We asked readers for suggestions on how to stop leaks from the nuclear plant. Here are some of the best responses Christine Oliver
Continue reading …We asked readers for suggestions on how to stop leaks from the nuclear plant. Here are some of the best responses Christine Oliver
Continue reading …From a fly and flop break in Lanzarote to a beach hut in Whitstable, here’s where to go with a toddler in tow Ile de Ré, France Holidays with toddlers are tough. We’ve tried it all, from self-drive in South Africa to house swaps in Savannah, but our fondest memories are reserved for the Ile de Ré. On our summer hols last year we camped at Les Amis de la Plage, a lovely site by the beach with none of the big holiday park fuss, just brilliant, clean facilities including child-sized sinks and toilets, a baby changing area and purpose-designed shellfish washing stations. On the beach, there were pools at low tide for the kids to play in and surprisingly passable surf for me at high tide. We stocked up each day at the local market in Le Bois-Plage-en-Ré and then headed back to camp to consume the vast quantities of delicious claret and shellfish we’d bought. In the evenings, we often headed to Saint-Martin-de-Ré for a sunset stroll and dark chocolate ice cream from La Martinière, absolute bliss. • Pitches at Les Amis de la Plage (+33 546092401, les-amis-de-la-plage.com ) cost from €22 (high season) Ben Colclough, director of tourdust.com Princes’ Islands, Turkey Burgazada, one of the Princes’ Islands in the Sea of Marmara near Istanbul, is a weekend retreat that’s sleepy the rest of the time. Keen for a relaxed, self-catering break but also hooked on Byzantine mosaics, the Hall family (including George, then two-and-a-half, and Harry, nine months) spent a blissful week here early last summer. After morning pastries, fresh juices and Turkish coffee by the harbour, a 45-minute ferry ride (£2) slowly brought the city into view before docking at Kabataş, on the European shore. Transport-obsessed toddlers will love that Hagia Sophia is a tram ride away, while Taksim Square can be reached by funicular. Locals loved our boys, and ferry journeys were unexpected fun with them both getting plenty of attention. Car-free Burgazada can be toured by horse and buggy, or you could do as we did and just hang out by the pool until it was time for dinner on the quayside. • To rent the Serenity apartment on Burgazada for £650-£1,450 a week, see holidaylettings.co.uk Tom Hall, Lonely Planet Mull The Isle of Mull is second only to Skye in the Inner Hebrides for size and population, and it’s a wonderful place for a family holiday. Just getting here, usually via the beautiful ferry ride from Oban, is an adventure – and if the weather’s right the views from the breezy upper deck are a wonderful way to leave the real world behind. The ferry docks at Craignure, from where a 45-minute drive brings you to journey’s end at Calgary Bay, arguably Scotland’s best sandy beach. The former Calgary Hotel is a collection of self-catering properties – a week at Limetree Cottage costs £515 – £615 and makes the perfect base if the weather’s fine – and a cosy retreat if your luck’s out. Close by, Tobermoray – the setting for the television series Balamoray – has a great fish and chip van on the harbour wall. Mull has plenty of lovely short walks which can easily be tackled with small people in backpacks. • Limetree Cottage (+44 (0)1688 400256, calgary.co.uk/limetree.html ) costs from £405-£615 to rent for a week Tom Hall, Lonely Planet Lanzarote It was a bit of a surprise to find that fly-and-flop holidays are still possible with baby in tow. We took Lola, then six months, to Lanzarote for an autumn break at Casa Katharina, a smart but affordable house on a peaceful, if nondescript, estate near Playa Blanca on the island’s south-eastern side. Big hits included Sky TV and an outdoor pizza oven/bbq (dad), the garden’s giant cacti (Lola), the absence of almost anything to do (mum) and the private heated pool (everyone). The Canarian air was magically soporific, even for a teething baby, but if you’re likely to bore of a relaxed swim-read-snooze routine, there’s a wide, buggy-friendly promenade a five-minute walk away. In one direction you’ll find crashing waves and solitude, in the other an unpretentious resort with a small play park and relaxed beach bar where grinning waiters coo at children while parents drink beer with toes in the sand. • See Lanz Luxury Villas (+44 (0)121 275090, lanzluxuryvillas.com ) Emily Mathieson, Word of Mouth editor at Condé Nast Traveller Cabo Cope, Murcia, Spain I’d never heard of the Cabo Cope before, but was immediately intrigued by the prospect of unspoiled Spanish Mediterranean coastline. And realising that it is threatened by yet another concrete resort project, we decided to go down and see it for ourselves. This was as close as I could get to Laurie Lee’s experience when he first arrived on the Costa del Sol, I thought: arid mountains cascade unhindered by man towards the sea. It was perfect for driving along dirt tracks to find private beaches of crystalline water – shallow enough