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'I did a run because Jeremy Clarkson saved my life'

by Jacqueline January 14, 2025
written by Jacqueline

"Without [Jeremy] Clarkson, without [Richard] Hammond, without [James] May, there is a good chance I would not be talking now."

Andrew Hood, from North Devon, was diagnosed with testicular cancer in 2021 after watching an episode of the television series The Grand Tour, which caused him to get checked for the disease.

He completed a 34-mile (55km) ultra-marathon between Oxford railway station and Clarkson's Diddly Squat Farm on Saturday to show his appreciation to the presenter and to raise awareness.

"Clarkson prompted me [to get checked], so I feel it is only right I pay that forward," said Mr Hood.

PA Media
Mr Hood ended his 34-mile ultra-marathon at Clarkson's Diddly Squat Farm

In the episode that caused the ultra-marathon runner to get himself checked, the motoring trio "had a little joke" about "getting up in the middle of the night and needing to go to [the toilet]".

He said it was these jokes that made him begin to think about prostate and testicular cancers.

It was then in the shower when he began to think more about testicular cancer that he noticed one of his testicles had "shrunk".

"One of mine had shrunk to the size of a marble and had gone rock solid," he said.

Mr Hood added: "It typically affects 15-year-olds up to those in their late 40s. The average age of diagnosis is about 34 – I was 48.

"I've had a very good friend who is 69 and was diagnosed last year."

Discussing his run, Mr Hood said: "I ran to the Farmer's Dog, which is [Clarkson's] pub, first of all.

"That was about the halfway mark of about 17 miles [27.5km] and I had the most amazing welcome and reception.

"When I arrived at Diddly Squat, it was a very hot day… and I arrived there to a really lovely reception – I got cheered in and I got rounds of applause.

"I knew I would find it emotional and I did – I cried."

PA Media
Mr Hood said without Jeremy Clarkson, Richard Hammond and James May he may not be alive today

Clarkson was unable to greet Mr Hood at the finish line due to commitments outside the UK, but the Devon man wrote a letter to the presenter in which he thanked him for saving his life.

He wrote: "Thank you will never be enough.

"You have ensured my children still have a father and you have ensured my wife still has someone who won't empty the dishwasher."

January 14, 2025 0 comments
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Tech

'Psoriasis made me feel like a human leopard'

by Jamie January 14, 2025
written by Jamie

A psoriasis sufferer has described how the condition made her feel "like a human leopard".

Psoriasis is an auto-immune condition affecting more than 125 million people worldwide. It causes skin to rapidly replace itself within days rather than the usual three to four weeks and the impact can be devastating.

Giorgia Lanuzza, 34, from Basingstoke, has been living with the condition for two decades and said she has turned her struggle into a story of self-acceptance.

The 34-year-old mum of two said it began when her father died when she was aged 13.

"He was in an accident – a motorcycle accident – and the grief just showed itself all over my body," she said.

"The skin cells build up and it can cause red dots, sometimes flaky. There are many different causes. I think mine is through stress.

"The weeks went on and the patches just spread, the dots gathered all over my body and soon I was just like a human leopard walking around. It was bizarre."

Giorgia Lanuzza
Ms Lanuzza said she had learned to embrace her skin

Ms Lanuzza said she suffered in silence, avoided school and kept her skin covered up.

"I was hiding this sadness and this psoriasis that was going on," she said.

"I did the only thing I knew really at the time, which was to joke and to make fun of myself before anyone else had the chance."

A trip to Thailand in 2015 became a turning point, she told the BBC, when she got a throat infection and her psoriasis "just blew up".

"The doctors said I was 97% covered – I had to take photos, I knew I needed to share these with the world," she said.

When Ms Lanuzza posted the photos on social media, she said the response was "insane", and added: "It really just still fills my heart now."

'Beautiful part of me'

After learning to "embrace" her skin, she has written an autobiographical book, titled Different Skin, that she said was "partly self-help".

"It's like a badge of honour, my psoriasis," she explained. "It really is just my strength now. It reminds me so much of my dad.

"Even with the severe cases of psoriasis that I've had, [my dad's] been the one on my shoulder saying 'Giorgia, show the world and you can do it'.

"I love my skin so much, it's a beautiful part of me. To see my daughter touching my skin and fascinated by it, just embracing me and learning that it's fantastic to be different – and in fact 'my mummy's an author' – she's really proud.

"I didn't feel alone anymore. This is so right. This path that I've taken, that my dad put me on, it's the right path for me.

