Category: United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: FMQs: Greens call for White House apology for Vance lies

    Source: Scottish Greens

    Abortion rights are healthcare and must be defended.

    The First Minister has been urged to back calls for a White House apology for the lies and misinformation peddled by Vice President JD Vance about safe access zones in Scotland.

    Scottish Green MSP Gillian Mackay introduced the bill that secured 200 metre wide safe access zones, or buffer zones, around abortion service providers to stop the intimidating anti-choice protests that were taking place across Scotland.

    In a speech last week, VP Vance claimed that people in Scotland were told that private prayer in their own homes would be against the law within a safe access zone and that people were encouraged to report anyone they thought guilty of “thought crime.” This has never been true.

    Speaking at First Minister’s Questions, Scottish Green co-leader Lorna Slater condemned Vance’s comments and the planned anti-choice protests outside hospitals.

    In her first question to the First Minister, Ms Slater said:

    “This week, US Vice President JD Vance has spread misinformation about laws made in this Scottish Parliament.  

    “His claims about my colleague Gillian Mackay’s Safe Access Zones Act are grossly misleading.

    “Emboldened by Mr Vance’s comments, anti-choice groups have already started to target patients outside the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Glasgow, with more actions planned in coming weeks.

    “Last summer, members of this Parliament agreed overwhelmingly that everyone should be able to access abortion services free from harassment.

    “What is the First Minister doing to correct false claims and provide clarity to the public on what the buffer zones mean for them, and how will he protect safe access to healthcare in Scotland?”

    Following the First Minister’s response, in which he emphasised his support for safe access zones, Ms Slater urged the First Minister to back representations to the White House to correct the record.

    In her second question, Ms Slater said:

    “The White House manufactures mistruths, tech billionaires profit from them and bad faith actors spread them: disinformation is playing an increasingly dangerous role in our communities and in global politics.

    “Promoting lies and misinformation, at home and abroad, can have serious consequences for all our communities. Friendly countries do not tell lies about each other.

    “Does the First Minister agree that political leaders everywhere must stand up to disinformation – and will he ask Keir Starmer to demand an urgent apology from the White House when the Prime Minister meets Trump next week?”

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Restoring Scotland’s natural environment

    Source: Scottish Government

    New targets to enhance nature and protect biodiversity.

    Legislative proposals to help restore nature and protect biodiversity in Scotland have been introduced to Parliament.

    The Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill, which will now be considered by MSPs, would place a duty on Ministers to set legally-binding nature restoration targets and will modernise how national parks and deer are managed.

    The legislation is a key part of the Scottish Government’s Strategic Framework for Biodiversity and complements the Scottish Biodiversity Strategy and related delivery plans. 

    Experts have warned that a decline in biodiversity will make the climate crisis worse while a changing climate will increase the rate of biodiversity loss. The Bill proposes actions to tackle the twin crises of climate change and nature loss with measures to protect biodiversity and reduce harmful carbon emissions.

    It will build on the high ambitions set out in the Biodiversity Strategy and Delivery Plan, which includes over 100 actions to tackle the nature crisis.

    If passed by Parliament in due course, the Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill would:

    • place a duty on Scottish Ministers to set legally-binding targets for nature restoration
    • create a power to allow for future amendments to Environmental Impact Assessment legislation and the 1994 Habitats Regulations, to ensure that they remain fit for purpose over time and to flexibly adapt to future requirements, while ensuring that the legislative frameworks continue to effectively underpin environmental protection and assessment processes in Scotland.
    • modernise the aims of National Parks and powers of National Park Authorities
    • reform the way in which deer are managed through the implementation of many of the recommendations made by the Deer Working Group, through repealing the licensing of venison dealing, and by amending NatureScot’s powers of intervention.

    Cabinet Secretary for Rural Affairs Mairi Gougeon said:

    “We all depend on nature – to provide our food, help prevent flooding, tackle the climate crisis and contribute to our wellbeing. But right now around 11% of species in Scotland are under threat and if we do not take urgent action, nature in Scotland will continue to decline and some important species might be lost forever.

    “Our proposals in this Bill can contribute to the Scottish Government’s priority of tackling the climate emergency. The twin crises of climate change and nature loss are interdependent and need to be tackled together.

    “Improving our biodiversity is one of the best chances we have to adapt to climate change and ensure we can continue to enjoy nature’s benefits, on which we all depend. However, government cannot do this alone – we must work in partnership with, and use the expertise of, land managers, farmers and crofters.

    “We are determined to promote biodiversity, to adapt to climate change, and to ensure we can continue to enjoy the benefits of Scotland’s wonderful nature – and this Bill will help achieve that.”

    NatureScot Chair Colin Galbraith said:

    “We welcome the introduction of the Natural Environment Bill, and we strongly support the inclusion of statutory targets to protect and restore Scotland’s nature. These are an essential part of achieving the vision set out in the Scottish Biodiversity Strategy for the recovery of nature; helping to restore vital habitats and safeguard threatened species. They will also help us build resilience against the impacts of climate change while striving towards becoming a nature-positive and net-zero nation.

    “In particular, the proposed changes for deer legislation will help improve efforts to restore priority areas such as native woodlands and peatlands by reducing the impacts of deer grazing and trampling.”

    Background

    Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill | Scottish Parliament Website

    Scottish Biodiversity Strategy to 2045 – gov.scot (www.gov.scot)

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Birmingham City Council – Notice of Public Interest Report

    Source: City of Birmingham

    Published: Thursday, 20th February 2025

    Local Audit and Accountability Act 2014, Council House, Victoria Square Birmingham B1 1BB

    Notice is hereby given that pursuant to Section 24 and Schedule 7 of the Local Audit and Accountability Act 2014 (“the Act”), Grant Thornton UK LLP, the local auditor of the accounts for Birmingham City Council has made a report in the public interest relating to the implementation of Enterprise Resource Planning System (ERP) and a copy can be downloaded here.

    In accordance with the requirements of the Act, commencing from Monday 24 February 2025 between 10am and 4pm on weekdays any person may inspect the report and make a copy of it, or any part of it, at the Council’s offices at Victoria Square, Birmingham B1 1BB. Alternatively, the report is available using the link above.

    Notice is also given that pursuant to Section 24 and Schedule 7 of the Local Audit and Accountability Act 2014 that a meeting of the Council will be held on Tuesday 11 March 2025 commencing at 2.00pm in order to consider the above report in the public interest. The Report makes a series of recommended learning points which the Council will consider at this upcoming meeting.

    Dated :  20 February 2025.

    Joanne Roney Managing Director

    Birmingham City Council, Council House, Victoria Square, Birmingham

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Museum secures funding for repairs to iconic Winter Gardens

    Source: City of Sunderland

    Sunderland Museum & Winter Gardens has secured £488,000 grant funding towards vital repairs to its iconic Winter Gardens.

    The MEND4 funding from the Arts Council England Cultural Investment Fund – Museum Estates and Investment Fund will be used to address issues with corrosion, glazing failure and mechanical systems within the Winter Gardens, protecting its tropical plant collections.

    Sunderland City Council is planning to match fund this latest Arts Council funding with £171,000 from its own funds, bringing the total investment in repairs to the Winter Gardens to £660,000.

    The much-loved Winter Gardens houses more than 2,000 species of plants below its glazed dome, with a curving staircase leading up to its treetop walkway. It also features a pond with Koi Carp and an impressive water sculpture.

    Welcoming the funding, Councillor Beth Jones, Cabinet Member for Communities, Culture and Tourism at Sunderland City Council, said: “We’re delighted to have secured £488,000 funding from the Arts Council England to carry out repairs to this very special part of our much-loved museum. 

    “The funding will help safeguard the future of this immensely popular green/tropical oasis in the heart of our city centre, which plays a major role in helping make Sunderland Museum and Winter Gardens one of the most popular tourist attractions in the North East.

    “It’s all about ensuring the vitality of one of our most loved venues for future generations to enjoy at the same time as retaining and enhancing its significance as a landmark building within the city. So it’s brilliant to see it supported using funding by Arts Council England.”

    Today’s funding announcement comes as work nears completion on repairs to the roof and masonry of the original Grade II listed 1879 Museum & Winter Gardens. This was carried out with the support of a £349,000 MEND2 grant from an earlier round of Arts Council funding in 2023, with the remaining £151,000 coming from the City Council. 

    This latest funding forms part of a package of funding that Sunderland City Council is pulling together for the museum, including plans to submit a bid to the National Lottery Heritage Fund in May 2025 for a multi-million pound redevelopment of Sunderland Museum & Winter Gardens.  The project will transform and rejuvenate the museum, better connecting it with Mowbray Park and introducing new ground floor galleries to take advantage of the space vacated by the library once it moves to the new Culture House currently under development in Keel Square.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI NGOs: UK: Police forces ‘supercharging racism’ with crime predicting tech – new report

    Source: Amnesty International –

    Amnesty’s new report ‘Automated Racism’ reveals dangerous discrimination in police prediction tools

    Almost three-quarters of police forces attempt to predict crime by racially profiling communities across the UK

    ‘These systems have been built with discriminatory data and serve only to supercharge racism’ – Sacha Deshmukh

    A new 120 – page report from Amnesty International UK ‘Automated Racism – How police data and algorithms code discrimination into policing’ has exposed the grave dangers to society from ‘predictive policing’ systems and technology used across almost three quarters of the UK’s police forces.

    This is the first report to demonstrate how these systems are in flagrant breach of the UK’s national and international human rights obligations

    Amnesty found that at least 33 police forces – including the Met Police, West Midlands, Avon and Somerset, Manchester and Essex police – across the UK have used predictive profiling or risk prediction systems. Of these forces, 32 have used geographic crime prediction, profiling, or risk prediction tools, and 11 forces have used individual prediction, profiling, or risk prediction tools. 

    Sacha Deshmukh, Chief Executive at Amnesty International UK, said:

    “No matter our postcode or the colour of our skin, we all want our families and communities to live safely and thrive. 

    “The use of predictive policing tools violates human rights. The evidence that this technology keeps us safe just isn’t there, the evidence that it violates our fundamental rights is clear as day. We are all much more than computer-generated risk scores.

    “These technologies have consequences. The future they are creating is one where technology decides that our neighbours are criminals, purely based on the colour of their skin or their socio-economic background.

    “These tools to “predict crime” harm us all by treating entire communities as potential criminals, making society more racist and unfair.

    “The UK Government must prohibit the use of these technologies across England and Wales as should the devolved governments in Scotland and Northern Ireland. Right now, they can demand transparency on how these systems are being used.  People and communities subjected to these systems must have the right to know about them and have meaningful routes to challenge policing decisions made using them.

    “These systems have been built with discriminatory data and only serve to supercharge racism.”

     There are two main types of racist predictive policing systems that raise several human rights concerns: 

    Location: make predictions about the likelihood of crimes being committed in geographic locations in the future. The systems in all locations specifically targeted racialised communities. The chair of the National Police Chiefs Council has publicly admitted that policing is ‘institutionally racist’. In the year ending March 2023 there were 24.5 stops and searches for every 1,000 Black people, 9.9 stops and searches for every 1,000 people with mixed ethnicity, 8.5 for every 1,000 Asian people – and 5.9 for every 1,000 white people. Racialised people are over-represented in stop and search compared to both their representation in the population and even their involvement in police records of crime.

    The vast majority of stops and searches in the UK – 69 per cent – lead to no further action

    Profiling: individuals placed in a secret database and profiled as someone at risk of committing certain crimes, in the future. 

    Areas such as London, West Midlands, and Manchester with high populations of Black and racialised people are repeatedly targeted by police and therefore crop up in those same police records. Black people and racialised people are also repeatedly targeted and therefore over-represented in police intelligence, stop-and-search or other police records.  

    Forces using racist and failing systems

    The Metropolitan Police Service’s Violence Harm Assessment profiles people based on intelligence reports and about people who are ‘suspects’ and an individual can be profiled without ever having offended or committed a crime.  

    An initial period of Risk Terrain Monitoring-influenced policing targeted the north of the boroughs of Lambeth and Southwark from September 2020 onwards. Between December 2020 and October 2021 Lambeth had the second highest volume of stop and search of all London boroughs. In the same period, people of ‘black ethnic appearance’ (as defined by the Metropolitan Police Service) had the highest rate of stop and search encounters per 1,000 population of any ethnic group: they were stopped and searched more than four times, than people of white ethnic appearance. 80 per cent of these stops and searches resulted in no further action. In the same period, Lambeth had the second highest volume of police uses of force in all London boroughs, and police used force most against people recorded as ‘black or black British’. 

    In Southwark in the year ending March 2021, Black people were stopped and searched 3.3 times more than white people. Police used force against people in Southwark at least 8,924 times between September 2020 and September 2021, and 45 per cent of those times it was against ‘black or black British’ people.  (p67)

    West Midlands Police has deployed predictive crime mapping tools to predict knife crime and serious violence since 2021 and 2022, respectively. These tools have been funded by the Home Office Grip ‘hotspot’ policing programme and are part of West Midlands Police’s ’Project Guardian’ team, which focuses on youth violence and knife crime. 8 times out of 10  the system got it wrong.

    Influenced by the knife crime and prediction tool, West Midlands Police continues to conduct racial profiling and discriminatory policing. In the force area in 2024 white people were stopped and searched 2.3 times out of every 1,000, while Black or Black British people were stopped and searched 10.3 times out of every 1,000, almost five times as much.  (p44)

    Essex Police’s Knife Crime and Violence Model’s use of data on criminal associates criminalises people by association, without any evidence of criminality. The use of data on people’s mental health and drug use is another way in which health issues are taken to be markers of criminality. In other words, people are being criminalised for health issues. In the Essex Police force area in 2024 Black people were on average almost three times more likely to be stopped than white people, and in some areas of Essex as much as six and seven times more likely.

    There is no conclusive evidence from the Essex Police pilot or subsequent studies of the implementation that the use of so-called hotspot mapping had any impact on crime. There is, however, evidence that the use of the system reinforced and contributed to racial profiling and racist policing. (p38)

    Greater Manchester Police’s gang profiling is based on suspicion or even ‘perception’ without objective evidence of offending, or even any evidence of offending.

    The disproportionate representation of Black and racialised people on the ‘gang profiling’ XCalibre database is discriminatory and evidences the racial profiling that XCalibre conducts. This police tactic is also clear infringement of these young people’s right to freedom of association. It continues the targeting of black cultural and music events, as with the Metropolitan Police’s Form, which required events spaces to provide details to the police about the type of music played and the ethnic background of attendees.

    The Greater Manchester Police tactic of banning people from events in Manchester because they were perceived to be linked with gangs is one element of their so-called gang profiling. The XCalibre Task Force sought to exclude people from a cultural event based on its data-based profiling of their alleged involvement in gangs. (p91)

    Human rights violations exposed

    Racial profiling: The use of these systems by police results in, directly and indirectly, racial profiling, and the disproportionate targeting of Black and racialised people and people from lower socio-economic backgrounds. This in turn leads to their increased criminalisation, punishment, and exposure to violent policing. 

    There’s no right to a fair trial: Predictive systems target people and groups before they have actually offended, which risks infringing on the presumption of innocence and the right to a fair trial.