for toddlers, but with excellent snorkelling opportunities for adults too. We stayed at the Mayarí Hotel, in Calabardina, a pleasant oasis overlooking the sea, run by a child-friendly couple; a babysitting service was available and they were soon treating our little one as though he were part of the family. • Doubles at Mayari Hotel ( + 34 968 419748, hotel-mayari.com) from €76.50 Jason Webster, author of five books on Spain, including Or the Bull Kills You (Chatto & Windus) a detective novel set in Valencia Isola d’Elba, Tuscany, Italy One of the joys of holidaying with under-fives is that you’re not bound by the tyranny of the school calendar. Elban beaches that are unvisitable during Italian school holidays in August are quiet in May, when the island’s wild flowers bloom, and even June. Perfect white-sand crescents at Fetovaia and Cavoli, on the island’s south-west, make a great photo, but Sant’Andrea on the north coast is a tiny rock-pooler’s dream. Away from the crystal waters, my little ones love the open, boneshaker cable car ride to the 1,019m summit of Monte Capanne, for views as far as Corsica and right up the Tuscan coast. Just remember to hold on to their hands, and your hats … ours are still up there somewhere. There’s plenty of seafood on every menu, but at informal La Bussola, in Portoferraio, we can sample some serious flavours, such as the signature dish of steamed salt cod on shredded leeks and chickpea puree – and the kids share a pizza. The island’s best family accommodation is the boutique complex of affordable, spacious apartments at Casa Campanella, near Capoliveri. Ask them to book your ferry crossing from Piombino, to guarantee the best fare. • Apartments at Casa Campanella ( casacampanella.it ) cost from €1,900 per week for two to three people Donald Strachan, author of Tuscany, Umbria & Florence With Your Family (£12.99), published this week by Frommer’s Wind in the Willows caravan, Wales This gorgeous Romany caravan, made for a recent film of Wind in the Willows, is hidden away on top of a hay meadow in stunning Monmouthshire countryside. The caravan itself is compact – there’s just one large double bed – so it can only furnish a holiday for a small family: my husband, my six-year-old daughter and I squashed in happily enough. I’m not generally a fan of camping, but this was more comfortable than the usual, because a touch of luxury is provided by the off-grid cabin just a few feet away – the interior is worthy of an interiors magazine, with a sofa, large oven, dining table and a shower. But the most magical part was cooking meals over an open fire, with wood from the nearby copse, then getting tucked up inside the caravan at night and falling asleep to the occasional hooting of owls. • Prices range from £168- £258 for a two-night stay (+44 (0)844 500 5101, underthethatch.co.uk/willows ) Harriet Green, editor of the Guardian’s Family section Brittany, France Ten minutes inland from the seaside town of Binic, La Maison des Lamour is a collection of four cottages and five B&B rooms set on a former farm. The decor is stylish country – a sleek combination of modern furniture and accessories (free-standing baths, a chandelier of tea lights, slate-tiled walls) and antique finds (old picture frames and books decorate the bedrooms), with splashes of Cath Kidston-style floral cuteness. All of which will appeal to design conscious parents, though just as important is the kids’ paraphernalia – cots, high chairs etc, which make this a hassle-free family retreat. Breakfast (for B&B guests) of local breads, pancakes and jam will please adults and children alike. Outside there’s a large wooden fort for kids to let their imaginations run wild, along with a slide and swings, tunnels, a wooden horse, and a field full of ponies to ride in summer – and a river with pedalo hire. With a restaurant and farm shop on site, you could easily while away your days without getting into the car once, but the Lamours will happily recommend places to visit and eat in the area. • B&B from €75 (high season); cottages from €580 per week (peak season) (+33 2 96 74 13 63, lamaisondeslamour.com ) Jane Anderson, author of Brittany with Kids, published in May by Footprint Osea Island, Essex The Essex commuter belt is not the obvious place to look for a secret island untouched by time, but that’s what makes Osea so exciting. Until last year, this private island in the Blackwater Estuary near Maldon was run as an exclusive rehab clinic and recording studio. In January, it opened to the public for the first time in more than 100 years as a low-key holiday retreat offering self-catering accommodation in a collection of stylish weatherboarded 18th century cottages, a couple of beach houses and a grand Edwardian manor house which can sleep up to 20. Sailing and fishing trips can be organised, but the emphasis is on simple pleasures: beachcombing, foraging for berries and samphire, swimming, birdwatching and nature walks. Young children will love the chance to collect eggs from the hens, pick fruit from the orchard and visit the island’s two resident donkeys. Osea can be reached