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Death of much-loved Stalbridge ex-teacher Pam Roberts

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Many ex-pupils of St Mary’s Primary School will be saddened by the death of ex-head teacher Pam Roxburgh (née Roberts) who died early last month in Blandford Hospital.

As ‘Miss Roberts,’ Pam taught at Stalbridge for in the 1970s before being appointed head of a primary school in Cornwall. She returned to Stalbridge as head of St Mary’s.

She married Edwin Roxburgh, an antiques dealer and land owner, and went to run a successful chinaware shop in Sherborne’s Long Street, before moving with Edwin to the Dordogne in SW France.

On Edwin’s death she returned to Dorset to live in Fitzoak Cottage in Higher St, Okeford Fitzpaine, where she was diagnosed with cancer and Parkinson’s disease.

Pam, 81, was a striking, warm-hearted lady with a keen sense of fun, says Andy Palmer, who was a 10 year-old pupil at the school when she first taught at Stalbridge.

‘When I moved back to Dorset I used to call on her several times a week and take her out and it was always a pleasure. She was full of fun and still behaved as if she was in her twenties, when she became friends with my mother, Audrey Palmer, who also taught at St Mary’s’.

Riding for the Disabled Makes Fun with Horses Accessible for All

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The Princess Royal is the President of the Riding for the Disabled, a National Charity, started in 1969, for riding horses and now carriage driving.

There are National and International Groups, one of the 500 groups in the UK is the Blackmore Vale RDA. The Blackmore Vale RDA often translate RDA as Riding Develops Ability or Riding for Different Abilities. They are situated in North Cheriton & are currently all crossing fingers, toes, & hooves that they are going to be able to start riding again soon. They have been closed for a year now, apart from a short while in the autumn when they were permitted to use a mechanical horse with a remote control & a family member helping the rider. They had one very special day when one rider was able to ride a live pony in the school & then……they were locked down again.

Image: National Hunt Jockey Bryony Frost who is a keen supporter of RD

In the picture their flag bearer is National Hunt jockey Bryony Frost, who is a keen supporter of RDA and is hoping that they can reopen soon and have some fun days & show everyone what they CAN do this year.

They are an eclectic group of many volunteers & ponies who together can provide riding, be it on Bob & Florin, the mechanical horses or the real ponies Pod, Toby, Woody & Duke. They normally (whatever that means now!) ride on Monday, Wednesday, Thursday & Saturday mornings but they can be flexible.

For more information please email  [email protected]

The Blackmore Vale March Issue out now!

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Ooof – sorry, sorry – the Blackmore Vale March magazine turned into a huge great thing. It’ll be a long read, so I suggest you go make a pot of coffee!

Lambs on the front cover of the March issue of The Balckmore Vale magazine


Obviously we’re bursting with the news – starting with Dorset’s own Handforth (you know you want to read that)…

There’s also important news on local help for victims of Domestic Violence, the deathly seriousness of littering at Compton Abbas Airfield and the genuine surge towards shopping locally.

EVERYONE should read Rupert’s column this month – he’s written a handy short hand guide breaking down the Local Plan. It has massive, long-lasting impact for every Dorset resident, and needs your attention – complaining in two years time that 30,000 new homes are being built will be too late, this is your chance (also check your local town council’s website – most are holding extra-ordinary meetings to discuss the Local Plan. Do attend, listen, and use your voice).

Andy Palmer’s column is probably my favourite yet, Roger’s story about ‘Darzet being spoke in Newfoundland‘ is SO interesting, and then of course there’s Brigit’s Hairy Footed Flower Bees

We’ve also got seven pages of Mother’s Day messages – I love them all. But we’ve tucked them away at the back, because you don’t need them til next week. No peeking.

There’s also pages of situations vacant for those looking for jobs in the Blackmore Vale March.

