| Partners in 
			place for £200 million housing investment 
			 MORE than £200 million is 
			to be spent in Liverpool, delivering 1,500 new homes and bringing a 
			further 1,000 back into use.  Liverpool City Council has 
			appointed its official Housing Delivery Partners; a consortium made 
			up of private housing developer Redrow Homes, affordable housing 
			provider Liverpool Mutual Homes (LMH) and its building contractor 
			Willmott Dixon. Redrow Homes and LMH will jointly build 1,500 new 
			homes and LMH will bring 1,000 back into use
 The 'Building Our Future' partnership, which will run for an 
			initial five years, has the potential to attract over £200 million 
			of private investment into the City, focusing on building the right 
			homes, in the right place, at the right time.
 
 Redrow will develop housing for sale bringing a range of executive 
			homes to Liverpool and will identify and acquire land to enhance the 
			Council's own development sites. LMH will develop affordable housing 
			by investing their own funding and by attracting grant funding. They 
			will also be seeking to bring 1,000 empty properties back into use. 
			Willmott Dixon will work on behalf of LMH to build new homes and 
			refurbish properties to enable them to be brought back into use.
 
 Liverpool City Council will provide strategic planning and housing 
			need information, as well as selling surplus land to the partnership 
			for development.  Land and investment will be brought together 
			in a planned way, with any capital receipts generated by the sale of 
			Council sites and assets reinvested back into the Partnership.
 
 Using their combined experience and expertise, the partnership will 
			provide a wide range of house types from affordable to executive 
			homes, without the Council being required to fund the schemes from 
			its own resources.  The partnership will also prioritise 
			employing local people, providing training and supporting local 
			supply chains, as well as developing and delivering complementary 
			economic development projects.
 
 The partnership will work on a wide range of initiatives to tackle 
			empty properties, including those that have not been lived in for a 
			long time, such as maximising investment from property owners and 
			securing funding to bring houses back into use. Areas where groups 
			of empty properties are most heavily impacting on streets will be 
			particularly targeted.
 
 Mayor of Liverpool, Joe Anderson launched the search for a Housing 
			Delivery Partner last summer as part of his plans to work with 
			public and private sector organisations to drive up the quality of 
			housing in the City. He said:- "I want everyone in Liverpool 
			to have access to a decent home, and that's why improving our 
			housing stock is one of my top priorities. I promised to build 5,000 
			new homes in Liverpool by 2016 and bring 1,000 back into use, and 
			we're already well on course to exceed that target. This partnership 
			will allow us to do even more. 
			We're using this innovative approach to help us build on the 
			fantastic progress we are making in housing in this City.  It 
			will unlock new investment opportunities and enable us to pool 
			resources and expertise at a time which is vital when we are facing 
			significant spending cuts. It will create new jobs and deliver new 
			and refurbished properties in the neighbourhoods that need it most, 
			as well as improving the lives of thousands of local people."
 
 The partnership will carry out a comprehensive review of the housing 
			market across the City, to identify development and refurbishment 
			opportunities; taking into account housing need and demand; the 
			Council's Housing Strategy; and the need to complement other actual 
			and planned regeneration projects.
 
 The 2, full delivery programmes for each area of work;  for 
			new-build and one for refurbishment; will be agreed by the 
			partnership board, before being recommended to the Council's Cabinet 
			for consideration and approval in September this year.
 
 Assistant Mayor and Cabinet Member for Housing, Councillor Ann 
			O'Byrne, said:- "This new partnership will play a major part 
			in the on going transformation of housing in this City, and will 
			help us build on the fantastic momentum we've created in recent 
			years. 
			It's another great example of how we are finding imaginative ways of 
			providing the type of good quality housing this City needs.
			Once the partnership is in place, we'll be working together to drive 
			forward some really important schemes which will increase housing 
			choice and breathe new life into communities. The combined 
			experience and expertise that this consortium brings with it gives 
			me real confidence that we can make the partnership a massive 
			success story for Liverpool."
 
 Welcoming the partnership, Redrow Homes (Lancashire) managing 
			director Steve Greenhalgh, said:- "We're delighted to be part 
			of a pioneering arrangement designed to deliver 2,500 much needed 
			homes across the City.
			We're particularly pleased that Redrow's investment in private sale 
			homes will help stimulate the creation of affordable housing, 
			including the refurbishment of empty housing stock.  The City 
			Wide approach and joined-up thinking between the Council, Liverpool 
			Mutual Homes and ourselves is what makes this project so exciting."
 
