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  1. Cornwall Council considers spending £159m on new town

    Richard Whitehouse

    Local Democracy Reporting Service

    Cornwall Council is proposing to use £159m to help build an access road for a planned new town and other works towards the major project.

    Reports going to next week’s cabinet meeting detail the next stages in the council’s intervention in getting proposed new developments under way on land at Langarth, near Threemilestone.

    The council has already agreed to buy plots of land for 154 homes but is now moving forward with other parts of the development.

    Planning permission is already in place for 2,700 homes and various associated developments on land in the area but none of the separate developments have got under way.

    Earlier this year the council announced that it was intervening to try to kick start the developments which are a key part of its housing targets included in the local plan which runs to 2030.

    The council is aiming to bring together all the developments and use them to create a “new town” which could have about 8,000 people living there – similar in size to Liskeard, Launceston or St Ives.

    The cabinet will debate the proposals next Tuesday.

  2. Seven arrested in illegal money lending crackdown

    BBC Radio Devon

    Seven people have been arrested in Brixham as part of a crackdown on illegal money lending in the town.

    Members of the England Illegal Money Lending Team, working with Devon and Cornwall Police and Trading Standards officers, executed search warrants at five addresses.

    They seized documentation, electronic devices and a quantity of cash.

    Six men, aged between 33 and 45, and a 27-year-old woman, were arrested on suspicion of offences including illegal money lending, money laundering and perverting the course of justice.

  3. Third suspected case of Alabama rot affects Cornwall dogs

    Cornwall Live

    A dog is currently being tested for Alabama rot in Cornwall after a suspected case of the flesh-eating disease led to the death of another pooch.

    The killer condition is reported to have claimed three animals in the county this year. Its latest victim had been walked at Tehidy Woods, near Camborne.

  4. Weather: Staying mostly cloudy

    Dan Downs

    Weather Forecaster

    A few clear spells are possible overnight, but skies will be mostly cloudy and a little light rain or drizzle may edge in from the west later into Tuesday evening.

    Minimum temperature: 5 to 8C (41 to 46F).

    Weather

    Wednesday looks set to remain mostly cloudy with a little light rain or drizzle around, but a few brighter spells are possible too.

    The south-easterly breeze will pick up later.

    Maximum temperature: 7 to 10C (45 to 50F).

  5. MP worried that UK is 'running out of Brexit road'

    BBC Politics

    A Devon Conservative MP who backs calls for a second Brexit referendum says time is running out for Prime Minister Theresa May to decide on her next actions.

    Totnes MP Sarah Wollaston said she was "feeling very worried about the fact that in 108 days we run out of road".

    Quote Message: The only red line so far the prime minister hasn't laid down is the one that takes us off the edge of the cliff into a chaotic no deal.
    Quote Message: So I very much hope that once she comes back [from meeting other European leaders for talks aimed at rescuing her Brexit deal] with nothing more than a cosmetic change from the European Union, what we'll see is a serious discussion of Plan B. That, in my view, should include getting the consent of the British people to the actual deal on offer."
    Sarah Wollaston
  6. 'Keep button batteries from children' warning

    Facebook

    View more on facebook

    The Facebook post is the latest in a series from Cornish Trading Standards staff warning about the dangers of children swallowing the small batteries.

  7. Lights pulled down in Ilfracombe Christmas tree vandalism

    North Devon Gazette

    The organisers of Ilfracombe’s Christmas decorations have warned the town’s Christmas tree may have to be removed if vandalism continues after its tree had been "attacked repeatedly" since it was put up two weeks ago.

  8. Brexit: Concerns over 'demand' on local authorities

    Rob England

    BBC News Online

    A political group in the South West has called on the government for "more information and more engagement" over Brexit.

    A letter has been sent to the minister for housing communities and local government from members of the Heart of the South West group, which is made up of 23 local authority and NHS organisations from Devon and Somerset.

    Members said they were "concerned about the potential increased demand on local authorities in areas such as Trading Standards and environmental health" post Brexit, especially due to existing funding restrictions.

    A spokesman for the group said it was "frustrated by a lack of information from Westminster" which was "hindering the local assessment of the likely impact of Brexit" on the area.

    Union flag and EU flag
    Quote Message: We have no desire to enter into the politics of Brexit, our only interest is in practical steps that would protect the best interests of the 1.7 million residents and 89,000 businesses that are in the... area." from Councillor David Fothergill Somerset County Council Leader
    Councillor David FothergillSomerset County Council Leader
  9. Seeing Bude rock fall 'was definitely shocking'

    Chloe Axford

    BBC Spotlight

    Video content

    Video caption: Seeing Bude rock fall was 'definitely shocking'

    A geologist is to visit the site of a cliff fall near Bude to examine how safe it is, Cornwall Council says.

    Tonnes of rock fell away at about 16:00 on Monday.

    Deborah Smith was at Lynstone Road and managed to film the rock fall.

    She said she was "definitely shocked" to see the fall but it was not going to put her off walking in the area.