"I have to keep my psoriasis, love it, love myself, and I'm going to teach the world how to do that as well."

January 14, 2025 0 comments
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Tech

'Gateway to town' reopens after a year of work

by Amy January 12, 2025
written by Amy

Two lanes of a "gateway" into a town are reopening nearly a year after work began to transform and regenerate the area.

Since August, one lane on Midland Road, Bedford, has been shut to allow for work to repave, widen and improve the road.

Anil Luthra, from Bubbly's Travel, welcomed the reopening but said construction had had an impact on every business in the area and most customers had "stayed away".

Andrea Spice, a Conservative at Bedford Borough Council, said the authority had worked really hard to "accommodate businesses".

Midland Road will reopen to traffic both ways on Wednesday, the council said.

Nicola Haseler/BBC
Andrea Spice said completing the work was a "significant milestone in our efforts to enhance Bedford's town centre"

The improvement work was part of the "Midland Road public realm improvements", which has been paid for through the Bedford Town Deal, a £22.6m government investment aimed at revitalising the town centre.

Mr Luthra added: "Most of the customers stayed away, they don't come on this side, you talk to someone [they say] 'oh Midland Road nah, we're not going there because of the road closure'.

"It has affected every business a little bit here, the restaurant next door has suffered a lot."

Nicola Haseler/BBC
The council said the work would create "a safer, more attractive, and welcoming environment for pedestrians, visitors, and residents alike"

Ms Spice, portfolio holder for economic growth, planning and prosperity, said: "There were parts of the town you could park and walk to, you might not have been able to park right outside, I appreciate that.

"I hope shopkeepers know we've tried really hard to accommodate them and their businesses.

"We have improved the pavement, we've re-laid it, it looks clean, it looks fresh, it's wider in parts.

"We've tried really hard to lift this part of town, which is a massive gateway for us because if you come off the train and you want to get into the town centre this is the road you walk down and this is your first impression of Bedford."

Nicola Haseler/BBC
The council has upgraded street furniture and decluttered the street, it said

Samantha Laycock, chair of the Bedford Town Deal Board, said: "This is just the beginning of Midland Road's transformation."

Bedford road re-opens, but ‘customers stayed away’
January 12, 2025 0 comments
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Tech

Walkie talkies handed out to keep Newquay safe

by Amy January 11, 2025
written by Amy

Beach lifeguards, police, CCTV operators and town rangers have been given 10 new walkie talkies to "enhance safety" across a Cornwall town's beaches and high street.

The project, funded with about £3,000 from the Office of the Police and Crime Commissioner, aims to "ensure quicker response times, better coordination and a stronger deterrent presence", said Mark Warren of the Newquay Business Improvement District.

"They will help keep our residents, local businesses, and visiting tourists safe throughout the year," he said.

The walkie talkies come on top of 80 already deployed in the town at shops and pubs, said Mr Warren.

January 11, 2025 0 comments
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Business

Sizewell C nuclear plant gets £14bn go-ahead from government

by Mason January 10, 2025
written by Mason

The government has committed £14.2bn of investment to build the new Sizewell C nuclear plant on the Suffolk coastline, ahead of the Spending Review.

Sizewell C will create 10,000 direct jobs, thousands more in firms supplying the plant and generate enough energy to power six million homes, the Treasury said.

Chancellor Rachel Reeves said the "landmark decision" would "kickstart" economic growth, while Energy Secretary Ed Miliband said the investment was necessary to usher in a "golden age of clean energy".

However, Alison Downes, director of pressure group Stop Sizewell C, said ministers had not "come clean" about Sizewell C's cost, because "negotiations with private investors are incomplete".

Once construction work begins, Sizewell C will take at least a decade to complete.

Reeves said it would be the "biggest nuclear building programme in a generation".

Ms Downes added she believed the investment could be spent on other priorities and feared the project would "add to consumer bills".

January 10, 2025 0 comments
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Industry

Faisal Islam: US and China deal is significant, but not an end to the trade war

by Logan January 9, 2025
written by Logan

It's a ceasefire on the main front of the global trade war. Global markets are rising again, and container ships can set sail across the Pacific.

The progress made in US-China talks in Switzerland was far greater than expected. The prohibitive triple-digit tariffs are now down to just moderately high levels, at least for three months.

The details were a little complicated, perhaps by design to enable both sides to save face.

The bottom line is this: the retaliatory tit-for-tat rise in tariff rates has been cancelled, and the so-called "reciprocal" tariff rate of 34% is lowered for at least 90 days to 10%.