    Mass surveillance:  This is indiscriminate and can never be proportionate interference with the rights to privacy, freedom of expression, freedom of association and of peaceful assembly.

    Zara Manoehoetoe, Kids of Colour and Northern Police Monitoring Project3, said:

    The way in which these systems work is that you’re guilty until you can prove yourself innocent. Criminalisation is a justification for their existence. There is the presumption that people need to be surveilled and that they need to be policed.” 

    Chilling effect 

    People who live and reside in areas targeted by predictive policing will seek to avoid those areas as a result, leading to a chilling effect. Participants in the Essex discussion group said that if police were targeting certain areas, they would avoid those areas.

    Recommendations

    • A prohibition on predictive policing systems
    • Transparency obligations on data-based and data-driven systems being used by authorities, including a publicly accessible register with details of systems used. 
    • Accountability obligations including a right and a clear forum to challenge a predictive, profiling, or similar decision or consequences leading from such a decision. 

    Secrecy, scare tactics and surveillance – the view from those affected

    Anon contributor to the report said:

    “It’s not fair to over-police areas that have these challenges because of intentional underfunding, and to now [be] adding police to a situation that you’ve created as a part of the state system, is just adding to the problems of the community that you claim you want to protect.”

    John Pegram, Bristol Copwatch, said:

    “It doesn’t matter if you offended 13 or 14 years ago for something, you’re known to us for this, and therefore we’re going to assign a score to you. It’s risk scoring, it’s profiling, often racist profiling.”

    Hope Chilokoa-Mullen from the 4Front Project, said:

    We’ve had members who have been stopped and told: ‘You’ve been stopped because you’re on a database.’ They don’t know what database it is. I suppose that’s the point of it, you’re not really meant to know how it’s used.”

    Anon contributor said:

    “It targets and profiles entire areas. It targets you based on the community you live in. It’s a clear example of how racism structures policing.”

    See full report here

    MIL OSI NGO

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Special Children Act (SCA) case outcomes reporting changes

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    We are making changes to the Client and Cost Management System (CCMS) to automatically lodge Case Outcomes on Associated Cases in SCA matters.

    Changes are being made to automatically lodge outcomes on linked cases where the lead matter is reported. This removes the requirement for solicitors to lodge the case outcome on any associated case with a zero cost limit.

    Why is this happening?

    We want to remove the labour intensive requirement to report outcomes on every linked associated case.

    Given the details entered are the same on the associated cases as the lead case it is purely an administrative process which solicitors are often not paid for.

    What does this mean for providers?

    This will remove the requirement under Phase 1 of the changes to report case outcomes on any associated case with a zero cost limit.

    The option to report outcomes on associated cases will be greyed out and triggered automatically when the lead outcome is reported.

    Historic matters where outcomes have not been reported on associated cases will be shut down by a script. This will happen where a Lead case has been reported but the associated cases remain unreported.

    A ‘nill bill’ is still required on all these cases under Phase 1 of the changes.

    When are the changes being made?

    We intend making the changes on the evening of 24 February 2025. There will be downtime to CCMS on the evening.

    Further information

    https://legalaidlearning.justice.gov.uk/improvements-to-special-cases-act-sca-multiple-client-process/

    Updates to this page

    Published 20 February 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: TUV urge public to have their say on planned MLA pay rise

    Source: Traditional Unionist Voice – Northern Ireland

    Statement by TUV North Antrim MLA Timothy Gaston:

    “While I am not aware of any announcement from the committee established to look at the Assembly Members (Remuneration Board) Bill that they are seeking views of the public, I noticed this morning that a call for evidence opened on Tuesday.

    “The TUV response to the call for evidence is reproduced below.

    “Members of the public can let MLAs on the committee know what they think of the proposals which would see them awarded a massive pay rise by completing the survey at the following link .”

    Submitted to Assembly Members (Remuneration Board) Bill – Call for Evidence

    If you are providing a submission on behalf of an organisation please state its name
    TUV

    If you are providing a submission on behalf of an organisation please select its type.
    Political Party

    If you are providing a submission on behalf of an organisation please state its purpose.
    The defence and strengthening of Northern Ireland’s place within the United Kingdom.

    Do you consent to your submission being published on the Committee’s website and included in the Committee’s report?
    Yes. Publish in full.

    Questions Relating to Relevant Clauses in the Bill

    Clause 1
    The “Remuneration Board” better reflects the purpose of the body
    Strongly Agree

    Clause 2
    It is appropriate for the determination of Assembly members’ salaries and pensions to be determined by an independent panel/board rather
    than by the Assembly Commission.
    Strongly Agree

    It is appropriate for the determination of adequate resources required by Members for the exercise of their functions to be determined by the
    Assembly Commission rather than by an independent panel/board.

    Strongly Agree

    The independent financial review panel got it wrong on a number of issues. The ridiculous rule about not having a phone number or an email address on an MLA office sign is an obvious example so we support this suggestion.

    Clause 3
    The independent panel/board should have regard to the salaries payable to members of other legislatures when making determinations as to the salaries payable to Members of the Assembly
    Strongly Disagree

    MLAs do not deserve a pay rise to put them in line with Members of other Parliaments and assemblies because, uniquely, the Northern Ireland Assembly decided that there are vast areas of law and policy that it does not want to have any say over. If the Assembly is so pompous as to believe that it is just as important and competent as the legislatures listed in clause 3 of the Bill, why did the majority of Members vote to give away lawmaking powers to Brussels, where no one from Northern Ireland has any say in the laws that govern two thirds of our economy? Unless or until MLAs have the self-respect to reclaim those laws, they should not be treated like members of any other legislature.

    The legislatures listed above are the appropriate legislatures to consider when making such determinations
    Strongly Disagree

    Quite apart from the points made above why would a legislature in Northern Ireland concern itself with what members of foreign legislatures in the Irish Republic are paid?

    Clause 4
    The temporary filling of vacant positions on the board/panel should be permitted, pending the appointment of replacements.
    Agree

    Clause 5
    Former Members of the Assembly should be permitted to sit on the panel/board.
    Strongly Disagree

    This represents a clear conflict of interest on two fronts. First, one would assume that a former Member will have maintained some sort of relationship with Members, who would stand to benefit financially from the decisions of the board. Secondly, as a former Member, he or she would benefit from pension determinations. Such a situation cannot be allowed to go unchallenged. There were good reasons why former MLAs were excluded from the original panel. Those reasons remain valid. It is noteworthy that the previous independent financial review panel had just three members. If, as the Bill anticipates, one of those members is a former MLA, that is a sizeable chunk of its membership.

    Clause 6
    It is appropriate for determinations to be made at least 6 months before the date of the poll for the Assembly elections.
    Agree

    Provision should be made to require determinations to be published in draft and made the subject of consultation.
    Agree

    Consultation should be undertaken before the Board issues determinations more than once in respect of an Assembly, or otherwise than in accordance with the timing rules set out in subsection (2).

    Agree

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Chair and two Trustees reappointed to Theatres Trust board

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    The Secretary of State has reappointed Dave Moutrey as Chair, and James Dacre and Stephanie Hall as Trustees of Theatres Trust for a second term of 3 years.

    Dave Moutrey

    Appointed from 21 February 2025 to February 2028

    Dave is responsible for leading the creation and delivery of Manchester City Council’s cultural and creative industries policy and strategy, working closely with the city’s cultural and creative sectors on joint initiatives. He was appointed to this role after a 6-year part-time secondment to the Council as Director of Culture. 

    Until March 2024, he was Director and Chief Executive of HOME, a purpose-built multi-art venue that opened in May 2015. He conceived and led the merger of Cornerhouse and Library Theatre Company to create HOME, along with the £25m capital project for the building, which has attracted almost 1 million visits per year since opening. HOME includes 5 cinema screens, education spaces, digital production and broadcast facilities, a 500-seat theatre, 150-seat flexible theatre, a large gallery, café bar, restaurant, offices, and other spaces consistent with a production centre. It provides opportunities for artists and audiences to create work together, as well as a social and cultural hub. Before HOME, Dave was Director and CEO of Cornerhouse from 1998, having established and led the regional arts marketing agency Arts About Manchester. 

    Dave was awarded an OBE for services to culture in 2022 and a Doctor of Arts honoris causa by the University of Salford in 2018. He is a member of the Chartered Management Institute and the British Academy of Film and Television Arts. He was previously an advisor to the British Council and still holds several non-executive roles on not-for-profit boards.

    James Dacre

    Appointed from 21 February 2025 to 20 February 2028

    James Dacre is a Director and Creative Producer who has directed, produced and toured work to several hundred theatres, opera houses and festivals across the UK and abroad, with his productions winning Olivier, The Stage and UK Theatre Awards. He recently founded Living Productions which produces theatre, film, concerts and festivals. James was Artistic Director of Royal & Derngate Theatres from 2013-2023 and previously held roles as Associate Director at the New Vic Theatre, Theatre503 and the National Youth Theatre. He is Chair of the Board of Theatre503, a Board Director of Spirit of 2012, a Trustee for Talawa Theatre Company and a Franco-British Young Leader. James Dacre became a Trustee of The Theatres Trust on 21 February 2022. 

    Stephanie Hall

    Appointed from 21 February 2025 to 20 February 2028

    Stephanie Hall is a barrister specialising in town and country planning at Kings Chambers. She lives with her family near Leeds but works across England and Wales. Stephanie represents both local authorities and developers at planning appeals and in the Courts. She has particular experience of large schemes and major infrastructure projects, sometimes involving theatres and very often involving works to or in the setting of listed buildings. Stephanie appears in the list of top-rated planning junior barristers, is a member of the Planning and Environment Bar Association, the Compulsory Purchase Association, the Parliamentary Bar Mess and the National Infrastructure Planning Association. Stephanie Hall became a Trustee on 21 February 2022.

    Remuneration and Governance Code

    The Chair and Trustees of the Theatres Trust are not remunerated. This appointment has been made in accordance with the Cabinet Office’s Governance Code on Public Appointments. The appointments process is regulated by the Commissioner for Public Appointments. Under the Code, any significant political activity undertaken by an appointee in the last five years must be declared. This is defined as including holding office, public speaking, making a recordable donation, or candidature for election. Dave Moutrey, James Dacre and Stephanie Hall have not declared any significant political activity.

    Updates to this page

    Published 20 February 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Runners gear up for Chelmsford Half Marathon

    Source: Anglia Ruskin University

    Around 3,000 people will lace up their running shoes for the 2025 Chelmsford Half Marathon event next month.

    The event takes place on Sunday, 2 March and runners will start and finish the 13.1-mile course at Anglia Ruskin University (ARU), which is the headline partner of the event. There are also 5km and 10km events on the same day.

    The half-marathon course will take runners along Parkway and Essex Yeomanry Way to Great Baddow and Sandon, before returning through Chelmer Village and back into the city centre. All race distances are accurately measured and officially licensed by England Athletics Run Events.

    Road closures will be in place before, during and after the event. These include High Bridge Road, Essex Yeomanry Way, Chelmer Village Way and Bishop Hall Lane. The Essex Highways website has full details of road closures and times.

    “We’re proud to renew our partnership with the Chelmsford Half Marathon. Events like these are not only enjoyable to participate in, but also play a crucial role in supporting local charities.

    “We have supported The Chelmsford Half Marathon for a number of years and it is always a fantastic event for both the runners and their friends and families cheering them on.”

    Professor Roderick Watkins, Vice Chancellor of Anglia Ruskin University (ARU)

    “We are delighted to be organising one of the largest public sporting events in Essex, alongside our Headline Partner Anglia Ruskin University.

    “As the event evolves and grows, we continue to inspire thousands to become active and develop opportunities to raise even more funds for charities.”

    Andrew Martin, Race Director of the Chelmsford Half Marathon

    For full details about the race, visit cmhalf.com

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Liverpool Remembers as Hall Hosts Covid-19 Reflection Event

    Source: City of Liverpool

    The civic heart of Liverpool – and one of Britain’s most beloved buildings – is to become the city’s focal point for remembering the Covid-19 pandemic.

    To commemorate five years since the pandemic began, a national Covid-19 Day of Reflection will take place on Sunday, 9 March.

    In Liverpool, the Great Hall in St George’s Hall will be transformed into a special space for people to visit, remember those we lost, acknowledge and celebrate all the acts of kindness that took place across our communities and reflect on the profound impact of the pandemic on our everyday lives.

    The stunning venue will be beautifully illuminated by paper lanterns, representing the challenges people lived with throughout the pandemic – whether that be the loss of a loved one, isolation, economic hardship or mental health struggles, but also acknowledging the tremendous resilience shown throughout.

    A gentle and poignant soundscape will play, creating an ambience for quiet contemplation, and a Book of Commemoration will allow people to leave a message of reflection if they wish to do so.

    Members of the public are invited to reflect on their experiences and memories within the Grade I listed neo-classical masterpiece, situated off Lime Street, which will be open from 10am-4pm for this unique event.

    The event has been organised by Liverpool City Council and the lanterns will be supplied by local arts organisation, the Lantern Company.

    For more information, visit St George’s Hall website.

    Leader of Liverpool City Council, Councillor Liam Robinson, said:
    “Five years ago the world changed and we’re still feeling that ripple-effect today.

    “It was an incredibly tough time for Liverpool – case rates and deaths were high, businesses were under huge pressure to stay afloat and people were lonely and fearful of what could happen – it was a chapter of history which we will never forget.

    “But throughout this extraordinary crisis, the true spirit of Liverpool shone through, communities came together to help and support one another. This city stepped forward, blazing a trail for others to follow when it came to mass testing and paving the way for large cultural events to start welcoming people once again – things we should all be proud of.

    “On Sunday March, St George’s Hall will be a hub to reflect on this time of so many mixed emotions, acknowledging our city’s resilience, strength, and solidarity, and looking ahead to the future with hope.”

    Director of Public Health for Liverpool City Council, Matthew Ashton, said:  
    “Every single one of us has been affected by Covid. The intensity of our shared experience should never be underestimated – along with the disease itself, we had to juggle not being able to see our family and friends, social distancing, wearing face coverings, working from home, home schooling – all of which have impacted on our individual  mental health and wellbeing, and on the health and economic prosperity of our city overall.

    “Thankfully we are well into our recovery journey, and one of the most important lessons we have learnt, is the power of strong communities and partnerships. Throughout, stakeholders from across the city have worked closely with health professionals to ensure the best outcomes for our communities, and although the pandemic may be over, these partnerships will continue to provide support in this recovery phase.

    “Liverpool’s event is a way for us to process what has happened over the past five years and I encourage people to take some time out of their day, honour those we lost and celebrate all of our remarkable achievements during this unprecedented period.”

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Ongoing crackdown hooks 6 unlicensed anglers

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    As part of an ongoing Environment Agency crackdown, 6 anglers have been found guilty of fishing illegally at waters in the London area last year.

    A fisheries enforcement officer

    Their cases were brought by the Environment Agency to Barkingside magistrates’ court on 8 January 2025. In total, the 6 offenders will now pay £2,182 in fines and charges.