 Chief Executive at LMH, Steve Coffey, said:- "This is 
			tremendous news for us, residents and Liverpool as a whole; major 
			changes are going to be made to housing right across the City. 
			We've worked very closely with the Council since it transferred 
			15,000 homes to us in 2008, raising the standard of housing 
			significantly during our initial 5 year, £400m improvement 
			programme. We have continued this approach since with our 1st new 
			build developments. 
			We share the Mayor's vision and ambition to deliver new, high 
			quality, sustainable housing and bring back into use empty homes to 
			meet demand. It goes much deeper than just the physical buildings. 
			We are creating resilient and resourceful neighbourhoods that 
			address a wide range of issues such as tackling anti-social 
			behaviour and helping people into work and training to make sure 
			they are given the chance to lead enjoyable and prosperous lives."
 
 John Frankiewicz, divisional chief executive, Willmott Dixon Capital 
			Works, said:- "Willmott Dixon is delighted to be a part of 
			this exciting and innovative partnership with Liverpool City Council, Liverpool Mutual Homes and Redrow Homes. 
			This partnership builds on our strong track record of delivery 
			within Liverpool, which recently includes constructing Notre Dame 
			Catholic College and a new home for Archbishop Beck Catholic Sports 
			College. It will allow us to unlock employment and training 
			opportunities for the people of Liverpool, an aspect of our business 
			underlined recently when we won a Queen's Award for Enterprise.  
			We look forward to working with our partners to deliver new homes 
			and bring empty properties back into use in communities throughout 
			the City."
 
 Programme delivery will be closely monitored by the partnership, 
			with quarterly and annual reports provided to the Council's Cabinet.  
			The 'Building Our Future'  partnership will be for a period of 
			5 years (2014 to 2019), with the option to extend for a further 5 
			years (2019 to 2024). It supports the Mayor's target of delivering 
			5,000 new homes and bringing a further 1,000 properties back into 
			use over the next 3 years.
 
			
			 |  | EQUIPMENT BOOST 
			FOR 5 DISABLED MERSEYSIDE CHILDREN 5 disabled Merseyside 
			children are among the first to benefit from a new charity 
			partnership which has raised more than £450,000 to provide 
			specialist equipment. 
			The equipment is being funded through a partnership between leading 
			UK children's disability charity Newlife Foundation and The Morgan 
			Foundation, which supports organisations across Merseyside including 
			education therapy group Stick 'n' Step, Gilbrook Special School on 
			the Wirral and Activate Arts in Kirkby. 
			The money was raised through a recent (May) Morgan Foundation golf 
			day and gala evening which featured rock legend Robert Plant. It 
			will be used to provide vital equipment for families working with 
			Newlife Foundation and living in The Morgan Foundation catchment 
			area of Merseyside, North Wales, West Cheshire and North 
			Shropshire.*  
			In the 1st tranche of funding, almost £22,000 of equipment is 
			being provided for a total of 13 children. In Southport, 1 child 
			is getting £2,412 to help pay for a wheelchair and another will be 
			receiving a £660 specialist car seat. Car seats will also be 
			provided for 2 4 year olds, 1 each in Bootle and St Helens, 
			with a child in Prenton set to get a £3,600 bed.
			Newlife Foundation has previously funded 196 Equipment Grants for 
			children on Merseyside, totalling £250,856.
 * Wolverhampton Wanderers' charity, Wolves Aid, receives 10% 
			of the annual funding budget to replicate the work of The Morgan 
			Foundation in the Wolverhampton area.
 
			Rogue traders jailed for conning 
			elderly homeowners 2 
			men who conned elderly vulnerable people over building work on their 
			homes have been jailed.  Dean Evans , aged 30, of Manor House 
			Lane, Higher Heath, Whitchurch, Shropshire and Lee Hargreaves, aged 
			23, previously of Mather Avenue, St Helens, were sentenced at 
			Liverpool Crown Court after pleading guilty at an earlier hearing at 
			the City's magistrates court to offences under the Fraud Act and 
			Consumer Protection From Unfair Trading Regulations (CPR)
 Evans pleaded guilty to 9 offences under the CPR and 1 fraud 
			offence, and Hargreaves pleaded guilty to 3 CPR offences and 2 fraud 
			offences.
 