    Bude rock fall. Pic: Deborah Smith

    Cornwall Council said staff had already inspected the cliff path "to make sure there is no immediate danger to walkers" and the South West Coast Path running through an open field in the area was still open to the public.

    But it did say people should remain vigilant when walking along the coast path and "report any significant cracks"; as well as ensuring they kept a good distance from the base of the cliffs.

  10. Doctors object to Torbay retirement village plans

    Ed Oldfield

    Local Democracy Reporting Service

    Torbay retirement village

    Doctors are objecting to plans for a retirement village in Torbay because of the pressure extra elderly residents will add to local health and care services "already close to breaking point".

    English Care Villages has submitted plans to Torbay Council for a 159-home “continuing care retirement community” at Sladnor Park, a former holiday park near the village of Maidencombe on the coast between Torquay and Shaldon.

    The Maidencombe Residents' Association said the apartments would be too expensive for locals and the isolated site, two-and-a-half miles from the nearest urban centre at St Marychurch, would bring in outsiders who would increase pressure on health and care services.

    Objections to the plan include one from Torquay GP Dr Roger Fearnley, who warned health services were already “close to breaking point” and said the development would attract people retiring from outside the local area. Other doctors in the areas have also criticised the proposal.

    The developer said the retirement village would serve the area with a range of flexible accommodation and care options as the area’s population aged.

    The application is expected to be decided on in the next few months.

  11. Government 'is backing Stadium for Cornwall'

    BBC Politics

    The government says it is backing the long-running campaign to get a new sports stadium built in Cornwall.

    The comments, in the House of Commons, were in response to the Conservative MP for St Ives, Derek Thomas, who challenged ministers to do more for the Stadium for Council.

    The £14.3m Stadium for Cornwall is planned for a site near Threemilestone, outside Truro, as a new home for the Cornish Pirates rugby team, Truro City Football Club and facilities for Truro and Penwith College.

    Last week, Cornwall Council leader Adam Paynter said the government had to say whether or not it would spend £3m towards building the stadium match-fund local cash agreed in April.

    Stadium for Cornwall
    Quote Message: This stadium isn't just about sport - although we should support Cornish Sport - but also about the health and well-being of children and adults right across the county. We're nearly there with the money. What more can the treasury do to delivery this fantastic opportunity?" from Derek Thomas MP Speaking in the House of Commons
    Derek Thomas MPSpeaking in the House of Commons

    Treasury Minister Robert Jenrick said he met Cornish council officials last week and would be working with partners in Cornwall and Sports England "to seek a means to bring the exciting project to a successful conclusion".

  12. Reward offered for missing funeral home dog

    Rob England

    BBC News Online

    A family has renewed its appeal to trace its missing therapy puppy.

    Pudding, a 16-week-old dachshund, ran away after being spooked near Puslinch Bridge in Kitley Woods, Yealmpton, at about 10:00 on Sunday 2 December.

    Pudding

    The mother of Pudding's owner, Cheryl Burdett, said her family had been looking "around the clock".

    Pudding is a therapy puppy for bereaved families at Ms Burdett's family funeral home in Plymstock.

    Ms Burdett said she was "forever grateful" for the help they'd had in the search from friends and strangers.

    "More than 300 people have very kindly given up their time looking" she said, adding some had even used drones and thermal cameras to search.

    A reward has been offered by the family for the puppy's safe return.

  13. Dustin Lance Black: 'Our son should know his egg donor'

    BBC Radio 5 live

    Dustin Lance Black and Tom Daley

    Dustin Lance Black and his husband, Plymouth-born Olympic diver Tom Daley, became parents for the first time in June, having son Robbie Ray through surrogacy.

    Mr Black, an Oscar-winning screenwriter, and Mr Daley used a gestational surrogate in California, and a different egg donor, to have Robbie Ray.

    In a specially recorded podcast for BBC Radio 5 Live. he talks about there were "two women out there who made this possible"

    Mr Black said he believed it was important for people to understand the difference between gestational and traditional surrogacy, where the surrogate's own eggs are used.

    He added that the process made him rethink the couple's relationship with their egg donor, adding that he and Mr Daley were now planning to take Robbie Ray to meet her next year.

  14. Bloody T-shirt 'not forensically examined'

    Johanna Carr

    BBC News Online

    A bloody T-shirt found on the body of a holiday island worker who died after going missing from a party on the Isles of Scilly was not forensically examined, an inquest has heard.

    Josh Clayton's body was found on rocks 10 days after he disappeared on Tresco, where he had been working as a bar manager, in September 2015.

    A post-mortem examination was carried out 15 days later and clothes he had been wearing were destroyed, Plymouth Coroner's Court heard.

    Pathologist Dr Russell Delaney said he saw the T-shirt and blood staining from fluid was due to decomposition which was "not an unusual finding" in such circumstances.

    Dr Delaney also said he found no evidence of "any significant injury" and the cause of death was "unascertained".

    Det Chief Supt Steve Parker, from Devon and Cornwall Police, previously told jurors it was "highly unlikely" there would have been any forensic evidence on Mr Clayton's clothes but added: "I can't say categorically."

    The inquest continues.

    Josh Clayton's