Category: United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI: Champion Safe Company Supports Inaugural Buckeye Blast Benefiting The Light Foundation

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Delaware, OH, May 16, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Champion Safe Company, a leading manufacturer of premium safes and wholly-owned subsidiary of American Rebel Holdings, Inc. (NASDAQ: AREB), America’s Patriotic Brand (americanrebel.com), proudly participated in the inaugural Buckeye Blast sporting clay fundraiser, held at Black Wing Shooting Center in Delaware, Ohio. The event benefited The Light Foundation, a nonprofit founded by former New England Patriots offensive tackle and Ohio native Matt Light.

    As a sponsor of the event, Champion Safe donated one of its top-tier safes as the grand prize for the raffle drawing, helping raise funds to support the Foundation’s mission of empowering young people to reach their highest potential.

    “We’re proud to support the Light Foundation and its mission to build stronger young leaders,” said Tom Mihalek, CEO of Champion Safe Company. “It was a privilege to contribute to such a meaningful event, and we’re thrilled that one of our safes could help generate excitement and support for a great cause.”

    The Buckeye Blast brought together outdoor enthusiasts, community leaders, and supporters of youth development for a day of camaraderie and competition. The funds raised will help The Light Foundation continue its impactful leadership programs, outdoor camps, and mentorship initiatives.

    Matt Light, who grew up in Greenville, Ohio, expressed his gratitude: “Having Champion Safe on board as a sponsor was a huge win for us. Their donation of a safe for the grand prize raffle added excitement to the event and helped us raise critical funds. It’s always great to see Ohio-based events supported by companies that share our values.”

    The event was hosted at Black Wing Shooting Center, a premier firearms and training facility and a proud American Rebel safe dealer.

    For more information about Champion Safe Company, visit championsafe.com. To learn more about The Light Foundation, visit mattlight72.com.

    Contact: ir@americanrebel.com

    About Champion Safe Company

    Champion Safe Company has been at the forefront of safe manufacturing for over 25 years, offering a range of high-quality safes designed for ultimate security and fire protection. With a commitment to craftsmanship and innovation, Champion Safes are trusted by homeowners, gun owners, and businesses across the nation. To learn more, visit: championsafe.com

    About American Rebel Holdings, Inc.

    American Rebel Holdings, Inc. (NASDAQ: AREB) has operated primarily as a designer, manufacturer and marketer of branded safes and personal security and self-defense products and has recently transitioned into the beverage industry through the introduction of American Rebel Beer. The Company also designs and produces branded apparel and accessories. To learn more, visit americanrebel.com and americanrebelbeer.com. For investor information, visit americanrebel.com/investor-relations.

    Forward-Looking Statements

    This press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. American Rebel Holdings, Inc., (NASDAQ: AREB; AREBW) (the “Company,” “American Rebel,” “we,” “our” or “us”) desires to take advantage of the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and is including this cautionary statement in connection with this safe harbor legislation. The words “forecasts” “believe,” “may,” “estimate,” “continue,” “anticipate,” “intend,” “should,” “plan,” “could,” “target,” “potential,” “is likely,” “expect” and similar expressions, as they relate to us, are intended to identify forward-looking statements. We have based these forward-looking statements primarily on our current expectations and projections about future events and financial trends that we believe may affect our financial condition, results of operations, business strategy, and financial needs. Important factors that could cause actual results to differ from those in the forward-looking statements include benefits of participating in the event, actual revenues for fiscal 2025, our ability to effectively execute our business plan, and the Risk Factors contained within our filings with the SEC, including our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2023. Any forward-looking statement made by us herein speaks only as of the date on which it is made. Factors or events that could cause our actual results to differ may emerge from time to time, and it is not possible for us to predict all of them. We undertake no obligation to publicly update any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future developments or otherwise, except as may be required by law.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Global: Assisted dying: five questions that need answering before it can work in pratice

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Suzanne Ost, Professor of Law, Lancaster University

    Collagery/Shutterstock

    An attempt to make assisted dying legal in England in Wales continues to make its way through parliament, with MPs currently scheduled to have a final vote on the bill in June.

    The bill has sparked both passionate support and strong opposition, raising vital questions: how would such a law work in practice? Who would deliver it? And what would it cost?

    While much attention has focused mostly on the ethics of assisted dying, the government’s recently published impact assessment looks at the practical side and it deserves closer attention.

    Of course, we shouldn’t base a decision about life and death solely on financial or logistical grounds. But if assisted dying is to become part of the law in England and Wales, we need to understand how it would work in reality. The report highlights a number of key challenges:

    1. The medication question

    The assessment draws mainly on data from 11 other jurisdictions, especially Oregon, where assisted dying has been legal for years. It found that the drugs used can lead to prolonged and unpredictable deaths, in part due to inconsistent drug availability.

    However, the report doesn’t compare this to Switzerland, where assisted dying must be self-administered and is tightly regulated. There, a single barbiturate is typically used, leading to death within two to ten minutes depending on whether it’s taken orally or via injection. This raises questions about what kind of medications would be used in the UK and how reliably they would work.

    2. Opt-outs: who will deliver the service?

    Experience from countries like Canada shows that most doctors opt out of providing assisted dying. In Canada, over 5,000 assisted deaths were carried out by just 80 people. Similarly, in the US and New Zealand, entire institutions – especially palliative care services – have opted out.

    Kim Leadbeater, the MP sponsoring the bill, has confirmed that it would not oblige hospices to participate. While this protects individual conscience, it may leave patients struggling to find willing clinicians or being discharged home to die.

    3. Can the NHS cope with a new service?

    The bill assumes the NHS would be responsible for delivering assisted dying. But is the system ready?

    Switzerland uses volunteer doctors outside the healthcare system, which may be more sustainable. In the UK, oversight is expected to come from a panel including a senior judge or lawyer, a psychiatrist and a social worker.

    However, the Royal College of Psychiatrists (RCP) has raised serious concerns, both about the role psychiatrists would play and whether there are enough professionals to fulfil that role. The RCP currently opposes the bill.

    4. Funding: a two-tier system?

    The impact assessment suggests assisted dying would be free at the point of delivery. Yet palliative care – the alternative end-of-life support – often receives less than 40% government funding, relying heavily on charity.

    Could this create a two-tier system, where assisted dying is fully funded while palliative care remains under resourced?

    5. Legal costs and challenges

    If passed, the bill could trigger human rights challenges, particularly around mental capacity and access. Legal experts suggest several grounds on which it might be contested and these cases would need to be defended, incurring additional costs.

    Families might also seek judicial review of a panel’s decision to permit a request for assisted dying. And public protests outside clinics or hospitals offering the service could require increased policing and security – all of which have financial and social implications.

    This bill tackles one of the most morally sensitive issues in society. But if it is to succeed, and be implemented safely, it must be built on more than good intentions.

    The government’s impact assessment lays out the many practical hurdles: medication protocols, workforce readiness, conscientious objection, legal protections, and funding disparities. These aren’t technicalities. They’re the framework that would determine whether assisted dying is accessible, safe and ethically delivered.

    As the bill progresses, the debate must move beyond principle alone. The future of this legislation – and its real world impact – will depend on how well we address these deeply human, and deeply complex, practicalities.

    Suzanne Ost has previously received funding from the Arts and Humanities Research Council and the British Academy for research that she has conducted.

    Nancy Preston receives funding from Horizon Europe but not for her work on assisted dying. She is affiliated with European Association of Palliative Care where she Co-Chairs the Task Force on the role of palliative care professionals in supporting patients and families considering assisted dying.

    ref. Assisted dying: five questions that need answering before it can work in pratice – https://theconversation.com/assisted-dying-five-questions-that-need-answering-before-it-can-work-in-pratice-256270

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: CCUS explained: experts answer your questions

    Source: United Kingdom – Government Statements

    News story

    CCUS explained: experts answer your questions

    Got a question about Carbon Capture, Usage, and Storage (CCUS) and the technology involved? Experts answer some of the most common questions here.

    How does CCUS work? 

    Olivia Powis, CEO at the Carbon Capture and Storage Association, says:  

    Carbon Capture, Usage, and Storage (CCUS) is essential for reducing emissions from heavy industries. It can also be used to generate low-carbon power by gas power stations with carbon capture and storage as well as enabling hydrogen power. These sources of power are important for when the sun isn’t shining, and the wind isn’t blowing.

    This low carbon technology captures carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from industrial facilities, compresses it, and then transports it by pipeline or ship for utilisation or safe and permanent storage deep under the seabed, preventing the CO2 from entering the atmosphere. The CO2 is stored in porous rocks – in old oil fields, gas fields, or saline formation – that act like a sponge and are covered by layers of trapping mechanisms such as impermeable ‘caprock’ – ensuring safe and permanent storage. The CO2 is then monitored to make sure that its stored securely.

    Is CCUS a proven technology? 

    Professor Stuart Haszeldine, Professor of Carbon Capture and Storage at University of Edinburgh, says: 

    Yes, carbon capture and storage has been operating successfully and safely since 1996 at the Sleipner storage site in the North Sea, halfway between Aberdeen and Bergen. A similar project has been developed at Snøhvit offshore in Norway. Experience gained in those operations has led to the Northern Lights project, situated north of Bergen which offers secure CO2 storage commercially to European industries.

    Is CCUS safe? 

    Professor Niall Mac Dowell, Professor in Energy Systems Engineering at Imperial College London, says: 

    Yes, various technical components of the carbon capture, utilisation, transport, and storage value chain have all been extensively deployed in other contexts around the world for decades. In the UK, not only can existing Health and Safety legislation effectively regulate the safety of CCUS, but we are also fortunate to have a wealth of experience in the offshore industry, which will be used to safely store the CO2 several kilometres below the seabed, in formations similar to those that have trapped natural gas for millennia.

    Does CCUS help us tackle climate change? 

    Chris Stark, former CEO at the Climate Change Committee and Head of Mission Control for Clean Power 2030 at the Department of Energy Security & Net Zero, says:

    CCUS provides the lowest cost pathway to reaching net zero which is why the independent Climate Change Committee has declared it a ‘necessity, not an option.’ CCUS gives a range of options to decarbonise that would otherwise not be possible, and it minimises the climate warming emissions released to the atmosphere on our journey to net zero. It will be an important part of our industrial future.

    With an increase in renewable energy, why do we need CCUS

    Louise Stott, Deputy Director for Policy at Energy UK, says:

    To help secure our energy supply, we need low-carbon power that is available at all times of the day and in all weathers. Gas-fired power stations with CCUS, used alongside all other forms of low-carbon energy generation, will be able to provide flexible power on the system. Beyond power generation, CCUS will also play an important role in the decarbonisation of heavy industry. There are certain industrial processes, such as cement production, which will only be able to decarbonise through technologies like carbon capture.

    Is CCUS too expensive? 

    Mathilde Fajardy, Energy Analyst at the International Energy Agency, says: 

    CCUS technologies are critical to put energy systems around the world on a sustainable path. The cost of a project depends heavily on the source of the CO2 captured, the distance and mode used to transport it, as well as where and how it is stored. The cost of CCUS also needs to be considered against alternative decarbonisation options – in some cases, CCUS may be the only option available today.

    Is there enough space to safely store carbon captured by CCUS projects? 

    Stuart Payne, CEO at the North Sea Transition Authority, says: 

    The North Sea has the potential to store up to 78 GT of CO2 in a combination of depleted oil and gas reservoirs and natural saline aquifers. That could be enough capacity on the UK Continental Shelf to store centuries worth of UK emissions. In fact, we believe we have an exceptional case for the UK to become a carbon storage centre for the world.