The rates applying now are 30% from the US (which includes an existing 20% component aimed at curbing the illegal trade in fentanyl), and 10% from China.

The world's two biggest economies have stepped back from beyond the brink.

  • Markets rise as US and China agree to slash tariffs
  • What does the US-China deal mean?
  • Laura Bicker: China has come to the table – but this fight is far from over

Who blinked first? The row-back started a month ago, as investors sold US government debt aggressively after the reciprocal tariff rates were first revealed.

The ascent of the US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent to lead trade negotiations was the start of the process. Trade hardliner Pete Navarro has been clearly sidelined. It was Bessent who was in Switzerland with Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng at the weekend.

The US pushed back strongly against the idea of countries retaliating against their tariffs. China did the most and currently has the same baseline 10% tariff as the rest of the world.

So the US now has the problem. Why would any ally who did not retaliate expect to get worse than China, who did?

There was also nothing agreed on the longer-term challenges to the relationship, for example Chinese exchange rate policy.

So this does also affect the rest of the world profoundly. In the first instance this ceasefire is much better news than expected. It is not an end to the trade war, but it is a very significant truce.

China was facing a 2008-style factory shutdown and potential significant unemployment. It should be averted now.

At these tariff levels, prices will go up somewhat, but the trade will flow. Some uncertainty will remain, given the temporary nature of some of this.

The toy shop owner I met last month in Arizona, who will not publish prices in her Christmas catalogues, may still have that uncertainty, but probably can now count on the container ships sailing with her products onboard.

At the time the retaliatory tariffs were released, the US administration strongly suggested that the buyer countries always win trade wars. The seller or deficit countries such as China, need their buyer more than the other way round.

This has not proven to be the case. The potential financial market turmoil proved to be an equal and opposite source of pressure on the US.

The situation has improved, but the situation is far from over. And even the trade shock we have seen so far will have consequences.

China will attempt to project to the rest of the world that it is now the more reliable economic partner.

The US will have to decide how much it can contain China's rise in advanced technology, from microchips to electric vehicles to artificial intelligence. It may find it has some patching up to do with the rest of the world too.

January 9, 2025 0 comments
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Market

What matters to students in the local elections?

by Alyssa January 8, 2025
written by Alyssa

Rising bus fares, the environment and the cost of living were some of the issues students said matter most to them ahead of the upcoming local elections.

Thousands of young people will be eligible to vote for the first time on 1 May – but some said they will not. One man said it had fallen to the bottom of his priorities.

Students at the University of Warwick spoke about whether they would vote or not and what the issues were that mattered to them.

Naomi Carter, 24, said there was both a lack of awareness and "disillusionment" about the local elections, as people had thought there would be a "revolution" following the results of the general election last year.

Naomi Carter, 24, plans to vote in the upcoming local elections

Ms Carter, a welfare and campaigns officer for the university and who just graduated from a sustainable development degree, said she planned to vote.

"I always said I could vote in every election I could," she said. "Potentially my great grandmothers could have died for me to have the right to vote, so I better exert it."

Some people were not fully aware of what a council does for them, she added.

"Especially if you've got local councils and district councils and all sorts and the county council as well, I think it's just difficult for people to know why it feels relevant to them," she explained.

"If it's the huge election like the general election, you hear so much coverage of it, you know how important it is, but I think as it gets distilled down, people are less and less aware of why it's important and whose running."

Students at Warwick University would be eligible to vote in the Warwickshire County Council elections, depending on where they live.

  • I don't believe my vote will have an impact
  • What does your council do for you?
  • Are there elections where you live?

The council is responsible for waste management, although not roadside bin collections, and are also in charge of education and transport and social care.

Nathaniel Gate, 21, is undecided as to which party he will vote for

Nathaniel Gate, 21, lives in Leamington Spa, Warwickshire, and does not yet know if he will be voting – or who he would vote for.

"Alongside all of my university responsibilities, I think it falls more or less to the bottom of my priorities," he said.

The marketing and strategy masters student, who has lived in the area for four years, said "things were so static" voting was a "bit of a moot point".

Asked what mattered the most to him, he said the key issues had always been local buses.

"Currently me and my friends here are now going to go to my car, because i've had to bring my car up from home which is costing me quite a bit of money," he said.

He said it cost £3 each way for the journey to campus but parking cost £8.50. But now he has a staff job on campus he can park for free.