Don’t forget: every link is clickable, and there’s lots of video too. Do pinch and zoom the pages, and you can flip back and forth as you wish. And please, do share – you can share the whole magazine, or just a single page. Not long now and we can break out and see a face or two for outside chatting. I honestly can’t wait.
In the meantime, come have a chat on Twitter, Facebook or Insta. Coffee’s at 11, and we like posh biscuits.
Laura & Courtenay x

All previous issues can be seen on the Blackmore Vale magazine rack here

Sturminter Newton – Town Clerk Vacancy

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Sturminster Newton – Town Clerk vacancy

Sturminster Newton Town Council is seeking a Town Clerk. This is a real opportunity for an experienced leader who is dynamic, innovative, and resilient and who will focus on pragmatic solutions to meet the aspirations of the councillors and the people of Sturminster Newton.

The Town Clerk is responsible for carrying out all the functions of the Proper Officer and also the Responsible Financial Officer, providing effective leadership and management of staff, services and facilities. The role is challenging and you will be required to work evenings regularly and occasionally at weekends. You will be supported by a strong and positive team of eight staff.

The post is 25 hours per week, the core hours are 09.00 to 13.00 Monday to Friday and the remaining hours may be worked flexibly. The salary is NJC scale point 37 to 42 (£40,875 to £45,859) on a pro-rata salary of £27618.92 to £30985.81. The package includes the equivalent of 24 days’ paid leave plus public holidays and a contributory pension scheme.

For more information see the Town Council website or contact Acting Town Clerk, Mal Derricott, at [email protected]

A recruitment pack and application form (required for all applicants) can be downloaded via the link below.

http://www.sturminsternewton-tc.gov.uk/Working_for_the_Council_33711.aspx

Closing date for applications: 12 noon on Friday 29th March 2021

Interviews will be held during the week commencing Monday 6th April 2021

PREVIOUS APPLICANTS NEED NOT APPLY

Posted March 2021

Stamp duty holiday ‘to be extended until end of June’

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The Government is expected to extend the stamp duty holiday for another three months in order to boost the property market following the announcement of the roadmap to ease lockdown restrictions in Britain.

The news will be welcomed by many who were concerned about missing the 31 March deadline.

We understand that Rishi Sunak, Chancellor of the Exchequer, will make the announcement in the budget on 3 March 2021, although details of the extension are yet to be confirmed.

The SDLT holiday was designed to be a temporary relief to stimulate the market and support jobs following the COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent lockdown.

It is understood that property transactions fell by around 50% during the first national lockdown.

The tax relief increased the starting threshold of residential SDLT from £125,000 to £500,000 from the 8 July 2020 until 31 March 2021. Since the relief was introduced, transactions have significantly increased and seasonally adjusted data showed that in October 2020, transactions were 8% higher than October 2019.

The market has been very busy, and the boom has led to substantial increases in average house prices over the last seven to eight months which show little sign of abating. The SDLT threshold extension undoubtedly contributed to this increase. There has been considerable concern within the property market that the abrupt end of the tax break could bring significant disruption. The cliff edge and bottleneck could have seen thousands of transactions collapse, leaving many out of pocket and a sudden fall in property values.

Thousands of people signed a petition to extend the SDLT holiday, which resulted in the issue being debated in parliament and many estate agents, solicitors, surveyors and regulators have also lobbied the Government to extend the deadline.

A temporary solution?

It has been suggested by many professionals within the industry that the most sensible and balanced approach would be to continue the threshold extension and taper it out over a period of six months to a year to ensure there is no sudden collapse and that we don’t simply move the same issue further down the road, only to face it again in the coming months. In this way, we could ensure some continuity and stability in the property market at a time when many may feel that there is very little certainty in employment, finances, or the wider economy.

It is hoped that the extension takes into consideration the challenges the industry has faced amid greater demand from buyers and the lockdown.