    Further information

    Read more about UK carbon capture, usage and storage.

    Updates to this page

    Published 16 May 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Extensive Failures

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Press release

    Extensive Failures

    In a public inquiry at the end of April, Deputy Traffic Commissioner Nick Denton revoked the standard international goods vehicle operator’s licence held by Transglobal Solutions Ltd with immediate effect.

    He cited extensive and persistent breaches of statutory obligations under the Goods Vehicles (Licensing of Operators) Act 1995.

    Following a pattern of non-compliance, the company and its director, Maricel Taranu, have also been indefinitely disqualified from holding or obtaining an operator’s licence. Mr. Taranu is further barred from acting as a transport manager for any operator.

    The inquiry was unattended by either the company or Mr. Taranu.

    The revocation follows serious concerns uncovered during multiple investigations by the Driver and Vehicle Standards Agency (DVSA), including vehicles operated without MOTs and road tax presenting a direct risk to public safety, failure to download tachograph data, and extended operation of vehicles without driver cards – both clear violations of drivers’ hours regulations.

    There was a shocking lack of maintenance, culminating in one vehicle being stopped with four loose wheel nuts, a disintegrated tyre, and a defective indicator. On top of this, there was no engagement with the DVSA or the Office of the Traffic Commissioner, despite repeated attempts to obtain essential compliance records.

    Further DVSA inspections revealed that the company had no legitimate maintenance arrangements, minimal operating facilities, and an exceptionally high prohibition and MOT failure rate— double and triple the national average respectively. In addition, false information was provided to authorities regarding vehicle operations, and a warrant for Mr. Taranu’s arrest remains active in Romania for unrelated driving offences.

    Mr Denton said “This is one of the worst operators I have ever come across. Mr Taranu has refused to engage both with DVSA and the traffic commissioner. He has overseen illegal and dangerous operations in the UK and appears to be wanted by the Romanian authorities for serious motoring offences… I cannot allow the company’s vehicles to operate and pose a danger to other road users for a moment longer.”

    He concluded that there should be no room in the industry for Mr Taranu, who has shown an utter indifference to the law and to road safety. The full written decision can be found here.

    For any further details or enquiries, please contact: Email : pressoffice@otc.gov.uk

    Updates to this page

    Published 16 May 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: NDA appoints two new Non-Executive Board Members

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    News story

    NDA appoints two new Non-Executive Board Members

    NDA announces Catriona Schmolke CBE FREng and Dr Neil Bruce OBE CEng as NDA Board members.

    NDA logo

    The Nuclear Decommissioning Authority (NDA) has announced that Catriona Schmolke CBE FREng and Dr Neil Bruce OBE CEng have been appointed to the NDA Board as Non-Executive Board members.

    Neil and Catriona will begin their three-and-a-half-year term on 1 June 2025.

    Catriona brings 40 years of expertise in the infrastructure sector as a hydrogeologist and engineer, with significant experience in Chief Executive, Board Chair and Non-Executive roles. Her career has spanned numerous sectors and major programmes, including nuclear, energy, water, waste, and contaminated land.

    She served as the Chief Safety Security and Sustainability Officer at Jacobs from 2014 to 2020. Catriona currently holds the position of Chair at Artus Air Ltd. Additionally, she serves as a Non-Executive Director and member of the Audit & Risk Committee for the National Physical Laboratory and Scottish Water Group. She is also a Non-Executive Director with NES Fircroft Ltd.

    Catriona is a former Visiting Professor of Sustainability at Newcastle University and serves as a lay member and Chair of the Statutory Safety Committee at Strathclyde University.

    Neil has 40 years of experience, including as a Chief Executive, Board Chair, and Non-Executive Director, in the maritime, resources, nuclear, built environment, and energy sectors. He has managed global and regional markets in over 50 countries, working with public, private, and PE-backed companies.

    Neil’s current roles include Non-Executive Director at McDermott International and Dar Groups; Executive Advisor and Chair with two private equity groups; Chair of a start-up waste-to-biofuels technology business and Visiting Professor at Robert Gordon University Aberdeen.

    His previous roles include President and CEO of SNC Lavalin Group Inc, Group COO at AMEC plc, and various leadership and delivery positions in major projects and in industry associations.

    Peter Hill CBE, the Chair of the NDA, said:

    I am delighted that Catriona and Neil are joining us. Their extensive experience will be invaluable in helping us to drive forward our nationally important mission.

    Catriona Schmolke CBE FREng said:

    I am honoured to join the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority as a Non-Executive Director. As we navigate the complexities of decommissioning and environmental stewardship, I look forward to contributing my expertise and experience in sustainable solutions to this nationally important mission, thus safeguarding the future for generations to come.

    Dr Neil Bruce OBE CEng said:

    It is a privilege to join the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority at this important juncture, as the breadth of its decommissioning work is set to expand. I am committed to leveraging my experience in energy and nuclear markets to support the NDA’s efforts in decommissioning the UK’s nuclear legacy, ensuring we meet the highest standards of safety and efficiency.

    Catriona and Neil were appointed to the NDA Board by the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (DESNZ) following a fair, open and transparent selection process.

    Updates to this page

    Published 16 May 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-Evening Report: Time for NZ media to ditch the propaganda and stand against genocide

    COMMENTARY: By Saige England in Christchurch

    “RNZ is failing in its duty to inform the public of an entirely preventable humanitarian catastrophe.”

    Tautoko to Jeremy Rose, Ramon Das and Eugene Doyle for this critique of a review of RNZ’s coverage of a genocide.

    Sadly, this highlights RNZ’s failure to report the genocide from the perspective of the very real victims — more journalists killed in Gaza than the whole of World War Two, aid workers murdered and buried, 17,000 children, including babies, who will never ever grow.

    I respect so many RNZ journalists and have always supported this important national broadcaster but it is time for it to pull up its pants, ditch the propaganda and report from the field of truth.

    I carry my Jewish ancestors in standing against genocide and calling for reports that show the truth of the travesty.

    For reporting on protests I have been pepper sprayed by thugged-up police donning US-style gloves and glasses (illegally carrying pepper spray and tasers).

    I was banned from my own town hall when I tried — with my E Tu press card — to attend the deputy leader Winston Peters’ media conference.

    This government does not want the truth reported, it seems.

    I have reported from the fields of invasion and conflict. I’ve taught journalism and communications. Good journalists remember journalism ethics. Reports from the point of view of the oppressor support the oppressor.

    Humanitarianism means not reporting from the perspective of a mercenary army — an army that has been enforcing apartheid for decades, and which is invoking a policy of extermination for expansion.

    Please read this media review and think of how you would feel if someone demanded that you leave your home. Palestinians have faced oppression and apartheid and “unhoming” for decades.

    Think of the intolerable weight of grief you would carry if a sniper put a bullet between the eyes of a child you love and know.

    Report on the victims. And stop subscribing to propaganda.

    Saige England is a journalist and author, and a member of the Palestine Solidarity Network Aotearoa (PSNA). She is a frequent contributor to Asia Pacific Report. This was first published as a social media post.

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI Global: Trump’s vision for Air Force One will turn it from the ‘Flying White House’ to a ‘palace in the sky’

    Source: The Conversation – USA – By Janet Bednarek, Professor of History, University of Dayton

    Former first lady Jacqueline Kennedy helped design Air Force One’s color scheme, which has been used since her husband’s presidency. Jeff J. Mitchell/Getty Images

    Since President Donald Trump excitedly announced that he would be accepting a US$400 million plane from the Qatari government to serve as the next Air Force One, even members of his own party have expressed alarm.

    There’s the price tag of refurbishing the plane with top-secret systems – upward of $1 billion, according to some estimates. Then there are the conflicts of interest from accepting such a large present from a foreign nation – what some say would be the most valuable gift ever given to the U.S.

    But it would also mark a striking departure from tradition.

    While they’re often variants of commercial planes, presidential planes have almost always been U.S. military aircraft, flown and maintained by the Air Force.

    The first White Houses in the sky

    I’m an aviation historian who once worked in the United States Air Force’s history program for three years, so I’m well-acquainted with the history of presidential aircraft.

    Franklin D. Roosevelt became the first president to fly while in office. In January 1943, he boarded the Navy-owned, civilian-operated Boeing Dixie Clipper – a sea plane – for a trip to Casablanca to meet with Allied leaders.

    President Franklin D. Roosevelt made the first presidential flight on a Dixie Clipper, a sea plane built by Boeing.
    Hulton Archive/Getty Images

    The security measures needed to safely transport the president – especially during wartime – spurred the creation of the first custom-built aircraft for presidential use, a heavily modified VC-54 Skymaster. Though officially named “The Flying White House,” the new presidential aircraft became better known by its nickname, the “Sacred Cow.”

    President Harry Truman used the Sacred Cow as his presidential aircraft through much of his first term in office.

    In late 1947, the U.S. Air Force ordered a second custom-built presidential aircraft, a modified DC-6, which Truman named the Independence.

    While in office, Presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry Truman flew on a modified Douglas C-54, nicknamed the Sacred Cow.
    Museum of Flight/Corbis via Getty Images

    During Dwight D. Eisenhower’s two terms, the president flew on two different planes operated by the Air Force: the Columbine II, which was a customized, military version of Lockheed’s commercial airliner the Constellation, and the Columbine III, which was a Super Constellation.

    Embracing the jet age

    In the 1960s, the use of jet engine technology in U.S. commercial aircraft revolutionized air travel, allowing planes to fly higher, farther and faster. Jet travel became associated with the glamorous and the elegant lifestyles of the “jet set” crowd.

    So it’s fitting that President John F. Kennedy – who was sometimes called the “the first celebrity president” – was the first White House occupant to fly in a jet, the Boeing 707.

    Kennedy’s aircraft was also the first painted in the distinctive light blue-and-white scheme that’s still used today. First lady Jacqueline Kennedy developed it with the help of industrial designer Raymond Loewy.

    It would go on to serve eight presidents before leaving the presidential fleet in 1990, when Boeing delivered the first of two modified Boeing 747s.

    These are the aircraft that continue to serve as the president’s primary plane. Boeing signed a contract to provide two new aircraft in 2017, during Trump’s last term. In 2020, the company decided to refurbish two existing aircraft that were originally built for another customer.

    The refurbishment has been more cumbersome and expensive than building a new aircraft from scratch. But it’s the only option because Boeing closed its 747 assembly line in late 2022.

    A nickname sticks

    On a trip to Florida, the crew of Columbine II first used “Air Force One” as the plane’s call sign to clearly distinguish the plane from other air traffic.

    While the public has associated the name Air Force One with the modified Boeing 707s and 747s and their distinctive colors, any plane with the president aboard will carry that call sign.

    They include several smaller aircraft, also operated by the Air Force, such as the North American T-39 Sabreliner used to transport Lyndon B. Johnson to his ranch in Texas and the Lockheed VC-140B JetStars, the fleet of backup planes used by several presidents, which Johnson jokingly called “Air Force One Half.”

    A cultural and political symbol

    Air Force One has long served as a symbol of the power and prestige of the presidency.

    It became an indelible part of U.S. history in November 1963, when Johnson took his oath of office from Air Force One’s cabin while Kennedy’s body lay in rest in the back of the aircraft.

    Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson is sworn in as president aboard Air Force One following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.
    Universal History Archive/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

    Air Force One carried President Richard M. Nixon to China and the Soviet Union for historic diplomatic missions. But it also famously flew him from Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland to his home state, California, after he resigned from office. On that day, the plane took off as Air Force One. But it landed as SAM 27000, the plane’s call sign used when the president wasn’t on board.