    Illegal fishing “undermines investment” in fisheries

    Unlicensed fishing poses a risk to fish stocks and can often cost anglers the species they care about. It also undermines all the investment made using rod licence income, in addition to the good work by our partners and angling clubs in improving fisheries.

    Richard Tyner, area fisheries team leader at the Environment Agency, said:

    “We hope the penalties these 6 illegal anglers have received will act as a deterrent to anyone who is thinking of breaking the laws and byelaws we have in place across England.

    “Fishing illegally can incur a fine of up to £2,500, and offenders can also have their fishing equipment seized. We inspect rod licences 24/7, 7 days a week to check on cases of illegal fishing, and for those caught cheating the system, we will always prosecute.

    “Illegal fishing undermines the Environment Agency’s efforts to protect fish stocks and make fishing sustainable.  Money raised from fishing licence sales is used to protect and improve fish stocks and fisheries for the benefit of legal anglers.”

    Rod licences cost much less than a tenner

    Any angler aged 13 or over, fishing on a river, canal or still water needs a licence to fish. A one-day licence costs from just £7.10, and an annual licence currently costs from just £35.80. Concessions are available. Junior licences are free for 13 – 16-year-olds.

    Licences are available from www.gov.uk/get-a-fishing-licence or by calling the Environment Agency on 0344 800 5386 between 8am and 6pm, Monday to Friday.

    Known hot spots for “illegal fishing” targeted

    The Environment Agency carries out enforcement work all year round and is supported by partners, including the police and the Angling Trust. Fisheries enforcement work is intelligence-led, targeting known hot spots and where illegal fishing is reported.

    Anyone with information about illegal fishing activities can contact the Environment Agency incident hotline 24/7 on 0800 807060 or Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.

    Alex Payne, 25, of Crays View, Billericay, Essex, was found guilty at court to fishing without a licence at the Chase Fishery in Dagenham, east London, on 15 June 2024. He was ordered to pay £443. This includes a fine of £220, costs of £135 and a victim surcharge of £88.

    Mark Taylor, 25, of Camden Close, Grays, Thurrock, was found guilty of fishing without a licence at Tylers Common Fisheries, Harold Wood, east London, on 15 June 2024. He was ordered to pay £443. This includes a fine of £220, costs of £135 and a victim surcharge of £88.

    Ciprian Buta, 38, of Montague Road, London, pleaded guilty to fishing without a licence at Walthamstow Reservoirs, Tottenham Hale, north London, on 17 June 2024. He was ordered to pay £329. This includes a fine of £146, costs of £125 and a victim surcharge of £58.

    Liam Midmore, 25, of Watermans Lane, Paddock Wood, Tonbridge, Kent, pleaded guilty to fishing without a licence at Thorney Weir Lakes, West Drayton, on 6 May 2024. He was ordered to pay £329. This includes a fine of £146, costs of £125 and a victim surcharge of £58.

    Cristian Milhailopol, 46, of Lincoln Grove, Harrogate, North Yorkshire, pleaded guilty to fishing without a licence at Tylers Common Fisheries, Harold Wood, east London, on 18 May 2024. He was ordered to pay £329. This includes a fine of £146, costs of £125 and a victim surcharge of £58.

    Christopher Ould, 35, of Ashdown Road, Bexhill-on-Sea, East Sussex, pleaded guilty to   fishing without a licence at Thorney Weir Lakes, West Drayton, on 6 May 2024. He was ordered to pay £329. The penalty includes a fine of £146, costs of £125 and a victim surcharge of £58.

    Contact us:

    Journalists only – 0800 141 2743 or communications_se@environment-agency.gov.uk.

    The press office is unable to answer enquiries from members of the public. If you are not a journalist and would like to contact the Environment Agency, please call 03708 506506.

    Updates to this page

    Published 20 February 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI USA: Speaker Johnson Delivers Keynote Address to Alliance for Responsible Citizenship Conference

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Mike Johnson (LA-04)

    WASHINGTON — Yesterday, Speaker Johnson delivered the keynote address at the 2025 Alliance for Responsible Citizenship (ARC) global conference in London, England. Appearing remotely to the more than 4,000-person audience, Speaker Johnson warned against the threat of “soft despotism,” and encouraged leaders to “be prepared to steer their aims towards policies and mediating institutions that reduce government dominion over our lives and advance prosperity.”

    “The only way to reverse this trend into further technocratic tyranny is to recommit to our foundational principles and live them out. What made the West, and what made our nations great, must now guide us once again,” Speaker Johnson said.

    Watch Speaker Johnson’s full address here.

    Below are excerpts from the address:

    “Here in America, as you are all seeing, we’re in the midst of a great change. In our national election a few months ago, our people delivered truly a mandate to make our country great again and to restore common sense in our public policy. Here and elsewhere, the radical big government progressives pushed that pendulum too far and too aggressively to the left, and the people rose up and said, enough. And now that pendulum is beginning to swing back to the center, and we’ve been given a once-in-a-generation opportunity to demonstrate now to our nation and the new demographics of voters who have come into our Republican Party for the first time, that it really is our conservative policies that lead to human flourishing, because they’re better for individuals and families and communities, individual states, and our nation as a whole,” Speaker Johnson said

    “In America, we still believe in peace through strength, and we still understand our role in the world. A strong America is good for free people everywhere because it helps to keep the terrorists and the tyrants at bay. But to maintain our strength and leadership, our foreign policy must be centered on our own national interest. It’s a matter of common sense for each of our countries to acknowledge that we must each take care of our own houses before we help take care of the neighborhood,” Speaker Johnson said. “As we seek to make America safer, stronger, and more prosperous, we will encourage all our friends and allies to do the same in and for their own countries. The survival of the West will depend upon that. And this is how we will turn the tides, by refocusing and marshalling our many shared interests toward our own national interest.”

    “This trend is reflected in political apathy and the growing tendency of people to simply submit to governments whose laws have become so offensively intrusive and whose centers of power feel distant and inaccessible. If there is nothing to fight for, then why fight at all, Speaker Johnson said. ”This is the vision of the left, for the people to feel so powerless that they give in and just accept their fate as mindless vassals under the safe protection of the state. And the only way to reverse this trend into further technocratic tyranny is to recommit to our foundational principles and live them out. What made the West and what made our nations great must now guide us once again.

    Below is the full transcript of Speaker Johnson’s address as delivered: 

    Thank you, my dear friend, the Baroness. Good morning. I wish I could be there with all of you in person, and I am truly sorry that I’ve been prevented from making the trip now for the second year in a row. I was unexpectedly elected Speaker of the House just days before the inaugural ARC Conference in October 2023, and I had to send my last-minute regrets. And now, just days before this second conference that I had so much been looking forward to, I found myself once again with late breaking developments in Congress, this time involving our budget and government funding that simply doesn’t allow me to leave the country. But there’s no place I’d rather be than there with you this week as we had long planned, but I’m glad to at least have this opportunity to join you remotely. 

    We find ourselves in a very unique and consequential moment in history here in America and throughout the West. And I believe the timing of the ARC Conference is truly providential. I joined the ARC Advisory Board two years ago because I was so intrigued by the idea of bringing together so many thought leaders and change makers from around the world to, as we determined, ‘shape a hope-filled vision for the future.’ My friends, there really is great reason for our hope. 

    Here in America, as you are all seeing, we’re in the midst of a great change. In our national election a few months ago, our people delivered truly a mandate to make our country great again and to restore common sense in our public policy. Here and elsewhere, the radical big government progressives pushed that pendulum too far and too aggressively to the left, and the people rose up and said, enough. And now that pendulum is beginning to swing back to the center, and we’ve been given a once-in-a-generation opportunity to demonstrate now to our nation and the new demographics of voters who have come into our Republican Party for the first time, that it really is our conservative policies that lead to human flourishing, because they’re better for individuals and families and communities, individual states, and our nation as a whole.

    In recent decades, our government had become too large, too inefficient, and too powerful. And in too many cases, it had also been weaponized and corrupted. That is precisely what the framers of our Constitution feared and what political philosophers and historians over the centuries have warned against. Almost two centuries ago, Alexei de Tocqueville wrote of big government: “After having thus successfully taken each member of the community in its powerful grasp and fashioned him at will, the supreme power then extends its arm over the whole community. It covers the surface of society with a network of small, complicated rules, minute and uniform, which the most original minds and the most energetic characters cannot penetrate to rise above the crowd.”

    De Tocqueville noted that “such a power does not tyrannize, but it compresses, extinguishes, and stupefies a people till each nation is reduced to nothing better than a flock of timid and industrious animals of which the government is the shepherd.” Tocqueville called it soft despotism, a condition in which citizens voluntarily and gradually just surrender their rights and independence to the government, lured by the promise of security and stability. This kind of despotism doesn’t arrive through violence or open tyranny. Instead, it comes quietly, insidiously, through comfort and convenience. 

    Tocqueville warned of a future where citizens would become passive spectators in their own democracy, willful stewards of their carefully managed decline. Soft despots don’t break down your door and confiscate your weapons, they don’t arrest you in public for criticizing the government, and they don’t station soldiers on street corners to ensure your compliance. Soft despots ensure your compliance through normal democratic channels. 

    Regulations? Oh, they keep you safe. 

    Censorship? That’s to protect you from misinformation. 

    Surveillance? That’s necessary for your security, see.

    Dependence? It offers you stability. 

    And we see these forces at work in our society today. The architects of this soft despotism have taken shape too often as government bureaucrats and big tech and corporate elites, international institutions, media gatekeepers, and the welfare state. And their benevolent rule has given us nations without borders, grossly inefficient bureaucracies, a culture of surveillance, and a citizenry that is apathetic, distracted, and dependent. The dynamics are the same around the world. Whether you’re in Detroit or Manchester, Lyon or Berlin, the supreme power of big government has extended its arm over all of us. And the casualties of the soft despotism that’s taken hold have been the loss of our heritage, our national identities, our patriotism, and our prosperity. 

    In this civilizational moment, as our friend Oz Guinness describes it, will we choose renewal, replacement, or decline? In the U.S., we have just embarked on a new path of renewal. We are determined to bring about a new golden age in America, as President Trump says, and we are convinced that we can, if we return to the timeless foundational principles which lead to human flourishing. 

    The challenge we have today is ensuring that the current generations of our countrymen recognize and recommit to those principles. And what are they? In less than 17 months, the U.S. will celebrate the 250th anniversary of our Declaration of Independence. As G.K. Chesterton observed, “America was founded on a creed that is set forth with dogmatic and even theological lucidity,” he said. From. the second paragraph of the Declaration, “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, that to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed.”

    Of the 56 men who signed the Declaration, almost all of them professed to be Christians, and at least half of them had received formal religious training in their education. Having studied the Bible, they recognize that we are not simply born equal, but rather created equal and that it is our Creator who endows us with our rights and not the state. They also recognize that all of us are made in the image of our Creator and thus every single person has an inestimable dignity and value. And that value is not related in any way to the color of our skin or where we live or what our talents are or anything else. Our value is inherent because it is given to us by God. 

    The founders of our country also understood that man has a fallen nature and that fallen men with power and no accountability can become a serious problem. Because power corrupts and as Lord Acton observed, “absolute power corrupts absolutely.” So, our system of government was meticulously designed with careful safeguards, like the separation of powers and checks and balances. And our founders emphasized that a government of the people, by the people, and for the people, could not long survive without a vibrant practice of religious faith, because they understood that is a necessary element to foster personal responsibility and to keep a general moral consensus among the people. A healthy, self-governing society relies on the moral character of its citizens. 

    It’s ironic, but on this day in America, we’re observing one of our 11 federal holidays, and this one’s known as President’s Day, which originally began as an annual celebration of George Washington’s birthday. In his farewell address, the father of our country noted this. He said, “Of all the dispositions and habits which lead to political prosperity, religion and morality are indispensable supports.” Our second president, John Adams, reminded his countrymen that the American Constitution was, “made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.” The founders emphasized the importance of balancing individual liberty with personal responsibility. And our fourth president, James Madison, argued that every citizen should put the nation above their own self-interest. 

    The timeless virtues that are rooted in the Judeo-Christian tradition served as the foundation of America and of all Western civilization. But in recent decades, changes have happened rapidly, and left-wing social movements have advanced very aggressively. Many world leaders, convinced that national borders were obstacles to unity and social progress, sought to dismantle them in favor of global integration. 

    But a key downside to the new global order is that it ultimately led to a devaluing of local communities and a weakening of national identity, which was replaced instead by a divisive new racial, sexual, and gender-based identity. If Americans aren’t American anymore, and Brits aren’t British anymore, and Germans aren’t German anymore, then naturally something else will fill the void. If everyone is a citizen of the world, then no one is really accountable any longer to their own nation or to their own local community. 

    Unfortunately, these ideas have taken hold. We have heard a little bit about polls this morning. Here’s a few more. 50% of Germans under the age of 30 say they feel more European now than German. Only 40% of Americans say they are extremely proud to be American. Only one in five British adults consider themselves to be very patriotic. This trend is reflected in political apathy and the growing tendency of people to simply submit to governments whose laws have become so offensively intrusive and whose centers of power feel distant and inaccessible. If there is nothing to fight for, then why fight at all? 

    This is the vision of the left, for the people to feel so powerless that they give in and just accept their fate as mindless vassals under the safe protection of the state. And the only way to reverse this trend into further technocratic tyranny is to recommit to our foundational principles and live them out. What made the West and what made our nations great must now guide us once again. 

    During his trip through America, Tocqueville marveled at what he said was, “The extreme skill with which the inhabitants of the United States succeed in proposing a common object for the exertions of a great many men and in inducing them voluntarily to pursue it.” Those neighbors and local volunteers joined together to found seminaries, hospitals, prisons, libraries, and schools. They built society together with their own hands. 

    In all of our shared history in the West, it has remained true that strong communities have formed a bulwark against tyranny. Strong mediating institutions ground us in the needs of our community and the outgrowth of these institutions formed the basis for a healthy, engaged citizenry. Edmund Burke called them “little platoons.” He was referring to the families and churches and civic organizations and community groups which began at the smallest, most local level. Burke argued this bottom-up voluntary approach to society would deepen our sense of duty and shared responsibility to one another and also act as an important safeguard against a distant state authority. 

    While the spirit of voluntary association is currently on life support throughout the West, it is not dead. We see it in America every time there is a natural disaster. I’ve participated in this as a local citizen, and I’ve witnessed it often as an elected official.

    This past September, Hurricane Helene made landfall in the United States. It was an historic storm. For five straight days, torrential rains and 100-mile-per-hour winds swept across the Atlantic, devastating homes and communities and businesses. It hit western North Carolina the hardest. As the Speaker of the House, tasked with ultimately passing the relief efforts through Congress, I wanted to take a trip to ground zero to witness the scope of this destruction and meet with the individuals whose aid our aid would eventually impact. 

    One of our first visits in the state was to the First Baptist Church in Swannanoa, North Carolina. When we arrived, we were met with what looked like a military-grade aid station. It was so impressive. There were doctors and nurses and carpenters and chefs and scores of volunteers. The storm knocked out almost all of their cell and internet service throughout the entire region. So, I asked the pastor’s wife at that church, how did all this come together? 