As the university was campus based, the only options for students who did not live on campus were to live in Canley, Coventry, or Leamington Spa.

"It takes about an hour on average to get from wherever you are in Leamington. The bus itself takes about half an hour, but waiting for the bus, that's the big issue," he said.

"Most university courses have a huge problem with attendance which I think would be massively helped if there was way more emphasis on making the transport and the buses way better."

Amro Maraqa, 18, said he wasn't sure if he was eligible to vote as an international student

First year management student Amro Maraqa, 18, said bus fare increases had affected him.

"Bus fares went up by 90p this year, from £2 to £2.90," he said.

"Which was not something I was expecting as it was kind of a hefty jump within a single year."

As an international student, he was not sure if he was eligible to vote, but he said his other main concerns were around the cost of living and the environment, including waste management.

Raphael Roy Taylor, 20, said he would "absolutely" be voting in the local elections

Raphael Roy Taylor, 20, is in his second year of a politics and history degree and said he "would absolutely be voting".

He said there should be more funding in the arts.

"We've got two different council areas. We're both representing Warwickshire but we're also a university that's based in Coventry," he explained.

"We're in rich privileged Warwickshire, half of it is in Coventry, I think we need to be really engaging with the regeneration fund for Coventry City Centre."

Sasha King-Smith, 21, said it was "really important" for students to vote

Sasha King-Smith, 21, just graduated with a politics degree and said it was "really important" for students to vote.

She said she had always voted in the local elections and went to the polls for the first time during the local elections in 2021- on the day she celebrated her 18th birthday.

Ms King-Smith, who is the union's democracy and development officer, spoke of how the key issues for her were the environment and inclusivity, alongside the cost of living.

"Even just trying to breathe. Existing, studying, everything costs money, also with the recent fee increases we're going to see students unhappy about that," she said.

"For the bus pass to get us to campus, my first year I think it was £325 and now it's like £410," she added. "It increases massively every year."

Daniel Eggleton, 20, said he had voted in the general election in the past

Daniel Eggleton, 20, is in his second year of studying Maths and has voted in the general election in the past.

But he said he found it tricky to vote for candidates who he thought were"morally reproachable" and at the local elections, he wanted to vote for those who deemed "honourable and upright."

"I think having people with a good sound set of ethics is very important to me," he explained.

"I want someone who is going to say what they're going to do and keep up with what they're going to do."

January 8, 2025 0 comments
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Innovation

Executive told it may need to bring in water charges

by Oscar January 7, 2025
written by Oscar

The Stormont Executive will need to raise money from water charges or other sources if it wants to improve the performance of NI Water, an independent watchdog has concluded.

The Northern Ireland Fiscal Council said changing the structure of NI Water will not, on its own, make a sufficient difference.

"The fundamental constraint on NI Water is a budgetary one," it said.

Persistent underfunding of NI Water has led to a shortfall in the wastewater infrastructure, which in turn, is limiting house building and other development.

How is water paid for?

Northern Ireland is the only part of the UK where households do not pay directly for their water.

Instead, NI Water receives a government subsidy which diverts more than £300m annually from the Executive's budget.

The fiscal council said a popular belief that households pay for water through a portion of their rates bill is not true.

It said the link with the regional rate was broken in 1998.

Sir Robert Chote, chair of the council, said: "The current funding model is not fit for purpose.

"Charging for water or increasing taxes would put a further squeeze on the household finances, but failing to do so has its own costs."

Sinn Féin and the DUP, the largest Executive parties, are opposed to water charges.

The Sinn Féin-controlled Department for Infrastructure is holding a consultation which could lead to all house builders in Northern Ireland having to pay into a wastewater infrastructure fund.

Pacemaker
Infrastructure Minister Liz Kimmins has proposed voluntary contributions from developers to a wastewater infrastructure fund

Infrastructure is aging

The Infrastructure Minister, Liz Kimmins, has set out a second proposal which would involve voluntary contributions from developers.

She said developer payments alone would not solve the problems but would be a "step forward on the journey towards having the infrastructure we all need".

Much of Northern Ireland's wastewater infrastructure is ageing and needs upgraded.

It means there are more than 100 towns and villages where the system is operating near or above capacity and cannot accommodate any additional wastewater connections.

Speaking in March, Kimmins said: "Due to years of historic underfunding and austerity by the British government, our current drainage and wastewater infrastructure is in urgent need of upgrades.

"Improving our sewerage systems will be a significant undertaking, costing billions and spanning multiple decades."

January 7, 2025 0 comments
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