    Trump has been compared to Nixon in more ways than one.

    And Trump’s complaint that Arab leaders have bigger and more impressive airplanes than the current Air Force One is reminiscent of Nixon’s own concerns of being outclassed on the world stage.

    The Nixon family boards Air Force One to fly to California on Aug. 9, 1974, following President Richard Nixon’s resignation.
    Wally McNamee/Corbis via Getty Images

    When president, Nixon strongly advocated for American supersonic transport – a 270-passenger plane designed to be faster than the speed of sound – that he hoped could be modified to serve as a new Air Force One. He feared the failure to develop an SST would relegate the U.S. to second-tier status, as other world leaders – particularly those from England, France and the USSR – traversed the globe in sleeker, better performing aircraft.

    Trump’s concerns about Air Force One seem less focused on safety and security and more on size and opulence. His longing for a “palace in the sky” is befitting for a president drawn to soaring skyscrapers, lavish parades and gold ornamentation.

    Janet Bednarek does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. Trump’s vision for Air Force One will turn it from the ‘Flying White House’ to a ‘palace in the sky’ – https://theconversation.com/trumps-vision-for-air-force-one-will-turn-it-from-the-flying-white-house-to-a-palace-in-the-sky-256745

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Beechside children’s home receives outstanding Ofsted rating

    Source: City of Portsmouth

    Beechside short breaks children’s home, which provides short-break services for children with learning and/or physical disabilities, has proudly received outstanding ratings in all areas following a recent Ofsted inspection.

    The unannounced inspection of Portsmouth City Council’s Beechside short breaks children’s home on 15 and 17 April 2025, evaluated the home on the following criteria:

    • Overall experiences and progress of children and young people: Outstanding
    • How well children and young people are helped and protected: Outstanding
    • The effectiveness of leaders and managers: Outstanding

    Cllr Nicholas Dorrington, Cabinet Member for Children, Families, and Education, said: “This outstanding achievement is a testament to the hard work and commitment of the Beechside staff and the wider council team.

    “We are incredibly proud of this recognition by Ofsted and remain dedicated to providing the best possible care for the children and young people we care for at Beechside children’s home and their families.”

    The outstanding rating reflects the dedication and hard work of Beechside’s team in providing high-quality care and support to some of the most vulnerable children and young people in our community. Additionally, the comprehensive improvements made over the past couple of years, including renovations to the house, have significantly enhanced the positive experiences of those cared for at Beechside.

    You can read the full report here: https://reports.ofsted.gov.uk/provider/2/SC037588?utm_source&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=report

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Fun for all the family at Godiva Festival – and it’s included with your ticket!

    Source: City of Coventry

    Open on Saturday 5 and Sunday 6 July, the Family Field – sponsored by Coventry College – will be bigger and better than ever. This year, it’s been transformed into four themed zones designed to bring adventure, fun and discovery.

    From magic and circus tricks to a caving experience, comedy shows and even a seaside escape, there’s something for every family to enjoy.

    Plus, a very special guest will be joining the fun: Bluey, one of CBeebies’ biggest stars, will be meeting and greeting on the Family Field at intervals throughout the day on Sunday 6 July to meet her young fans.

    And here’s the best bit – all Family Field activities except funfair rides are included in the price of your ticket!

    Here’s a taste of what you’ll find in each of the four zones:

    • Country Zone – enjoy Farm Circus magic, juggling and acrobatics plus other creative activities with leaf printing and bark rubbing. Those bold enough can take on Shaun the Sheep’s Farmathlon challenge!
    • City Zone – get moving at a family bhangra workshop with award-winning entertainer Sohan Kailey. Don’t forget – Bluey will be in the City Zone too!
    • Beach Zone – build sandcastles, play games on the pop-up beach and enjoy a comedy pirate show with a side of sunshine. There’ll be music from the Phase One Steel Pan Orchestra too.
    • Adventure Zone – thrill-seekers will love the caving experience, fast-paced sports activities and mini roller coaster!

    Cllr Abdul Salam Khan, Deputy Leader of Coventry City Council and Cabinet Member for Events, said: “Godiva is a fantastic music festival, but there’s so much more as well, with lots of first-class entertainment and experiences for all ages.

    “Our Family Field is always a top attraction for many and this year it has a great offer that will help families to play, learn and have fun together in a brilliant environment.

    “Godiva really is an incredible weekend that has something there for people of all ages and I’d encourage everyone to book their tickets early and make sure they don’t miss out.”

    Gemma Knott, Vice Principal Business Growth at Coventry College, added: “I am delighted that Coventry College is sponsoring Godiva’s Family Field. This is a flagship event for Coventry.

    “We are excited about showcasing our brilliant College and reaching out to the heart of the community with our activities which include tasters from our very talented hair and beauty, performing arts and music staff and learners plus lots more planned!

    “Please drop by to say hello to our friendly team if you have any questions about joining Coventry College this summer; we will be on the Family Field all day on Saturday and Sunday.”

    Tickets are on sale now, with prices frozen at last year’s rates. Family ticket prices will allow for any combination of teens and children, and a new single parent family ticket has also been introduced. Family ticket prices for Sunday 6 July start at £27.

    This year’s Festival features headliners Marc Almond on the Friday, Clean Bandit on Saturday and the festival will be closed by Ocean Colour Scene on the final day.

    Other acts include Nathan Dawe, Heather Small, Heaven 17, Rose Gray, Young T & Bugsey, Diversity, Parfitt Jr & The RPJ Band, Panjabi Hit Squad and lots more. There will also be a diverse line-up of other acts and attractions, with food stalls, exhibitions and family-friendly activities, making it the perfect summer outing for the whole family.

    For ticket price information and to keep up to date with all the latest news and announcements, head to the Godiva Festival website, sign up for the Godiva Festival newsletter or follow us on FacebookTwitterInstagram and TikTok.

    Godiva Festival is brought to you by Coventry City Council Godiva. The Godiva Festival Family Field is sponsored by Coventry College.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Save Loch Lomond: “Appalling” Flamingo Land mega-resort approved by Scottish Government officials

    Source: Scottish Greens

    The most unpopular planning application in Scottish history, Flamingo Land would cause irreversible damage to the world-famous local environment

    The decision by Scottish Government officials to approve Flamingo Land’s destructive mega-resort application for Loch Lomond will cause “irreversible damage” and is an “anti-democratic outrage” says Scottish Green MSP Ross Greer.

    Flamingo Land have attempted to gain planning permission for their mega resort at Balloch for the past decade, with their first application failing in 2019. Their latest bid was unanimously rejected by the board of Loch Lomond and the Trossachs National Park at a public hearing in September of last year.

    This followed a campaign led by Ross Greer which collected over 155,000 individual objections to the plans, as well as objections from the National Trust for Scotland, Woodland Trust, Scottish Environment Protection Agency, the local community council and the Park’s own expert planning officers.

    Flamingo Land lodged an appeal against this decision shortly before Christmas, seeking to have the rejection overturned by the Scottish Government and secure consent for their plans, which include two hotels, a waterpark, over 370 car parking spaces, a hundred woodland lodges, monorail, and more.

    In a letter to Ross Greer and other stakeholders this morning, the Scottish Government’s Planning And Environmental Appeals Division confirmed that they have overturned the democratic decision of the National Park’s board and granted permission for the destructive mega-resort.

    This is despite flood risk warnings from SEPA, loss of nature and biodiversity, the disruption of over 250 extra cars on congested local roads at peak times and a range of other damaging impacts the development would have.

    Mr Greer said:

    “This is an anti-democratic outrage. I cannot believe that Flamingo Land’s destructive and immensely unpopular mega-resort is being given the go-ahead by Government officials. It was the most unpopular planning application in Scottish history and will cause irreversible damage to the world-famous local environment at Loch Lomond.

    “Their destructive plans were unanimously rejected by the National Park’s board, opposed by the Scottish Environment Protection Agency, the National Trust for Scotland, the Woodland Trust, the Park’s expert planning officers and 155,000 people who joined our Save Loch Lomond campaign.

    “This greedy developer would not take no for an answer and I am shocked that Government officials have put Flamingo Land’s interests above the need to protect Loch Lomond.

    “We are urgently considering our options for continuing this fight. I will leave no stone unturned in the campaign to save Loch Lomond.”

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: New Lord Mayor and Deputy announced for the year

    Source: City of Plymouth

    Councillor Kathy Watkin has been elected as Lord Mayor of Plymouth, with Councillor Chip Tofan as the new Deputy Lord Mayor for the coming year.

    They were both elected at the Annual General Meeting this morning (Friday 16 May)

    Councillor Watkin trained and worked as a speech and language therapist before training as a solicitor.

    Kathy worked in the legal sector in two well known firms in Plymouth and as a registered sole practitioner in her own practice for 13 years prior to retirement.

    She has served on various committees including Licencing, Corporate Parenting, Mount Edgcumbe, Planning and has been the vice chair for the Health Scrutiny Committee and Health and Wellbeing Board.

    In 2023 she was elected as Deputy Lord Mayor.

    She said: “What a privilege it is to be elected as Lord Mayor, I am really looking forward to the coming year, meeting all the different communities in Plymouth and engaging with them.

    “I want to thank my fellow Councillors for choosing me as their next Lord Mayor for the year.”

    Councillor Chip Tofan was born in Iasi, Romania, graduating from Iasi Gheorghe Ashachi University, with a bachelor’s degree in engineering and now runs his own business providing consultancy services.

    Chip was first elected to Plymouth City Council in May 2022, representing Eggbuckland Ward.

    During his time as a councillor, Chip has been a member of different committees including Scrutiny, Licensing, Natural Infrastructure and the Growth Scrutiny Panel.

    Chip said: “I am so pleased to be elected as Deputy Lord Mayor and look forward to supporting Kathy over the next year in office and working together.”

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Championing the cream of the crop at Balmoral Show

    Source: Northern Ireland City of Armagh

    The Ballylisk’s of Armagh stand was very busy this year

    A Food Heartland envoy, including the Lord Mayor, Councillor Sarah Duffy, Deputy Lord Mayor, Councillor Kyle Savage, Alderman Paul Greenfield (Chair of Economic Development and Regeneration Committee) and Chief Executive Roger Wilson OBE, visited Balmoral Show yesterday – Thursday 15th May – to show support for breeders and agri-businesses from across the borough.

    The Food Heartland Agri Champions were also present, taking the opportunity to meet with producers, engage with visitors, and network with key industry players. Their presence underscored the borough’s dedication to innovation and sustainability within the agri-food sector.

    Throughout the event, Food Heartland representatives connected with important stakeholders including the Ulster Farmers’ Union (UFU), the Rural Support Network, and Food NI, reinforcing strong collaborative ties that continue to strengthen the region’s agricultural economy.

    The Balmoral Show remains a vital platform for showcasing the talent, quality, and resilience of the local agri-food industry, and Food Heartland was delighted to be part of it.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI USA: First Genetic Counseling Professional Science Master’s Students Graduate

    Source: US State of Connecticut

    The first graduates from the University of Connecticut’s Professional Science Master’s (PSM) in genetic counseling were hooded last Tuesday. The program was ten years in the making and is the first such accredited program at a public university in New England.

    “Watching our first cohort graduate today was nothing short of incredible,” says program director and UConn Health pediatric genetics counselor Maria Gyure. “These graduates didn’t just complete a program – they helped build it. I couldn’t be prouder to send them out into the world as the next generation of genetic counselors. We have no doubt they will serve as exemplary ambassadors for our program and make meaningful contributions to the communities they serve.”