If you need further advice please contact Charlotte Robins, Licensed Conveyancer

01823 625863 [email protected] in Taunton or Jenny Cottrell in Sturminster Newton 01258 444682 [email protected]

Voice of an Estate Agent: March 2021

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Regular monthly Blackmore Vale property commentary column in the Blackmore Vale from Susie and Brad the North Dorset Team at Meyers

Well it’s official, the stamp duty holiday has been extended by our Chancellor; the rumours from both the press and industry that have been circulating for the past weeks have finally been clarified but what does this mean for the property industry?  Is this just a ‘push-back’ of the cliff-edge ending feared by most? Will it buoy the industry up again and keep properties being listed for sale, or will this merely help those for whom the original end of March deadline had become an extremely stressful race to the finish line?

We find ourselves planning for the end of lockdown 3, with the housing market open, yet still hampered by factors out of our control. The stamp duty holiday to date, had clearly disproportionately buoyed the market, with many people bringing forward their plans to move home in order to make this saving. In so doing, it created an enormous strain on the ancillary services, the council, solicitors, planners and surveyors with the average time now taking for a house purchase to go from ‘under offer’ to ‘completed’, a whopping 134 days.

These unprecedented and unpredictable times continue with the now extended stamp duty holiday; Rishi Sunak providing this almost inevitable compromise enabling the huge backlog of properties currently under offer, to have their transactions cleared in time to make this crucial saving. Rumours had been circulating the industry for weeks attempting to quantify what if any, compromise would be reached and finally we have the answer, an extension of the SDH till end of June 2021.

To that end, and to quote our friends at Zoopla;

’There’s one thing we can’t get away from; the pandemic has unlocked a lot of new demand for homes; it has led to a ‘once in a lifetime re-evaluation of the home’ and it won’t stop there. With big life changes still inevitable this year, the factors behind buyer’s decision-making will get more and more complex’’

How this manifests itself within our Dorset property market, only the coming weeks and months will reveal, with an almost inevitable further ‘race to the finish line’ later this year.

Here at Meyers our flexible business model has been able to ride the storm so far and will continue to do so as we enter the next phase in this unprecedented period for house selling and buying. For further information on how we work, please contact a member of your North Dorset team:

Internet company founded by farmer who was quoted £120k for leased fibre line doubles staff to 81

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A privately owned internet business, founded by a farmer who was quoted £120,000 to connect a 300 metre leased fibre line to his office, has doubled its staff numbers in the last 12 months.

Blandford-based Wessex Internet now employs 81 people from its rural base on the Ranston Estate, an increase of 100 per cent since last year.

Wessex Internet installed 624 km of fibre in the ground in 2020, the equivalent distance from its Blandford offices to Perth in Scotland.

The business, which provides ultrafast connectivity to rural areas considered unviable by other providers, is planning to recruit more employees this year.

The growth follows a four-year migration to full fibre delivery from its previous wireless focus.

Hector Gibson Fleming, Managing Director, said: “We will continue to recruit more people over the coming year.

“The whole nation is currently undergoing a revolutionary change in approach to its working patterns, education, healthcare, home life and leisure activity.

“People and businesses in rural areas have the same rights to world class connectivity to support this as those in towns and cities.”

During 2020, Wessex Internet:

  • significantly increased its network footprint allowing for a continued growth with a year-on-year increase in the number of customers it connected by 27 per cent.
  • achieved a 59 per cent increase in the number of rural communities it connected to full fibre broadband from the previous year.
  • installed 624 km of fibre in the ground across Dorset, Wiltshire, Somerset and Hampshire. That’s the equivalent distance from Blandford to Perth in Scotland.
  • expanded its geographical reach from Warminster in Wiltshire, close to Fordingbridge in Hampshire, down to Lulworth in Dorset and over to Yeovil in Somerset.
  • doubled its number of employees. Every office-based function is in-house – from sales and customer support to project managers and marketing. The company has its own dedicated civils and construction team that build its network across the countryside.
  • extended its reach of non-residential connections to include schools, churches, farms, businesses, village halls and sports clubs. Among them Farmer Palmer’s Farm Park, Lulworth Heritage Centre and The Tank Museum at Bovington.
  • won a three-year contract to bring full-fibre broadband to some of the most rural areas in South Somerset following a successful bid to Connecting Devon and Somerset, a government subsidised scheme.

