Children’s Fun Day organized for May 31st

A “Children’s Fun Day” in support of the refurbishment of the King George V Playing Fields Playground is to be held on May 31st 2008.

You can download a printable copy of the colour poster below in English or in Welsh . Or you can download a printable black and white flyer.

Children\'s Fun Day Poster Welsh

Vote for a possible Goodyear playground grant

Good Year Logo

Congratulations all those who voted to nominate our playground. We have now been short listed in the competition to receive the £10,000 grant to refurbish a needy playground. Even if you have already voted to nominate our playground, please vote for us again in the main competition starting Tuesday May 6th.

The winner will be the playground with the most votes, so the Action Group and King George V Playing Fields Committee are urging as many people as possible to vote for our playground by following the link below and clicking the link showing the percentage total for our site. You will need to register with the website in order to vote.

www.mygoodyear.co.uk/buddyZone/

Posters asking people to vote for our park are being put up around town. If you would like to display one or put one up at work, please email Fiona White at nce.actiongroup@btinternet.com

Please get your family to vote too, or send your friends our
special electronic postcard with pictures of the playground and a request to vote.

Thanks!

For late breaking news, please go to the comments section at the foot of this page.

Photos of the play area

Broken See-saw and swings

Concrete Tube

Damaged and Dangerous

Listing Sideways

Old and Damaged

Playing fields campaign making good progress

Campaigners for improvements to the play equipment on the King George V playing fields in Newcastle Emlyn have expressed disappointment at what they claim are misleading and negative articles which have appeared in the current editions of local newspapers ‘The Tivyside’ and ‘The Carmarthen Journal’.

The articles were written following ill-tempered exchanges between Town Councillors at their monthly meeting last week. The Councillors were not aware of the good progress being made by the Action Group and Playing Fields Committee and some made very negative comments. The Tivyside newspaper did not contact the organizers to ask for a campaign update before publication of its article.

Sue Tabbitt
Sue Tabbitt

Sue Tabbitt of the Action Group explained to Newcastle-emlyn.com that:

“The Action Group is now working closely and proactively with the King George V Playing Fields Committee (of which I am a member), to ensure that we are all working together for a rapid resolution to this ongoing problem of a lack of decent outdoor play facilities for the children of this town.

“Members of the Action Group have now joined the Playing Fields Committee and Fiona White, now a Town Councillor, now attends meetings and is working closely with us on tracking down new grants to apply for, and on filling in the forms very comprehensively.

“We had a very successful Bingo Night at the local sports club earlier this month (early April) which was thoroughly enjoyed by all, and more are planned.

“The Fun Day** will make full use of the Playing Fields and aims to make a big splash, with bouncy castles, an auction of promises, and loads of child-oriented activities (face painting, crafts, etc). A big feature of the day is that Playworld UK, a firm which makes and fits playground equipment, is coming down, free of charge, with laptops and images, so that the town’s children (of all ages) can participate proactively in designing their own ideal playground, to make them feel more involved, and so that the town can see what the new playground could look like if the funds come in this year.

“We urge everyone to support come and support the event, and this important cause.”

Sue Tabbitt has written to the Tivyside newspaper to correct their article.


**The Fun Day referred to above will take place on Saturday 31st May, between 10am and 4pm, at the current playground site in Newcastle Emlyn on the King George V playing fields, next to the central car park. All are welcome; there will be activities for all. All funds raised go directly towards the new playground.

Action Earth Award for Ysgol Y Ddwylan Eco Project

The Children of Ysgol Y Ddwylan in Newcastle Emlyn received a grant from the environmental group Action Earth recently. Last Saturday they constructed a willow tunnel in the grounds of the school. The children have already won the coveted Green Flag status as an Eco School by recycling, composting and being particularly aware of wasting resources.

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Click for larger image

They are also involved in the campaign to make their town a plastic bag free zone. The grant from Action Earth was to help them improve their surroundings with sustainable, natural play equipment. Year 6B had already built a willow dome and the tunnel is a fantastic addition. The tunnel was planted and woven by a team of volunteers. The Eco Committee would like to thank everyone who helped and particularly Action Earth and Morrisons for their support.