    From left to right: Samantha Wesoly, Lila Aiyar, Kathryn Cavanna, Heather Gaddy, Natalie Cartwright, Mariangelie Beaudry, Karina Mancini, Stephanie Auger, Matthew Ruegg, and Maria Gyure (Rachel O’Neill/UConn Photo)

    The two-year program is uniquely positioned to give students broad experience in both research and clinical genetics. The Genetic Counseling PSM is housed under the auspices of the Institute for Systems Genomics (ISG). The ISG includes researchers and clinicians at UConn Health, Connecticut Children’s, and The Jackson Laboratory for Genomic Medicine. Those relationships, along with others, allow students to participate in a series of 10-week fieldwork rotations throughout their training. Students are placed in clinical rotations in diverse areas, including prenatal, pediatric, cancer, cardiovascular, and metabolic genetic counseling, as well as a laboratory rotation. An enrichment rotation gives students the opportunity to tailor a fieldwork experience aligned with their individual interests, in specialty clinics, industry, and advocacy.

    They are also required to take part in a genetic research project beginning in the second semester. This graduating class focused on areas including forensic genetic genealogy, the human right to health, barriers to newborn genomic research, underrepresented populations in rare disease research, among others.

    “The graduating class of 2025 represents a remarkable achievement, not only for the outstanding students in the program, but for the leadership and faculty that have made this program possible,” says ISG director Rachel O’Neill.

    UConn’s tuition is generally more affordable than the private university genetic counseling programs elsewhere in the region, making it more accessible for potential students. Interested potential students are encouraged to look at the program’s homepage as applications open in the fall.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Talent and tenacity is celebrated in champion style at 2025 Leeds Sports Awards

    Source: City of Leeds

    Organised by Sport Leeds and Leeds City Council, the ceremony is held each year to celebrate the achievements of athletes – of all ages and levels – as well as coaches, administrators and volunteers.

    And the 2025 edition of the event – hosted at Leeds’s Carriageworks Theatre – did exactly that, with close to 20 different awards being presented to some extremely deserving recipients.

    The evening’s winners included Leeds Rhinos Wheelchair Rugby League coach and former player James Simpson, who took home the coveted Sporting Pride of Leeds title.

    Previous recipients of the award – which recognises work done by an individual, club or organisation to raise the profile of the city as a centre of sporting excellence – include Rob Burrow, Eddie Gray and Josh Warrington.

    A Lifetime Achievement Award, meanwhile, went to Rhinos chief executive Gary Hetherington. The same award was presented posthumously to former Rhinos chief scout Bob Pickles.

    Joan Young’s tireless work supporting netball across the city was recognised with a Special Contribution Award.

    Local, national and international athletics stalwart Dr Ian Richards and City of Leeds Diving Club fundraisers Fiona Croft and Becky Simmonds were all winners in the Outstanding Sports Volunteer category.

    There were awards, too, for local stars of the Olympics and Paralympics, including Georgie Brayshaw, Katy Marchant, Tom Pidcock, Hannah Cockroft and Kadeena Cox.

    Crossgates Harriers took first place in the Community Club category, with a highly-commended mention going to Methley Athletic AFC.

    Councillor Salma Arif, Leeds City Council’s executive member for adult social care, active lifestyles and culture, said:

    The Leeds Sports Awards is one of the highlights of our city’s sporting calendar and an event that means a huge amount to many people.

    “It’s an opportunity to salute the sporting community as a whole, with the important contribution made by grassroots organisations – as well as volunteers and other unsung heroes – being rightfully celebrated alongside the high-profile achievements of Leeds Rhinos, Leeds United and our Olympians and Paralympians.

    “Congratulations to all the winners and nominees at this year’s awards, you have done yourself and the city proud.”

    FULL LIST OF WINNERS AND ‘HIGHLY COMMENDED’ RECIPIENTS

    Young Sportsperson (sponsored by Technogym)

    Winner: Yaried Alem

    Highly commended: Matilda Potter and Amy Wright               

    Young Disability Sportsperson (Sponsored by Technogym)

    Winner: Oliver Porter     

    Highly commended: Lucas Town               

    Sportsperson (Sponsored by Technogym)

    Winners: Georgie Brayshaw, Katy Marchant and Tom Pidcock

    Disability Sportsperson (Sponsored by Technogym)

    Winners: Hannah Cockroft and Kadeena Cox

    School Achievement (Sponsored by YPO Sports)

    Winner: St Theresa’s Catholic Primary School

    Highly commended: Dave Curtis                                  

    Community Coach (Sponsored by Evans Homes)

    Winner: Charlotte Williams

    Highly commended: Elaine Brown and Pete Makowski

    Community Club (Sponsored by Evans Homes)

    Winner: Crossgates Harriers

    Highly commended: Methley United AFC

    Student Sport Champion (Sponsored by Leeds Trinity University)

    Winner: Max Burgin

    Highly commended: Luke Whitehouse                                               

    Outstanding Sports Volunteer (Sponsored by Rosterfly)

    Winners: Dr Ian Richards, Fiona Croft and Becky Simmonds

    Inspirational Community Champion (Sponsored by University of Leeds)

    Winner: Come Outside – Jovanni Sterling and Rob Lattibeaudiere

    Highly commended: Anthony Hall

    Performance Coach (Sponsored by Yorkshire Sport Foundation)

    Winner: Dave Murray

    Highly commended: Rhys Davey, Paul Moseley and Adam Smallwood

    Performance Club (Sponsored by Weetwood Hall Hotel)

    Winner: City of Leeds Diving Club

    Highly commended: Leeds Gymnastics Club

    Sustainability Champion (Sponsored by Zoggs)

    Winner: K.E.E.P.

    Highly commended: Yorkshire Cricket Foundation                                         

    Sporting Pride of Leeds (sponsored by first direct arena)

    Winner: James Simpson

    Lifetime Achievement Award (Sponsored by Leeds City Council)

    Winner: Gary Hetherington

    Posthumous Lifetime Achievement Award (Sponsored by Leeds City Council)

    Winner: Bob Pickles

    Special Contribution Award (Sponsored by Leeds City Council)

    Winner: Joan Young

    Note to editors:

    Sport Leeds was established in 2002 and has since become a dynamic sports network with a strong reputation in the city and region. It serves as the strategic partnership for organisations involved in promoting and developing sports and active recreation in Leeds. The network includes professional and amateur sports clubs, universities, colleges, school clusters and other important sporting organisations from within the city, region and beyond.

    ENDS

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Secretary of State announces the reappointment of Justin Kouame to the Northern Ireland Human Rights Commission

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Press release

    Secretary of State announces the reappointment of Justin Kouame to the Northern Ireland Human Rights Commission

    The Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, the Right Honourable Hilary Benn MP, has announced the reappointment of Justin Kouame to the Northern Ireland Human Rights Commission.

    Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, Hilary Benn.

    The Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, the Right Honourable Hilary Benn MP, has announced the reappointment of Justin Kouame to the Northern Ireland Human Rights Commission.

    Background

    The Northern Ireland Human Rights Commission (the ‘NIHRC’) was created by the Northern Ireland Act 1998, as part of the Belfast (Good Friday) Agreement.

    The NIHRC was established in 1999 and operates as an executive non-departmental public body sponsored by the Northern Ireland Office.

    Its powers and duties are set out in legislation, and it operates in compliance with UN General Assembly resolution 48/134 (the ‘Paris Principles’) on National Human Rights Institutions. The NIHRC’s functions include keeping under review the adequacy and effectiveness in Northern Ireland of law and practice relating to the protection of human rights and promoting understanding and awareness of the importance of human rights in Northern Ireland. 

    Further information about the work of the Commission can be found at: https://nihrc.org/about-us 

    A biography for Justin Kouame can be found at: https://nihrc.org/about/who-we-are/our-people/justin-kouame

    Terms of Appointment

    • This position is part-time for a period of three years ending on 31 August 2028.
    • The position receives a fixed annual remuneration of £7,500.
    • The position is not pensionable.

    Political Activity

    All appointments are made on merit and with regards to the statutory requirements. Political activity plays no part in the selection process. However, in accordance with the original Nolan recommendations, there is a requirement for appointees’ political activity in defined categories to be made public. 

    Mr Kouame has declared that he has not been politically active in the past five years. 

    Regulation

    The appointment is regulated by the Office of the Commissioner for Public Appointment (OCPA).

    Statutory Requirements

    The Secretary of State makes appointments to the Northern Ireland Human Rights Commission in accordance with the Northern Ireland Act 1998.

    Updates to this page

    Published 16 May 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Taxi numbers consultation

    Source: Scotland – City of Perth

    The consultation, which relates to taxis only (vehicles hailed on the street or from a taxi rank), wants to hear what people think about the number of licences issued for taxis in Perth.  

    Currently, there is a limit on the total number of taxi licences issued by the Council, which is set at 80. This limit is only put in place if the Council is satisfied that there is no significant unmet demand for taxis, and the situation is reviewed around every three years. If there is an unmet demand for taxis which is significant, then the Council needs to consider if the limit should be increased or removed. As part of that process, a company which is experienced in this field was hired to complete a survey to see if the public demand for taxis was being met. The results of that survey are available on the online Consultation Hub; the key points of those results are: 

    • The amount of time passengers had to wait for a taxi in 2024 was significantly greater than in 2017 (which was pre-pandemic). 

    • Disabled passengers, especially wheelchair users, continue to face increased difficulties. 

    • There is a significant demand for the services of taxis in Perth that is not met (this is an ‘unmet demand’). 

    • The limit or cap on the number of taxis should be increased by 24 to meet the demand. 

    • If the limit or cap is increased to allow as large a number as 24 new taxi licences to be issued, it is also worth considering whether there is a realistic difference between that and removing the limit or cap altogether (making the number of licences available ‘unlimited’). 

    At a Licensing Committee Meeting held on 25 March 2025, it was agreed that the Council would consult with the public to see what the next steps might be in relation to how the unmet demand should be addressed. 

    The consultation survey is open online at our Consultation Hub until 16 June 2025. Anyone requiring a paper copy or requiring special assistance to complete the consultation can contact the Council’s Civic Licensing team on 01738 475180 or email civiclicensing@pkc.gov.uk

    Feedback from this consultation will be used, along with other information collected, to prepare a report to the Licensing Committee. It is the Licensing Committee that make decisions on how many additional taxi licences will be made available, as well any other restrictions on vehicle types. 

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Beating heart of community to reopen this weekend as Ancoats Green refurbishment completes

    Source: City of Manchester

    Ancoats Green will reopen to the public this weekend (Saturday 17 May) following a major refurbishment project that has now been completed at the city park.

    The investment is part of a wider £40m public realm programme creating a new focal point for the neighbourhood alongside further public space that seamlessly links the newly opened Ancoats Mobility Hub and the Council’s first This City housing development at No. 1 Ancoats Green. The public realm projects are also helping to unlock 1,500 new homes -including more than 500 under construction by Manchester Life. 

    The renewed park space includes high quality multi-functional open spaces for the community, new play areas with accessible equipment, open grassed areas, generous footpaths and space for small events.  

    New walking and cycling routes connecting the park to the wider city centre will encourage active travel, along with significant new planting and increased biodiversity – including wildflower areas a new trees. 

