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fl/K'FY: iu'JliA-c'3~'!''' .YjsfrifftVj’it 24 Clitheroe Advertiser & Times, August 5th, 2004 Fishing village


hooked them WHAT a great Royal Lancashire Show!


Everyone in the fishing village


agreed the three days were delightful and well attended. All have agreed to return next year. The casting demon­ strations by Dreamstreams, of West Wales, certainly proved a great attrac­ tion to young and old, men and woman alike. Yes, we had a few small hiccups, but


they were dealt with fairly quickly. Everyone agreed to return for next year's event, which will be bigger and better, as we all learnt something from this year's show. I t was very gratifying to see so


many youngsters spending a lot of time in the fishing village. They were taught to tie flies, to cast


and tie knots, learnt about baits and tackle for river and still water fishing, and asked a million questions. We gave away 431 goody bags to anglers young and old. Finally, the Prince Albert Angling


Society raised the magnificent sum of £310 for Ribble Valley Crossroads.


MARTIN JAMES, Meadowsido, Grindletnn


Better ways to


stop speeding MY initial reaction on reading last week’s front page story about speeding motorists in Sabden was to have some degree of sympathy for their dilemma. Yes, I know to some this will seem


provocative, irresponsible or even downright anti-social, but this is a sit­ uation where I genuinely feel sorry for my unknown fellow motorists. To read of 40 drivers being caught in


a speed trap gives me an uneasy feeling that, somewhere, there could be an injustice in the summary treatment being brought to bear on what is large­ ly a very soft target. Most of those 40 people will be normal, law abiding cit­ izens, either coming to, or going home from, work; in other words, the lifeblood of our nation. I ask the question: Are the police as


successful at catching the scores of feckless criminals who plague our soci­ ety and thereby never need to do a day’s work?


What about the hundreds of unem­


ployed youngsters driving around East Lancashire without insurance, road tax or licence? (If this seems exagger­ ated, ask any magistrate at the Black­ burn sessions about their frustration in controlling the problem). Are the police working as hard to


eliminate mindless car crime on Clitheroe's streets? Pointing radar guns in Sabden does not give me much reassurance! I am sure Insp. Bob Ford has heard


these questions before, but the fact remains there is a pathetic discrepan­ cy in the application of law to different sections of society, and more impor­ tantly in the way the enforcement of law is accepted. I imagine that 90% of the 40 Sab­


den speedsters will meekly write out their £60 cheques, glad to become law abiding citizens again, but still left with a 15 to 20% increased insurance premium to come. Surely it was obvious that with the


closure of the A671, traffic over the hill would increase dramatically, becoming the preferred much shorter alternative route for drivers coming to, or leaving Clitheroe. Although this is a lovely scenic route, it is rather a white knuck­ le one and not for the faint-hearted. The road itself is badly in need of


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PICTURED is Paul Roberts, a committee member of the Prince Albert Angling Society, presenting Marlin James with a cheque for £310 (s)


upgrading and is just as likely to be the cause of serious accidents as the issue we are dealing with. The A671 road closure could have


been an ideal way for the police to be pro-active in the situation rather than re-active. The presence of a police van at a prominent vantage’point in the village would have been just as effec­ tive in curbing speed (no revenue though). The police could have stopped anyone who was doing a ridiculous speed and, yes, booked them. What about flashing red danger beacons on the approach to the bot­ tom of both hills, surely worth a try if Sabden residents are in danger of life and limb. I realise some of the points I have


made will be seen as controversial, but I do have a firm belief in the sanctity of life and driving through Sabden at 40 to 50mph is, as Insp. Ford says, unacceptable. There are, however, better ways


than radar guns and fixed penalty notices to achieve motorists' co-opera­ tion. Unfortunately, the law enforcers have not realised this yet and this is why people like me begin to lose confi­ dence in the justice system of our country.


