014

Rising High in Suffolk



Interns currently working in councils all over Suffolk are now starting the last month of their three month summer placements.  All local authorities in the County are committed to supporting young people and helping them to get the best possible start in the world of work. As part of this commitment,  20 internships were created across Suffolk in both 2013 and 2014.

On Wednesday I took part in judging a competition which introduced 12 Suffolk interns to the world of Resource Management.  Each of them took on a RM role, whether in Human Resources, Finance, Procurement etc. They spent the afternoon developing and presenting a plan for the creation of a mythical Mildenhall Hub, hosted by the County Council, and designed to include representatives from other public sector bodies such as the Police and Probation Services.

Both teams did very well, creating excellent graphics and presentations, and quickly getting to grips with the problems of their brief.   I have to say that observing them at work, I felt like Karen Brady (or perhaps Margaret Mountford!) in The Apprentice, although our young people applied themselves to their task with a lot more intelligence than is sometimes seen on television.   Although one of the teams theoretically ‘won’, both displayed a good understanding of what was required.

Our Interns are paid the minimum wage, which means that the experience does not cost them money, and the scheme tries to match them with areas which reflect their interests and career expectations. They are all at different stages in their further education, some having finished university and others being between university years. The scheme sometimes leads to an offer of permanent work in the Suffolk public sector, and, of course, does develop skills and enhance a young person’s CV

Details of apprenticeships, internships and other work opportunities for young people in the public sector in Suffolk,  including the Council intern scheme, which will be repeated in 2015,  can be found on the Rising High Website:-


Sunday, August 3, 2014

Two visitors to the wildlife garden

We have had two visitors this week to the part of our garden that we have set aside to try to encourage wildlife of all sorts. 

The first was our charming and enthusiastic weekend houseguest, Charlie Bee, pictured left,  posing on the edge of the patch.  He seems to like sniffing about in the undergrowth and generally making himself at home.  Perhaps that is because where he lives in Thorpe Morieux he has a much larger area which is also specially kept to encourage biodiversity.

The second was local ecologist, George Millins, who came to see how the special plants that he had given us in the spring, chosen to attract and support butterflies, had survived.  At the moment the area is rather overwhelmed with rye grass, and also with giant thistles and ragwort.  However some of the field scabious, birds foot trefoil and other introduced species have survived and there are certainly signs of butterflies enjoying the area.  The ragwort has provided essential sustenance for the caterpillars of the cinnabar moth.  Some of the plants have been completely eaten bare by the distinctive yellow and black creatures.

George thinks it will take about five years to establish the area with the right balance of plants to create ideal conditions.  We will be mowing the area in October, and picking all cuttings up, to try to reduce the fertility of the soil and encourage the right wild flowers to grow.