    Ancoats green transformation in numbers:  

    • 1.06ha renewed park space 
    • 2823m2 of wildflower meadow planting 
    • 420m2 of new planted areas 
    • 63% net increase in trees – any trees removed (either due to disease or those with a limited life span) have been replaced 2:1  
    • Highly sustainable design with many of new surfaces made from reclaimed materials to create a permeable drainage system

    The project has looked to celebrate the industrial heritage of the area, including referencing historic flint glass works in the park features. Upcycled materials from both the Our Town Hall and Albert Square project and walling stone from the former Prussia Canal arm that once ran through the park have successfully be re-used throughout the park. Reclaimed granite setts have also been incorporated into the spaces, while salvaged building stone has been used for seating areas across the park. 

    A family friendly community event will take place on Saturday 17 May celebrating the reopening of the park space, hosted by This City.  

    Funding for the project was received through Homes England, the Greater Manchester Combined Authority via the Brownfield Land Fund, and the City Council.  

    The Ancoats Regeneration Story 

    The public realm investment is part of the latest phase of the Ancoats Regeneration programme continues the internationally renowned regeneration of the neighbourhood.  

    The Green, alongside the now open Ancoats Mobility Hub, which will be managed by APCOA is helping to underpin the development of 1,500 new homes in this part of the city centre, including the Council’s first This City development at No. 1 Ancoats Green where the first homes are expected to be completed this summer, which includes 30% affordable housing capped at the Manchester Living Rent.  

    This phase of Ancoats investment aims to create a strong sense of place and a low-traffic, pedestrian first neighbourhood for the ongoing residential development that will bring this chapter of investment to a close.  

    The Ancoats Green redevelopment was designed by Planit and the key contractor was Alined Construction Ltd.  

    The Ancoats Mobility Hub and This City’s No. 1 Ancoats Green development was designed by Buttress Architects. The Hub was delivered by Bowmer and Kirkland and No.1 Ancoats Green is being built by Wates Construction Limited.  

    Leader of the Council Bev Craig said:  

    “We’re on a mission to invest more in our parks and green spaces. With over 150 parks and green spaces in Manchester, Ancoats Green is the latest park in our city centre to be created or refurbished to make sure our residents have access to brilliant green spaces. The Green will be the heart of this community, a place local people can take pride in, spend time with family and friends, and find a respite from the bustle of the city – all in a low traffic, sustainable neighbourhood. 

    “This is also part of a £40m public realm investment in this part of Ancoats – including the new Mobility Hub – which is helping to unlock the next phase of regeneration in the neighbourhood – and the final chapters of a regeneration story going back two decades.  

    “Building on the Ancoats success story the next phase of investment will see 1,500 new homes built, which includes the Council’s first This City housing development at No. 1 Ancoats Green that will complete in the next few months – helping to increase access to genuinely affordable homes in the city centre.

    “Ancoats Green is a great example of the council investing more in the priorities that residents tell us they want to see and is a beautiful addition to this area of the city. “

    Anna Marohn, Principal Landscape Architect comments from Planit:

    “It’s been a real privilege to work on delivering the new Ancoats Green. A verdant space in the heart of Manchester city centre for the community, celebrating the area’s rich heritage and with sustainability at its core.  

    “The dramatic enhancements will see an increase in Biodiversity. The use of wildflower meadows, structural herbeacous planting, addition of 41 new trees, bug hotels and bird boxes integrated creatively throughout the space, will encourage nature back into the city.  Climate resilient and reclaimed materials have been used extensively throughout the park, including SUDS with rain gardens located within the green, and porous asphalt for the footpaths.    

    “Many of the parks’ surface materials are reclaimed – using granite setts from the renovation works at nearby Albert Square and old coping stones – to create bespoke seating elements.  

    “The dramatic enhancements will offer the existing and future community a place to dwell, play, exercise and socialise for future generations to come.” 

    Commenting on their role in the design work for the Ancoats Mobility Hub, This City’s No.1 Ancoats Green development and Eliza Yard for ManchesterLife, Matthew Burl, Buttress director said: “The opening of the Ancoats Mobility Hub is about so much more than mobility. It’s about giving streets back to people, creating space for community life to flourish, and embedding sustainability into the everyday experience of the city. It’s been a privilege to help shape this important project for our own local neighbourhood of Ancoats. Our new housing development for This City, No1. Ancoats Green, is due to be finished this summer and Eliza Yard for Manchester Life will complete in the spring next year. Both will add thoughtfully designed apartments and townhouses to complement all of the benefits of Ancoats life and the new park.” 

    Designed by Buttress for Manchester Life Development Company on behalf of Manchester City Council, the Eliza Yard project reuses an existing surface car park in Ancoats, creating a unique new residential location that will contribute to the ongoing regeneration of the area. It is being built by Sisk. 

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Competition enforcement – a view from the CMA

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Speech

    Competition enforcement – a view from the CMA

    Speech by Juliette Enser, Executive Director for Competition Enforcement, delivered at CompLaw: Advanced EU, London.

    Thank you for inviting me to give a view from the CMA today.

    I’m going to focus on competition enforcement work – my area of specialty – because it’s a particularly opportune time to talk about 2 important topics.

    First, I’d like to explain the messages that we think businesses should take away from our spate of recent enforcement activity.

    Secondly, looking to the future, I want to explain how we propose to make sure our competition enforcement work delivers on the UK government’s steer that we should focus on supporting growth across the CMA’s tools.

    The aims of competition enforcement

    Before I get into the detail of these topics, however, I wanted to spend a few moments standing back and thinking about what and how we are trying to achieve with our competition enforcement work.

    Because this ultimately guides our choices about both what work we do – in other words what cases and other interventions we choose to prioritise – and how we go about it.

    At its heart competition enforcement is about safeguarding competitive markets, driving efficiency throughout the supply chain and promoting dynamism, innovation and productivity.

    Competition enforcement can also drive down prices for consumers, for businesses and for taxpayers, as well as keeping markets open and creating a level playing field. And it has an important role in driving trust and confidence in markets, for both consumers and investors.

    That’s why competition enforcement remains at the core of the work of the CMA as we evolve to meet new policy and economic challenges. And this applies whether we are talking about tackling hard-core cartel conduct, abuses of market power or other illegal and harmful arrangements.

    So that is – as most of you in this room will already recognise – what competition law enforcement can achieve. But how, in practice, do we translate this into reality. One important way is by bringing anti-competitive conduct to an end: and that can be through the vehicle of a formal investigation – certainly the aspect of our work that is likely to be most familiar to this audience – but also through other interventions – such as warning or advisory letters that I will talk about later.

    We are in many cases however also focused on deterring those who might be tempted to stray over the line. And indeed this can be a crucially important outcome of our work. We do this primarily by imposing fines on companies – almost £650 million over the last 5 years – but also through holding individuals to account through our powers in relation to director disqualification – at current count 29 individuals have been prevented from acting as directors or being involved in the management of a company under the disqualification regime. More recently, those who are found to have committed breaches of competition law also face an increased risk of being excluded from future public tenders as a result of the Procurement Act that came into force this February.

    Recent enforcement activity

    I’m going to move on to talk about how that aim translates into enforcement activity by reference to 5 recent cases – all of which demonstrate our commitment to deterring conduct that impedes the kind of dynamic, competitive markets that boost our economy.

    A brief tour of our recent enforcement cases will serve to underline the variety of victims we aim to protect – taxpayers, workers, consumers, businesses – as well as how anti-competitive conduct has the potential to reduce economic prosperity through dampening innovation or reducing efficiency.

    So what, more precisely, have we been doing by way of enforcement since the start of this year.

    In February, we fined 4 global investment banks collectively over £100 million for colluding in relation to UK government bonds or gilts (and related products) through bilateral exchanges of information among traders. (The fifth bank involved in the investigation escaped fines because it was the first to self-report the conduct to us under our leniency policy before we’d opened an investigation.) It is, of course, vital that a market of paramount importance to us all – the gilt market – should be able to function freely and fairly and the size of the fine reflects that.

    In March, we concluded our first labour market case concerning exchanges of information among sports broadcasters about the rates of pay for freelancer production staff like sound and camera operators with a view, primarily, to aligning those rates or – as one of those involved described it – presenting a ‘united front’. Labour markets are key to a well-functioning economy and, in taking cases in this area, we aim to ensure that workers are able to obtain a fair value for their work but also that businesses can find and hire workers at the right price.

    In April, we reached a finding of infringement by many of the global car manufactures and the EU and UK trade association that encompassed a long-running agreement not to advertise their performance against certain green parameters – an investigation we started because we were concerned that this type of conduct could undermine incentives to innovate, including when it comes to sustainable growth. The investigation culminated in a settlement which saw the parties collectively agree to pay fines in the region of £77 million.

    I also wanted to highlight a case that is not quite yet concluded which is our investigation into a drug manufacturer who we suspected of spreading misinformation about the safety of a rival drug. To put an end to the investigation, the manufacturer has offered not only to put in place guarantees about how it will interact with healthcare providers going forward – including conducting a communications campaign designed to clarify the position in relation to the relative safety of the rival drug – but also to make a payment of £23 million directly to the NHS. So with this outcome, we would be simultaneously ensuring that a competitor is not wrongly prevented from competing on the merits to grow the sales of its drug, we are protecting the NHS (and ultimately the taxpayer) from the risk of potential financial harm and – perhaps most importantly – making sure healthcare providers have accurate safety information when selecting the right treatment for their patient’s condition.

    And while I’m talking about pharmaceuticals, it is also worth highlighting a judgment handed down last week concerning our investigation about excessive pricing of Liothyronine. This case concerned a particularly egregious infringement that saw the sole supplier of an essential drug increase its price over 1000% in less than 10 years, without any justification – costing the NHS millions of pounds. Given the nature of the conduct at issue here, we were extremely pleased that the Court of Appeal found resoundingly in our favour.

    It is also worth flagging that as part of its judgment, the Court of Appeal considered how the CMA should approach the issue of deterrence when it comes to setting penalties. And given what I’ve already said about the importance of deterrence to our work, it was comforting that in this case the Court of Appeal upheld the CMA’s approach to ‘specific deterrence’ – essentially agreeing that penalties should be set at a level that is sufficient to deter re-offending by the party being fined relative to global turnover (and therefore re-instating in full the original penalty imposed by the CMA on one of the firms involved).

    Before I move on to discuss our future priorities, I did want to highlight that both the vehicle recycling and disparagement cases I mentioned above were also the subject of similar investigations by the European Commission.

    Indeed, in the car recycling case, we opened and concluded the cases on the same day. And particularly in the context of this conference, I wanted to stress how vital international cooperation remains to competition enforcement work; whether that be in sharing expertise and best practice or on specific investigations. Indeed, this was brought home to me last week during the International Competition Network’s annual conference which took place in Edinburgh, and which saw agencies come together and discuss how we continue to evolve our agencies and our laws to meet the challenges we collectively face and to exchange best practices in areas as diverse as dawn raids to advocacy.

    Looking to the future – priorities for intervention

    The government’s strategic steer published today as well as our annual plan highlights the opportunities for our work to continue to drive efficiencies in the provision of public sector services.

    As those of you who are familiar with our work will recognise, the CMA has a strong track record in taking cases that serve to protect the public purse. This includes investigations into pharmaceutical companies under both Chapter 1 and Chapter 2 – seeking to detect and deter practices which ultimately drive up prices for the NHS, an investigation into a supplier of school software that we were concerned was trying to ‘lock in’ schools and preventing them from fully benefiting from price and quality competition, and cartel investigations for example into:

    • concrete drainage products used, among others, in the construction of roads
    • water storage tanks, used by schools and hospitals

    And we intend to build on our track record with a focus on public procurement.