Wessex Internet adopts a community project-based approach to building networks.

It has more than 80 ‘Community Champions’ in local areas who work collaboratively with its in-house team.

The company is actively involved with helping rural homes and businesses to receive a broadband service that is on par with towns and cities through the government’s Rural Gigabit Connectivity Voucher (RGCV) scheme.

Hector Gibson Fleming, Managing Director Wessex Internet

Hector Gibson Fleming said: “Our focus is to expand our fantastic service to even more of the countryside.

“We want to significantly grow our customer base and continually improve our service experience for existing customers.

“We have everything in place to achieve this – robust systems, a strong management structure and the specialist skills that contributed to a successful 12 months.”

Hector’s father, James Gibson Fleming, 62, founded Wessex Internet in 2010 after receiving the shock £120,000 quote for connecting a leased fibre line to his farm office over a distance of 300 metres.

James Gibson Fleming Wessex Internet Chairman

He is now the company’s Chairman.

Eleven years later the Wessex Internet network consists of more than 150 wireless masts and over 2,000 km of fibre delivering ultrafast fibre and wireless coverage across Dorset, Wiltshire, Somerset and parts of Hampshire too.

In Dorset, Wessex Internet is one of the first providers to use funding from Dorset Council’s Rural Gigabit top up scheme to extend its network to new communities in the county that would otherwise have a sub-standard internet connection.

By: Andrew Diprose Dorset Biz News

The campaign for a real Dorset accent … | Tales from the Vale

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A lot of readers seemed to approve of my last column, the Editor tells me, in a rare burst of communication. 

The general feeling, though, is that the famous Dorset, ‘I be’ and ‘I b’ain’t’, does spread wider than North Dorset.

I’d like this to be true. In fact, the Editor and I are having top level Zoom meetings to discuss setting up The Campaign for A Real Dorset Accent (CARDA) to resurrect it, although it hasn’t actually died in North Dorset where I live.

One of the reasons for CARDA is to fight back against the habit some people – they know who they are (actually, the probably don’t) – have of raising their voice at the end of sentences, which turns statements into a question. I’ve written to Priti Patel, the Home Secretary, and James Vaughan, Chief Constable of Dorset Police, to try and make this a ‘Verbal Annoyance Crime,’ or VAC – at CARDA we’ve got to use a lot of acronyms or we won’t be taken seriously.  And as everyone else appears to think pretty much anything one says is a ‘hate crime’, I want to be part of it.

I’m not over confident of a positive response, or any response, to be fair, but someone’s got to make a stand and I invite readers to sign-up to CARDA.  The Headquarters will be my Music Studio which be in the garden of my tiny cottage in Mappowder.  (I’m even getting a plaque and will have a socially distanced opening ceremony. So socially distanced, in fact, that I will be the only one attending). This ceremony will be at noon on Saturday, March 20th, the first day of Spring, when hopefully warmer weather will coincide with a vast drop in Covid cases (nd I can put the sweet peas in the greenhouse).

As I write this, there’s been a 130% increase in Covid cases in Child Okeford. I believe that the cause could be the diversion of traffic through the village due to the closure of the Shillingstone road (we’re living in the Vale of Tiers).  We all note a ghastly whiff when driving from Blandford to Child Okeford, due to the collapsed sewer. The workmen are going through the motions of mending it (hope they don’t get caught between two stools).

Lockdown lubrication

Are Dorset people drinking more during lock-down?

The recent spate of solid profits announced by the big drink firms suggest people are not drinking more, but they’re drinking better.

I’ve researched Dorset habits, and it would seem to be true.

I talked to Richard Parrish, Alcohol Manager at the much-loved Dike’s supermarket in Stalbridge, and he confirms that sales of the smarter gins, for example, were very strong in the first lockdown.  But then all stores report high booze sales as pubs are closed for normal business. (See News page x).

