Cambridge Market transformation plans announced by city council
A consultation to comment on the plans has opened.
The layout will be reconfigured. (Image: LDA Design)
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The details of a multi-million-pound project to transform Cambridge Market have been revealed.
Cambridge City Council has opened a consultation on its plans to transform the design, appearance, and usage of the historic market.
An update on Denbighshire’s new waste and recycling service will be given to councillors. On May 13, Denbighshire County Council’s Communities Scrutiny Committee will hear an update on plans for the weekly recycling service, along with a four-weekly residual waste collection, to be implemented during 2023. The new weekly trolley box recycling service was approved by the Council’s cabinet in December 2018. The roll out will commence after the completion of a new centralised waste depot on the Colomendy Industrial Estate in Denbigh, with construction set to start this summer. Tony Ward, the Council’s Head of Highways, Facilities and Environmental Services, said: “This project contributes significantly to the Council’s environmental ambitions as we will be using less fuel, recycling more waste and producing higher quality recycling suitable for use in the UK manufacturing industry.
An update on Denbighshire’s new waste and recycling service will be given to councillors. On May 13, Denbighshire County Council’s Communities Scrutiny Committee will hear an update on plans for the weekly recycling service, along with a four-weekly residual waste collection, to be implemented during 2023. The new weekly trolley box recycling service was approved by the Council’s cabinet in December 2018. The roll out will commence after the completion of a new centralised waste depot on the Colomendy Industrial Estate in Denbigh, with construction set to start this summer. Tony Ward, the Council’s Head of Highways, Facilities and Environmental Services, said: “This project contributes significantly to the Council’s environmental ambitions as we will be using less fuel, recycling more waste and producing higher quality recycling suitable for use in the UK manufacturing industry.
Gypsy and Traveller sites review to be carried out by council after camps set up on school fields
Denbighshire County Council will be conducting the audit after illegal camps were set up on high school fields
Updated
Travellers at Prestatyn in Denbighshire on Tuesday near the Nova Centre (Image: North Wales Live)
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Stock image of fireworks A council’s aim of limiting the negative impacts of fireworks will likely have to wait until the respective governments tighten existing laws. December saw councillors in Gwynedd overwhelmingly back a motion calling on legislation to introduce a lower maximum noise level for fireworks sold to the public. The motion, which also called for stricter regulations on when they can be let off, had also prompted a report looking at what actions the authority could take on a local level. But Thursday’s meeting of the Communities Scrutiny Committee heard that council officers could only recommend best practice when it comes to holding public displays, with the likelihood that the UK Goverment would have to change the law before councillors could implement the measures they wanted.