    It is well-known that public procurement is particularly vulnerable to bid-rigging and that bid-rigging, where present, can substantially increase prices: research suggests that this can be by 20% or more. And this accords with evidence from our own cases that bid-rigging can be extremely lucrative – with some of the parties to our Demolition investigation having ‘compensated’ each other for deliberately losing tenders with substantial payments.

    So we intend to intensify our work in this area. For example, by investing further in our detection tools, including – where we can access the right data – using data analytics (including AI) tools to identify suspicious activity. And as I mentioned already there is a new risk facing cartelists arising from the debarment regime introduced by the Procurement Act 2023 which will see them face the possibility of inclusion in a central debarment register and exclusion from future public tenders for a period of up to 5 years.

    While public procurement is certainly a priority, it will not be the only area of work we tackle in the short to medium term. For example, we are currently investigating in the areas of housebuilding and travel – both cross-cutting sectors that are key enablers of growth. And, as I will talk about more below, we are generally keen to hear from businesses facing barriers to entry or expansion that competition law can help them solve, particularly in areas that the government has identified as a focus in its industrial strategy green paper.

    Looking to the future – the 4Ps

    Late last year, the CMA announced a new ‘4Ps’ framework to deliver meaningful changes to how we go about our work, based on clear feedback from businesses and investors. The 4Ps in question are pace, predictability, proportionality and process. This framework is – consistent with the government steer that I’ve already referred to – designed to support growth, investment and business confidence in the UK’s competition and consumer regimes.

    We’ve already set out how we intend to apply the 4Ps to our merger review function, as well as to the new digital markets and consumer protection regimes under the DMCCA. Today, I want to say a few words about how we intend to complete the roll-out of the 4Ps to our competition enforcement work.

    Pace and proportionality

    Of the 4Ps, I would like to start with pace and proportionality and want to take some time to explain:

    • as regards ‘pace’ – how we plan to deliver against the new ‘duty of expedition’ introduced by the DMCCA, including through greater use of technology and rigorous streamlining of investigations and decisions while respecting due process
    • as regards ‘proportionality’ – how we propose to use the full range of our toolkit while at the same time maintain the deterrence impact of our interventions

    Pace

    Since the DMCCA came into force in April of this year, we have a statutory duty of expedition that applies to all of our competition enforcement investigations, a change which we worked closely with the government to bring about.

    So we have been considering carefully how to get to the right outcomes in a more timely manner: for example, we continue to make significant investments in technology to speed up our processes, for example, for evidence review and we have made substantial efforts to streamline our decisions – while still seeking to ensure they are properly reasoned. We have also recently made changes to the guidance covering our procedures intended to help us work at pace, for example, by setting clear expectations about how we will go about identifying legally privileged documents among material acquired during inspections. While none of this may sound particularly exciting, identifying and pursuing these incremental opportunities is vital if we are to achieve our goal – to reach positive outcomes as quickly as we can without compromising on rights of defence.

    And in that context, I firmly believe that this new duty of expedition will help us achieve the right balance between conducting our work at pace and ensuring that we give due consideration to requests we might receive, such as requests from parties – for example, for more time to provide information – or from complainants – for example when they ask for the CMA to conduct further lines of enquiry. Because – and this is worth underlining – our ability to work at pace depends not only on how we conduct ourselves but also on the response of those with an interest in our investigation.

    Proportionality

    As I mentioned already, we have a range of tools at our disposal to bring about behaviour change both by the parties to the investigation and more broadly: this can of course include a fine imposed following a full administrative procedure but need not always do so. In some cases, use of a softer tool or a consensual outcome may be more appropriate provided this can be done without sacrificing the overall deterrent impact of the regime. So we are focused on achieving the right suite of interventions across the regime.

    And that means you can expect 3 things from us going forward.

    First, you should expect us only to open a formal investigation where we consider it is warranted by the expected impact should we conclude that an infringement has taken place – whether the direct impact that might result if we put an end to unlawful conduct and/or through the deterrent message that we would send, whether to a firm, sector or about a practice. This commitment is underpinned by our prioritisation principles, which require us to consider the strategic significance and impact of the outcome that may be achieved and to weigh that up against the risk and resources involved, which we consistently challenge ourselves about whether it’s right to open or continue investigations.

    In practical terms, this means you can also expect that in many cases we will aim to achieve a change in behaviour without carrying out a full (or indeed any) formal investigation. Indeed, between 2018 and 2024 we sent a total of 593 warning and advisory letters. Such letters put the businesses in question on notice of the CMA’s concerns and include recommendations for ensuring compliance with competition law.

    Secondly, we are firmly committed to closing investigations or scoping them more narrowly (for example, reducing the number of parties or the time period of our investigation) where we consider it is proportionate to do so.

    Thirdly, where we can do so without undermining deterrence, we will seek to put an end to the matter by consensus, whether through our settlement or commitments procedures. Indeed, with the exception of the Liothyronine case, each of the recent investigations that I talked about earlier ended (or may end) in settlement or commitments.

    Being able to bring investigations to an end in this way has clear benefits – both for the parties involved and for the CMA, in bringing finality to the proceedings more quickly and avoiding unnecessary litigation. For that reason, we are particularly pleased that the CAT has twice now upheld – most recently last December – the finality of settlements. withdrawing settlement discounts from parties that appeal. Indeed, it is now a feature of our settlement process that parties must expressly agree not to bring an appeal.

    However, it is important to emphasise that, in investigations that are not concluded by way of settlement or commitments, we remain focused on seeing them through where we believe there is significant harm to address or deterrent impact to achieve including, where appropriate, vigorously defending any legal challenges we may face.

    Predictability

    So, moving on to predictability and in particular plans we have to make a more predictable environment for those firms who wish to collaborate for beneficial purposes and who are considering the competition law risks of doing so.

    As competition specialists you will know that we have published a lot of guidance (on both substance and process) as well as full reasoned decisions, so there is transparency of our work and reasoning. Through those publications, we aim to help firms to stay on the right side of the law and also know how to engage with our processes. And we have a wide range of materials intended to help businesses avoid illegal conduct: for example, ‘case studies’ which use ‘stories’ from our work to act as a guide or wider campaign work such as our ‘cheating or competing’ campaign.

    That said, we are aware that competition law can be complex. And it would not be a good outcome for the UK if this complexity resulted in competition law having an unnecessary chilling effect on positive, pro-competitive behaviour that could support, for example, innovation or productivity. If, for example, competitors were to be unduly wary of working together to bring innovative products to market or of using their collective purchasing power to sponsor new production techniques or improve the resilience of the supply chain.

    Indeed, discussions of industrial strategy inevitably raise questions around policy goals like resilience or global competitiveness, which might lead to the consideration of the potential benefits of strategic domestic suppliers or the creation of globally significant companies. And this might give added salience to the question of how competition law and policy can create the right conditions for companies to scale and remain competitive in the global market – including how to create an environment that fosters beneficial collaborations.

    So, turning to what we intend to do in this space. Many of you will likely be familiar with our initiative launched in 2023 on ‘Green Agreements’ which was intended to address exactly the concern I am talking about – in other words fears that businesses were not working together to combat sustainability issues because they were concerned that they might face competition law risks. This initiative has 2 components:

    1. accessible advice – the Green Agreements Guidance – that clearly explains how the competition rules might apply to a variety of types of cooperation that businesses might want to engage in to meet sustainability goals
    2. an open offer to provide tailored advice (that we also publish to further demystify our practice)

    And from our engagement with the business community and other stakeholders – including the number of requests for advice we receive – we are confident this initiative has been successful. (Indeed, the only time as an enforcer I’ve been asked while on stage what prompted the CMA to do something so brilliant was when I was talking about Green Agreements!)

    So, we are now working with the government and business stakeholders to understand whether there are other areas that might benefit from additional intervention from the CMA to support beneficial activity.

    This could potentially include bespoke advice, issuing tailored guidance and also making aspects of our existing guidance more accessible.

    We have already targeted 2 avenues where there may be a need for us to act: first is the cross-economy area of labour markets. Here, we have heard that businesses want to understand from us in more detail how they can stay on the right side of the law when it comes to hiring practices including, for example, how they can legitimately benchmark their salaries against those of other employers. And we therefore intend to supplement our existing advice to employers.

    Secondly, in the key enabling area of skills, we are talking to stakeholders across the 4 nations of the UK to get an understanding of whether competition law concerns are preventing universities from working together in ways that could be good for the economy.

    Now I should underline – particularly for those older members of the audience – that we are not proposing to return to the days before the ‘modernisation regulation’ (of 2003) where even pro-competitive agreements required our blessing. And nor are we suddenly going to turn a blind eye to competitor collaborations which, even while they may have a beneficial objective, leave insufficient room for competition and therefore have the potential for harm. However, we recognise that with the premium we have – to my mind rightly – put in recent years on using our decision-making powers to tackle the most egregious harms, we have been investing less in helping those looking to push forward with beneficial collaborations.

    And in that spirit, we are interested in hearing from sectors – particularly the 8 key industrial strategy sectors – where there is concrete evidence that competition law concerns are chilling beneficial collaborations and where we might be able to help.

    Process

    Moving on to the final of the 4Ps – process. Process is about engagement and we are currently focusing on 2 areas where we are looking to improve how we engage with businesses and other stakeholders: complaints and leniency.

    Leniency guidance

    Our leniency programme remains an important – albeit by far not the only – tool for us to detect cartels accounting and indeed our government bonds, sports broadcasting and vehicle recycling cases all resulted from leniency applications.

    At the end of April we launched a public consultation on an updated version of the guidance that underpins that programme. We are aiming to make the guidance easier for firms to use, by bringing it up to date with developments in policy and practice, and by streamlining our procedures; as well as ensuring it continues to have the right balance of incentives for companies and individuals to be the first to apply for leniency. We are looking forward to hearing your feedback on this document.

    Complaints charter

    When it comes to how we engage with businesses who may be victims of anti-competitive conduct, anecdotal evidence suggests that we could improve on the experience of firms. With that in mind, we intend to publish a ‘Complaints Charter’ that is intended to make our complaints process more accessible and predictable: for example, information about how to make a complaint, and what you can expect by way of response, including how quickly complainants should expect to hear back from us.

    I hope that in publishing this charter we not only help firms engage with the CMA but also underline how interested we are in hearing from those businesses that might be suffering as a result of anti-competitive conduct, particularly in the areas we have identified in our Annual Plan as a focus. And we are very happy to engage in discussion at an early stage with those who wish to gauge our appetite to take action on a particular issue. And I would also emphasise that our desire to take action to protect businesses that are doing their very best to grow and to innovate is backed up by strong tools – including interim measures – as well as procedures to protect confidential information.

    For the moment I will leave it there, other than to flag that we are continuing to think more broadly including about further changes to our processes that can help embed the 4P principles so please do watch this space.

    Updates to this page

    Published 16 May 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Preston Markets Loved for 150 Years

    Source: City of Preston

    This week, as part of ‘Love Your Local Market’ fortnight, Preston Markets is proud to announce the 150th anniversary of its iconic Victorian canopy.

    Standing tall since 1875, this striking structure has sheltered generations of traders and welcomed countless visitors, becoming one of Preston’s most recognisable city centre landmarks.

    To mark the occasion, Preston Markets will host a two-day Victorian-themed celebration on Friday 15 and Saturday 16 August. Visitors can expect traditional characters such as Victorian strong men, penny-farthing-riding policeman along with live performances and family-friendly activities. A special heritage tour will offer insights into the markets rich history whilst a curated display – developed in collaboration with a history student from the University of Lancashire will showcase the markets’ story through the decades. More details will be announced.