by road just twice in every 24 hours, when the waters recede to reveal a causeway built by the Romans across the rocky river bed. Although you are really just a 90-minute drive or a 40-minute train ride from London, when the tide comes in and the causeway disappears, the sensation of being cut off from the rest of the world is complete. • Prices range from £263-£512 for a week at the Sweet Shop, a one-bedroom cottage (07810 753226, oseaisland.co.uk) Joanne O’Connor, travel writer Kent Kids love the novelty factor of the Fishermen’s Huts in Whitstable, Kent. They’re like supersized versions of Dad’s garden shed, but with bedrooms, kitchenette and a bright green wooden front door that opens directly onto the beach. The paved beachside path is ideal for cycling, tricycling, scootering, toddling, or purposefully pushing a toy pram back and forth all day long – and it’s just a few car-free steps away. Let the kids explore while you sample some of the best oysters in England and take in the picturesque pebble beach and striking fishing boats. The huts may not be glamorously furnished and the stairs are a bit steep for young ones, but it’s the perfect seaside crash pad for beach-bound boys and girls. • The Fishermen’s Huts can be booked through the Hotel Continental, Whitstable (01227 280280, hotelcontinental.co.uk) ; family huts from £115 per night. The world-renowned Royal Native Oyster Stores ( whitstableoystercompany.com ) can be found along the path. For cycle hire, including children’s bikes, child trailers and tag-alongs, contact whitstablecyclehire.com Jonathan Knight is editor of Cool Camping and Cool Places guides Family holidays Tuscany Turkey Canary Islands Brittany Murcia Wales Spain Summer holidays Scotland guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …From a fly and flop break in Lanzarote to a beach hut in Whitstable, here’s where to go with a toddler in tow Ile de Ré, France Holidays with toddlers are tough. We’ve tried it all, from self-drive in South Africa to house swaps in Savannah, but our fondest memories are reserved for the Ile de Ré. On our summer hols last year we camped at Les Amis de la Plage, a lovely site by the beach with none of the big holiday park fuss, just brilliant, clean facilities including child-sized sinks and toilets, a baby changing area and purpose-designed shellfish washing stations. On the beach, there were pools at low tide for the kids to play in and surprisingly passable surf for me at high tide. We stocked up each day at the local market in Le Bois-Plage-en-Ré and then headed back to camp to consume the vast quantities of delicious claret and shellfish we’d bought. In the evenings, we often headed to Saint-Martin-de-Ré for a sunset stroll and dark chocolate ice cream from La Martinière, absolute bliss. • Pitches at Les Amis de la Plage (+33 546092401, les-amis-de-la-plage.com ) cost from €22 (high season) Ben Colclough, director of tourdust.com Princes’ Islands, Turkey Burgazada, one of the Princes’ Islands in the Sea of Marmara near Istanbul, is a weekend retreat that’s sleepy the rest of the time. Keen for a relaxed, self-catering break but also hooked on Byzantine mosaics, the Hall family (including George, then two-and-a-half, and Harry, nine months) spent a blissful week here early last summer. After morning pastries, fresh juices and Turkish coffee by the harbour, a 45-minute ferry ride (£2) slowly brought the city into view before docking at Kabataş, on the European shore. Transport-obsessed toddlers will love that Hagia Sophia is a tram ride away, while Taksim Square can be reached by funicular. Locals loved our boys, and ferry journeys were unexpected fun with them both getting plenty of attention. Car-free Burgazada can be toured by horse and buggy, or you could do as we did and just hang out by the pool until it was time for dinner on the quayside. • To rent the Serenity apartment on Burgazada for £650-£1,450 a week, see holidaylettings.co.uk Tom Hall, Lonely Planet Mull The Isle of Mull is second only to Skye in the Inner Hebrides for size and population, and it’s a wonderful place for a family holiday. Just getting here, usually via the beautiful ferry ride from Oban, is an adventure – and if the weather’s right the views from the breezy upper deck are a wonderful way to leave the real world behind. The ferry docks at Craignure, from where a 45-minute drive brings you to journey’s end at Calgary Bay, arguably Scotland’s best sandy beach. The former Calgary Hotel is a collection of self-catering properties – a week at Limetree Cottage costs £515 – £615 and makes the perfect base if the weather’s fine – and a cosy retreat if your luck’s out. Close by, Tobermoray – the setting for the television series Balamoray – has a great fish and chip van on the harbour wall. Mull has plenty of lovely short walks which can easily be tackled with small people in backpacks. • Limetree Cottage (+44 (0)1688 400256, calgary.co.uk/limetree.html ) costs from £405-£615 to rent for a week Tom Hall, Lonely Planet Lanzarote It was a bit of a surprise to find that fly-and-flop holidays are still possible with baby in