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‘It’s cruel’: relatives of residents react to proposal to close Lancashire care homes

about 19 hours ago
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Elderly residents of care home left anxious after Reform-led county council started consultation over plans for its closureFor Marjorie Aspden, 95, Woodlands care home in Clayton-le-Moors in Accrington was the perfect place to spend her twilight years,When she looked out from the window of her room, she saw the woods that she played in as a young girl and felt a sense of contentment,Now she and hundreds of other elderly residents are facing uncertainty after the Reform-led Lancashire county council announced it would consult on plans to close care homes in the area,Last month it began a consultation on moving residents out of five local authority care homes and day centres into other premises,The consultation closes in mid-December and the cabinet will make a final decision on the closures in February.

“We’ve been delighted with the home and with the room, we moved her there because her needs are just too great to have kept her in sheltered housing,” said Marjorie’s son, Phil,“We moved her six months ago and I can’t bear to tell her what’s happening because I think she’d be heartbroken to be moving again,”He said the council had already started a review of his mother’s care needs, which he believes “seems premature if the consultation stage is still in place, so it feels like the decision is all but made”,Dorothy Devereux, 92, has lived at Woodlands for 12 years,Before that, she worked as a nurse and carer.

When the time came to be placed in a home, she was adamant it had to be Woodlands, as it was the only place she felt she could comfortably spend her final years.For Dorothy’s children, Frances and Simon, the plans are unacceptable.They say a report being used to justify Woodland’s possible sale is years out of date and that there is not enough space for people to go into the remaining care homes in the area, with some possibly being relocated far distances away.“From everything we’ve seen so far – as little as it is – all that they’ve talked about is money,” said Simon.“They’ve not even considered the human cost.

They haven’t thought about how this impacts our parents, where they will go, how happy they will be.Not only does it seem impossible, it’s cruel, especially from a party that claims to have respect for people who have contributed to society.”The siblings were only made aware of the plans from their mother and received no official notice from the council or the home.Frances Duxbury is among a handful of the 50 residents at Woodlands who are aware of the plans, with many others who have conditions such as dementia and Alzheimer’s not being able to fully understand the situation.Some of the loved ones of these residents were only made aware that their parents were under threat of being moved when they were added to a WhatsApp group to discuss it.

The proposal has been referred to as one of a series of decisions made by Reform councils to balance budgets, fuelled by the principles of their Trump-inspired Department of Government Efficiency, or Doge,Some residents have complex mental and emotional needs, which have led to their children choosing not to tell them, so as to not shatter the sense of calm they have found at the home,Centenarian Ken Ormerod, who lives with anxiety, has been a resident at Woodlands for two years,His daughter, Aileen Walmsley, used to work there, while her daughter and granddaughter are employed at the home,She says her father wouldnot be able to survive if he was made to move again.

“My dad’s been passed from pillar to post, he’s had such a hard life and he’s always been a bit of a hermit,” she said.“Since being here he’s come out of his shell, he’s smiling like he hasn’t for years.He always used to eat alone, now he eats in the canteen.He’s even got a small group of friends, I can’t imagine him losing that, I don’t think he could go on if he did.”Sarah Smith, the MP for Hyndburn where Woodlands is located, believes the additional cost of moving residents to private homes will lead to the council spending more money than it will save within 18 months.

“This seems to me like an ideological position rather than a logical one, just to meet the standards of Doge, which I think has come to stand for the department of granny evictions,” said Smith.“They keep talking about ‘cutting the fat’ but there isn’t fat in council budgets.So, when they talk about cutting fat, they really mean cutting frontline services, but they aren’t thinking about the actual impact it will have.”Graham Dalton, Lancashire county council’s cabinet member for adult social care, said the review was part of a “commitment to ensuring that the care we provide remains safe, high-quality, and sustainable for the years ahead” and that he and the council understood “how deeply valued these services are by those who use them and their families as well as staff and the wider community”.He said: “We know that for many, these homes are not just buildings, they are places of comfort, familiarity and connection.