    She informed me that an elderly woman in the community, who had recently purchased an entire cow to store in her deep freezer for the winter months, had lost her home in the storm, but somehow the deep freezer had survived. She was worried that the hundreds of pounds of meat in her freezer would spoil without electricity, so she loaded it into a vehicle and dropped it off somewhere she knew it would go to good use, and that was the local church. 

    Neither the pastor nor his wife were trained butchers, but they knew they had hungry mouths in the community, so they turned their sanctuary into a makeshift butcher shop and started cooking for the surrounding people. As the smell of grilled beef wafted above the small town, citizens showed up. And they continued to show up. And from that point forward, the church became the central hub for disaster relief, organized not by the state or the federal government, but by local neighbors, the community. It filled in where the bureaucracy could not. 

    In times of disaster, local organizations are often the first to respond, well before the broken and bureaucratic federal agencies ever arrive. And they often have a much higher mission success rate, by the way. In my home state of Louisiana, organizations like the Cajun Navy, an interconnected group of volunteers with boats and trucks, have saved thousands of Louisianians during storms like Hurricane Katrina. 

    I tell these stories because they serve as evidence that strong communities, built on the spirit of voluntary association and shared responsibility are still very much alive. But it is a shame that it takes a natural disaster for us to recognize their value. This level of civic engagement should be the rule and not the exception, because the same principles that drive effective local action in times of crisis can also inform national policy and global leadership. 

    In the last line of the Declaration of Independence, our founders wrote the following, “For the support of this declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of divine providence, we mutually pledge to each other our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor.” America’s founders were willing to die for the cause of liberty, and this acknowledgment in our nation’s birth certificate signaled a commitment that America would place our national interest over our individual interests, and those of foreign nations. 

    While we have gradually lost sight of this concept, the new American government is proof positive that we can rekindle that spirit once again. On this national holiday of ours, I’ll quote the president that I most fondly remember from my youth, and that’s Ronald Reagan. He reminded us of this famous admonition. He said, “We cannot escape our destiny, nor should we try to do so. The leadership of the free world was thrust upon us two centuries ago in that little hall in Philadelphia. In the days following World War II, when the economic strength and power of America was all that stood between the world and the return of the Dark Ages, Pope Pius XII said, the American people have a great genius for splendid and unselfish actions. 

    Into the hands of America, God has placed the destinies of an afflicted mankind.” American leadership clearly did help bring about decades of peace and economic growth and prosperity for the Western democracies. 

    In America, we still believe in peace through strength, and we still understand our role in the world. A strong America is good for free people everywhere because it helps to keep the terrorists and the tyrants at bay. But to maintain our strength and leadership, our foreign policy must be centered on our own national interest. It’s a matter of common sense for each of our countries to acknowledge that we must each take care of our own houses before we help take care of the neighborhood. As we seek to make America safer, stronger, and more prosperous, we will encourage all our friends and allies to do the same in and for their own countries. The survival of the West will depend upon that. And this is how we will turn the tides, by refocusing and marshalling our many shared interests toward our own national interest. 

    Recent elections in places France, Italy, like Netherlands and Germany signal that millions of freedom-loving people around the world share our concerns about unchecked power and the erosion of national sovereignty. As leaders in government, academia, media, and the arts, we must be prepared to steer their aims toward policies and mediating institutions that reduce government dominion over our lives and advance prosperity. In short, we must not let this civilizational moment pass us by. 

    So how do we do it? As leaders, we should be working at every level to shift control away from established power centers and back to the people. The local school board will not be nearly as powerful if there is a thriving parent-teacher association holding them accountable. The county commission’s grip on zoning laws is weakened when neighborhoods take control of development initiatives. And organizations like the World Economic Forum lose their dominance when organizations like our ARC seek to challenge their hegemony. 

    History has proven that centralized governments thrive when their subjects are powerless and indifferent. If we want to protect our rights from tyranny, we have to focus, work, and build closest to home. And we must hold our elected leaders accountable. 

    President Reagan reminded us of another thing. He said, “Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. We didn’t pass it to our children in the bloodstream. It must be fought for, protected, and handed on so that they will know the same liberty, opportunity, and security that we have too often taken for granted.”

    This is our civilizational moment. The West is finally awakening once again. We have to seize this opportunity, and by God’s grace, we will. I hope you all enjoy this historic conference, and I thank you again for the opportunity to share with you this morning, and I so wish I was there in person. God bless you.

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: 25th anniversary of the Stockholm Declaration on Holocaust Remembrance

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    The International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance commemorates 25 years of the Stockholm Declaration and looks ahead to the future of Holocaust remembrance.

    Lord Pickles addressing the event to commemorate the 25th anniversary of the Stockholm Declaration on Holocaust Remembrance.

    On Monday 17 February, the UK presidency of the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) welcomed Heads of Delegation from the 35 IHRA Member Countries to London for an event to commemorate the 25th anniversary of the Stockholm Declaration on Holocaust Remembrance. We also invited key figures who played an important role in shaping international activity on Holocaust education, remembrance and research over the past 25 years, as well as Holocaust survivors, representatives of the Jewish community and civil society.

    The UK government is committed to international co-operation to promote education, remembrance and research about the Holocaust. The UK was one of the founding signatories of the Stockholm Declaration in 2000, through which we pledged that the terrible events of the Holocaust would remain forever seared in our collective memory.  This commemoration event provided an important opportunity to reflect on what has been achieved in terms of promoting Holocaust remembrance, and look ahead to the future. 

    IHRA Chair and UK Special Envoy for Post-Holocaust Issues Lord Pickles reflected on the achievements of the past 25 years. He noted that the pledges made 25 years ago were still as relevant today as they were in 2000. Lord Pickles stressed the importance of safeguarding Holocaust sites, opening up Holocaust-related archives, and the promotion of testimony and Holocaust-related objects. He also drew attention to the dangers caused by ongoing Holocaust distortion, adding that the truth can never harm us.

    Former Prime Minister Tony Blair and former US President Bill Clinton both addressed the audience via video message. They reflected on their efforts, alongside former Swedish Prime Minister Göran Persson, to strengthen international co-operation on Holocaust remembrance 25 years ago and to bring together world leaders to sign the Stockholm Declaration and form the IHRA.

    Looking ahead to the future, participants emphasised that further collective action was needed to tackle the challenges of Holocaust distortion and the global rise of antisemitism. The role of emerging technologies was also highlighted as an area to explore, given the potential to harness artificial intelligence as a force for good in Holocaust education. All agreed that it was essential to continue to educate about the facts of the Holocaust, to ensure the truth is never forgotten.

    Updates to this page

    Published 20 February 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Feast of family fun planned for St Patrick’s Day Spring Carnival celebrations

    Source: Northern Ireland – City of Derry

    Feast of family fun planned for St Patrick’s Day Spring Carnival celebrations

    20 February 2025

    Tens of thousands of people are expected to throng the streets of Derry this St Patrick’s Day as Derry City and Strabane District Council this week announced a comprehensive programme of music, dance, food and folklore for its 2025 Spring Carnival celebrations.

    This year’s programme will incorporate the theme of Forest, Sky and Sea as the city celebrates the arrival of spring and brighter days with activity planned for Guildhall Square, the Craft Village, Waterloo Place and the Guildhall,

    The centrepiece will again be the North West Carnival Initiative’s renound Spring Carnival Parade through the city centre at 3pm featuring flamboyant performances from local dance groups, sports clubs and community organisations.

    Mayor of Derry City and Strabane District Council, Councillor Lilian Seenoi-Barr, who will lead the parade with St Patrick, launched the full programme this week on the city walls where the parade will pass through Shipquay Gate.

    “As the days get longer and colour returns to our green spaces, excitement is starting to build for our 2025 St Patrick’s Day Spring Carnival celebrations,” she said.

    “It’s a great day out for all the family with lots of activity and entertainment planned for around the city centre.

    “It’s always a magnificent sight to see hundreds of colourful parade performers weaving their way around the city centre in front of thousands of spectators and I can’t wait to be part of that.”

    Festival and Events Manager at Council, Jacqueline Whoriskey, revealed that last year’s event attracted record numbers to the city centre.

    “The St Patrick’s Day Spring Carnival is packed with unmissable festivities, offering something for everyone to enjoy,” she said.

    “From live music to captivating street performances and walkabout characters, the city will come alive with energy and excitement.

    “We adopted a city centre route for the parade in 2019 and that has proved popular with participants, attendees and businesses and attracted its highest ever attendance last year of 32,500 people.”

    The full programme for the 2025 Spring Carnival celebrations for Derry and Strabane can be accessed now at derrystrabane.com/springcarnival.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Oxford City Council calls for potential development sites

    Source: City of Oxford

    Published: Thursday, 20 February 2025

    Oxford City Council is asking people to suggest sites which could be suitable for future development to inform the creation of its next Local Plan.

    The Local Plan 2042 will guide all planning decisions in Oxford for the next 17 years.  

    The Council wants to hear from landowners, developers and others who know of sites with a potential range of future uses. Sites must be wholly or partly within Oxford’s administrative boundaries. 

    The Council will then fully assess sites capable of delivering 10 or more homes, 500m2 of employment floorspace or are bigger than 0.25 hectares. 

    Submission of a site for consideration does not mean it will be included in the Local Plan or get planning permission in future. 

    The Council will also consider sites included in the preparation of earlier Local Plans. However, it encourages people to provide updates if any details have changed. 

    For consideration, people should submit details of sites by 17 March 2025. This can be done using the Council’s online webform.  

    Anyone with questions before submission can contact the Planning Policy team at planningpolicy@oxford.gov.uk or call 01865 252847. 

    Comment 

    “Oxford is growing and it needs to do so in a way that works for everyone. We are actively encouraging landowners to put forward sites for development, particularly for housing. This is an important step in shaping our future development and we want to hear from people about land that could potentially help meet our city’s needs.” 

    Councillor Louise Upton, Cabinet Member for Planning

    Frequently asked questions about the call for sites 

    Next steps for the Local Plan 2042 

    The Council is set to carry out two rounds of public consultation later this year as it completes preparation of the Local Plan 2042:  

    The Council aims to submit the plan to the Planning Inspectorate for examination in April 2026.  

    Once the plan is submitted the timescale for approval is in the hands of planning inspectors. However, public hearings could be held late next year and the Local Plan 2042 adopted in the spring of 2027. 

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Council welcomes jail term for payments cheat

    Source: City of Coventry

    A Coventry woman has been jailed after fraudulently claiming over £17,000 in financial support to care for her mother up to two years after she had died.

    Agnieszka Macugowska, aged 45, was jailed for a total of 31 months when she appeared at the Crown Court sitting at Warwick.

    The court heard that her mother had a care plan with Coventry City Council that started in 2015.

    She received a cash payment to cover support for 15 hours and 45 minutes a week, which she managed with support from her daughter. The payment started at £184.28 per week which in April 2019 was raised to £191.36 per week.

    In 2020, when the Council failed to receive information so it could continue to monitor payments, Agnieszka Macugowska told them her mother still lived in Coventry, but had changed doctors and travelled abroad for medical treatment. 

    She then provided information to the Council to support the use of the direct payment, including timesheets completed by her mother’s carer and her insurance certificate.  

    The Council then carried out a home visit in late 2020 where they met Agnieszka Macugowska, along with a woman introduced as her mother and a woman presented as her carer.

    However, following further inquiries, the Council found the mother had, in fact, died in November 2018 whilst abroad. 

    In welcoming the sentence, Cllr Abdul Salam Khan, Deputy Leader of Coventry City Council, and Cabinet Member for Policing and Equalities, said:

    “There are so many people in our city who are going through tough times caring for loved ones, and that brings an incredible emotional and financial strain.

    “The Council works with relatives to give the support they need, but sadly there are some unscrupulous people who think they can exploit the system and secure financial gain for themselves. This does not just come at the expense of the Council, but also for others struggling to make ends meet.

    “It is well known that Coventry, like all local authorities, is facing severe pressure on its budget, and a lot of that is because of the increasing costs in caring for adults and children and supporting the most vulnerable in our community.

    “It is a responsibility we take very seriously and we work hard to help as many as we can, and we will not stand by and let the system be exploited. As in this case, we will investigate and ensure those who steal from others are prosecuted.

    “We welcome the finding of this case and the sentence imposed. Hopefully it will serve to show others the severe consequences they face if they break the law.”

    The falsely claimed sum of more than £17,000 has successfully been recovered by the Council.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: MAIB Data Portal update

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    The MAIB Data Portal 6 month update, with additional data from 2024 to 2022.

    The MAIB Data Portal has been live for just under 6 months. Data was initially only available for marine accidents reported to the MAIB in 2023. Today, that data has been updated to include marine accidents reported in 2022, 2023, and 2024. Work continues to make available data from 2020 and 2021. Data for 2025 and beyond will be released at regular intervals in the future.

    The MAIB’s goal to improve safety of life at sea and prevent future accidents is a key driver for providing the public and industry with marine accident data to highlight key insights and drive safety improvements.

    Visit the MAIB Data Portal to access the service, where you can view a prepared dashboard and download any combination of 3 CSV files and a Power BI data set file with a copy of the online dashboard and CSV files embedded.

    Please note that if you have used data previously published, it may differ slightly from the latest update as accidents have been investigated and additional information has come to light.

    Updates to this page

    Published 20 February 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Pledge on waiting times exceeded

    Source: Scottish Government

    “Our plan is delivering” – Health Secretary.

    The pledge to carry out 64,000 surgeries and procedures with additional funding by the end of March 2025 has been exceeded, new figures released to Parliament reveal.

    More than 75,500 NHS surgeries and procedures were delivered between April 2024 the end of January 2025, around 11,500 more than pledged.

    Funded through £30 million investment, the targeted activity has resulted in significant reductions in inpatient/daycase waiting lists across a number of health board areas and specialities. Between April 2024 and September 2024 there has been:

    • a 44% decrease in Imaging waits at NHS Fife
    • a 22% decrease in Urology waits at NHS Forth Valley.
    • a 19% decrease in Ear, Nose and Throat waits at NHS Highland
    • an almost 15% decrease in Ophthalmology waits at NHS Lanarkshire
    • an almost 10% decrease in General Surgery waits at NHS Lothian.

    The targeted funding has also helped reduce the total national waiting list size between April 2024 and September 2024 for imaging by 7.5% and for scopes by 7.3%.

    In April 2024 the Scottish Government funded NHS boards to deliver 64,000 procedures (40,000 diagnostic procedures, 12,000 surgeries and 12,000 new outpatient appointments) by March 2025. By January 2025, 56,500 diagnostic procedures, almost 9,200 surgeries, and over 9,800 outpatient appointments took place.

    The Scottish Government will continue to monitor the impact of the funding until the end of March 2025 with boards reporting they expect to see further progress.

    Latest published data also shows a rise in planned care activity between April 2024 and September 2024 compared to the same period in 2023 – with an 8.3% increase in inpatient/daycase procedures and a 2.5% increase for new outpatient appointments.

    Health Secretary Neil Gray said:

    “I am pleased to see health boards are now reporting the tangible impacts of our investment to clear the longest waits. Our plan is delivering and we are seeing progress across a number of speciality areas. I thank staff for their outstanding effort in carrying out this additional activity which is having a positive impact on people’s lives.