tow. We took Lola, then six months, to Lanzarote for an autumn break at Casa Katharina, a smart but affordable house on a peaceful, if nondescript, estate near Playa Blanca on the island’s south-eastern side. Big hits included Sky TV and an outdoor pizza oven/bbq (dad), the garden’s giant cacti (Lola), the absence of almost anything to do (mum) and the private heated pool (everyone). The Canarian air was magically soporific, even for a teething baby, but if you’re likely to bore of a relaxed swim-read-snooze routine, there’s a wide, buggy-friendly promenade a five-minute walk away. In one direction you’ll find crashing waves and solitude, in the other an unpretentious resort with a small play park and relaxed beach bar where grinning waiters coo at children while parents drink beer with toes in the sand. • See Lanz Luxury Villas (+44 (0)121 275090, lanzluxuryvillas.com ) Emily Mathieson, Word of Mouth editor at Condé Nast Traveller Cabo Cope, Murcia, Spain I’d never heard of the Cabo Cope before, but was immediately intrigued by the prospect of unspoiled Spanish Mediterranean coastline. And realising that it is threatened by yet another concrete resort project, we decided to go down and see it for ourselves. This was as close as I could get to Laurie Lee’s experience when he first arrived on the Costa del Sol, I thought: arid mountains cascade unhindered by man towards the sea. It was perfect for driving along dirt tracks to find private beaches of crystalline water – shallow enough for toddlers, but with excellent snorkelling opportunities for adults too. We stayed at the Mayarí Hotel, in Calabardina, a pleasant oasis overlooking the sea, run by a child-friendly couple; a babysitting service was available and they were soon treating our little one as though he were part of the family. • Doubles at Mayari Hotel ( + 34 968 419748, hotel-mayari.com) from €76.50 Jason Webster, author of five books on Spain, including Or the Bull Kills You (Chatto & Windus) a detective novel set in Valencia Isola d’Elba, Tuscany, Italy One of the joys of holidaying with under-fives is that you’re not bound by the tyranny of the school calendar. Elban beaches that are unvisitable during Italian school holidays in August are quiet in May, when the island’s wild flowers bloom, and even June. Perfect white-sand crescents at Fetovaia and Cavoli, on the island’s south-west, make a great photo, but Sant’Andrea on the north coast is a tiny rock-pooler’s dream. Away from the crystal waters, my little ones love the open, boneshaker cable car ride to the 1,019m summit of Monte Capanne, for views as far as Corsica and right up the Tuscan coast. Just remember to hold on to their hands, and your hats … ours are still up there somewhere. There’s plenty of seafood on every menu, but at informal La Bussola, in Portoferraio, we can sample some serious flavours, such as the signature dish of steamed salt cod on shredded leeks and chickpea puree – and the kids share a pizza. The island’s best family accommodation is the boutique complex of affordable, spacious apartments at Casa Campanella, near Capoliveri. Ask them to book your ferry crossing from Piombino, to guarantee the best fare. • Apartments at Casa Campanella ( casacampanella.it ) cost from €1,900 per week for two to three people Donald Strachan, author of Tuscany, Umbria & Florence With Your Family (£12.99), published this week by Frommer’s Wind in the Willows caravan, Wales This gorgeous Romany caravan, made for a recent film of Wind in the Willows, is hidden away on top of a hay meadow in stunning Monmouthshire countryside. The caravan itself is compact – there’s just one large double bed – so it can only furnish a holiday for a small family: my husband, my six-year-old daughter and I squashed in happily enough. I’m not generally a fan of camping, but this was more comfortable than the usual, because a touch of luxury is provided by the off-grid cabin just a few feet away – the interior is worthy of an interiors magazine, with a sofa, large oven, dining table and a shower. But the most magical part was cooking meals over an open fire, with wood from the nearby copse, then getting tucked up inside the caravan at night and falling asleep to the occasional hooting of owls. • Prices range from £168- £258 for a two-night stay (+44 (0)844 500 5101, underthethatch.co.uk/willows ) Harriet Green, editor of the Guardian’s Family section Brittany, France Ten minutes inland from the seaside town of Binic, La Maison des Lamour is a collection of four cottages and five B&B rooms set on a former farm. The decor is stylish country – a sleek combination of modern furniture and accessories (free-standing baths, a chandelier of tea lights, slate-tiled walls) and antique finds (old picture frames and books decorate the bedrooms), with splashes of Cath Kidston-style floral cuteness. All of which will appeal to design conscious parents, though just as important is the kids’ paraphernalia – cots, high chairs etc, which make this a hassle-free family retreat. Breakfast (for B&B guests) of local breads, pancakes and jam will please adults and children alike. Outside