 Liverpool Trading Standards Officers took action after Evans and 
			Hargreaves carried out painting, roofing and guttering work on a 
			number of properties during the summer of 2013 after cold calling in 
			Liverpool 9.
 
 The work was of poor quality, they didn't give the required 
			paperwork or cancellation notices and failed to return and put right 
			faults when contacted by the homeowners.
 
 They were also charged with fraud by North Wales Police following a 
			complaint about overcharging for work they claimed to have carried 
			out on a property in the Wrexham area. All of the home owners 
			targeted were elderly.
 
 His Honour Judge Hatton said that he had to take into account the 
			numbers of elderly victims, the fact the offences were committed 
			over a period of time and in different parts of the country. He said 
			that the only appropriate sentence was custodial and the difference 
			in sentencing reflected the fact that Evans was clearly the 
			ringleader.
 
 He sentenced Evans to 10 months in prison and Hargreaves to 6 
			months. He ordered that they both be disqualified from driving for 2 
			years as they were itinerant fraudulent traders and ordered that a 
			vehicle seized from Evans during the investigation be forfeited.
 
 John McHale, head of Liverpool Consumer Protection, said:- 
			"This is an important result for the service and its partners 
			working together to protect vulnerable residents in the City. We 
			will not accept the targeting of consumers and in particular 
			vulnerable members of our communities by rogue traders. Consumers 
			have rights and those rights need to be protected and we will 
			continue to ensure we use all statutory powers at our disposal to 
			deal with rogue trader activity.  We would also advise people 
			not to accept work from building workers offering to do work when 
			they cold call. This case is a classic example for homeowners."
 
			Range High School Chemists Create 
			Winning Formula! 
			 
			BUDDING chemists from Range High School will 
			represent the North West in the final of a national schools' 
			chemistry competition after beating off hopefuls from across the 
			region.
			The students from Range won the North West regional heat of the 
			Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) Schools' Analyst Competition held 
			at the University of Central Lancashire (UCLan) in Preston. 
			The 3 AS level chemistry students; Ciara McQuaid, Chloe Uffendel and 
			Jonathan Baker, and triumphed over 10 schools from across Lancashire 
			and Merseyside and will represent the North West region at the 
			prestigious UK final which will also take place at UCLan in June 
			2014. 
			Each team undertook various practical analytical experiments based 
			on problems relevant to industrial or social needs. These were 
			judged on skill, understanding and accuracy using tests intended to 
			promote team work and safety in the laboratory.
 Jillian Stretch, a chemistry teacher from Range High School, 
			accompanied the pupils to the UCLan event. She commented:- 
			"This was the first time our school has attended the event and so I 
			was extremely proud that they won the North West heat. They are 
			looking forward to representing the region in the national final.  
			The students thoroughly enjoyed working on the tasks and worked well 
			as a team. The one thing they all agreed on was that they had fun. 
			It has increased their confidence in their analytical skills and 
			given them a taste of facilities available at university."
 
 UCLan Senior Lecturer in Organic and Medicinal Chemistry Dr Rob 
			Smith commented:- "Congratulations to the pupils from Range 
			High School. Once again we saw just how capable young chemists from 
			across the North West are and what great lab and analytical skills 
			they have. 
			This year's RSC competition is particularly special for us as UCLan 
			will host the final next month. We are looking forward to welcoming 
			the 20 school teams from across the country to put their analytical 
			science skills to the test and see who will be crowned the overall 
			winner."
 
			You have helped us to donate 
			£96.00 so far to the Liverpool Lord Mayor's Charity 
			
						
						 WE 
			have have donated £96.00 to the Lord Mayor's Charity (Liverpool), 
			thanks to your help buying our B.O.A. 70th Anniversary DVD 's. Sadly 
			we did not sell all 50, so we are going to continue to sell them and 
			donate £3.00 from the sales until we have sold all 50 of them. The 
			donation of £96.00 will go towards Councillor Gary Millar's total, 
			that will help the Linda McCartney Centre, The Whitechapel Centre, 
			Variety - The Children's Charity and The Michael Causer Foundation. 
			As Councillor Erica Kemp was been sworn in to the role of 
			Liverpool's Lord Mayor on Tuesday, 11 June 2014, further donations 
			from us to the Liverpool Lord Mayor's Charity will now go to 
			Councillor Erica Kemp appeal fund. We would like to say a big well 
			done to Councillor Gary Millar for his efforts, over 2013 to 2014 
			and wish Councillor Erica Kemp good luck with her efforts. |