    “This is a good start, however, we know many people are still waiting too long. We are determined do more and our 2025-26 Budget, with cross-party support now agreed, will provide a record £21.7 billion for health – including £200 million to help clear waiting list backlogs, improve capacity and reduce delayed discharge.

    “This record funding will help us ensure no one waits more than 12 months for a new outpatient appointment or inpatient/daycase treatment by March 2026. We will also deliver over 150,000 extra appointments and procedures in the coming year which will ensure people receive the care they need as quickly as possible.”

    Background

    In April 2024, the Scottish Government announced £30 million, allocated for Q1 of this financial year, to tackle waiting times. The Scottish Government pledged to deliver around; 12,000 additional procedures, 40,000 extra diagnostic procedures and 12,000 new outpatient appointments.

    NHS Boards have provided regular management progress reports to Scottish Government on the activity delivered through the additional funding. These reports are the data source for the 75,500 figure.

    Stage of treatment waiting times – Inpatients, day cases and new outpatients quarter ending 30 September 2024

    Diagnostic waiting times – Waits for key diagnostic tests 26 November 2024

    Written question and answer: S6W-35115 | Scottish Parliament Website

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: East Midlands: Kerry and Neil’s inspiring fostering story

    Source: City of Derby

    Kerry and her husband Neil have been fostering for Derbyshire County Council for 12 years, caring for children of all ages—from newborns to 17-year-olds. Their experience spans a wide variety of placements, including short breaks, long-term fostering, and emergency care.

    The decision to foster came after their twin sons went to university, and Kerry took voluntary redundancy from the NHS. Fostering had been on their minds since their sons were teenagers, but the timing wasn’t right due to the demands of parenting and a busy career. When the opportunity arose, Kerry saw an advert for fostering with Derbyshire County Council and felt it was the perfect moment to begin their journey.

    Reflecting on the fostering application process, Kerry describes it as both supportive and thorough. Although she initially found the detailed questions daunting, she came to appreciate their purpose. “The process is there to make sure fostering is right for you and that you’re able to provide thoughtful and professional care,” she explains.

    For Kerry, fostering is about more than offering a loving home—it’s about being a professional parent. Over the years, she and Neil have undergone extensive training, particularly in therapeutic parenting, to help them understand and address the unique needs and traumas of children in care. “The training and experience have made me more thoughtful and professional in my parenting,” Kerry says. “Intuition alone isn’t enough when it comes to meeting the complex needs of foster children.”

    There have been many memorable moments during their fostering journey. One of the most special was adopting their daughter, who they initially fostered from birth. Kerry also recalls helping a young boy overcome his fear of confined spaces. Through patience and trust-building, the boy was eventually able to explore a cavern with the family—a moment of triumph for everyone.

    Fostering has also had a profound impact on the couple’s twin sons, who grew up alongside the foster children. The experience taught them empathy and caring instincts that have carried into their adult lives. One of the twins, now a father, has been praised for his natural ability with babies—something he attributes to fostering.

    To stay supported, Kerry and Neil are part of a monthly foster carer coffee and chat group, which provides a space to share experiences and advice. They also benefit from the consistent support of their supervising social worker, who has worked with them throughout their 12-year fostering journey. Their extended family is deeply involved as well, offering additional help and encouragement.

    For those considering fostering, Kerry has some advice:

    Don’t be scared off by the assessment process. While it may seem intense, it’s there for a reason—to make sure fostering is the right fit for you. The rewards far outweigh the challenges, and the difference you can make in a child’s life is immeasurable.

    Kerry also emphasises the many benefits of fostering through a local authority like Derbyshire County Council. She appreciates the close-knit team approach and the strong relationships they’ve built with social workers and fellow carers, which offer a level of support and connection that private fostering agencies simply can’t match.

    Fostering has been one of the most rewarding experiences of our lives. The support we’ve received and the relationships we’ve formed have made all the difference.

    Councillor Nadine Peatfield, representing the Lead Council’s Cabinet Member for Foster East Midlands praised Kerry and Neil’s dedication, saying:

    Kerry and Neil’s commitment to fostering over the past 12 years is truly inspiring. Their unwavering care and compassion have provided countless children with stability, love, and a brighter future. They exemplify the incredible work that foster carers across the East Midlands do every day. We are deeply grateful for their efforts and proud to have them as part of our Foster for East Midlands community.

    If you’re inspired by Kerry and Neil’s story, why not consider fostering? Join the incredible network of foster carers who are changing lives across the East Midlands. Contact Foster for East Midlands, your local council fostering team for Derbyshire, Derby City, Nottingham City and Nottinghamshire councils. Call 03033 132 950 or visit the website at fosterforeastmidlands.org.uk to learn more. 

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Security: Over 1,000 top-venting blank firers handed in

    Source: United Kingdom National Police Chiefs Council

    With less than 10 days remaining of national gun amnesty.

    Police forces across England and Wales have seen over 1,000 Turkish manufactured guns handed in as part of a national amnesty currently taking place for owners, of soon to be outlawed blank firing guns, to hand them over to police.

    The top-venting blank firing (TVBF) guns have become popular with organised criminals in recent years due to the ease at which they are readily convertible into lethal firearms. Tests by the National Crime Agency and policing, funded by the Home Office, show models produced by four Turkish manufacturers are readily convertible and therefore illegal. TVBFs are legal to buy in the UK without a licence by over 18s unless they are readily convertible.

    Police forces across England and Wales have been holding a four-week Firearms Amnesty for Turkish manufactured TVBFs namely models with the brand names ‘Retay’, ‘Ekol’, ‘Ceonic’ and ‘Blow’, although anyone with a TVBF who is unsure of whether the law change applies to them has been given the simple advice – if in doubt, hand it in.

    Assistant Chief Constable Tim Metcalfe, National Police Chiefs’ Council Lead for the Criminal Use of Firearms, said: “These weapons are readily convertible and therefore have been outlawed. Only with the public’s support can we get these potentially lethal weapons off the streets.

    “What we have seen so far this month that the public have taken onboard the message and are visiting their local police station to hand in these weapons. It is important the public hand in these weapons to avoid them being used by criminals.

    “Taking these weapons off the streets will stop them from being converted and go a significant way to help protect the public.

    “With less than 10 days until the amnesty finishes, I would urge anyone with a Turkish manufactured TVBF to hand it in to their local police force. If you are in doubt whether yours is one of the brands, I would encourage you to hand it in to the police.”

    So far, the amnesty has seen the following items handed in:

    • 1,000 Turkish manufactured top-venting firers
    • 3,000 rounds of ammunitions surrendered; this is primarily blank ammunition

    The amnesty started on 3 February and is due to end next week on Friday 28 February 2025, after which anyone in possession of a TVBF could be subject to prosecution and up to 10 years imprisonment.

    In their original state TVBFs have a fully blocked barrel and are designed to discharge only blank cartridges. When discharged, combustion gases vent from the top of the weapon. TVBFs are sold with at least 50 per cent of their visible surface painted a bright colour however, criminals may paint them black so they look like an original lethal purpose (OLP) weapon as well as convert them to a lethal purpose firearm.

    Policing Minister, Dame Diana Johnson said: “Illegal firearms are dangerous and life-threatening, which is why we have such strong controls on them and we continue to keep all relevant laws under constant review.

    “That’s why it’s important for any member of the public to hand these blank firers into their local police station, as it’s vital to take these illegal weapons off our streets to protect public safety.”

    Since 2021, UK law enforcement has recovered more than 1,000 converted TVBFs in criminal circumstances. Firearms legislation has not changed; the weapons are illegal to own under the Firearms Act 1968 as they can be readily converted using common household tools and without specialist skill on the part of the person carrying out the conversion. Recent testing completed by the NCA has demonstrated this. Police are asking people to hand in any TVBFs before 28 February 2025 to help them avoid prosecution and prevent these pistols getting into the wrong hands.

    Many TVBFs may be held in innocence and ignorance of their illegality or may be overlooked or forgotten in people’s homes. The amnesty gives holders the chance to dispose of the TVBFs safely by taking it to a local police station and handing it in.

    NCA Deputy Director, Charles Yates, said: “These four Turkish brands have appeared routinely in investigations and there had been a strong demand for them from organised criminals. They posed a significant threat.

    “Preventing the sale of these illegal guns will make it harder for offenders to acquire a firearm. By surrendering their top-venting blank-firers, members of the public have helped us in our ongoing mission to keep communities safe.

    “The amnesty is just one example of how the NCA and policing work together relentlessly to protect the public from the threat of firearms.”

    Other unwanted, unlicensed firearms and ammunition may be surrendered to police at any time which will avoid the risk of them becoming involved in criminality and means that members of the community can dispose of firearms in a safe place.

    Up until Friday 28 February 2025, those handing in a Turkish manufactured TVBF will not face prosecution for the illegal possession and will not have to give their details. However, the history of any live firearms handed in will be checked for evidence if its use in crime.

    Top-venting blank firers can be handed in at designated police stations across England and Wales but anyone handing one during the Firearms Amnesty is advised to check with their local force regarding station locations and opening times for the amnesty. To receive advice on how best to transport the weapon responsibly from home to the police station phone 101 before travelling.

    If you know of people involved in illegal firearms activity should call the Police on 101 or Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111. Every call to Crimestoppers is anonymous and potentially vital to preventing or solving serious crimes; removing an illegally held firearm may just save someone’s life.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Regional growth to be boosted by £67 million for culture projects

    Source: United Kingdom – Government Statements

    Growth in jobs, tourism and regional regeneration to be ushered in by funding for major cultural projects across the UK

    Regional growth and regeneration will get a much-needed boost as 10 major culture projects across the UK will receive more than £67 million, the government confirmed this week.  

    Funding will be ‘critical’ in showcasing the UK as a world-leader in culture and bring in visitors from across the globe.   

    Just as importantly this will help drive growth in all parts of the country – a key element of the government’s Plan for Change – by creating jobs and in some cases building new homes.   

     Projects receiving funding are:    

    • £15 million for the National Railway Museum in York, will go towards the construction of a new building, Central Hall, which will include a new entrance to the museum, a new gallery, retail, café, flexible event space and new visitor facilities. The museum is part of a wider mixed-use regeneration scheme in York to transform underused railway land into a new city quarter which could create more than 3,000 new homes, new office, retail and hospitality space, contributing to more than 6,000 new jobs and £1.6 billion in economic value to the region.   

    • £10 million to start the process of revamping ‘Temple Works’ in Leeds a derelict Grade 1 building, bringing it into public ownership; paving the way for it to house the British Library North in the future and unlock further regeneration of new housing and commercial development on surrounding sites.  

    • £10 million for the International Slavery Museum and the Maritime Museum in Liverpool, to expand and maintain the museums which play a crucial role in the wider reimagining of the Liverpool Waterfront.   

    • £5 million for the National Poetry Centre in Leeds that will renovate a redundant Grade 2 Listed building to create a national headquarters for poetry and bolster Leeds’ reputation as a regional centre for culture and creativity.    

    • £5 million for City Centre Cultural Gateway in Coventry, that will support the repurposing of the former IKEA building in Coventry city centre to become a new cultural and visitor attraction.    

    • £2.3 million to three cultural projects in Worcester, these three projects will deliver new cultural and public spaces around the Scala arts venue:   

    • A new Scala Co-Working Space will be created to provide an onsite office and studio space for artistic companies to create work.    

    • Two mezzanine floors of the Corn Exchange building will be brought back into use through the creation of Next Level Food which will provide a new space for more events and exhibitions and modern catering facilities will be    

    • A new welcoming social space for younger generations will be created through the Angel Place is Your Space hub   

    • £10 million for Venue Cymru in Conwy, Wales, will upgrade the largest Welsh arts centre outside Cardiff and deliver a step-change in the use of the building, including the relocation of the existing library and Tourist Information Centre to create a modern and innovative cultural hub.   

    • £5 million for Newport Transporter Bridge, Wales, that will fund vital repair and maintenance works to Newport Transporter Bridge, which plays a crucial role in the tourism economy as a visitor attraction in South Wales.   

    • £2.6 million for the Victoria and Albert Museum in Dundee, Scotland, that will expand and recurate the existing Scottish Design Galleries telling the story of Scottish design to create an improved destination and visitor experience.    

    • £2.2 million for Shore Road Skills Centre in Belfast, Northern Ireland, that will see the redevelopment of the South Stand at the Crusaders FC into a unique state of the art community education, event and skills centre  

    Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner said:    

    Every corner of the UK has something unique to offer, and our rich creative capital must not be underestimated.    

    Our Plan for Change promises growth for every region and I’ve seen first-hand how these projects are igniting growth in their communities.   

    Through investing in these critical cultural projects we can empower both local leaders and people to really tap into their potential and celebrate everything their home town has to offer. This means more tourism, more growth and more money in people’s pockets.”   

    Alex Norris, Minster for Local Growth, said:    

    The benefits of these fantastic projects go far beyond community and county borders, they are key to unlocking a regional and nationwide celebration of UK culture and creativity as well as driving growth and regeneration.    

    This investment marks a huge step forward in our decade of national renewal as committed to in our Plan for Change – creating jobs and boosting tourism and regeneration in our regions is the type of long-term, sustainable growth the government is prioritising to ultimately put more money in people’s pockets.”   

    Culture Secretary, Lisa Nandy said:   

    Everyone across the country should be able to access arts and culture in the place they call home. This support will empower our cultural organisations to continue playing an essential role in developing skills, talent and high-quality careers in every corner of the UK.”  

    These projects will celebrate and raise awareness of the unique social value and cultural history of the UK while also supporting crucial economic growth through creating local jobs and attracting tourism on a national scale.    

    Projects that are most advanced and will see benefits spread beyond regional borders and attract investment have been prioritised to maximise public spending and deliver long-term growth.

    Updates to this page

    Published 20 February 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Ofqual seeks views on improvements to supporting compliance for AOs

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    The regulator is to refine its approach to ensure awarding organisations continue to offer high quality qualifications. 

    Changes to improve the way Ofqual both supports compliance and takes regulatory action were put out for consultation today.  

    The changes are designed both to support awarding organisations and ensure that enforcement action, when it is needed, is proportionate and fair, to maintain the standards of qualifications that students and the public rely on.

    The updated approach introduces proposals to better explain the way in which the regulator uses its powers. It also proposes revised and more efficient processes for dealing with regulatory breaches and a new sanction.

    Proposals include:  

    • a streamlined process for settling simple cases quickly, where organisations agree they have breached Ofqual’s conditions  

    • a new sanction of a public rebuke from the regulator in cases where it’s right that a failure to follow regulatory rules be addressed formally and publicly, but where a fine may not be proportionate

    Where cases are not contested, it is proposed that the chief regulator will have the power to decide that a final decision can be made by a single decision-maker.

    Deputy Chief Regulator Michael Hanton said:  “The 11 million certificates awarded for regulated qualifications in England each year are intrinsic to our education system, the economy, and wider society. Ofqual’s job is to be the guardian of standards and quality in those qualifications.