there’s a large wooden fort for kids to let their imaginations run wild, along with a slide and swings, tunnels, a wooden horse, and a field full of ponies to ride in summer – and a river with pedalo hire. With a restaurant and farm shop on site, you could easily while away your days without getting into the car once, but the Lamours will happily recommend places to visit and eat in the area. • B&B from €75 (high season); cottages from €580 per week (peak season) (+33 2 96 74 13 63, lamaisondeslamour.com ) Jane Anderson, author of Brittany with Kids, published in May by Footprint Osea Island, Essex The Essex commuter belt is not the obvious place to look for a secret island untouched by time, but that’s what makes Osea so exciting. Until last year, this private island in the Blackwater Estuary near Maldon was run as an exclusive rehab clinic and recording studio. In January, it opened to the public for the first time in more than 100 years as a low-key holiday retreat offering self-catering accommodation in a collection of stylish weatherboarded 18th century cottages, a couple of beach houses and a grand Edwardian manor house which can sleep up to 20. Sailing and fishing trips can be organised, but the emphasis is on simple pleasures: beachcombing, foraging for berries and samphire, swimming, birdwatching and nature walks. Young children will love the chance to collect eggs from the hens, pick fruit from the orchard and visit the island’s two resident donkeys. Osea can be reached by road just twice in every 24 hours, when the waters recede to reveal a causeway built by the Romans across the rocky river bed. Although you are really just a 90-minute drive or a 40-minute train ride from London, when the tide comes in and the causeway disappears, the sensation of being cut off from the rest of the world is complete. • Prices range from £263-£512 for a week at the Sweet Shop, a one-bedroom cottage (07810 753226, oseaisland.co.uk) Joanne O’Connor, travel writer Kent Kids love the novelty factor of the Fishermen’s Huts in Whitstable, Kent. They’re like supersized versions of Dad’s garden shed, but with bedrooms, kitchenette and a bright green wooden front door that opens directly onto the beach. The paved beachside path is ideal for cycling, tricycling, scootering, toddling, or purposefully pushing a toy pram back and forth all day long – and it’s just a few car-free steps away. Let the kids explore while you sample some of the best oysters in England and take in the picturesque pebble beach and striking fishing boats. The huts may not be glamorously furnished and the stairs are a bit steep for young ones, but it’s the perfect seaside crash pad for beach-bound boys and girls. • The Fishermen’s Huts can be booked through the Hotel Continental, Whitstable (01227 280280, hotelcontinental.co.uk) ; family huts from £115 per night. The world-renowned Royal Native Oyster Stores ( whitstableoystercompany.com ) can be found along the path. For cycle hire, including children’s bikes, child trailers and tag-alongs, contact whitstablecyclehire.com Jonathan Knight is editor of Cool Camping and Cool Places guides Family holidays Tuscany Turkey Canary Islands Brittany Murcia Wales Spain Summer holidays Scotland guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Join us for our daily live blog debating the government’s controversial restructuring of the health service 12.03pm: At 1pm today there we will be holding a live Q&A session on Spire Healthcare’s new survey , which shows waiting times creeping upwards for a number of procedures. Online debating the pros and cons of turning to private providers for the answer will be: • Dr Jean-Jacques de Gorter , clinical director, Spire. • Jacky Davis , NHS consultant radiologist. We want the questions to come from you in the comments below, but here are a few suggestions: • Can private providers help reduce waiting times? • Do private providers save money? There’s evidence they cost more. • What are the risks of using private providers? • Do we have any examples of private providers working well and working badly? Why? • If we do use taxpayers’ money to fund private contracts, how can we get the most out of them? • Can GPs find themselves commissioning healthcare for patients from providers they might have an interest in? If so what can be done to prevent this conflict of interest? • If private providers take all of the work out of hospitals, what will this mean for the training of junior doctors? 11.51am: My colleague Hélène Mulholland has filed a story on David Cameron’s comments that “changes need to be made” to the NHS reforms ( see 10.03am ). Here are the key quotes from the prime minister (left): Yes, I think they do need to change. We need to get this right. But I don’t think it was wrong to get started rapidly on a process of change. While it’s an option to stick with the status quo, I don’t think it’s a sensible option. So I think it was right to get moving. But we have a moment now where the legislation is almost finished in the Commons, where I think it is right to stop and to pause, to rethink and improve because I think we can make further improvements to our policy. I think that is a different thing for the government to do. Normally governments just plough ahead regardless, but I think it’s important to see if we can further improve those policies and, at the same time, make sure we have more full-throated support from people working in the NHS, most of whom know change is necessary. I want to get them on board for the changes we are considering and see if they have ideas for further improvement. 