Concerned mothers call for improvements to children’s play area

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A group of mothers of young children have called for urgent improvements to the play area in Newcastle Emlyn’s “King George V Playing Fields”. They have described the play equipment as “unsafe, and a disgrace to the town” and plan to take their children to a play area in Llandysul (8 miles away), if Newcastle Emlyn’s facilities are not upgraded by the summer.

King George V Playing Field Sign

Fiona White, a spokeswoman for the group, said:

“The equipment doesn’t meet with safety regulations. It is broken and dangerous. How the Town Council website can say, under amenities, it “boasts” a children’s play park is a wonder to me! It’s not something I would boast about!

“The slow rate at which the playing fields committee has raised funds over its 28 year history has simply not been sufficient to maintain or replace the equipment. The situation is now desperate and a lump sum is needed to make real improvements.

“We feel that the community which pays already through Council Tax together with the revenue the car park must generate, should not be chased year after year to buy raffle tickets, when the target amount to be raised is so far beyond our reach. After 28 years, the community is naturally very disheartened and sceptical about whether anything will change if things continue to be tackled as they are. Having a decent, safe play area for the town’s children is a basic right, yet in Newcastle Emlyn it is simply not being met. With Government targets to tackle obesity and the sedentary lifestyle many families slip into, surely this is the perfect opportunity to make a difference in our town.

Old Equipment

“The Chairman of the Playing Fields Committee has told us that an application has been made to the National Lottery Fund, but a successful outcome cannot guaranteed so we have written to Carmarthenshire County Council asking for support. They have been helpful but say it is not their responsibility and pointed us towards “Fields In Trust” for ideas.

“We have decided to try and move things forward by starting an action group and organising a petition. This will show any funding body that the strength of community feeling on the issue. I encourage everyone to sign the petition and give us their thoughts on how to proceed.”

Downloaded the petition for printing

The action group can be contacted at nce.actiongroup@btinternet.com

Photos of the play area

Broken Fencing

Broken See-saw and swings

Concrete Tube

Damaged and Dangerous

Listing Sideways

Missing Equipment

Old and Damaged

Unsafe slide

Dragon film premiere success

The 30 minute film commissioned as part of the Heart of the Dragon Festival this summer was premiered on Wednesday November 28th 2007 at the Emlyn Arms.

Many of the guests were photographed as they entered. Their photographs can be viewed below.

Apologies to anyone I photographed but their pic doesn’t appear. The lighting was very poor and I had to rely on slow exposures, which meant that some were blurred.” - Jeremy Clulow


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Dragon Guests

A YouTube preview of the film will soon be available along with details of how you can buy it on DVD.

Here are a few other pictures of the event.

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Local MP wins best website award

Adam Price receives website award

Plaid Member of Parliament for Carmarthen East and Dinefwr (which includes Newcastle Emlyn) Adam Price has won the British Computer Society’s first award for the best Parliamentary website.

Adam’s bilingual website was selected as overall winner and considered to be “an outstanding example” of the very best incorporation of the three qualities:

  • Design
  • Engagement
  • Accessibility

Judging of all MP websites was undertaken by BCS President Professor Nigel Shadbolt and key political journalists including Quentin Letts of the Daily Mail, Patrick Wintour of the Guardian, Michael Kallenbach of UK Press Gazette and - to ensure broad appeal to all ages - Matthew Darroch Thompson (aka Webster) of The Oldie Magazine.

Adam Price Website
Click to visit website

Because accessibility is vital in engaging people with disabilities, all sites were also appraised by AbilityNet, the national charity that helps disabled adults and children use computers and the internet by adapting and adjusting their technology.

In response to the award Adam commented:

“I am delighted to have won this. I am very proud that the efforts we have made to ensure that I am accessible to my constituents have been recognised. In today’s digital age people want to be able to raise their concerns in many different ways. We have two full time offices that anyone can just pop in or phone and the next step was to allow people to use the internet. It has been a fantastic way of interacting with people and has really helped me tackle some of the major issues in Carmarthenshire.”

CCTV: Common sense or just Hot Fuzz?

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CCTV camera

See also item on CCTV in Newcastle Emlyn.