DAVID BOWKER, Park Avenue, Clitheroe


I feel strongly


over Brockhall REGARDING the letter from Gerald Hitman in the Advertiser (July 22nd). I t ended by saying he hoped people those who opposed the village at Brockhall over a decade ago would now appreciate its character. I, for one, do not and I felt very


strongly about the way Brockhall Hospital was disposed of. I agree we needed to move on regarding the patients, but I think better use could have been made of it. What beautiful surroundings for


homes for the elderly and disabled - yes, a very different village (so many homes are closing). What happens next? Surely the need


for “des. res.” houses will run out, but maybe not while there are people around like Mr Hitman, who pur­ chased Brockhall Hospital for a pit­ tance. Well done! He surely can afford


to entertain hundreds of guests at The Old Zoo. What a pity we have not more Gra­ ham Sowters'around to oppose yet


more planning. However, I shall still remember Brockhall Hospital with affection and the people. I spent many, many years as a nurse working there. Sentiment is a good old fashioned word. Let us try and think about it more often.


BETTY MORTON, Hospital Cottages, Waddington


Give residents’


plan go-ahead! SOMETIMES, it seems as if our local councillors live on a different planet to the rest of us.


We live in Brockhall Village and


have been completely mystified as to why Coun. Graham Sowter and the parish council have been so opposed to every development here. In last week’s paper, you reported


that they opposed planning permission for a very large house here, on the grounds th a t it was so big that it


might be used for employment purpos­ es.


But you also published letters from


them opposing planning permission for office annexes - on the grounds that they might be used for residential pur­ poses. It seems pretty clear that they


do not want housing or employment here. The development of Brockhall Vil­


tion’s planning application is the right way forward.


JOANNE AND BEN BRINDLE, Brockhall Village


New job hopes


are unrealistic I HAVE seen the letter from Coun. Graham Sowter about the planning application for the final phase of devel­ opment of Brockhall Village. The application involves brownfield


land which already has planning per­ mission for 38 homes and up to 6.000 sq.m.(approx 60,000sq.ft) of offices and/or industrial units. It appears that Coun. Sowter would


like most of the land to be used for such development, on the basis that 6.000 sq.m, of employment space could provide a large number of jobs. The more jobs we have in the Ribble


is agreed that the Residents’ Associa­ Staff friendly


lage has now been going on for 12 years and it is high time that it was complet­ ed, so that we can all live in peace. More or less everyone who lives here


and helpful I FEEL I must reply to the unwar­ ranted and inaccurate reference in the


letters column, to our general post office. I attend regularly, collecting my


own and others’ pensions and find the staff to be friendly and helpful.


The temporary barriers and the


only way of keeping an orderly approach to the counter, which has recently been extended to allow six staff at busy times. Interior decoration has recently been carried out. The exterior, which also came in for


criticism, is a fine clean building fit to grace any market town.


due. Let us give credit where credit is


G. ARNOLD, Queen Street, Clilheroc


/ ' V "vV* ; c- : -v.,. > s V. Wrile to: The Editor, Clitheroe Advertiser and Times, 3 King Street, Clithcroe BB72EW e-mail: vivien.mcath@eastlancsnews.co.uk Valley, the less people will have to


commute. A key purpose behind the planning


application we have made, on behalf of the Brockhall .Village Residents' Asso­ ciation and Brockhall Village Ltd, is precisely to maximise the number of employment opportunities in the vil­ lage. It does so by proposing that each house that is built has a separate office annexe, to make them attractive to people who want to run their business­ es from home and employ staff in those businesses. Research demonstrates that there is


an increasing need for such live/work space and at Brockhall there is already a waiting list of people who want these properties. Consequently, jobs will be created as


soon as they are built. They will of course, by their very nature, minimise commuting. There will also be jobs in the swimming pool and gymnasium complex, which forms part of the application. Coun. Sowter proposes that maxi­