11.33am: Sunny Hundal (left) at the left-liberal blog Liberal Conspiracy has just written this post criticising the NHS reforms . He says the government is confused and points to a recent YouGov poll for the Sunday Times showing that the public remains unconvinced. Response? Total support 27%, Total oppose: 52%, Don’t know: 21%. That’s a big thumbs-up from the public then. 11.23am: Peter Ward Booth, who describes himself as a partially retired NHS consultant and who followed the blog yesterday, sent this email to Rowenna this morning saying that practitioners and patients need more information about the reasons about the government’s reforms. Ward Booth tackles the important point about whether GPs are really in a position to cut the cash flowing into highly specialised hospital specialities. Of course we all know it’s about saving money – specifically targeting secondary specialist or hospital care – however you want to describe it. Yes, it is expensive, because it is super-specialised, with beds and highly trained healthcare workers. Yes, if GPs hold the funds, they will restrict referrals to save money, just as PCTs restrict referrals by declaring certain procedures “low priority” – euphemism for not treating a condition. Either way the quality of care will go down, unless you can afford private care. In the past governments tried to reduce the cost of secondary care by trying to have managers micromanage the running of the hospitals; the price was we have statistically a manager for every hospital bed. Managers are, however bright or motivated, driven by their political masters, not by patient or doctor needs. They are also very expensive. So let’s be honest and recognise we need secondary/specialist care, but address the costs issue separately. Let’s give the power to the consultants to run their own departments and have “costs” league tables as well as “outcome” league tables. Have teams of peers to review the failing units with the power to hire and fire. Above all the “reforms” should not be allowed to reduce specialist care to only those who can afford it. Yes, GPs are specialists, but not in surgery (or) cardiology. 10.37am: The health secretary got a boost today with a sympathetic and pithy portrait from the Independent’s health editor Jeremy Laurance . Laurance gets the health secretary’s deadpan humour to a tee, recalling his funniest personal anecdote about suffering a stroke while playing cricket. “People imagine politicians are a bit brain dead,” [Lansley] would say. “Well I am – and I have the MRI scan to prove it.” On a less humorous note, in the Guardian former Labour chair of the health select committee David Hinchliffe attacks the government for its pro-market tilt. The same market philosophy which impacted upon my constituents 20 years ago is at the heart of the health and social care bill. Its proposals are driven by an ideology totally alien to a health service whose success has been rooted in co-operation and collectivism. In the FT there’s more bad news for the government as one of four NHS trusts chosen to be early adopters of the electronic patient records pulled out – plunging the health service’s £12.7bn programme to create a vast patient database into “yet another crisis”. Also in an ominous sign of things to come, news that Trafford General Hospital is in a financial mess. It’s an iconic place in NHS history – treating the first ever state-funded patient when the health service was inaugurated in 1948. The Manchester Evening News says “the hospital where the NHS was founded could find itself £75m in debt by 2015″. And trust the Daily Mail to come up with a holiday story in health. The tabloid claims that a hospital is considering flying foreign patients overseas rather than fund their long-term care. One way to beat the Easter traffic. 10.32am: Rowenna points out a political spat in Scotland where Labour claimed that knife injuries cost the NHS in Scotland £500m a year – almost 5% of Scotland’s £11bn NHS budget. Nigel Hawkes on Straight Statistics has an interesting take on how politicians are using stats on the health costs of knife crime to score political points. He says the Scottish Labour party has promised a mandatory prison sentence for anyone found in possession of a knife outside their home. To justify the policy, they say knife injuries cost Scotland’s NHS £500m a year, or 4.5% of the health budget. But after some digging, Nigel says that even with the “best will in the world” it’s hard to see the total cost of knife crime exceeding £10m a year – or 50 times less than the Scottish Labour party is claiming. Scottish Labour’s policy doesn’t make much sense, Nigel argues, given that they are setting aside an extra £20m to provide the extra prison places that will be needed if more people are sent to jail as a result of their policy.” (Disclaimer: Rowenna is standing as a candidate in local elections next month in England for the Labour party.) 