Anyone who has seen the film Hot Fuzz will remember the small fictional town of Sandford in Gloucestershire to which police sergeant Nicholas Angel is exiled by the Metropolitan Police force because he is just too good at his job and shows up his colleagues.

Sandford has a Neighborhood Watch Association (NWA) which through it’s CCTV (Closed Circuit Television) system manned by volunteers, holds the town in its claustrophobic grip, viewing everything outside its comfort zone of white, middle aged and middle class with suspicion and hostility.

Hot Fuzz CCTV room

Sergeant Angel eventually discovers that anyone seen as threatening the rural status quo is being systematically liquidated for what the NWA sees as “the greater good”. The film ends in an exhilerating Hollywood style shootout. (Contains strong language).

Cut to the UK. We have more CCTV cameras (5 million) per head of population (60 million) than any other nation. We have 1% of the World’s population, but 20% of its video cameras and are the most “observed” country in the World.

Cut to Newcastle Emlyn West Wales, population 1,000 where the Town Council is keen to see the installation of 9 CCTV cameras costing £19,000 in order to observe the comings and goings of it’s inhabitants (although the TC would argue, just the unruly ones). Is this a legitimate response to an increase in vandalism and unruly behaviour, or simply overkill given the nature of the problem? Are there local police crime statistics to support the CCTV proposal?

Should Newcastle Emlyn have CCTV coverage of Bridge Street and Sycamore Street?
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The main dilemma regarding the use of CCTV is explained by Jonathan Bamford, assistant commissioner at the Information Commissioner’s Office:

“It is clear that use of CCTV enjoys a lot of public support and can have benefits such as helping with the detection of crime, however, it can be extremely intrusive, putting law abiding people under surveillance. It is essential that the public is confident that CCTV is being used responsibly and for a proper purpose.”

Some CCTV operators have even begun to include audio in their CCTV use. Some local authorities have begun fitting speakers beside cameras so that operators can admonish wrongdoers observed on camera in real-time.

The Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) has warned that CCTV must not be used to record conversations. The Commissioner has proposed a new Code of Practice on the use of CCTV to replace the current code adopted in 2000.

I hope that a similar consultation has been taking place in Newcastle Emlyn amongst shopkeepers and residents about the Town Council’s push for CCTV. A public meeting was held on Friday October 12th about the proposals but it was poorly attended, with less than 10 of the 100 town businesses represented and under 30 people, which includes the whole 10 person Town Council. Absence from that meeting however doesn’t imply consent. A proper survey of opinion should be carried out and the results made public. The enthusiasm of a few people for the surveillance society and the silence of the majority cannot be the basis for the installation of cameras in the town.

Those who see technology as the answer to social problems and who wish to covertly observe the lives of the vast majority of non-rowdy, sober and law-abiding citizens must demonstrate an overwhelming case before being allowed to impose their solutions on the rest of us. They must also explain in detail who will have access to recordings or live broadcasts of the comings and goings of towns people. Will everyone having access to the system be Criminal Records Bureau checked? Who will own the recordings? Wireless video systems such as the one being proposed are also vulnerable to their wireless signal being intercepted by hackers working from laptop computers.

It is up to the CCTV enthusiasts to demonstrate that the electronic surveillance approach is vital to keep law and order on Newcastle Emlyn High Street from the Bridge Street to Emlyn Square (for that is the only area of the town which would be covered by the CCTV) and that the thousands of pounds going into the project couldn’t more effectively be spent on other crime prevention measures.

Have your say below and let’s have the debate first, followed by the decision, rather than vice-versa.

Blaen Bowi Wind Farm expansion refused by planning committee

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Blaen Bowi No Thanks

The Planning Committee of Carmarthenshire County council have followed the recommendation of their planning department and refused planning permission for a further 3 wind turbines on the 1000ft Moelfra Hill site, two and a half miles south of Newcastle Emlyn.

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Dragon Festival organizers respond to criticism

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Jeremy Clulow gets the ball rolling…

The “Heart of the Dragon” Festival this summer was a huge success. The people who made it a reality worked their butts off for two years - first of all developing the concept, then obtaining grant funding and then organizing the weekend of activities and festivities. We are all in their debt for showing true community spirit and commitment to their home town, especially in the face of negativity and skepticism from many people, including the majority of Town Councillors.

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