Policing 2012/2013 Budget Consultation

From Somerset and Avon Police Authority:

“There is still time to tell us what you think about the policing budget.

You can have your say online by completing our 2012/13 Budget Consultation or by calling 01275 816377.

This year to explain the consequences of the Government’s offer of a freeze for the policing part of the council tax our Treasurer has turned to YouTube for help.  You can watch him explain the impact of the comprehensive spending review (CSR) on the police budget and what the council tax freeze means to you….  Click here to see the Treasurer on YouTube!

Visit our consultation website to have your say. You have until January 15, 2012 to tell us your views.”

Bus Service Consultation

“Somerset County Council is proposing to reduce its funding to bus services from 2012 due to cuts in our funding.  This could mean bus operators running fewer buses or stopping some services.  For full details of the proposals and to submit your comments please visit www.somerset.gov.uk/bussurvey and complete the online survey or contact us on 0845 345 9155 to have a survey posted to you.

The last date to have a survey posted to you is the 13 January 2012.”

A copy of the questionnaire has been included here for you to download and complete at your convenience.  Questionnaires need to be completed and returned to Somerset County Council (the address is on the questionnaire) by 20th January 2012.

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Waste and Recycling Collections – Severe Weather Guide

Some advice and information from Somerset Waste Partnership:

In severe weather, recycling and refuse crews will try to keep collecting if it is safe.

If your collection is missed, please be patient; we will try to return once conditions improve, working late and on Saturdays  to catch up.  Please put out recycling and refuse by 7am for the next three working days; if we have not been back by then,  please take it back in and put out by 7am on your next usual collection day.

If your collection is delayed, extra amounts of regular waste will be accepted: please put rubbish in black sacks, recycling in carrier bags and food in covered buckets or in black sacks with other rubbish.

In very bad conditions, we may have to suspend collecting garden and bulky waste to give priority to the main services.  If our clinical waste service is interrupted, we will get back as soon as possible.

Recycling is not just good for our environment, it also saves us all money.
If you do not separate out things like kitchen scraps, paper and cans, they end up in landfill.  Over £5million a year of your money currently has to be spent on landfill; money that would be better spent maintaining public services.  Every extra bottle, jar, can or piece of cardboard you recycle does make a difference.  The best thing you can fill your bin with is fresh air!

For help with how and where to recycle and information on collections during severe weather, go to:
Website – www.somersetwaste.gov.uk
Facebook – www.facebook.com/somersetwaste
Twitter feed – @somersetwaste
Local radio and local council customer services

Walk 1: Pavyott’s Mill and Naish Priory

Length: Approx. 4 miles
Type: Circular
Difficulty: Level walk involving stiles, roads, fields and some uneven ground
Footwear: Waterproof footwear advisable
Start: East Coker Village Hall (Grid Ref: ST537128), Halves Lane

Parking: East Coker Village Hall, Halves Lane

Walk 1 takes you around the northern part of the Parish along sunken lanes, by river bank and across redsand farmland, passing historic buildings and features of the famous sailcloth and rope-making industries which were East Coker’s main employers in the days before steamship.

So come and follow in the footsteps of T.S. Eliot and William Dampier.

(To be used in conjunction with the East Coker Rights of Way Map. Path names in brackets)

1. From the Village Hall car park, turn left into Halves Lane.  Continue to the T-junction and turn left.

2. Continue over the small bridge for 50yds, and on your right is a phone box.

A short diversion from the walk is Hymerford House (Grade I Listed), claimed to be the birth-place of William Dampier. Continue 50yds further down the road until you reach the entrance to East Coker Primary School.  Directly opposite, Hymerford House can be seen.  Retrace your steps back to the phone box.

3. Cross the road to the phone box, and start to follow the track (Bridleway Y9/53 Moor Lane).  Immediately on your left, beyond the house, will be a stile; cross this and start to follow the footpath to Pavyott’s Mill (Y9/30).

4. Keeping the River Odd on your left, follow the path over 3 stiles (Y9/32).

40yds beyond the third stile, you will find a stone-lined circular feature built into the river bank.  This is recently understood to have been used for the process of ‘retting‘, which helped separate flax fibres for use in the sailcloth and rope industry.

5. Continue towards Pavyott’s Mill, past the straw-thatched long roof of Redlands Farm on your left.

6. Cross a double stile, then head towards a small copse with stiles in and out (Y9/25).

7. Cross the river over a small footbridge and turn immediately right, following the river bank.  Go through a kissing gate and along a fenced footpath.

On your right is the imposing Pavyott’s Mill (Grade II Listed) and surrounding lakes.