10.03am: Hello. I am Randeep Ramesh, the Guardian’s social affairs editor, and my colleague Rowenna Davis and I will be liveblogging the government’s radical NHS reforms all day. Today there will be a question and answer session on Spire Healthcare’s new survey , which sees waiting times creeping upwards in a number of procedures. No surprise perhaps that families are not getting fertility treatments at a time of cuts, but worryingly patients are facing long waits for hip replacements and hernia repairs. Online debating the issues will be Spire’s clinical director, Dr Jean-Jacques de Gorter, and NHS consultant radiologist Jacky Davis. Also Rowenna will be at a conference on looking how to close hospitals painlessly. Earlier this month welfare secretary Iain Duncan Smith marched to save his local hospital ; while his cabinet colleague Andrew Lansley has to marshal insufficient resources to meet rising demand, this is one of the most vexing political issues of the day. For those who missed it Andrew Sparrow has already caught up with David Cameron’s interview on the Today programme. The main take away is that there will be changes to the NHS reforms. Interestingly Cameron made a point of saying hospital doctors would have a say in how GPs commission services for their patients. The prime minister’s brother in law, Carl Brookes, works as a cardiologist in Basingstoke for the North Hampshire NHS trust and memorably told him he was concerned that family doctors would become too powerful under Andrew Lansley’s plans. You can email me at randeep.ramesh@guardian.co.uk or tweet at tianran . Rowenna’s email is rowenna.davis@guardian.co.uk and her Twitter name is rowenna_davis . NHS Health Public services policy Public sector cuts Andrew Lansley Randeep Ramesh Rowenna Davis guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Hundreds of tourists evacuated after small blaze at Antoni Gaudí’s basilica, which caused damage but no injuries Police in Barcelona say a suspected arsonist started a small fire inside the Sagrada Familia basilica and forced the evacuation of hundreds of tourists. The blaze has been extinguished and no one has been hurt. A Catalan regional police official said around 1,500 people had been evacuated from Antoni Gaudí’s unfinished masterpiece. It is one of the most popular tourist sites in Spain’s second-largest city. The official said some tourists saw smoke coming from inside the sacristy and alerted authorities, and that the suspected arsonist was arrested. The official spoke on condition of anonymity in line with department policy. She said the fire caused damage but no injuries. The sacristy is the area where priests put on their robes in preparation for mass. Spain Europe guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Susanne Ibru, 38, was convicted of harassment in her absence after repeatedly turning up at the footballer’s house A woman who disappeared from a magistrates court shortly before she was convicted of stalking footballer Rio Ferdinand and his family has been arrested. A warrant was issued for Susanne Ibru, 38, after she was found guilty at Macclesfield magistrates court of harassing Ferdinand by repeatedly turning up at his home in Alderley Edge, Cheshire. Ibru, formerly of Peckham, south London, but now of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, represented herself during her trial and cross-examined the Manchester United and England star before fleeing the hearing during the lunchtime adjournment on Monday. Cheshire police said she was detained in Warrington. Ibru was convicted in her absence of a harassment charge. Ferdinand, 32, told the hearing he was left “angry and upset” by Ibru’s visits. She turned up uninvited at the footballer’s home on three occasions between February and June last year. Ian Davies, prosecuting, said in the early hours of 21 February Ferdinand and his wife were asleep when Ibru woke him after pressing the intercom buzzer at the entrance gate. He went to a bathroom window and saw a figure wearing a hooded top. He shouted down to see who it was. She looked up and he was able to see it was Ibru. Asked by Davies how he felt, Ferdinand said: “At first I was angry and upset but then disturbed, really, because I have got a young family and this was not the time or the place to be coming to speak to me.” The player called the club’s security staff, who contacted police, and then watched on his CCTV as Ibru walked away and was stopped by officers at the end of the road. Ibru returned on 16 June, the court was told. Ferdinand said he saw her on the road opposite his house as he arrived home at about 8pm. He said he had no idea why she wanted to speak to him. Police attended and Ibru was given a formal warning to leave the couple alone. Her third alleged visit came just two days later, in