“The consultation we are running is a really important opportunity for people to share their views and help shape the future of adult social care in our county,“I would also like to make it clear that no decisions have been made about the future of any of these services,We are consulting to find out people’s views to help us make the best decision when the issue is considered by cabinet,”
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Spanish Armada-era astrolabe returns to Scilly after mysterious global journey

It spent hundreds of years languishing on the seabed off the Isles of Scilly in the far south-west of Britain before being hauled back to the surface by divers and setting off a circumnavigation of the world.Finally the Pednathise Head astrolabe – a rare example of a 16th-century navigational instrument once used by sailors to determine latitude – is back on Scilly after being rediscovered on the other side of the Atlantic.It turns out that after being sold and leaving the UK, the astrolabe passed through private collections in Australia and the US, its true identity forgotten along the way, before ending up in a museum on the Florida Keys.“It’s been on quite a journey,” said Xavier Duffy, the curator of the Isles of Scilly Museum. “We’re thrilled to have it back on Scilly and in the care of the museum

2 days ago
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My Cultural Awakening: I moved across the world after watching a Billy Connolly documentary

I was 23 and thought I had found my path in life. I’d always wanted to work with animals, and I had just landed a job as a vet nurse in Melbourne. I was still learning the ropes, but I imagined I would stay there for years, building a life around the work. Then, five months in, the vet called me into his office and told me it wasn’t working out. “It’s not you,” he said, “I just really hate training people

3 days ago
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The Running Man to David Hockney: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

Stephen King’s dystopian novel gets an Edgar Wright reboot with Glen Powell, while the prolific British master is back with new paintingsThe Running ManOut nowEdgar Wright directs this reimagining of the 1987 sci-fi cult classic based on Stephen King’s 1982 novel, which envisioned a fictional America of 2025 sliding into totalitarianism. Glen Powell stars as the contestant attempting to survive a deadly televised game.Now You See Me: Now You Don’tOut nowThis third film in the magic-heist franchise reunites Jesse Eisenberg, Woody Harrelson, Dave Franco and Isla Fisher as the Four Horsemen. Directed by Ruben Fleischer (Zombieland), the new instalment sees the gang target a massive diamond. Expect more sleight-of-hand shenanigans

3 days ago
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The Guide #217: The Louvre heist seems straight out of a screenplay – no wonder on-screen capers have us gripped

It was like something out of a movie. On the morning of 19 October, news broke of a heist at the Louvre in Paris: four thieves, disguised as construction workers, had made off with eight “priceless” pieces of French crown jewels from the 19th century. They also took a crown that once belonged to Empress Eugénie, wife of Napoleon III, but for some reason dropped it outside the museum. The haul has since been valued by a prosecutor at around €88m.The details of the case are astonishing, from the robbery itself – the thieves arrived in broad daylight, using a truck with a mechanical ladder to access the targeted gallery’s window, which they cut through with power tools – to subsequent revelations about the museum’s security measures

4 days ago
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Seth Meyers on Trump: ‘The most unpopular president of all time’

Seth Meyers spoke about rising tensions within the Republican party with Donald Trump losing support from his base over the Jeffrey Epstein scandal.The Late Night host spoke about yesterday’s dramatic meeting in the situation room to discuss Epstein, an ongoing crisis that has seen the president becoming “wildly unpopular”.Meyers said that Trump is “by all the accounts the most unpopular president of all time” and up until this point has only been “able to hang on to power because he has a tight grip on the Republican party no matter what he did or how bad things got”.But a new poll shows that only 33% of American adults approve of how the president is managing the government, a figure that’s down from March with the fall driven by Republicans or independents.Meyers called this “a meaningful and real development” and “it’s not coming out of thin air” with Trump “pissing off Maga” in multiple ways

4 days ago
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Colbert on Trump and Epstein: ‘They were best pals and underage girls was Epstein’s whole thing’

Late-night hosts covered this week’s latest bombshell Epstein and Trump revelations and spoke about the president’s latest interview with Laura Ingraham.On The Late Show, Stephen Colbert spoke about the government shutdown likely coming to an end after “an historic impasse” (the shutdown later did end) and Democrat Adelita Grijalva being sworn in as a member of Congress, seven weeks after she won a special House election in Arizona.Colbert said she has been “reborn from the ashes” and will be the 218th and final signature needed to force a vote to release the Jeffrey Epstein files.He joked that on her first day she was shown around and told “down there is the room where you’re going to topple the pervert cabal”.This week saw some new emails from Epstein released which suggest Trump knew of his conduct

5 days ago
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Stock market sell-off continues, as Google boss warns ‘no company immune’ if AI bubble bursts – business live

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Crest Nicholson plans job cuts and warns on profits, blaming budget uncertainty

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‘Fear really drives him’: is Alex Karp of Palantir the world’s scariest CEO?

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Don’t blindly trust everything AI tools say, warns Alphabet boss

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The Breakdown | Could new Nations Championship transform Test rugby? The jury is out

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Mark Wood declared fit for first Ashes Test as England seamers ‘lick their lips’ at surface

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