8. After 50yds, turn left through a gate signed ‘Patchlake’.

[If the ground is waterlogged, you may choose an alternative route from here:- instead on going through the gate, carry on to the end of the fenced footpath until you reach Pavyott’s Lane. Turn left up the road for 400yds and take the bridleway to foxholes (Y9/47) on your left (as the road bears right).  Follow the hedgeline to the end of this field and rejoin the original route (Step 11), where you will turn right up the hill.]

9. Keeping the hedgerow on your right (Y9/22), continue to a stile on the top of a raised bank.

Standing with your back to the stile, you will see a view of St. Michael’s Church (Grade II Listed) and Coker Court (Grade I Listed), nestling in the wooded hillside.  Beyond is a row of beech trees which mark the Parish boundary and the old ridgeway coaching route between Yeovil and Crewkerne.

10. Cross the stile and follow the hedgerow (uneven ground) to group of cottages at Patch Lake.  Pass through a wicket gate, turn immediately right through a gate singed Placket and follow the footpath over a stile.

11. Walk north (Y9/21) to the tarmac road.

12. Turn left and follow the road for 50yds to the tree island.  Cross straight over the busy East Coker/Yeovil road into Placket Lane (Bridleway 9/51).

13. After 60yds, fork left to Naish Priory (Bridleway 9/52).

14. You will join a tarmac lane at Gunville – follow this straight on towards the medieval Naish Priory.

Naish Priory (Grade I Listed) dates back to at least the 14th Century.  Note the imposing, original door.  Despite the name, there appears to be no evidence of the building ever being a priory, though there is evidence of communal areas and a dormitory.

15. After the Priory, pass through the kissing gate signed East Coker Post Office (Y9/35) and follow the hedgeline (uneven ground) to the bottom of the field.

16. Go through the kissing gate and continue along the sunken footpath.

17. Turn left at Herne Cottage (Grade II Listed), then immediately right along the path (Y9/48) towards the Post Office, passing North Coker House (Grade II Listed) on your left.

18. Keep straight ahead following the narrow, walled footpath to the kissing gate. Caution: this is a blind exit onto the main road through East Coker.

19. Turn left onto the road, pass East Coker Village Stores (and previously Post Office also) to the junction with Long Furlong Lane (50yds on the right).

20. Turn right into the lane, crossing the grass verge to the pavement opposite.

21. Look for the stile by the five bar gate, cross and follow this path (Y9/38) to East Coker Mill (Grade II Listed).  Cross the next stile and down a narrow, walles footpath into Mill Lane.

22. Turn left for 60yds, then turn right into a walled footpath as the road turns to the left.  This takes you into Drakes Meadow, the site of the former twine and ropeworks factory.  Turn Right at the junction and follow the path back to the Village Hall.

 

Walk 2: Views of Dorset, Coker Court and St Michael’s Church

Length: Approx. 2.5, 3 or 4 mile options
Type: Circular
Difficulty: Stiles, roads, fields and uneven ground. Some steep inclines.
Footwear: Waterproof footwear advisable
Start: East Coker Village Hall (Grid Ref: ST537128), Halves Lane

Parking: East Coker Village Hall, Halves Lane

Walk 2 takes you around the southern part of the Parish, through farmland, woodland, private parklands and shady lanes, with views towards Dorset’s rolling hills, an area of outstanding natural beauty.

(To be used in conjunction with the East Coker Rights of Way Map. Path numbers in brackets.)

1. From the Village Hall car park, turn left into Halves Lane.  At the T-junction turn right.

2. Using the pavement, keep the Millenium Stone on your left and walk up the narrow Back Lane (Y9/41).  Follow the lane to it’s end and turn right into Back Street.

3. After 100yds, you will be entering Coker Court Parks.  Continue in the same westerly direction through the kissing gate and along the tree lined footpath to Primrose Hill (Y9/7).

On your left you will see the recently restored ‘Ice Pond’ which, in the 19th and early 20th centuries, when frozen in the winter, supplied ice to be stored in the underground ice house near Coker Court.

4. After the next kissing gate, cross over the road and follow the bridleway (Y9/45) past Westfield Farm towards Primrose Hill (this track is often muddy).

5. At the end of this track turn left and cross a stile.  Follow the footpath (Y9/5) south easterly, along the ridge.

The extensive views from this ridge extend across the county boundary into the Dorset hills.

6. Cross another stile, continue along the ridge until at the end, another stile takes you onto the road.

7. Turn right down the hill.  At the bottom of the hill is the southern parish boundary stone (a ram).

8. Turn left along the bridleway to Sutton Bingham (Y9/44).

 

Here the route now divides into 2.5, 3 (go to number 16.) or 4 mile (go to number 19.) lengths.

Short Route (approx 2.5 miles)

9. After 200yds (opposite the farm entrance), you can turn left up the steps and enter the wood, taking a shorter route through the parklands and back to the Village.

