Dorset carer stole £20k from extremely vulnerable woman dorsetecho.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dorsetecho.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
THIS is how many children have been involved in serious crashes in Southend in the past five years. Data released by crashmap.co.uk shows the hot spots for road crashes that have involved children every year in Southend since 2016. Proceeding from the east of the Southend borough to the west, a two-vehicle crash took place on Poynters Lane in Great Wakering on July 7, 2017. This saw four people seriously injured, all of which were children. Another two-vehicle crash happened on October 20, 2017 involved two vehicles which saw one child injured. On June 8 that year, a single-car crash happened outside Richmond Avenue Primary School, injuring one child.
A 100-YEAR-OLD tree in Westcliff is being chopped down by Southend Council, prompting the ire of a campaigning resident and a Tory councillor. David Corroyer, of Southbourne Grove, has criticised Southend Council for its move to chop down the tree on the road after a branch fell off last week. Mr Corroyer, 62, believes there is no need to completely remove the tree and it could have just been pruned, but the council insists signs of decay were found. In an email to the council, Mr Corroyer said: “At least we had a notice pinned to the tree stating a branch had fallen off so the whole tree has to be removed, could it not have been simply pruned? Or is this just the excuse that is needed?”
A 100-YEAR-OLD tree in Westcliff is being chopped down by Southend Council, prompting the ire of a campaigning resident and a Tory councillor. David Corroyer, of Southbourne Grove, has criticised Southend Council for its move to chop down the tree on the road after a branch fell off last week. Mr Corroyer, 62, believes there is no need to completely remove the tree and it could have just been pruned, but the council insists signs of decay were found. In an email to the council, Mr Corroyer said: “At least we had a notice pinned to the tree stating a branch had fallen off so the whole tree has to be removed, could it not have been simply pruned? Or is this just the excuse that is needed?”