mum amount of land should be reserved for 6,000 sq.m, of convention­ al office or industrial buildings which might - in theory - generate more jobs. However, the realities of employ­ ment land and its development in the Ribble Valley indicate that these jobs will not come forward. Brockhall has not been successful in attracting such users, despite having had premises and land available. One of the main rea­ sons for this is that Brockhall is not an attractive location for companies look­ ing for such premises. The Valley has a limited market and


there are already much more attrac­ tive sites for such buildings. A prime example is on the A59 at the Ribble Valley Enterprise Park. This has space for 50.000 sq.m, of offices, but, the owners advise, it has taken five years or more to attract users for only 2.000 sq.m., with little evidence of demand for the other 96% of the land. While this land is available, it is wholly unre­ alistic to imagine conventional employers choosing Brockhall, in pref­ erence to this more accessible site. In the circumstances, it seems to us


that Coun. Sowter is arguing that the certain prospect of creating new jobs in the Ribble Valley, in the innovative form of live/work , should be rejected in favour of the long term and, at very best, uncertain prospect of a possibly larger number of notional and, in my view, wholly unrealistic ones.


GRAHAM CONNELL MRTPI, Director, DTZ.com


:iiV->ARr1:l9'e Y'f f ii'r www.clitheroetoday.co.uk


(M i'V is 'i? ) f-.( S3 > f ) !Y t f


••.! r r n ”


- Not all gloomy


on post offices DURING the last three or four weeks your newspaper has been running arti­ cles about the closure of two sub-post offices in Clitheroe; but not all news about post offices is gloomy. Billington has a new post office, sit­


uated in the newsagent's shop. After the closure of the old office


before Christmas, the village had to wait until May for the new Post Office to open. What a superb amenity this is for Billington. The interior of the shop has been re-designed and, outside, tubs of flowers and hanging baskets bright­ en up the area. A new ramp has been constructed for wheelchair users. The staff are always helpful and


friendly and it is a pleasure to visit the shop or use the post office. To Susan and all the staff; keep up the good work - you are really appreciated.


M.C. YATES, Billington


© WE are aware that it is not all


doom and gloom. Chatburn's post office is another Ribble Valley village business which has been the subject of much investment. The current owners have expanded the facility and provid­ ed an extremely attractive and vibrant frontage-Editor.


Staff friendly


and helpful OUR local MP describes the govern­ ment’s decision to put off the referen­ dum on regional government as cyni­ cal. Whether this is the case or not, I, for one, welcome the postponement! As the newly selected parliamentary


spokesperson for the Ribble Valley Lib­ eral Democrats, I firmly believe in the principle of regional government - but regional government that takes power down from Westminster, not away from local government at district and county levels. I would have been cam­ paigning for a “NO” vote in the refer­ endum. Now there is a chance it will not take place before the next election. We will pay a high price for the pro­


posed assembly in John Prescott’s scheme - the loss of local democracy as we know it. Freedom and democracy are intangi­


ble concepts that we think we ail under­ stand, but precious few of us seem to have realised how much we have lost during the last 20 years! When fewer people are able to put themselves for­ ward for election (only 36 seats in the proposed assembly, with a big reduction in the number of local councillors to match), when elections are held less often and the habit of voting at a dedi­ cated polling station on a particular date and time becomes rarer, then democracy is eroded bit by bit. Far too many people already no


longer engage with politics and politi­ cians. Under this government the growth in “consulting with the com­ munity” and creating local partner­ ships has been spectacular, and while- many partnerships have had some suc­ cessful outcomes, almost impercepti­ bly the role of elected local councillors has been undermined, as the agendas for the partnerships are almost always set by central government. Liberal Democrats believe that


power should be exercised at the low­ est level possible and decisions taken by people who are democratically accountable. The Tory government began the process of undermining local democracy when they introduced the poll tax - and Labour have carried on where the Tories left off.


