Wednesday 29 June 2011

Flintshire Care & Repair Vacancy

Senior Administrator
Temporary 6 month contract (initially)
Salary: £16,355

Flintshire Care & Repair require a Senior Administrator for a developing and busy office that provides services to older people and younger disabled adults. The contract will be for 6 months with the potential of a long term contract. The post holder will be expected to oversee a team of administrators whilst providing administrative and finance support. This is a varied position within a fast pace and developing Agency where we are committed to providing a quality service. If you are interested in learning more about this exciting opportunity please contact, Laura Bennett on 01352 758700 or by email laura.bennett@flintshirecr.co.uk. Application forms are available by email or by phone at sharon.harrold@flintshirecr.co.uk or 01352 758700.

£100,000 boost for North Wales coast communities

Community projects along the North Wales coast are benefiting from over £100,000 of funding as a result of the latest grants from the North Wales Coast Community Fund, Minister for Housing, Regeneration and Heritage Huw Lewis announced
The Community Fund is available for projects in the regeneration area which covers the coast from Mochdre to Prestatyn. The fund amounts to over £1m over the next three years and is the result of a unique partnership between RWE npower renewables (RWE NRL) and the Welsh Government, which offers local groups easy ‘one stop’ access to the fund.

The RWE NRL element of the fund is specifically available to communities between Mochdre to Kinmel Bay as a direct result of the operation of Rhyl Flats Windfarm and is managed by the Welsh Government.
Projects benefiting from this round of funding are:

AFASIC Cymru (All Families Affected by Speech Impaired Children). The group has applied for support for a youth project which helps 11 – 19 year olds with a speech, language and communication need so they can take part in social activities. £2,942 and £7,980 from Rhyl Flats Fund.

Colwyn Bay FC Football in the Community – This not for profit company provides healthy lifestyle courses, afterschool clubs and support employment programmes through the motivational power of football. Since September 2009 they have involved 75 adults and 912 children in their activities. Funding will go towards the purchase of their own portacabins and two computers. £17,024

Colwyn Bay Town Council - The funding will go towards a Participatory Budget scheme which will allow residents to make decisions about funding for their community. £20,000 and £10,000 from Rhyl Flats Fund.

Abergele Youth Action – The group, which has worked with young people since 2001, would like to improve its facilities by providing additional training rooms, an office, community music studio and fully equipped IT training suite. £20,000.

The Benefits Advice Shop – This registered charity has provided a specialist welfare benefit advice and advocacy services for 20 years. It now plans to provide an outreach service to Kinmel Bay, Abergele and Mochdre. £26,100 from the Rhyl Flats Fund.

Huw Lewis said:
“All of the projects which are benefiting from this funding today are providing an important service for their communities and have a positive impact on the area. What makes the Community Fund special is that it is local people who decide where the funding should go. Local people are at the heart of decision-making.
“The Regeneration Area is about working with the communities who are in the area, and know what that area needs. I look forward to seeing the impact this fund has on the coastal area, and I look forward to seeing how these projects develop.”

Kathryn Hall, Community Investment Officer for RWE npower renewables, which built and now operates Rhyl Flats Offshore Wind Farm, said:
“We’re delighted that through the operation of our Rhyl Flats Offshore Wind Farm, and our partnership with the Welsh Government, we’re able to help local communities bring such vital and important projects to life.“These latest awards demonstrate our continuing commitment to supporting the local communities in which we work and operate, and in a way that really works for them. We’re also very pleased to see the level of local engagement in taking up the opportunities available through this fund, and the success of the single application process.”

Tuesday 28 June 2011

Access Denbighshire County Council services now on your TV, Mobile, Wii or PC






You can:

  • Look for a job
  • Report a pothole or broken street light
  • Check leisure centre opening times
  • Get local news
Find out about Council services
Sky

Go to Community channel (539) and press the RED button.

Virgin Media

Press the Interactive button
Select News & Info
Select Looking Local
 
Mobiles*


Wii & PC

Insert the following url into your browser:

lookinglocal.gov.uk/denbighshire

* usual mobile network charges will apply

Money issues -cccs is here to help

If you’re worried about debt, The Consumer Credit Counselling Service Debt Remedy will help you find the best solution. The service is completely free, you don’t have to provide your name and all the advice you receive will be based on your situation. Once you have completed your CCCS Debt Remedy we will provide you with:

Tailored advice from our expert debt counsellors
A personal budget showing your income and outgoings
Practical help to make the most of your money
All you need to do is answer a series of questions about your household, income and outgoings. To do this go online at https://debtremedy.cccs.co.uk/start.aspx

Wednesday 22 June 2011

Home Start Fund-raising Evening

Home Start are holding a fund-raising evening on Friday 24th June 2011 at Brookhouse Mill Marquee, Denbigh. The event will take place from 7.30pm- 11pm.