    ‘Love Your Local Market’ is a UK wide initiative celebrating local markets and the traders who provide fresh quality produce and services to their communities.

    Originally held on Preston Flag Market with street traders dotted around the town, Preston Market evolved significantly after the arrival of the railway in 1838. This economic boost paved the way for the construction of a permanent canopy, completed in November 1875 which quickly became a symbol of Preston’s thriving market culture.

    Today, 150 years on, the canopy still provides a home for local traders and a popular space for visitors. It now shares space with beloved statues of Wallace and Gromit characters adding a playful touch to its historic setting.

    Councillor Martyn Rawlinson, cabinet member for Resources at Preston City Council said:

    Preston Markets have always been at the heart of Preston and it is fantastic to see them celebrated this way, Market traders work incredibly hard all year-round providing quality goods and services.

    “Marking the 150 year anniversary of the iconic, market canopy honours not only the heritage but also the vital role our markets continue to play in Preston’s future.”

    If you have a personal memory or family story linked to Preston Markets, we’d love to hear from you. Email markets@preston.gov.uk – selected stories may be included in a special display inside the Market Hall.

    To stay up to date with celebration details, including competition and event anouncements visit Preston Markets and follow @prestonmarkets on Instagram and Facebook.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Grant Scheme launched to support events and markets

    Source: Scotland – City of Aberdeen

    Businesses in the city centre are being encouraged to apply for a grant scheme to help support hosting events and markets. 

    The City Centre Events and Markets Scheme encourages and supports businesses to host events that will contribute towards Aberdeen’s vibrancy as well as enhancing community spirit and supporting the local economy. 

    Aberdeen City Council Co-Leader Councillor Ian Yuill said: “Having a wide selection of events will help our city centre to continue to be a fun place for locals and visitors to come together and celebrate local talent. 

    “Any interested businesses should look to see if they are eligible to apply and start their creative journey today.”

    Finance and Resources convener Councillor Alex McLellan said: said: “We are delighted to offer businesses in Aberdeen city centre the opportunity to bring their ideas to life and make a lasting impact on our community through this exciting scheme.”

    Discretionary grants of £1,000 are available to businesses looking to host free-to-attend, community events or markets within Aberdeen city centre. 

    Businesses can apply for funding towards exciting and creative events such as food markets for local producers, craft workshops and fashion shows. 

    This Grant Scheme is funded by the UK Shared Prosperity Fund. 

    To find out more and to apply, visit our website. 

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Seven-year ban for Suffolk car wash owner who employed illegal workers

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Press release

    Seven-year ban for Suffolk car wash owner who employed illegal workers

    Four illegal workers were discovered by Immigration Enforcement officers

    • Vittorio Dragoti employed four illegal workers from Romania at his Fiveways Car Wash in Suffolk  

    • The workers were found with no right to work in the UK by Immigration Enforcement last year 

    • Dragoti has been banned as a company director until May 2032

    The owner of a Suffolk hand car wash has been banned as a company director for seven years after employing four illegal workers. 

    Vittorio Dragoti, 28, hired the workers from Romania at the Fiveways Car Wash on the Fiveways Roundabout near Barton Mills. 

    The workers were discovered when Immigration Enforcement officials visited the car wash in 2024.  

    Dave Magrath, Director of Investigation and Enforcement Services at the Insolvency Service, said: 

    Company directors have clear statutory obligations to recruit people who have the right to work in the UK. 

    Consumers deserve to have confidence that workers providing services to them are not working illegally. And the workers themselves deserve to not be put in such a vulnerable position by people who may exploit their immigration status. 

    Vittorio Dragoti’s disqualification as a company director is a result of ongoing close collaboration between the Insolvency Service and our partners at the Home Office to clamp down on rogue directors.

    Dragoti, of Queensway, Mildenhall, was the sole director of Vito’s Car Care Limited since March 2019. 

    Immigration Enforcement officials found the four Romanian men aged between 18 and 49 with no right to work in the UK when they visited the car wash in April last year. 

    Vito’s Car Care was fined £180,000 for the immigration breach. The fine currently remains unpaid. 

    Cheryl Daldry, the Home Office’s East of England Immigration Compliance and Enforcement lead, said: 

    This is a great example of the serious consequences that are in store for business owners who fail to carry out checks on individuals they hire to ensure they have the right to work in the UK. 

    Dragoti flouted our employment and immigration rules by employing multiple people with no right to work in the UK, resulting in long term enforcement action against himself and his business. 

    “I would like to thank our partners at the Insolvency Service for their help to secure these sanctions against this non-compliant employer. 

    The Secretary of State for Business and Trade accepted a disqualification undertaking from Dragoti, and his seven-year ban began on Thursday 15 May. 

    The disqualification prevents him from becoming involved in the promotion, formation or management of a company, without the permission of the court. It does not impact any businesses with similar names or locations.

    Further information

    Updates to this page

    Published 16 May 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Statement on the fire at Bicester Motion

    Source: City of Oxford

    Published: Friday, 16 May 2025

    Statement from Councillor Susan Brown, Leader of Oxford City Council.

    “On behalf of Oxford City Council and the City of Oxford, I want to express my condolences to the families of those firefighters, and the member of the public, who have tragically lost their lives in the fire at Bicester Motion.  

    “This is a terrible reminder for us all that firefighters, as well as the other members of the emergency services, put themselves at risk on a daily basis, to protect us all. We own them a deep debt of gratitude.  

    “We are deeply saddened, and our thoughts are with the family, colleagues and friends of those we have lost in this tragic incident.” 
    Councillor Susan Brown, Leader of Oxford City Council 

    Oxford City Council has lowered the City Flag flying over the 1930’s extension of Oxford Town Hall to half-mast today to mourn the loss. 

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: New Lord Mayor takes on historic role

    Source: City of Leicester

    LEICESTER’S new Lord Mayor has been handed the chains of office at a ceremony in the city’s Town Hall.

    Cllr Teresa Aldred, who has represented Thurncourt ward since the 2015 local elections, was sworn in as the city’s first citizen at a meeting of the full council yesterday (Thursday).

    At the ceremony, the new Lord Mayor announced she would be supporting two important health charities in her mayoral year: the Joe Humphries Memorial Trust and ANDYSMANCLUB.

    Cllr Aldred will be supported in her year in office by the Lady Mayoress, her daughter Libby Aldred, together with her good friend Maggie Corley and the former boxer Rendall Munroe, who will serve as her consorts.

    “I am very excited and maybe just a little nervous about being the Lord Mayor of Leicester but I promise to serve the people with my whole heart,” said Cllr Aldred.

    “I am proud to be the Lord Mayor of this beautiful city – so rich in diversity and culture, and a place I have always called home.

    “During my year in office, I hope to highlight some of the many brilliant things that happen in the city but often go unnoticed.

    “I will also be passionate about supporting the work of the two charities I have chosen: the Joe Humphries Memorial Trust, which strives to reduce the impact and incidence of sudden arrhythmic death syndrome, increase the number of public access defibrillators in communities, and train more people in the skills needed to save a life in an emergency – and the suicide prevention charity, ANDYSMANCLUB. 

    “In my year in office, I hope to raise awareness of the vital work that both charities do.”

    Born and raised in Thurnby Lodge – where she still lives today – Cllr Aldred attended Willowbrook and St Joseph’s primary schools, before moving on to St Paul’s RC School and Hamilton Community College.

    She began work in a care home for the elderly, while attending Charles Frears College of Nursing and Midwifery, and she also trained as a teaching assistant.

    While raising her family, she started taking an active role in the local community, holding events at the Thurncourt Community Centre and assisting with sessions for elderly people.

    Cllr Aldred is married with four children and is passionate about horses, having had her own horse from a young age. Although she still keeps and cares for horses, it’s her children who continue to live her dream and she very much encourages them to be involved and enjoy the outdoors.

    The family also enjoy travelling across England in their motorhome.

    Cllr Aldred becomes the latest incumbent of an office that dates back to at least 1209. Formerly the ‘Mayor of Leicester’, the title was upgraded to ‘Lord Mayor’ in 1928.

    The outgoing Lord Mayor, Cllr Bhupen Dave, will serve as Deputy Lord Mayor in 2025-26, with Cllr Manjula Sood remaining as High Bailiff.

    More information about the office of the Lord Mayor is available at leicester.gov.uk

     

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Delivering homemade explosives manufacturing training

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Case study

    Delivering homemade explosives manufacturing training

    Dstl and FBI collaboration pushes forward the development of world-leading expertise and knowledge.

    The Defence Science and Technology Laboratory (Dstl) enabled the United States Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) to deliver training on homemade explosives (HME) manufacturing for the UK and other partner nations in early 2025, at Cranfield Ordnance Test and Evaluation Centre (COTEC).

    The FBI was supported by Dstl’s Forensic Explosives Laboratory (FEL) to successfully carry out the practical course.

    Training outcomes

    This course is important for the explosives’ community because it has helped develop participants’ knowledge and understanding of homemade explosives. It also enhanced knowledge of how to safely handle these materials.

    For Dstl’s FEL, the course has been instrumental in enhancing professional credibility when supporting the UK criminal justice system with expert witness testimonies.

    A number of Dstl experts worked hard to ensure this course was delivered in the UK, and collaboration amongst the following ensured its success:

    • FEL organisers
    • subject matter experts
    • safety personnel
    • trials managers
    • COTEC

    The FEL provides a forensic service to the UK police forces on behalf of the British criminal justice system, UK government departments (including the Home Office and Ministry of Defence), foreign governments and other clients.

    More about the training

    The Dstl team worked for about a year to refine the training content and develop safe working practices so the FBI could undertake this essential training within the UK.

    As most of the homemade explosives mixes were new to Dstl, additional scrutiny and small-scale hazard testing was required to ensure sufficient mitigations were in place for handling.

    Participants received a unique and practical hands-on training experience:

    • mixing a variety of homemade explosives
    • making improvised charges
    • observing their detonation

    Participants and observers included international partners, such as the Forensic Science Northern Ireland, Netherlands Explosives Ordinance Disposal and the Netherlands Forensic Institute.

    Dstl looks forward to future opportunities where we can continue this training and expand the benefits to others across the explosives and energetics community.

    Find out more about how Dstl delivers mission success through science and technology advantage.

    Updates to this page

    Published 16 May 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Funding for Highland Active Travel projects welcomed

    Source: Scotland – Highland Council

    The Highland Council has successfully secured funding from Transport Scotland for two Active Travel projects which will make it easier for people to walk, wheel and cycle for everyday journeys.

    Chair of the Economy and Infrastructure Committee, Councillor Ken Gowans said: “This is terrific news. There are many benefits of active travel. It is beneficial for individual health, it is a cheaper form of transport, can help the shift to low carbon travel, improve air quality and can produce an increase in productivity and footfall in town centres and other locations.”

    “The Council is working to deliver a low carbon transport network to tackle the climate and ecological emergency. Essentially this means making it easier, safer and more convenient for people to walk, wheel and cycle. The projects in Wick town centre and in Culbokie on the Black Isle both complement our work already underway and I’m delighted we can now press on with plans at both locations.”

    The Wick Street Design project has been awarded funding to make improvements to the Bridge Street / High Street junction to make it easier and safer for pedestrians to cross and reach the High Street from nearby car parks.  The High Street’s pedestrian zone will be resurfaced, and rising bollards will be installed at both ends to control vehicle access and slow down authorised traffic, enhancing pedestrian safety.  The project also includes new seating, planting, and artwork inspired by the Market Cross and local culture.