    “Like all regulators, we want those we regulate to comply with our rules, so that standards are maintained. These proposals are intended to bring clarity about how we will both support compliance and also take action when necessary.” 

    The updated policy, ‘Supporting Compliance and Taking Regulatory Action’, will include a new section explaining the ways Ofqual can support awarding organisations to meet its requirements and avoid the need for formal enforcement action.

    Previous work on updating the policy was interrupted by the pandemic.  

    The consultation was launched today, Thursday, 20 February 2025, and will end on Tuesday, 15 May 2025, at 11:45pm.

    Background information:  

    • Ofqual regulates 249 awarding organisations, certificating over 11 million certificates a year. These include GCSEs, A levels, T Levels, apprenticeship assessments and safety critical qualifications in sectors such as healthcare, childcare and security.   

    • Parliament gave Ofqual enforcement powers in the Apprenticeships, Skills, Children and Learning Act 2009. Those powers were amended by the Education Act 2011. 

    • The Taking Regulatory Action policy was last amended in 2012. 

    • Ofqual previously consulted on the proposal to implement a ‘rebuke’ as part of its consultation on this policy in 2019. This work was paused due to the pandemic. 

    • The consultation and further details are here: https://www.gov.uk/government/consultations/amending-our-taking-regulatory-action-policy

    Updates to this page

    Published 20 February 2025

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  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Local Plan steps closer to development and growth ambitions

    Source: City of York

    City of York Council is set to consider the adoption of its Local Plan following the findings of the Inspector’s Report on the Examination of City of York’s Local Plan.

    The Local Plan will be presented for consideration at Full Council on Thursday 27 February.

    City of York Council is set to consider the adoption of its Local Plan following the findings of the Inspector’s Report on the Examination of City of York’s Local Plan, which will be presented for consideration at Full Council on Thursday 27 February.

    Once adopted, this Plan will be the city’s first comprehensive development framework since 1956 and will guide York’s growth for the next decade, marking a pivotal milestone in the city’s future development and growth ambitions, whilst establishing the city’s green belt and historic setting for the first time.

    The Local Plan outlines the vision for sustainable housing, economic development, and infrastructure in York. It addresses key priorities such as affordable housing, environmental sustainability, and the protection of York’s historic character. The Plan provides a policy framework for decisions on development, shaping the city’s future spatial development until 2038.

    As part of the adoption process, the Council will review the Inspector’s recommendations and the main modifications to housing allocations, green belt boundaries, and transport infrastructure planning. The final decision on whether to formally adopt the Local Plan will be made at the Full Council meeting on Thursday 27 February.

    Cllr Claire Douglas, Leader of the Council, said:

    The Local Plan is an historic step in shaping York’s bright future, and we’re excited about what it means for our city. We welcome the Inspector’s findings and are confident that their modifications will strengthen the Plan, ensuring it supports York’s vision for a sustainable, inclusive city for all. The Plan provides us with a clear roadmap for how our city will develop and grow over the next decade – meeting the needs of our residents and businesses.

    “A huge thank you to everyone who has worked so hard to bring this Plan to life. We truly appreciate your dedication and commitment to York’s future.”

    Cllr Katie Lomas, Executive Member for Finance, Performance, Major Projects, Human Rights, Equality, and Inclusion, added:

    This Local Plan is designed to support the growth of York while promoting equality, accessibility, and sustainability. We are particularly focused on ensuring that affordable housing remains a central component of this Plan, along with infrastructure that meets the needs of all residents, including those from the most disadvantaged groups. This is a long-term investment in creating a fairer, greener York for future generations.

    Cllr. Michael Pavlovic, Executive Member for Housing, Planning and Safer Communities, commented:

    The Local Plan represents the outcome of 7 years extensive consultation, public hearings, and thorough examination. The Plan outlines significant investments in housing, transport, and employment opportunities, which will help drive York’s economy and provide much-needed infrastructure. For York to prosper we need to be ambitious, and this Plan unlocks the potential to make those ambitions a reality.

    Inspector’s Report and Next Steps

    The Inspector’s Report, published following extensive independent examination, recognised that the Local Plan meets all statutory duties to cooperate and aligns with national planning policies. However, the Report also identified certain areas requiring modifications to ensure the Plan’s soundness, particularly regarding the housing supply, green belt boundaries, and infrastructure delivery.

    The Council has already responded to the Inspector’s recommendations, requesting main modifications that will address these deficiencies. Full Council will be asked to adopt the plan with the Inspectors’ modifications.

    The Local Plan in Brief

    The Local Plan will provide a comprehensive strategy for:

    • Delivering 20,000 new homes over the duration of the plan, including a significant proportion of affordable housing
    • Allocating sites for economic growth, including areas for employment and retail expansion
    • Investing in sustainable transport infrastructure, including improved bus routes, cycling paths, and EV charging stations
    • Mitigating and adapting to climate change with enhanced green infrastructure, flood defences, and energy-efficient building standards.
    • Safeguarding York’s historic and cultural heritage while ensuring new development respects the city’s unique character.
    • Setting the city’s green belt and protecting the historic setting for the first time.

    The adoption of the Local Plan represents a turning point in York’s growth, ensuring that development is sustainable, well-planned, and consistent with local priorities.

    For more details on the Inspector’s Report and the upcoming Full Council meeting, visit the our Local Plan Inspectors Report.

    Full Council takes place on Thursday 27 February, the agenda is available to view online at our Democracy website and the meeting will be available to view live or on demand at our webcasts page.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Firms Encouraged to Meet the Buyer

    Source: Scotland – City of Dundee

    A call is going out for local businesses keen to bid for work in the public sector to attend a Dundee event where they can meet buyers from organisations across Tayside. 

    The free Meet the Buyer gathering on March 4 at the Michelin Scotland Innovation Parc (MSIP) will give potential suppliers the opportunity to talk informally about upcoming contracts. 

    A wide range of goods and services are bought in by public bodies including personal care, building works, transport and catering. 

    Councillor Steven Rome, convener of Dundee City Council’s Fair Work, Economic Growth and Infrastructure committee, said: “This event aims to help local businesses to be ready to bid for work from councils, health boards, universities and other public bodies when it comes up. 

    “Attendance is free, but we are keen that new and existing suppliers, particularly local businesses in and around Dundee, register for the event. 

    “Buyers will be there to meet potential suppliers to chat about upcoming contracts, how they go about tendering and what they look for when buying goods and services for their organisations.” 

    “Suppliers will also be able to network with meet larger contractors with public sector contracts to learn about current and active subcontract opportunities, and how to join their supply chains.”                                                       

    The free event is being organised by Dundee City Council in partnership with Perth & Kinross Council, Angus Council, and the Supplier Development Programme (SDP). 

    It takes place on Tuesday March 4 between 10am and 2pm at the Innovation Hub at the MSIP, Baldovie Road, Dundee.  

    Anyone who wants to attend should register on the SDP website here  

    Attendees on the day will be able to introduce their business to a wide range of public sector organisations, including: 

    • Dundee City Council 

    • Abertay University 

    • Angus Council 

    • Scotland Excel 

     

    Contractors confirmed to attend are Robertsons Tayside, McLaughlin & Harvey, MVV Environment Baldovie Ltd and Balfour Beatty. 

    Gillian Cameron, Programme Manager of the Supplier Development Programme, said: “Meet the Buyer Tayside is a fantastic opportunity to network with the real buyers that design and advertise local public sector contracts and supply chain opportunities, as well as learn about the free business support and training local businesses can access to help them bid better. 

    “The Supplier Development Programme works hand in hand with local authorities to create free events like Meet the Buyer Tayside, which help local businesses find, win and keep public sector contracts. So, if you want to consider and win work with the public sector or its partners in Tayside, this event is an unmissable opportunity.” 

    The session will include speakers and workshops, looking at topics like Quick Quotes for smaller contract opportunities, Community Wealth Building and how to use Public Contracts Scotland (PCS) and Public Contracts Scotland Tender (PCS-T) to tender for work. 

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Regulator to investigate Walsall community football charities

    Source: United Kingdom – Government Statements

    The Charity Commission has launched statutory inquiries into Walsall Wood Community Football Club and Walsall Wood Saints Junior Football Club.

    In July 2022, the charity regulator for England and Wales entered Walsall Wood Community Football Club (WWCFC) into a Double Defaulter Class Inquiry after the charity failed to submit its accounts and wider financial information for two years. The charity had also failed to follow correct practice when supplying accounts for the previous three years (Financial Year Ending (FYE) 30 June 2020, 30 June 2021, and 30 June 2022). 

    The regulator started monitoring Walsall Wood Saints Junior Football Club in June 2024 after it identified links between this charity and WWCFC. Similarly, Walsall Wood Saints had failed to supply accounts for FYE 30 June 2023 and submitted accounts in 2022 which were non-compliant. The engagement with both charities raised additional concerns which are now being examined under inquiry.  

    The junior club was set up to arrange activities related to football, including coaching, fun and league games, together with social and fundraising activities for children in the local community. Walsall Wood Community Football Club was set up with similar aims for the wider community and the promotion of healthy recreation. 

    The inquiries will examine:   

    1. The trustees’ compliance with their legal obligations for the content, preparation and filing of the charities’ accounts and other information or returns 

    2. If the trustees are managing their charities in line with their objects and governing documents 

    3. the trustees’ compliance with their legal duties and responsibilities in respect of their administration and governance of their charities, and if they have a sufficient number of willing and capable trustees 

    4. If there has been any misconduct and/or mismanagement in the administration of the charities 

    The Commission may extend the scope of these inquiries if additional regulatory issues emerge. 

    It is the Commission’s policy, after it has concluded an inquiry, to publish a report detailing what issues the inquiry looked at, what actions were undertaken as part of the inquiry and what the outcomes were.    

    ENDS 

    1. The Charity Commission is the independent, non-ministerial government department that registers and regulates charities in England and Wales. Its ambition is to be an expert regulator that is fair, balanced, and independent so that charity can thrive. This ambition will help to create and sustain an environment where charities further build public trust and ultimately fulfil their essential role in enhancing lives and strengthening society. 

    2. On 27 July 2022, Walsall Wood Community Football Club was placed into a Double Defaulter Class Inquiry. 

    3. On 14 January 2025, the Commission opened two separate statutory inquiries into Walsall Wood Community Football Club and Walsall Wood Saints Junior Football Club under section 46 of the Charities Act 2011. 

    4. A statutory inquiry is a legal power enabling the Commission to formally investigate matters of regulatory concern within a charity and to use protective powers for the benefit of the charity and its beneficiaries, assets, or reputation. An inquiry will investigate and establish the facts of the case so that the Commission can determine the extent of any misconduct and/or mismanagement; the extent of the risk to the charity, its work, property, beneficiaries, employees or volunteers; and decide what action is needed to resolve the concerns.

    Press office

    Email pressenquiries@charitycommission.gov.uk

    Out of hours press office contact number: 07785 748787

    Updates to this page

    Published 20 February 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: By land and by sea: UK supports US-led military exercises improving African security and stability

    Source: United Kingdom – Government Statements

    The UK Armed Forces are working with allies to deliver joint exercises with African partners to protect our people, prosperity and shared values.

    UK advisors guide partner forces in urban operations drills at Justified Accord, Kenya (Credit: U.S. Army Southern European Task Force, Africa)

    Thursday 20 February 2025 – The UK Armed Forces have been one of the biggest contributors to two large-scale military exercises that are reaching their climax this week across the land and sea of East Africa. The United States is leading both exercises and has brought together over 2,000 personnel from the armed forces of 29 countries, including 22 African nations.

    The UK is responsible for delivering component parts of these multinational training exercises, under United States stewardship. The UK has been one of the biggest contributors to the Exercise Justified Accord ‘Field Training Exercise (FTX)’ which sees B Company 3 RIFLES exercise alongside a company from the US 173rd Airborne Brigade, a company of Kenya Army infantry, a troop of Kenyan Marines, Kenya Airforce fixed wing and rotary wing assets and, one infantry platoon each from Tanzania and Somalia.

    Exercise Justified Accord is a land multinational exercise being delivered between 10 – 21 February hosted by Djibouti, Kenya and Tanzania. It began with table-top exercises that have laid the foundation for full-scale live activity, which are now underway. The action-packed drills involve coordinating and executing ground attacks, calling in air-support, urban warfare, using drones, and breaching and clearing buildings, as well as medical evacuations.

    Cutlass Express is being conducted simultaneously, mostly in Mauritius, Seychelles and Tanzania. It is a naval warfare exercise which focuses on boarding various types of vessels at high speed to take command and control. The exercise challenges teams to complete scenarios which become increasingly harder and involve different types of vessels – from boarding small boats and dhows, to gaining control of larger vessels whilst under fire.

    In another example of the United Kingdom and the United States being long-term partners for long-term stability and security, Exercise Cutlass Express is taking place for the 15th time, whilst Exercise Justified Accord has been conducted in various forms since 1998. Further joint exercises with African partners are planned for 2025.

    Both exercises will ensure that the different forces involved work together to achieve combat objectives and prepare for real-life scenarios where they may have to collaborate quickly and effectively to counter threats in the region.

    Falling just after the election of the new African Union Chairperson, the exercises also support the African Union’s security objectives by preparing partners for United Nations and African Union missions in Africa.

    It serves as another example of the UK’s support for improved security not just in East Africa, but across the whole of Africa. These include the creation of the history-making, first-ever Kenyan marines and joint-training with the special forces of Nigeria and Ghana.

    Olly Bryant, Defence Attaché at the British High Commission Nairobi, said:

    The UK is a long-term partner, helping to deliver long-term stability and security across East Africa, and we are proud to be working with our allies on delivering high-capacity and high-quality activity. We are also proud of our security partnerships with our partners across Africa, which protect our people, prosperity and shared interests – we go far when we go together.

    EDITOR’S NOTES

    Video and photo content

    Please find free-to-access video and photo content for Justified Accord here: https://www.dvidshub.net/feature/JustifiedAccord

    Please find free-to-access photo and video content for Cutlass Express here: https://www.dvidshub.net/feature/CutlassExpress2025

    Here is a link to a small selection of photos on Google Drive taken from the sites above: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1DOz2ajnRjFK4vAMN7KxajL57RgXO-9aJ?usp=sharing 

    Background on Exercise Justified Accord

    You can find more information here, via U.S. Army Southern European Task Force, Africa.

    Background on Exercise Cutlass Express

    You can find more information here, via U.S. Naval Forces Europe-Africa/U.S. Sixth Fleet.

    List of participating nations

    Exercise Justified Accord

    Angola

    Botswana

    Djibouti

    DRC

    Ghana

    Kenya

    Madagascar

    Malawi

    Mozambique

    Nigeria

    Republic of the Congo

    Somalia

    Tanzania

    Tunisia

    Uganda

    Zambia

    France (Observer)

    India (Observer)

    Italy

    Netherlands

    United Kingdom

    United States

    Exercise Cutlass Express

    Comoros

    Djibouti

    Kenya

    Madagascar

    Malawi

    Mauritius

    Morocco

    Mozambique

    Senegal

    Seychelles

    Somalia

    Tanzania

    Tunisia

    France

    Georgia

    India (Observer)

    United Kingdom

    United States

    CONTACT

    For media enquiries, please contact Tom Walker at the British High Commission Nairobi on tom.walker2@fcdo.gov.uk.