Join us for an evening celebrating our work in Denbighshire for the last 10 years

Hog Roast, Jazz Band, Auction of Promises, Sale of Hats and Handbags- new and gently used!

Tickets £15- includes food and entertainment.

For more information or to book your ticket, please call 01745 814819.

Denbighshire County Council using art to promote good health

A COUNCIL and a community group have joined force to use the arts as a way of promoting health and well-being.Denbighshire County Council’s community Arts Service and South West Rhyl Communities First have signed up artist Alison Mercer, who's work challenges and explores the diversity of parental relationships.She has been working with a variety of groups in Rhyl, the Bookstart Parent and Baby and Parent and Toddler groups.With Alison’s help, the Bookstart group members have been busy creating small keepsake quilts, altered babygrows and fabric books. They have also been using safe inks to make prints of their children’s feet and letter stamps to personalise their quilts, along with techniques such as embroidery and stitch.All parents and children who took part in the scheme will return to a workshop with the artist at Rhyl Library today.All of the artwork produced during the workshops will form part of the Arts in Health and Well-being exhibition being held at Rhyl Library Gallery from August until October 2011, alongside Alison's own pre-selected artwork.Community arts development officer Sian Fitzgerald, said: “The work will look amazing and the project is a fantastic opportunity to prove that textile arts and skills can create unique benefits for all participants, whatever their age and ability."

End Wales free school meal stigma, says Joyce Watson AM


Wales should put an end to the "stigma" children face for claiming free school meals, an assembly member claims.
Joyce Watson, Labour AM for Mid and West Wales, backs a fingerprint ID system of cashless payments to help poorer children.

She is due to launch a debate on the issue in the Senedd on Tuesday and says some pupils are going hungry to avoid being seen to claim free meals.
She says there is a mixed picture on the use of cashless payment systems.

Her office's research indicates that in Denbighshire, for example, all secondary schools use some sort of cashless system, whereas in Anglesey none do.

Most commonly, in schools where children still pay with cash for their dinners, pupils eligible for free meals are given tickets.

The AM believes this makes it easy for such children to be identified and put at risk of bullying.

She recommends rolling out a system by which children have accounts to pay for school dinners which can be topped up either by their parents or by the local authority if they qualify for school meals.

All pupils would then pay for their meals by a biometric reading of their fingerprint at the till without anyone knowing how their account was funded.

Ms Watson said: "68% is the average take up of free school meals where we have a system that identifies against a near 100% where we have a system that doesn't identify those who have free school meals and those who don't.

Sugar levels


She claimed that in schools without a cashless system there were "an awful lot of children simply going hungry" to avoid being seen to have free meals.

"[They] can't concentrate. Their sugar levels fall and their behaviour is also adversely affected by what's happening," she said.

Ms Watson intends to use her short debate during the assembly plenary to remind fellow AMs of a government commitment to roll out such cashless systems.

She said: "[Education Minister Leighton Andrews] did commit to rolling this out by September 2012.
"I want to know that that is happening. And I really think that this archaic practice of identifying children has to stop."

Addressing security concerns, Ms Watson said pupils' fingerprints were stored securely by the company that installed the biometric technology away from the school and could not be accessed by authorities.


One disincentive to move to a biometric system may be the cost, which the AM estimates at up to £30,000 for installation and £2,000 a year for maintenance.

However, Stephen Jones, head teacher of Ysgol Glan-y-Mor in Burry Port, Carmarthenshire, said its piloting of a biometric payment system over the last four years had delivered results.


He said it had cut the time pupils queued for lunches as well as removing any stigma attached to free school meals.

"The children like it," he said.

"It's almost a fun element to having their lunch, the fingerprints.

"It's much quicker so they're happy about that.

"The offshoot, I suppose, would be that parents can actually have computerised printouts of all the food and drink that their children consume and they can keep an eye on whether they're having a healthy diet or not."

Tuesday 21 June 2011

My Way, My Life is coming to an area near you!


On Thursday 21st July 2011, 11:00 am – 3:00 pm, My Way My Life is coming to the Royal Pavillion in Llangollen.

Do you sometimes feel that time is passing you by?

Do you feel you could do more?

Would you like to have more control over your life?

Would you like to have the confidence to just “go out and do it”?

Would you like to find the new you?

Would you like help with training, volunteering or employment opportunities?

If the answer to any of these questions is “YES” then come along to the Pavilion, Llangollen and see what My Life My Way has to offer. Find out how you, like others, can change your lifestyle for the better.

If you would like more information regarding My Life My Way please contact Vicky Hoban or Sandra Jones on 01745 334976.