    The Highland Council has been awarded funding to deliver the Culbokie Active Travel Village project which aims to make it easier, safer and more enjoyable for people spending time in the village walking, pushing buggies, using wheelchairs or mobility scooters, as well as cycling for all ages and abilities.  The existing footpaths will be widened to 2 metres where necessary and new footpaths will be built so people can walk through the village without crossing the road.  A new light controlled pedestrian crossing will also be installed along with physical traffic calming features including raised table junctions, carriageway pinch points and build-outs.

    The tendering process is underway for the Wick and Culbokie projects with work expected to be completed by 31 March 2026.

    In addition to funding for these two projects Transport Scotland will be delivering on the designs for improved non-motorized user transport provision at the Raigmore Interchange in Inverness, making it safer and more convenient for pedestrians, cyclists, and those using wheelchairs.  The scheme will include full signalisation of the Interchange providing controlled pedestrian and cycle crossings.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Join a community litter pick to ‘Bin the Stigma’

    Source: City of Portsmouth

    The B.More group,  composed of individuals with lived experience of recovery, is coordinating the litter pick on Friday 23 May in Buckland and Landport.

    The litter pick will include clearing a small area within Landport Community Garden, which is planned to become a memorial garden and reflective space for those impacted by drug or alcohol related deaths in the city.

    ‘Bin the Stigma’ is part of Portsmouth’s activities as an ‘Inclusive Recovery City,’ a programme led by the B.More group.

    In November 2024, Portsmouth signed a charter to become an Inclusive Recovery City—a place that visibly promotes recovery from addiction, challenges stigma, and champions pathways to recovery.

    Cllr Matthew Winnington, Cabinet Member for Community Wellbeing, Health and Care, at Portsmouth City Council, said:

    “Being an Inclusive Recovery City gives us the opportunity to help tackle stigma around addiction and recovery, building a supportive and inclusive community. Activities such as Bin the Stigma show that people in recovery can make such a positive impact in the community.”

    The litter pick will start from 10am on 23 May, with participants meeting at Ambition Portsmouth, 67 Kingston Road, PO2 7DX, where the litter pick will also finish.

    Refreshments will be available. Anyone in the community is welcome to join.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Regulator orders reform to governance at Islamic Centre of England

    Source: United Kingdom – Government Statements

    Press release

    Regulator orders reform to governance at Islamic Centre of England

    The Charity Commission has issued the Islamic Centre of England Limited with a formal Order under Section 84 of the Charities Act, compelling the trustees to provide rigorous oversight of future speakers and online activity by the charity among other actions.

    The Order has been issued in the context of a finding of misconduct and / or mismanagement during the regulator’s ongoing inquiry into the charity, to address the charity’s previous failures and to ensure that its governance is improved for the future.

    The move follows the appointment of two additional trustees at the charity – a centre of Islamic worship in north London – and the conclusion of extensive work by an Interim Manager appointed by the Commission to take temporary control of essential aspects of the charity’s running and to review its governance.

    The regulator opened an inquiry into the Islamic Centre of England in November 2022 to investigate serious governance concerns. The Commission appointed the Interim Manager in May 2023 and, in parallel with her work, continued to investigate concerns about the running of the charity.

    Breaches of previous advice and Orders

    The Commission has taken regulatory action during the inquiry, which remains ongoing, on wide-ranging governance issues and breaches of previous advice and orders. These included more recently failure to fully comply with the Order appointing the Interim Manager and failure to fully comply with directions. The Commission considers these, and a range of other past breaches, mismanagement and misconduct in the administration of the charity. The trustees currently dispute some of these legal findings.

    Section 84 Order

    The Section 84 Order requires the trustees to take a range of actions to improve the charity’s operations, governance and financial oversight, with clear deadlines for compliance. Among these are that the trustees are instructed to ensure that all religious services, speakers and events further the objects of the charity and are in its best interests, complying with due diligence processes put in place by the Interim Manager. Similarly, the trustees are required to ensure the charity’s website and social media content is exclusively in furtherance of the charity’s purposes and that trustees and staff document their decisions appropriately. The Commission will continue to closely monitor the trustees’ compliance with these and other actions in the Order, and can take further regulatory action if the trustees fail to do so.

    Changes to trustees

    During the course of the Commission’s inquiry a requirement was removed from the charity’s governing document for one trustee to be the official UK religious representative of the Supreme Leader of the Islamic Republic of Iran, and the occupant left this role. This addressed regulatory concerns about the charity’s failure to manage the conflicts of interest and apparent lack of independence this caused, which were at odds with charity law.

    Separately, the Interim Manager had overseen the appointment of the two new trustees and taken steps to improve the charity’s management and governance, particularly regarding speakers and events. The Commission has now discharged the Interim Manager, Emma Moody, after she implemented specific improvements asked of her by the Commission, with further improvements to be delivered by the trustees under the Order.

    Charity Commission Chief Executive, David Holdsworth, said:

    The law requires, and the public expect, charities to operate exclusively for the public benefit. The vast majority of charities do so successfully, making a difference every day. As this case shows, when a charity fails to operate in line with its legal duties we will step in to take action. We now expect the trustees to take the required action directed by the Commission and will not hesitate to use further legal powers should that be necessary.

    The Commission’s statutory inquiry is ongoing. It is the Commission’s practice to publish a report setting out its findings, regulatory actions and conclusions once an inquiry has concluded.

    ENDS

    Notes to editors

    1. A statutory inquiry is the Commission’s most serious form of investigation: How the Charity Commission investigates charities – GOV.UK and our policy on media reporting of current regulatory work is available on gov.uk: How the Charity Commission reports on its regulatory work – GOV.UK.
    2. The statutory inquiry into Islamic Centre of England is ongoing. How long our inquiries take vary from case-to-case. When an inquiry concludes we publish a report that detail the issues looked at, what actions were undertaken and what the outcomes were. These are on gov.uk.
    3. The Interim Manager’s duties included overseeing a successful process to recruit two new trustees to help to improve the charity’s governance, which is the focus of the Commission’s ongoing inquiry. There is information about the role of an Interim Manager on gov.uk.
    4. The Commission previously issued a statement to tackle misinformation about why the Centre was temporarily closed. This issue pre-dated the appointment of an Interim Manager.
    5. In legislation set by Parliament, a charity is an organisation set up with exclusively charitable purposes for the public benefit and subject to the High Court’s jurisdiction. Please see further information about what is a charity. Once an organisation is registered as a charity it can only be removed in extremely limited circumstances such as where it is no longer operating. It is not open to the Commission to remove charitable status as a sanction.

    Press office

    Email pressenquiries@charitycommission.gov.uk

    Out of hours press office contact number: 07785 748787

    Updates to this page

    Published 16 May 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Resident ordered to pay more than £2,600 for fly-tipping offence

    Source: St Albans City and District

    Publication date:

    A fly-tipper has been ordered to pay more than £2,600 after a large amount of waste was dumped on a quiet country road.

    St Albans City and District Council’s Environmental Enforcement team spotted the fly-tip at Drop Lane, Park Street, during a routine inspection of the area.

    Among the rubbish were wooden pallets, an old sofa, plastic packaging, bottles and takeaway food bags.

    The name of Mashood Hussain, of Haig Close, St Albans, was found on some of the material.

    When interviewed by Council officers, he refused to make any comment and was later issued with a court summons.

    Hussain pleaded not guilty to failing to properly dispose of the waste, a duty of care offence under the Environmental Protection Act.

    He told St Albans Magistrates Court that he had merely ordered some garden items for a project overseen by a relative and was not involved in the disposal of the waste.

    After a short trial, Magistrates found him guilty and ordered him to pay a £375 fine, a victim surcharge of £150 and a £2,163 contribution to the Council’s legal costs, a total of £2,668.

    After the hearing on Monday 12 May, Councillor Anthony Rowlands, Lead for Recycling and Waste, said:

    I am pleased that our Environmental Enforcement team has achieved another successful prosecution.

    I know that fly-tipping greatly annoys our residents. It is not only an eyesore and a blight on the landscape, but also a potential health hazard and is costly to clear up.

    This prosecution will remind people that fly-tipping is a criminal offence that can result in large fines and even a jail term in the most serious cases.

    It also shows that we are determined to track down offenders and deal with them appropriately.

    Photo: the Drop Lane fly-tip.

    Media contact:  John McJannet, Principal Communications Officer: 01727- 819533; john.mcjannet@stalbans.gov.uk.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: More than 356,000 journeys made over Pennyburn Bridge

    Source: Northern Ireland – City of Derry

    More than 356,000 journeys made over Pennyburn Bridge

    16 May 2025

    Pennyburn Bridge, a cornerstone of the Northwest Greenways Project, has recorded more than 356,000 journeys since May 2024, confirming its status as a vital piece of active travel infrastructure for the city.

    The £2.5 million bridge and greenway project, primarily funded through external partnerships with the Department for Communities (£727,500) and the Special EU Programmes Body (£1,733,648), required a Council contribution of £83,990.

    From 1st May 2024 until 1st May 2025 356,426 journeys were made across the bridge, with Sunday being the busiest day for pedestrians.

    “The Pennyburn Bridge has transformed how people move around our city,” said Karen Phillips, Environment and Regeneration Director with Derry City and Strabane District Council. “With over 356,000 crossings in just one year, it’s clear this investment is making a significant difference to daily life in our community. The bridge is not just connecting physical spaces – it’s connecting people to workplaces, schools, leisure facilities, and each other in a sustainable way.”

    The bridge has already become an integral part of city events, including the Waterside Half Marathon, and serves as a key link in the expanding greenway network.

    In recognition of its design excellence and contribution to sustainable transport, the Pennyburn Bridge project has received four prestigious awards: Construction Employers Federation Transport Infrastructure Project of the Year Award (below £10M), Institute of Civil Engineers Sustainability Award, Chartered Institution of Highways & Transportation (CIHT) Award for Active Travel Project of the Year, and Northwest Group of Businesses (NWGN) Infrastructure Project of the Year (less than £5M).

    Karen Phillips added: “The success of the Pennyburn Bridge demonstrates the Council’s commitment to developing high-quality active travel infrastructure that enhances connectivity while supporting environmental and health objectives across the city.”

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Major Review of the Judicial Salary Structure: Correspondence from SSRB

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Correspondence

    Major Review of the Judicial Salary Structure: Correspondence from SSRB

    Correspondence from Chair of SSRB’s Judicial Sub-Committee, Mark Emerton, and SSRB Chair, Lea Paterson, during the Major Review of the Judicial Salary Structure.

    Documents

    Letter of 15 May 2025 from the Chair of the SSRB to the Lord Chancellor in response to the publication of the Terms of Reference for the Major Review of Judicial Salary Structure

    Request an accessible format.
    If you use assistive technology (such as a screen reader) and need a version of this document in a more accessible format, please email ssrb@businessandtrade.gov.uk. Please tell us what format you need. It will help us if you say what assistive technology you use.

    Letter of 15 May 2025 from the Chair of the SSRB Judicial Sub-Committee to the UK judiciary in response to the publication of the Terms of Reference for the Major Review of Judicial Salary Structure

    Request an accessible format.
    If you use assistive technology (such as a screen reader) and need a version of this document in a more accessible format, please email ssrb@businessandtrade.gov.uk. Please tell us what format you need. It will help us if you say what assistive technology you use.

    Details

    Senior Salaries Review Body (SSRB) has been commissioned to carry out a Major Review of the Judicial Salary Structure.

    Updates to this page

    Published 16 May 2025

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