    Updates to this page

    Published 20 February 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Helping charities and strengthening communities

    Source: Australian Treasurer

    The Albanese Government is helping Australia’s 62,000 charities by ensuring that states and territories collaborate effectively with the federal government – reducing unnecessary paperwork.

    We’re taking the practical step of including representatives from all states and territories on the advisory board of the Australian Charities and Not‑for‑profits Commission (ACNC). This will include the greatest representation from state and territory governments since the Board’s inception in 2013.

    This move builds on the substantial body of work that Labor has done to support charities, and aligns with recommendations in the Productivity Commission’s landmark Future Foundations for Giving report.

    These strategic appointments aim to ensure the diverse interests of our communities are effectively represented, fostering a consistent national approach to regulatory and policy matters within the charity sector.

    The ACNC Advisory Board supports the Commissioner by offering informed advice on matters affecting charities and strengthening the governance and effectiveness of the sector.

    The new ex‑officio appointments will provide an additional layer of regulatory expertise, complementing the sector‑based members and enhancing the Board’s role as a forum supporting charity law, policy and regulatory reform.

    The new appointments to the ACNC Advisory Board are:

    • New South Wales – Ms Natasha Mann, Commissioner of Fair Trading and Deputy Secretary of Fair Trading and Regulatory Services, Department of Customer Service
    • Northern Territory – Ms Amanda Nobbs‑Carcuro, Executive Director, Industry Capability, Licensing and Migration, Department of Trade, Business and Asian Relations
    • Queensland – Ms Victoria Thompson, Deputy Director‑General, Harm Prevention and Regulation, Department of Justice
    • South Australia – Mr Brett Humphrey, Commissioner for Consumer and Business Services
    • Tasmania – Ms Robyn Pearce, Executive Director of Consumer, Building and Occupational Services, Department of Justice
    • Victoria – Ms Nicole Rich, Director of Consumer Affairs Victoria, Executive Director of Regulatory Services, Department of Government Services
    • Western Australia – Ms Patricia Blake, Commissioner for Consumer Protection, Department of Energy, Mines, Industry, Regulation and Safety

    The ACT is already represented on the board, with David Crosbie, CEO of the Community Council for Australia, reappointed in July 2023.

    This ensures that all states and territories will be represented in the national conversation about helping charities and reconnecting communities.

    These appointments reinforce the Government’s commitment to fostering a robust, well‑regulated charity sector that serves communities across Australia. It builds on our achievements to date. Since coming into government, the Australian Government has:

    • Improved the deductible gift recipient system by creating a new pathway for community foundations to access tax deductible status.
    • Streamlined the deductible gift recipient application process for environmental organisations, harm prevention charities, cultural organisations, and overseas aid organisations.
    • Introduced legislation to give the ACNC greater discretion to comment publicly on harmful breaches of compliance, to better support public trust and confidence in the regulatory framework.
    • Appointed a widely respected charity sector expert, Sue Woodward, to head the ACNC.
    • Refreshed the ACNC Advisory Board to be more representative of the charity sector, bringing First Nations, CALD and youth voices onto the Board.
    • Sent a clear signal that charitable advocacy is supported and welcomed by this government.
    • Worked with state and territory governments to streamline and harmonise fundraising rules across jurisdictions.
    • Funded a new General Social Survey with new questions on participation in volunteering and involvement in cultural events and cultural activities, and providing insights reflecting the impact of giving, participation, and purpose driven activity.

    Quotes attributable to Assistant Minister for Charities, Dr Andrew Leigh MP

    “Labor wants to minimise the time that Australia’s great charities spend doing paperwork, so we can maximise the energy they devote to helping the vulnerable, cleaning up the environment, helping people stay active, and connecting neighbours.

    “One of the best ways of achieving this is to ensure that all jurisdictions are working together on charitable regulation.

    “Bringing sector experts and regulators from all states and territories onto the advisory board of the charities commission will help charities by reducing regulatory overlap, and ensuring jurisdictions are working together to help charities and non‑profits thrive.”

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Major investment to boost growth and cement Britain’s place as cultural powerhouse

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Over £270 million Arts Everywhere Fund for arts venues, museums, libraries and the heritage sector in major boost for growth

    • Intervention is next step of Government’s Plan for Change to help boost local economies and increase opportunities to gain creative skills 
    • Comes as Culture Secretary marks the 60th anniversary of the first ever arts white paper

    People across the nation will benefit from access to the arts and culture on their doorsteps as a result of a major funding package to boost growth and opportunity. 

    Hundreds of arts venues, museums, libraries and heritage buildings will receive a share of more than £270 million as part of an Arts Everywhere Fund from the government, supporting jobs and creating opportunities for young people to learn creative skills while helping to boost people’s sense of pride in where they live. 

    The cash will be targeted at organisations in urgent need of financial support to keep them up and running, carry out vital infrastructure work and improve long term financial resilience. 

    Today’s announcement will help protect hundreds of jobs in the cultural and heritage sectors. Overall, cultural sectors support 666,000 filled jobs across the country.

    Arts and culture are a vital part of our first-class creative industries and are a key part of what makes Britain so great. The creative industries are worth £124 billion to our economy, creating jobs, opportunities and showcasing the best of Britain to the world. That is why the creative industries were identified as one of the eight growth-driving sectors in the government’s Industrial Strategy – with the potential to boost economic growth throughout communities in the UK.

    At an inaugural lecture marking the 60th anniversary of the first ever arts white paper by former Minister Jennie Lee, Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy will gather leaders from across the arts and culture sectors at the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC) in Stratford-upon-Avon. She will set out how Jennie Lee’s vision of the ‘arts for everyone, everywhere’ will be made a reality as part of the Government’s Plan for Change. 

    Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy said: 

    Arts and culture help us understand the world we live in, they shape and define society and are enjoyed by people in every part of our country. They are the building blocks of our world-leading creative industries and make a huge contribution towards boosting growth and breaking down barriers to opportunities for young people to learn the creative skills they need to succeed. 

    The funding we are announcing today will allow the arts to continue to flourish across Britain, creating good jobs and growth by fixing the foundations in our cultural venues, museums, libraries and heritage institutions.  

    As a government that is on your side, our Plan for Change will ensure that arts and cultural institutions truly are for everyone, everywhere.

    During the lecture, the Culture Secretary will announce the following funding for the next financial year, beginning in April:

    • A new £85 million Creative Foundations Fund to support urgent capital works to keep venues across the country up and running; 
    • A fifth round of the popular Museum Estate and Development Fund worth £25 million, which will support museums to undertake vital infrastructure projects, and tackle urgent maintenance backlogs; 
    • A new £20 million Museum Renewal Fund to help keep cherished civic museums open and engaging, protect opening hours and jobs, continue serving communities, and tell our national story at a local level;
    • An additional £15 million for Heritage at Risk will provide grants for repairs and conservation to heritage buildings at risk, focusing on those sites with most need. This will restore local heritage, such as shops, pubs, parks, and town halls;
    • A fourth round of the Libraries Improvement Fund worth £5.5 million, which will enable public library services across England to upgrade buildings and technology to better respond to changing user needs;
    • A new £4.85 million Heritage Revival Fund to empower local people to take control of and look after their local heritage. It will support community organisations to own neglected heritage buildings bringing them back into good use;
    • An additional £120 million to continue the Public Bodies Infrastructure Fund, which will ensure national cultural public institutions are able to address essential works to their estate;
    • A 5% increase to the budgets of all national museums and galleries to support their financial resilience and help them provide access to the national collection; 
    • Confirmation that DCMS will be providing £3.2 million in funding for four cultural education programmes for the next financial year to preserve increased access to arts for children and young people through the Museums and Schools Programme, the Heritage Schools Programme, the Art & Design National Saturday Club and the BFI Film Academy.

    This package will be integral to ensuring that arts and culture are a catalyst for growth in the Creative Industries and local economies by making sure cultural venues are supported to reach their full potential and attracting more tourists through our cultural institutions. 

    The Culture Secretary is also set to confirm the advisory panel of experts who will be supporting Baroness Margaret Hodge with her independent review of Arts Council England, as well as the scope of the review within the newly agreed Terms of Reference. 

    The beneficiaries of the fourth round of the Museum Estate and Development Fund will also be announced, which will see 29 local museums up and down the country receiving a share of almost £25 million to upgrade their buildings. 

    The news follows another boost for regional growth and regeneration earlier this week, when the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government announced ten critical culture projects across the UK will receive a total of £67 million. This funding will support exciting projects such as the National Railway Museum in York, the International Slavery Museum and Maritime Museum in Liverpool, and in Leeds, both the National Poetry Centre and the revamping of ‘Temple Works’, paving the way for it to house the British Library North.

    Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner said:   

    Our Plan for Change promises growth for every corner of the UK, which is why this week I announced more than £67 million for ten major cultural projects that celebrate our nation.

    I had the pleasure to visit some of these projects last week and seeing the role they will play in igniting regeneration in their communities and on a national scale. This means more tourism, more growth and more money in people’s pockets.

    This comes on top of the £60 million package recently announced by the Culture Secretary at the Creative Industries Growth Summit to support hundreds of creative businesses and projects across the UK. This is the first step towards delivering the Creative Industry Sector Plan, as part of the UK’s modern Industrial Strategy. Today’s announcement will build upon this, ensuring that the culture sector is able to achieve its full potential. 

    More details on how to apply to each of these funds and schemes will be made available in due course.

    Supportive quotes

    Daniel Evans, Tamara Harvey and Andrew Leveson from the Royal Shakespeare Company, said:

    The RSC welcomes the government’s celebration of the anniversary of Jennie Lee’s White Paper for the Arts and its announcement of the £85m Creative Foundations Fund, an urgently needed intervention.  Ageing capital infrastructure remains a tremendous drag on the sector’s ability to create the work for which it is globally celebrated and maximise its economic and social contribution.  We stand ready to work with the government and other stakeholders to ensure that theatre buildings are effectively maintained and put to the most effective use in creating impactful programmes of work that, true to Jennie Lee’s legacy, make the arts accessible to as many people as possible.

    Arts Council England, Chief Executive, Darren Henley said: 

    Today’s a good news day for arts organisations, museums and libraries. We know how much cultural places and spaces are valued in towns and cities across the land. For years to come, this new investment will help more people in more places to flourish by finding joy and connection with high quality culture close to home.

    Baroness Hodge’s review gives all of us at the Arts Council the chance to make sure that we’re doing everything we can to serve audiences right across England – and that we’re nurturing an environment where artists, arts organisations, museums and libraries can create their best work for those audiences. We’re looking forward to working with Baroness Hodge and her advisory panel to make sure that happens for everyone everywhere every day.

    Duncan Wilson, Chief Executive at Historic England, said: 

    The £15m Heritage at Risk funding will enable us to help regenerate cherished historic buildings in some of our most deprived areas, boosting local pride and wellbeing, as well as stimulating economic growth where it’s really needed.

    Kate Varah, Executive Director and Co-Chief Executive, National Theatre, said: 

    The support announced today shows that, like the visionary Jennie Lee, this Government keenly understands the arts ecosystem and its leading role in boosting the economy, enriching local communities and enhancing soft power. Much-needed capital investment will begin the task of enabling arts venues in towns and cities across our country to upgrade their facilities, providing more jobs and training, improving their financial and environmental sustainability, and offering more opportunities for young people and communities. Today’s announcement is further proof that the Government sees the benefit of working long term, in deep partnership with our sector, to break down barriers to growth and opportunity. Capital isn’t about bricks and mortar, it’s about making space for creativity to flourish.

    Alex Beard, CEO of Royal Ballet and Opera, said: 

    I am delighted that Government has recognised the need to invest in the country’s performing arts infrastructure. This one year programme is a vital first step in ensuring that future generations of audience members can continue to enjoy our world leading performing arts sector, which plays such an important role in the Government’s growth and wellbeing agendas.

    Gurinder Chadha, Film Director, said:

    Time and time again the creative industries have proved how much income they bring into our economy from box office sales to expertise, skills and jobs. I am proud to be a part of the British arts industry that is respected globally. Anything that helps local communities and local artists build their skills, to fulfil their potential and further the cultural economy is something to be applauded. 

    Kwame Kwei-Armah, Director and Playwright, said: 

    Today’s announcement by our government to invest in our world leading cultural sector could not have come sooner or at a better time. From personal inspiration to international soft power I, like many, will be overjoyed that our government has seen the cultural sector who we are and what we contribute to Britain and beyond.

    James Graham, Playwright and Writer, said: 

    This new investment is an extremely welcome acknowledgement of the role culture can play in rebuilding local communities.

    The sector has been just-about-surviving for too long and such injections mean much-loved local venues can begin planning for the future.

    On a personal note, as someone who grew up in a town with very limited access to the arts, the new funding for education programmes is to be celebrated. I only fell in love with theatre because of the passion of the drama teachers in my comprehensive school. It’s deeply encouraging to see that the collapse of culture in education over the last decade can finally turnaround, and unleash the creativity of all young people everywhere.

    Adjoa Andoh, Actress and Writer, said: 

    Arts and culture belong to all the people of our amazing creative nation.

    Our drama, our literature, our music, our painting, our history – it’s what we’re known for across the world, so at home everyone should have access to their heritage with no barriers to participation. I am thrilled that with the announcement of this fantastic injection of targeted funding for arts infrastructure and education, locally and nationally, the government recognises that only with their active support can all the people fully share in our wonderful cultural inheritance. I am sure Jennie Lee whose white paper championed the arts 60 years ago, would be proud.

    Tracy-Ann Oberman, Actress and playwright, said:

    Lisa Nandy has shown a huge commitment to the arts. She has been incredibly supportive of my production of “The Merchant of Venice 1936” and the need to tell stories through theatre to bring communities together. I think this announcement shows a real commitment to the arts in the UK and investment in the rich cultural heritage of this country.

    Lemn Sissay, Author and Broadcaster, said: 

    Investing in the arts is an investment in our communities, our creativity, and our future. The creation of the National Poetry Centre is a shining example of this commitment, offering a space where creativity can flourish and voices from all backgrounds are celebrated.

    Lisa Nandy’s commitment to providing funding for the arts, for everyone everywhere, ensures that the transformative power of culture reaches every corner of our nation, fostering unity, inspiration, and opportunity for all.

    Actors Sanjeev Bhaskar and Meera Syal said:

    As not only a vital sector for tourism but also for local communities and businesses, it’s encouraging to see British arts and culture being supported in a tangible and constructive way.

    Es Devlin, Stage Designer, said: 

    Now, more than ever, the cultivation of our collective consciousness, our shared imagination, our ability to seek patterns and imagine possible futures is critical, and this investment in the arts and arts education is urgent and most welcome.

    Kate Mosse CBT, Novelist, Historian & Playwright, said: 

    Today marks the 60th anniversary of Jennie Lee’s visionary White Paper that changed everything. The idea – radical at the time and no less important today – that the arts are for everyone, that creativity can be found everywhere and fostered, that books, theatre, dance, music transform lives, these ideas took root because of Lee’s commitment, enthusiasm and passion. She was one of the great transformational politicians of the 20th century and writers – and artists – salute you.