JULIE YOUNG, Barrow,


Clitheroc


J Clitheroe 422324 (Editorial), 422323 (Advertising), Burnley 422331 (Classified)


Clitheroe 422324 (Editorial), 422323 (Advertising), Burnley 422331 (Classified)


Scouts and Cubs race to prove karting qualities


TAKE some old crates and bits of wood, a few nuts and bolts, some pram wheels and bits of string. Add a lib­ eral dose of Scouting inge­ nuity and what have you got? Scouts and Cubs from


across the Ribble Valley provided the answer when they converged on Bowley Scout Camp, Great Har­ wood, for their annual Soap Box Derby. The home-made racing


go-karts did battle on a downhill time trial course,


with only a few minor spills to add to the thrills. Scout leaders were on


hand to ensure the vehicles were fit to race, with a strong emphasis on safety. . Poor weather earlier in


the day meant numbers were down slightly on pre­ vious years, but there was still a good turnout and plenty of fast and furious fun for everyone. Our picture shows some


of the young racers and their homespun speed machines. (B080704/3)


Weathergirl will help flower festival shine


TELEVISION weathergirl Nichola Dixon will bring a ray of sunshine to this year’s Festival of Flowers a t Stonyhurst College. The popular North West Today predic­


tor of precipitation (pictured) will defi­ nitely have her head in the clouds as she is lifted 50ft. high ion a cherry picker to place the first bouquet on the college cross and officially open the event. Flower enthusiasts are promised a spec-


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tacular sight a t this weekend's event, staged by the National Association of Flower Arranging Societies. The event will incorporate displays by


300 North-West members of NAFAS, who will arrange displays designed by local florists Ann Coulton and Tom Hodge all over the college On show will be 1,000 sunflowers dis­


played in bamboo cages, and exhibits rep­ resenting operas on the staircases. The top Refectory will have a Shakespearian theme and the top gallery will become a shopping mall, with 17 shop windows depicting trades past and present. The boys’ chapel will depict the crafts of


the church and there will be some 102 exhibits on two floors of the college, with a sculpture garden outside. The Academy Room will have a Tolkien theme, remind­ ing visitors of the school's links with the writer, who spent time there visiting his son, a teacher. A collectors’ fair and trade stands will


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be in the large ambulacum with garden plants, tombola, and raffles with prizes such as tickets to Euro Disney and a two- night stay at the Holiday Inn. There will be flower demonstrations


each afternoon. Emergency calls permit­ ting, the North West Air Ambulance will also land at Stonyhurst tomorrow. The festival is open from 10 a.m. to 8


p.m. tomorrow and Saturday and 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Sunday. Tickets are £7.50 in advance and £8.50 on the day, and are available from the college (01254 826345) or from the Tourist Information Office in Clitheroe.


Phone stolen from belt


A MOBILE phone,valued a t £50, was stolen from a man’s belt after an offender brushed past him in a Whal- ley public house between 9 and 11-30 p.m. last Wednesday.


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Bridleway coastal link is under way


THE first phase of an ambi­ tious bridleway linking coastal areas with Bowland Fells has been completed. A 47km stretch of bridle­


way starting at Halton-on- Lune, near Lancaster, has now been opened to horse riders. The route wends its way up the Roeburndale Valley over to Slaidburn


and the Hodder Valley on the old Salter Road, skirting Dunsop Bridge and Whitewell, and to Chipping. The route was designed in


consultation with local rid­ ers in order to promote Bowland without compro­ mising its character. Tarja Wilson, the county council’s Countryside Offi­


cer, said: "Co-operation and interest from the landown­ ing and farming community was the key to this success, not only in providing these concessionary routes but also in diversifying business­ es to provide accommoda­ tion for walkers, cyclists and horse riders, and, in many cases, their horses, too.”


AWAKETOTHE DREAM


www.clitheroetoday.co.uk


Clitheroe Advertiser & Times, August 5th, 2004 25


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