Friday 17 June 2011

OCN Music Course

South West Rhyl Communities First will be holding an OCN accredited music course, open to any 16-25 yr old's living within the Rhyl area, who are not in employment, education or training.

There will be two trained and experienced Community Music tutors, guiding and supporting the beneficiaries through the activity. At the end of the course the participants will have produced original pieces of music and gained accreditation for their achievements.

The music workshops will be available in both English and Welsh.

For more information please contact Sarah Breeze Project Officer on 014286 685248, or by email on sarah.breeze@communitymusicwales.org.uk.

To view the flyer for this event please click here.

* You will be charged for non attendance (£25), if you reserve your place and do not to turn up to the sessions.

Wednesday 8 June 2011

Get on your bike!

Marsh Tracks cycling facility is now officially open. If you would like to book the track for use for your groups please contact Justin Lewis on 01745 353335 or email justin@marshtracks.co.uk.

There are a range of cycles and helmets available for use.
Let's make the most of this fantastic facility in Denbighshire

Tuesday 7 June 2011

Can a welfare-to-work scheme get Rhyl back on the job?


Panorama's Vivian White visited Rhyl on the north Wales coast to meet some of the people affected by the government's planned welfare reforms. In one area of Rhyl, half of the adults are on out-of-work benefits - one of the highest figures in the UK.

Plumb in the centre of this seaside town that was once a popular holiday destination, there is a pub called Last Orders. It is a somewhat challenging name because it happens to be right in the middle of an area where things have gone badly, depressingly wrong. The dire unemployment numbers here are what brought us to Rhyl.
We came to meet some of the people affected and to see what the town itself has done to try to solve its welfare problem.

This month sees the launch of the Work Programme, which pays organisations - from voluntary groups to public and private organisations - incentives if they get people off welfare and into work, as long as they stay in work.

Other changes proposed include replacing six income-related work-based benefits with a single universal credit from 2013.

The government says it will make sure people are always better off in work, there will be an annual benefit cap of about £26,000 per family and those refusing to work face a loss of benefits for up to three years.

Labour MP Chris Ruane was raised in Rhyl and is involved in local back-to-work initiatives.

He arranged for Ray Worsnop, who has worked in markets all his life, to set up the new open-air market in the town centre, where he ran a course which aims to turn people on benefits into market traders.

"I was brought up when there were lots of jobs and I was brought up with work ethic," Mr Worsnop said. "And now that we have two or three generations of unemployed, I'm really worried that the work ethic isn't there."

Mr Worsnop said he hoped teaching others the life of a market trader might make a difference and encourage them to not give up on finding work.

Christine Ibbotson is one of his students in the market experiment.

She is on incapacity benefit as she waits for an operation to treat a chronic wrist problem and says she would much rather be working.

"I'm not staying on the sick, no way, I don't want to," she said, although she added that after being out of the workforce for a long time, she was daunted by the government's move to reassess everyone receiving incapacity benefit with an eye to returning many to work.

"It's not the thought of getting up or anything like that. It's just, I don't know, it is a bit frightening," she said of being reassessed.

'Complete revolution'

MP Mr Ruane was also a key player in creating Rhyl's "City Strategy" which helped to fund a new cafe and restaurant on the waterfront called the Taste Academy.
At the cafe, you will likely be served by, and your food prepared by, people recently on benefits. It is a six-month training scheme and new eatery all in one. It should turn out people poised to find employment in the sector.

But Mr Ruane has a bleakly critical view of the plan for welfare reform: "If you get the big stick out too soon, too early, when there's no jobs there or even worse, when the job opportunities are diminishing, you'll be driving people back on the streets."

Employment Minister Chris Grayling disagrees: "There's absolutely no reason for anyone to end up on the streets as a result of what we're doing."

In the ward of West Rhyl, half of adults are on out-of-work benefit.

Mr Grayling called the government's plans "a complete revolution in welfare to work" and defended the new approach to providing benefits, including the three years' loss of benefit if someone repeatedly turns down jobs that are on offer.

"The only people who put themselves in danger of finding their benefits stop are those who are capable of doing so and wilfully say 'I refuse to engage with the system,'" Mr Grayling said.

Steve Falvey, 21, father to a baby girl, has taken part in the local football club's Strikers programme that aims to boost self-confidence and life skills and get the long-term unemployed used to being on time and organised.

He has already had his benefits reduced under the existing rules for not applying for a job that he did not like the sounds of.

He said he wants to work, but added: "Not any job. I'd have to like the job, like I said."

Panorama: A Job to Get Work, BBC One, Monday, 6 June at 2030BST and then available in the UK on the BBC iPlayer.