    Nicholas Cullinan, British Museum Director, said: 

    This additional funding is a wonderful investment in the UK’s museums sector. In every corner of the country, our national and civic museums play a vital role protecting our heritage, bringing communities together, and supporting and inspiring the UK’s world-leading cultural sector.

    Mary Beard, Trustee of the British Museum: 

    This is great news. Museums across the country are places where we go to learn, to be challenged, to wonder, to debate and disagree, and to discover times, people and places different from ourselves. They deserve (and need) all the support we can give them.

    Doug Gurr, Natural History Museum Director, said: 

    I really welcome and am grateful for the additional support from the government for the museums sector, providing a vital lifeline to ensure we continue to reach and inspire audiences locally, nationally, globally.

    Tom Sleigh, Chair, Norwich Theatre, said: 

    We really welcome this announcement. There is a pressing need for better investment in cultural infrastructure, and this funding will be incredibly important for many regional arts organisations, who have such an important role to play in their local communities.

    Isobel Hunter MBE, chief executive of Libraries Connected, said:

    The Libraries Improvement Fund has been transformative in helping library services in England adapt to the changing needs of their users. This new round will broaden that legacy, creating more accessible, sustainable and inclusive libraries across the country. We can’t wait to see the successful projects take shape.

    Jenny Mollica, Chief Executive Officer of English National Opera and London Coliseum, said:

    We warmly welcome today’s announcement from the Secretary of State of a new Creative Foundations Fund. This will provide critical and transformative support for many performing and visual arts venues across the country, ensuring that they continue to play a vital role at the heart of their communities. These much-needed, urgent interventions in our cultural spaces will support creativity and innovation, locally and nationally – and are an investment in our audiences of today and the future.

    Stephen Freeman, Chief Executive, Royal Exchange Theatre said: 

    Today’s announcement of a new capital fund to support our cultural infrastructure is most welcome. It is deeply encouraging to see the Secretary of State responding to the real and urgent need for support at cultural venues up and down the country. Many of our most iconic institutions are in serious need of capital funds to support the future sustainability of our world class cultural offer.

    Sir Ian Blatchford, Director and Chief Executive, Science Museum Group said: 

    We are delighted with the Government’s continued strong support for national museums and the wider cultural sector. Museums benefit society in many ways, inspiring audiences with engaging stories, contributing to cohesive communities and showcasing creativity that helps drive tourism. The confirmation this week of £15 million Government investment in our ambitious plans for the National Railway Museum is a clear vote of confidence in the transformative work underway across the Science Museum Group.

    Jon Finch – Chair of English Civic Museum Network (ECMN) and Head of Culture and Visitor Economy at Barnsley Council said:

    On behalf of England’s regional museum sector, the English Civic Museum Network (ECMN) welcomes the Government’s unprecedented announcement of £45M investment to support regional museums. ECMN is delighted that the Government has recognised the compelling case for investment in local museums as part of its growth agenda. Civic museums are a fundamental part of England’s cultural, creative, and social fabric and are a catalyst for growth on our high streets

    Michael Eakin OBE, Chief Executive of Royal Liverpool Philharmonic said:

    Royal Liverpool Philharmonic welcomes this additional capital funding to support the sector in 2025-26. We are grateful that Liverpool Philharmonic Hall, one of the UK’s great concert halls, has benefitted from such essential support in past years, but we know that it will continue to need investment in the future. Many of this country’s great cultural buildings are urgently in need of capital works  to ensure they can continue to function and meet the needs of performances and audiences, and this new funding will be very welcome and helpful in addressing some of those needs.

    Jenny Waldman, Director of Art Fund said:

    The £20 million Museum Renewal Fund is a vital lifeline for our civic museums, which have a central place in the lives of local communities. It’s a welcome response to the severe financial pressures museums are facing, particularly those reliant on local authority funding. How appropriate that this crucial investment has been announced to mark the 60th anniversary of Jennie Lee’s visionary first White Paper on the Arts. This investment is an important first step to ensuring financial resilience, economic growth and ensuring our public collections remain accessible for future generations.

    Grayson Perry, Artist said: 

    We should be proud of the brilliant museums and galleries that we have all across the country. It is great to hear that the government understands how important they are and is putting a good chunk of money into maintaining them. These cultural powerhouses give our towns and cities a vital part of their identity, art is a central element of who we are.

    Sir Alistair Spalding and Britannia Morton, Co CEOs Sadler’s Wells. Artistic and Executive Directors said: 

    We welcome today’s announcement. It shows that the Culture Secretary is listening to the needs of the sector and is prepared to  act to protect our cultural infrastructure for future generations.

    Joshua McTaggart, CEO of Theatres Trust:

    Theatres Trust is thrilled that the government has announced its £85million Creative Foundations Fund. We know from our research and industry knowledge that this funding is desperately needed by so many theatres across England. Our diligent team is primed to advise and support theatres up and down the country as they begin their journey on developing and delivering new capital projects, and we encourage people to make use of Theatres Trust’s free impartial expert advice service as they begin their applications.

    Rebecca Lawrence, Chief Executive Officer:

    The British Library welcomes the extension of the Public Bodies Infrastructure Fund for the next financial year. We hope it will be a vital source of support for addressing some of the most urgent pressures on our buildings and estates, which continue to require substantial ongoing investment to ensure they are well maintained for our users and the national collection. We are also pleased to see the extension of the Libraries Improvement Fund for local authority run library services, who we collaborate with all across the country.

    Maria Balshaw, Director of Tate and Chair of the National Museum Directors’ Council said:

    Today’s funding announcements are fantastic news for the whole museum sector. We are incredibly grateful to see the Government’s recognition of the importance of our world-class museums.

    The increase in budgets for national museums and galleries like my own organisation Tate will be vital in supporting our financial resilience, enabling us to continue caring for and providing access to the national collection and the incredible public benefit we deliver. We also warmly welcome the announcement of additional capital investment for national and regional museums through the Public Bodies Infrastructure Fund and the Museum Estate and Development Fund. This investment is urgently needed right across the museum sector for maintenance and repairs.

    In particular, we are delighted to see the announcement of new funding for civic museums, who are facing an unprecedented set of economic pressures. They are some of the finest creative and cultural spaces in the world – caring for internationally significant collections, driving regional tourism and providing vital community services. The new Museum Renewal Fund will help bring civic museums back to a more sustainable position, and we are heartened that Government has listened to calls to protect this key part of our cultural and civic infrastructure.

    Andrew Lovett OBE, Chief Executive, Black Country Living Museum

    We welcome the financial support announced by the Secretary of State, coming as it does at a challenging economic time for many in the sector. A financial decision is a policy decision and we welcome this policy. On the anniversary of the publication of Jennie Lee’s white paper, this is a timely reminder that Museums and the arts are not only crucial to everyday lives and wellbeing, but are also a vital part of the UK economy and merit sustained investment. We make a mistake when we think museums are in the business of collecting and exhibitions; their business is social cohesion and helping us to better understand the world. And it doesn’t get more important than that.

    Notes to editors: 

    On the review of Arts Council England

    Arts Council England is set to undergo a transformative review that will reimagine how we support, develop, and celebrate creativity across every corner of our nation. This landmark independent review, led by Baroness Margaret Hodge, will shine a light on how we can break down barriers, amplify diverse voices, and ensure that arts and culture are truly accessible to everyone, regardless of background or postcode. By examining everything from funding mechanisms to community engagement, we’re taking a crucial step towards building a more inclusive, vibrant, and dynamic cultural landscape that reflects the rich creativity of every community in England.

    Cultural organisations and other interested parties are invited to participate in a survey to feed in their views as part of the review. 

    Read the survey, the advisory panel of experts and the full Terms of Reference for the review.

    On the fourth round of the Museum Estate and Development Fund

    The Museum Estate and Development Fund enables museums across the country to deliver a better experience for visitors and staff, make access and environmental improvements, unlock income-generating opportunities, and continue to protect treasured buildings and collections for future generations. It is open to museums in England accredited by the Arts Council which are not directly funded by DCMS. This fourth round of funding, worth £24.8 million, will benefit 29 local museums across the country: 

    North West

    • Queen Street Mill, Burnley, Lancashire – £813,115
    • Furness Abbey, Barrow-in-Furness, Lancashire – £457,795
    • Fusilier Museum and Learning Centre, Bury, Lancashire –  £81,244

    North East

    • Weardale Museum, Weardale, County Durham – £499,665
    • Sunderland Winter Gardens, Sunderland, Tyne and Wear –  £488,705
    • Preston Park Museum, Stockton-on-Tees, County Durham – £366,300
    • Hartlepool Art Gallery, Hartlepool, County Durham – £302,383

    Yorkshire

    • Museum of North Craven Life, Settle, North Yorkshire –  £798,500
    • Land of Iron, Skinningrove, North Yorkshire  – £655,907
    • Bankfield Museum, Halifax, West Yorkshire – £441,978
    • Pickering Beck Isle Museum, Pickering, North Yorkshire – £388,023 
    • Millennium Gallery, Sheffield, South Yorkshire – £315,684

    Midlands

    • Tamworth Castle, Tamworth, Staffordshire – £1,716,238
    • Wolverhampton Art Gallery, Wolverhampton, West Midlands – £1,695,75
    • Newstead Abbey, Ravenshead, Nottinghamshire – £1,482,882 
    • Creswell Crags, Worksop, Nottinghamshire – £499,999

    East

    • Peterborough Museum & Art Gallery, Peterborough, Cambridgeshire – £137,745 
    • Sainsbury Centre, Norwich, Norfolk – £1,276,711 
    • Bressingham Steam Museum, Diss, Norfolk – £429,719
    • Colchester Castle, Colchester, Essex – £1,293,625
    • Southchurch Hall, Southend-on-Sea, Essex – £423,105

    South East 

    • Bletchley Park, Bletchley, Buckinghamshire – £2,451,350 
    • The Lightbox, Woking, Surrey – £319,000

    South West

    • Russell Cotes Art Gallery and Museum, Bournemouth, Dorset – £1,500,817 
    • Nothe Fort, Weymouth, Dorset – £1,374,763  
    • Dorset Museum and Art Gallery, Dorchester, Dorset – £940,500 
    • Wheal Martyn Clay Works, St Austell, Cornwall – £707,200

    London

    • London Museum of Water and Steam, Brentford, London – £2,626,277
    • The Foundling Museum, Camden, London – £319,000

    Updates to this page

    Published 20 February 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Australia: New lease on life for historic lock up

    Source: New South Wales Premiere

    Published: 20 February 2025

    Released by: Minister for Lands and Property


    A significant heritage building in the historic Lock Up complex in the heart of Newcastle has been given a face-lift thanks to a $70,000 grant from the NSW Government.

    Number 88, located on Hunter Street, is one of the oldest buildings in the city. The historic, stone and painted masonry structure was first constructed in 1861 and served as a telegraph office, gaining a second storey in 1879.

    New flooring was installed, replacing damaged carpet. As workers removed carpet tiles they discovered the original cedar staircase remained intact. The staircase was sanded, resealed and now takes pride of place as a central, period feature in the building. 

    Unoccupied since 2018 due to building deterioration and the COVID, the repairs have assisted the Newcastle Historic Reserve Land Manager to secure a new long-term tenant, which will help the reserve to fund maintenance and improvements in the future.

    Buildings 74, 88 and 90 Hunter Street form a suite of three historic stone and painted masonry buildings. Building 74 was constructed in 1873 and was Newcastle’s original post office. Number 90 was a police station built in 1861 and closed in 1982.

    Building number 90 is known locally as ‘The Lock-Up’ and was originally built to support the Newcastle police station and was used from 1861 until its closure in 1982. The building has been re-imagined as an award-winning contemporary art space that showcases local, national and international artists. An artist in residency program invites artists to respond to the building’s history.  The Lock-Up’s padded cell is acknowledged as one of the best preserved in Australia.

    Crown Lands in the Department of Planning, Housing and Infrastructure funded the upgrade work through its Crown Reserves Improvement Fund (CRIF).

    Minister for Lands and Property Steve Kamper said:  

    “The NSW Government is focused on building better communities, which is why we are committed to helping maintain these three beautiful heritage buildings in the heart of Newcastle’s CBD.

    “Our statewide investments in Crown reserves help ensure they can continue to serve their communities for many years to come.”

    Member for Newcastle Tim Crakanthorp said:

    “This is fantastic news. These buildings have become an integral hub for our local artists and are an iconic piece of Newcastle’s history dating all the way back to the 19th century.

    “It is vital we continue to care for these buildings, which reflect important parts of our history here in Newcastle. I am very pleased Crown Lands has continued to fund this important maintenance work that will ensure our heritage buildings remain intact for future generations.”

    Newcastle Historic Reserve Land Manager Chairperson Gillean Shaw said: 

    “We are grateful to Crown Lands for their continued support in helping to protect these three historic buildings. This particular round of funding has helped upgrade number 88, keeping it consistent with its grand, mid 19th century character. 

    “Number 88 had been without a commercial tenant since 2018, due to the building’s deterioration over recent years. As a direct result of these upgrades, NHRLM have attracted a long-term tenant, which will bring in a new revenue stream, allowing the land manager to continue to fund important maintenance to preserve these significant buildings for future generations.”

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: NSW Government launches local council grants to combat hate and strengthen community cohesion

    Source: New South Wales Premiere

    Published: 20 February 2025

    Released by: Minister for Local Government, Minister for Multiculturalism


    The Minns Labor Government has launched the latest round of the NSW Social Cohesion Grants for Local Government designed to enhance councils’ ability to prevent and respond to hate.

    The program strengthens local government capability to foster connection and belonging within and between communities, as well as build trust in local institutions.

    Applications for the latest round of grants are now open, with local councils across NSW to share in $500,000 for projects that strengthen social cohesion and deliver stronger and more resilient communities.

    Councils may apply for between $50,000 and $150,000 to address a social cohesion challenge in their community, with the current round focused on preventing and responding to the prevalence of hate.

    Projects should aim to address the impacts of hate, polarisation and the localised impacts from global crises and events that councils are experiencing.

    In previous rounds, the NSW Social Cohesion Grants for Local Government program has funded projects to build community cohesion in high density residential neighbourhoods, support community centre activations in areas impacted by bushfire, and intercultural community leadership programs.

    Applications are open until 11:59pm on Friday 28 March and can be made on the grant webpage.

    Minister for Local Government Ron Hoenig said:

    “The impact of recent hateful events has been felt across the state.

    “Local governments are at the heart of their communities, and these grants will help councils create meaningful initiatives that foster inclusion and support communities to feel connected.

    “Our strength lies in our unity, our respect for one another and our shared commitment to making NSW a safe and welcoming place for all.”

    Minister for Multiculturalism Steve Kamper said:

    “This funding will assist with projects to help build community cohesion.

    “By supporting Social Cohesion Grants for Local Government, we are investing in the future of our state.

    “These grants will contribute towards protecting our society and supporting the true spirit of our multicultural state.”

    MIL OSI News