the early hours of 18 June, and she was arrested. Crime Rio Ferdinand Helen Carter guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Schools could close as early as June after teachers back ballot for industrial action over pension reforms Strikes could close schools as early as June after teachers backed a ballot for industrial action over the government’s proposed changes to pensions. Delegates at the Association of Teachers and Lecturers’ annual conference passed a motion condemning proposed reforms that will see public sector workers paying more towards their pensions, retiring later and receiving less when they do. The union’s executive will draw up plans for a strike ballot and consider the timing of any industrial action later today. Today’s vote could be a prelude to coordinated strike action by public sector workers against the government’s austerity programme. Unions are drawing up plans for strikes by June that could paralyse schools, universities, the courts and the civil service. Alice Robinson, senior vice-president of the ATL, told the conference in Liverpool: “Our only available bargaining weapon is a resounding demonstration by the teaching profession of their opposition to the proposed changes. “We need to send a loud and clear message that we and other teacher unions will not see our members so harshly treated to pay for a situation that is not of their making.” The University and College Union, which represents lecturers, has already held strikes over pensions, and the executive of the Public and Commercial Services Union decided last week to hold a ballot over job cuts and services. The decision will be confirmed at their conference next month. The National Union of Teachers will debate a motion calling for a series of one-day strikes over pensions at its conference later this week. The pension reforms, in a government-commissioned report by former Labour minister Lord Hutton, include raising the normal retirement age for state employees from 60 to 66 by 2020. Final-salary schemes will be scrapped and replaced by payments based on career averages. Ministers will also get more powers to raise employee contributions. The ATL has not taken national industrial action since 1979, when members withdrew from classrooms on a Wednesday afternoon to discuss a pay claim. The union’s motion, which was carried with an overwhelming majority, notes “with deep regret the lack of any change on the part of the government to its proposals for public sector pension schemes”. It calls on the union’s leadership to consider “whether the failure of negotiations and the failure of reasoned argument now justify a ballot for strike action.” There was just one dissenting voice in today’s debate. Trevor Cope, a teacher from Devon, said: “I left the NUT because of strike action. My conscience doesn’t allow me to support this motion.” ATL’s general secretary, Dr Mary Bousted, has previously said that school staff could walk out as early as this summer. Speaking last week, as she prepared to hand a petition bearing 15,000 signatures to the Chancellor, George Osborne, calling for ministers to rethink their proposals, Bousted said: “Education staff are being expected to pay more for their pensions, work longer before they can draw their pensions and get less at the end of the day. And we’re not just talking about small changes. “Because the government is changing the way teachers’ pensions are calculated, the value of their pensions will be reduced by 25% on average over the course of their retirement. In cash terms, that’s a loss of more than £60,000.” Teaching Schools Public sector pensions Trade unions Public services policy Jeevan Vasagar guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …National Public Radio clearly believes people need to be frightened into dramatic “climate change” legislation. On Saturday night's All Things Considered , NPR publicized an article by
Continue reading …London fire brigade says investigation into scrapyard fire that closed the M1 motorway has been handed over to police Fire authorities in London have said they believe the scrapyard blaze that closed a stretch of the M1 motorway and caused travel chaos at one of the busiest travel times of the year was started deliberately. A spokeswoman for the London fire brigade said the police were taking over the investigation into Friday’s incident in which an elevated section near Mill Hill in north London was badly damaged. “We believe the M1 fire was started deliberately. We have handed the incident over to the Metropolitan police,” she said. A Met spokeswoman said the fire had been treated as suspicious from an early stage: “The investigation continues, nothing has changed.” The blaze closed seven miles of Britain’s main north-south road between junctions 1 and 4 as many motorists were preparing to use the road for the Easter getaway. Two lanes have reopened in both directions. Transport authorities say they hope all lanes will reopen before Easter but warn there could be speed restrictions. London Transport Crime guardian.co.uk
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