10. Continue straight through the woods, exit over a stile, and walk straight up the incline (Y9/6 north) for 400yds.  The Park will flatten out and then head downwards.

You will pass the Ice House on your right as you approach your original point of entry into the Parks.

11. Cross the stile and turn right down Back Street.

12. You will approach the historic Helyar Almhouses (Grade II Listed) in front of you and the entrance to Coker Court (private, Grade I Listed) and St Michael’s Church (Grade II Listed) on your right.

T.S. Eliot’s ashes are interred in the church and there is much history and architecture to be explored in this peaceful and beautiful church.

13. Heading back down the hill, leave the church grounds passing the Almshouses on your right.

The Helyar Almshouses were erected between 1640and 1660 by Archdeacon William Helyar.

14. If you wish to visit The Helyar Arms pub, turn right into The Paddock, follow the path and turn right onto the Village road.  The pub is immediately in front of you.  After your visit, return to the exit from the Paddock and continue following the road as it bends to the right (caution as there is no pavement for 100yds)If not visiting the pub, continue to the junction and continue straight onto the Village road.

15. Continue along the road as it rises then falls, past the Cemetery on your right.  Follow the pavement, back to the Millennium Stone, and turn left at the junction, following the road back to the Village Hall.

 

Longer Route (approx 3 miles)

16. Continue along Isles Lane (Y9/44), which is often muddy.

This was once the old ridgeway coaching route between Yeovil and Crewkerne.

17. You pass through shaded woodland for approximately 600yds, and arrive at a lane junction.  Turn left abd walk down the hill (Stoney Lane) towards the village.

18. After 400yds you will pass between two pillars.  A footpath across the parks (Y9/8) takes you to St Michael’s Church.

T.S. Eliot’s ashes are interred in the church and there is much history and architecture to be explored in this peaceful and beautiful church.

The walk can now be completed in the same manner as the shorter route by going to number 13.

 

Longest Route: (approx 4 miles)

19. Continue along Isles Lane (Y9/44), which is often muddy, to the junction at the end (Sutton Bingham). Beware of traffic at the junction.

This was once the old ridgeway coaching route between Yeovil and Crewkerne.  At the junction, you will have a view of Sutton Bingham Reservoir, with its resident and migratory water fowl; a popular local attraction with parking area and a 12th century Norman church – well worth a visit on another day!

20. Turn left and follow the road for approximately 100yds. Go throughthe second farm gate on your left and follow the footpath (Y9/9) cross one field to meet up with the village road.

21. If you wish to visit The Helyar Arms pub, or St Michael’s Church, turn right and follow the road into the Village; if not, go to number 22.  The Helyar Arms will be on right after approximately 400yds, with the Paddock and the church on your left shortly after this.  The walk can be completed in the same manner as the shorter route by going to number 15 (if visiting the pub) or number 13 (if visiting the church).

22. Alternatively, turn right following the road for 50yds.  Turn left over a stile and follow the footpath (Y9/10) signed to Moor Lane across farmland.

23. After four fields you will come to footpaths which cross; keep straight on (one field) to meet Moor Lane by the Sewerage Works. 

24. Turn left and follow the hardcore lane west (Bridleway y9/53) to meet the main village road.

25. Turn left, walk over the small bridge, and then turn right at the junction, following the road back to the Village Hall.

Definition of Land Classification Grades

Source: Appendix 1 of an Agricultural Land Classification (ALC) assessment of land adjacent to an existing quarry off Bawtry Road, Mission, Doncaster commissioned by Mr M. Rowley – the landowner and quarry operator. Study undertaken by S.J.King B.A. (Hons), F.I. Soil Sci, of Land Use Consultancy Services, Market Weighton, York, on behalf of John Lunt, Land and Planning Consultant of Epworth, Doncaster, September 2004

[wpfilebase tag=file path=’Land Definitions.pdf’ /]

INFORM Somerset

Have you ever needed a statistic about Somerset and not known where to find it? Ever wanted to access a wide range of information about the county, at different geographical levels, all in one place?

If so, you may be interested in INFORM Somerset, the new online data hub providing detailed information about and for Somerset.

Structured across a range of themes, including Health and Wellbeing, Housing, Crime and Community Safety, and Economy and Jobs, the user friendly site includes indicators presented in interactive maps and tables that can either be simply viewed or be printed off and downloaded. Together, these indicators allow users to build up a detailed picture of the people living in Somerset, the organisations operating here, and the issues and challenges
they face.

The hub is maintained by the Partnership Intelligence Unit (PIU), with input from across Somerset County Council and the wider Somerset Intelligence Network (SINe).

You can access INFORM here: http://inform.sine.org.uk/

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