My other research involves the rather sneaky, low-minded, but fun exercise of looking at people’s bottle boxes that they put outside their gates on bin day. The first thing I notice is that more people are adopting the spoil-sport ruse of putting their empties box behind their bin.

This suggests to me that they’ve got something sinister to hide, therefore it’s reasonable to conclude that alcohol consumption has increased.

I did a bit more grass-roots research by consulting with the people who run my village shop.  ‘Are people drinking more,’ I asked.

‘You are,’ they said, while helping me carry some wine vats to the car.

Unhelpful, slightly judgemental, but true, so not a ‘hate crime’. 

I popped the same question to Pete and Sue at The Chapel Stores in Buckland Newton.

‘You are,’ they said.  Time to stop my research.

Stop Press News: Pete’s just bought a vintage soft top Mercedes, which he’s called ‘Lady Jane’. (He clearly hasn’t read Lady Chatterley’s Lover).  He says the name ‘comes from a Rod Stewart song’, but someone told him the song’s actually called ‘Baby Jane’.  That’s why I love Pete!

The BBC’s view of rural life

The BBC gets a lot of things right, and it does seem to be slowly realising that some people don’t live in London, or big cities. They did a piece on Sturminster just before Christmas, and in early February a reporter (obviously he’d got lost) spoke to some young people in Piddlehinton, where they said life there was ‘boring’.

I presume this delighted the editors as it would confirm their belief that anything interesting happens only in the cities.

I wish they had balanced their report by speaking to people who have lived in cities, and who appreciated the everyday consideration, neighbourliness, lack of litter, lack of graffiti, lack of road-rage and lack of general ill-temper and serious crime, found in village life. The definition of a village is a place where people talk to strangers.

Dear old Auntie

It continually amuses me to hear that The Archers has an ‘agricultural story editor’ (ASE), particularly as they barely mention farming in any detail. But I can just imagine the meetings when the ASE briefs the cream of metropolitan media on rural life. It probably goes like this (and we can take it for granted that all contributors raise their voices at the end of each sentence – more evidence of the need for CARDA):

ASE: So, like, there are some people who …(pauses as he doesn’t quite know how to deliver this next line) …don’t live in London.

Gasps of disbelief and shock at the very thought.

ASE: They live in what’s called the …countryside (pauses, then thinks how best to explain ‘the countryside’ to his blank-looking audience) …there are no Pret a Mangers….or Uber Taxis…I went to the ‘countryside’ once, it’s why I’m the ASE, and, I’m like, where is everything?

More gasps, several people faint. Smelling salts are called for.

ASE: And they all go around on these things called ‘tractors’….

Scriptwriter: Are these ‘tractors’ like a BMW 4×4?

ASE: Yes, they’re exactly like proper cars that all normal people (i.e. people who live in London) have, but they call them ‘tractors’, don’t know why, a rural thing probably (much laughter).  And they use them to tow big metal boxes on wheels, full of err….quinoa and …errr…wild basmati rice and …um…quiche…

Scriptwriter (approvingly): So, can we assume they’re all vegan?

ASE: Yes, like, everybody, I mean totes everyone, who lives in the countryside is vegan because, they’re like, ‘I can’t afford meat’. They sometimes snack on pieces of straw, and they hold up their trousers with baler twine…I’m like, why are you doing that, and they’re, like, ‘because we be…’

Well, I’m being very unfair as I like The Archers (and it’s gritty realism) and I happily pay my TV licence, and I think the BBC is brilliant, and, I’m proud of it, but I wanted to finish on a funny. 

Are you all going to join CARDA or what?

Andy Palmer

COX, Adrian

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Adrian Cox

Of Bourton passed away peacefully at home on 26th February 2021, surrounded by his family.

He will be greatly missed by all who knew him.

The family requests that a donation be made to Salisbury Hospice Charity via https://adriancox.muchloved.com/ in lieu of flowers.

Many thanks.