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Traffic fears for Etwall as land is set aside for 100 homes
RESIDENTS of a Derbyshire village have expressed dismay after a site was earmarked for 100 new homes.
South Derbyshire District Council says the homes could be built in Willington Road, Etwall.
The development features in the authority's draft local plan, which sets out areas for possible development over the next 20 years.
But villagers are concerned about the effect on traffic, services and schools.
Mike Berry, a Willington Road resident, said: "My biggest concern is the impact it will have on services.
"Going to the doctors' is like getting an appointment with the almighty."
He lives a few yards away from the area and says that, if the houses are built, the development will be the worst thing to hit the village in the 38 years he has lived there.
He added: "One hundred homes is a big percentage for a village the size of Etwall."
Karen Cresswell is the chairman of the parish council. A meeting of the authority was held at which 70 people voiced their concerns.
Mrs Cresswell, 51, said: "It is very clear there is widespread opposition against this choice of site.
"The opposition is incredibly strong from residents and I completely understand.
"Traffic was one of the main issues and many people are concerned that the development will pile pressure on local services.
"There would be major access problems because Willington Road has a very bad junction on to Main Street."
George Martin, of Laburnum Way, says traffic needs addressing already.
The 66-year-old said: "It's chronic, especially in the mornings. If this scheme goes ahead, the traffic would create more problems."
The authority has highlighted a number of benefits for Etwall on other sites, including a new cricket pitch and pavilion.
Land will also need to be found for the extension of Etwall cemetery.
A spokesman for South Derbyshire District Council said: "Through the local plan, our aim is to help South Derbyshire to continue to thrive.
"Willington Road has been named as one of our preferred sites because it offers the opportunity to provide better facilities and improve infrastructure."
Tributes to Indian Workers' Association member Harbhajan Singh Johal
A LIFE-LONG activist for equal rights has died after an "inspirational" life.
Harbhajan Singh Johal, a founder member of the Indian Workers' Association, moved to Britain in 1957 and formed the Indo-Pak Friendship Society in Derby with others from the Indian and Pakistani communities.
He died aged 79 in hospital in the Punjab from a ruptured stomach ulcer. He had been on a break in India with his family and was having treatment for an insect bite.
Shangara Gahonia, secretary of the Indian Workers' Association, said his father and Mr Johal had been friends and activists for equal rights together.
He said: "I knew Mr Johal from 1968 when I came to this country. He came in 1957 and always seemed to be the first person to do things. He was well-educated and, despite the obstacles he faced, was very, very active."
Due to poor conditions for Indian workers in the 1950s and 1960s, there was a national movement to revive the Indian Workers' Association, which had started in the 1930s.
Mr Johal was one of the founding members of the Derby branch. The association aims to fight discrimination and Mr Johal spent his life fighting for the rights of working-class people.
Mr Gahonia said: "He inspired people like me to join. It was my privilege to have been the secretary of the IWA while he was president and learn from him first-hand."
Mr Gahonia said the work Mr Johal carried out was always carried out in his own time and at his expense.
He said: "He worked at Qualcast and would finish his night shift, go down to London on the bus to join with protests then he'd be back at work that night."
Mr Johal started the trade union movement at Qualcast and was responsible for instating the first Indian Union shop steward at the firm.
Mr Gahonia spoke of the obstacles people from ethnic minorities faced in the 1950s and 1960s. He said: "You couldn't buy a house. Signs said 'for sale to whites only'. Two of the bus companies wouldn't hire black people."
Mr Gahonia said: "There aren't many people left like him who worked for a particular cause his whole life without worrying about his own concerns. He didn't just worry about the rights of Sikhs, either, but of all human beings.
"The Indo-Pak Friendship Society he formed had Pakistanis and Muslims in it, too. He was concerned with the rights of people whether they were white or black, it didn't matter."
Mr Johal was also active in the anti-apartheid movement and raised funds for the miners during the strikes of 1984 and 1985.
The Indian Workers' Association and Mr Johal's wife, son and two daughters, have organised a memorial at the Indian Community Centre, Rawdon Street, on Sunday, from 2pm to 5pm.
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Spondon Girls' Brigade marks 90 years
Spondon Girls' Brigade is among the oldest in Derbyshire and is celebrating its 90th birthday. Kelly Tyler reports.
IT was once feared that Spondon Girls' Brigade may have to call it a day due to a shortage of numbers.
But team leaders battled to save it and the company is now celebrating its 90th birthday.
The group, which meets at Spondon Methodist Church, in Lodge Lane, is the oldest company in the Derby and Dales District.
And the brigade held a party to celebrate on Saturday.
Pam Wood, who has been captain of the 1st Spondon Girls' Brigade for the past six years, said the celebrations were well attended.
The 45-year-old, of Chaddesden, said: "It's nice to feel that we are a small part of history.
"I started here when I was a girl and I can remember the brigade's 70th and 80th birthdays.
"It's not been easy. There was a time when numbers were as low as five, but we've kept going.
"We've picked up and we now have 11 girls. We've had a fresh start. We've never given up.
"We wanted to carry on and that's what we've done. Now let's hope we're still running for the centenary."
Pam's daughters, Emily, six, and Lucy, 10, are also members.
Her 15-year-old son, Chris, is a member of the Boys' Brigade, in Chaddesden.
At Saturday's celebrations, the youngsters performed a re-enactment, called Great Beginnings.
The show was about how the Girls' Brigade first came to Derbyshire in 1912.
The first Derby group was based at the United Reform Church, in Becketwell Lane.
Members performed a display of songs and dances from over the decades.
Jiving to Rock Around the Clock, from the 1950s, and singing along to The Beatles' Penny Lane, from the 1960s, were among the highlights.
There were also displays of old photographs and uniforms.
Video footage of when the brigade performed at the Assembly Rooms in 1982 was also shown.
Joy Tomlinson, who has been an officer with the brigade for 40 years, received an award at the church yesterday for her long service.
The other two leaders at Spondon are also celebrating anniversaries.
Pam is marking two decades with the brigade and Selina Halam-Eliott 10 years.
Joy said: "When I was a girl in the brigade, we used to have so much fun.
"I cannot remember what age I started but I must have been about eight or nine.
"I used to go the church's Sunday school and that's how I became involved.
"The brigade is more relaxed nowadays.
"We used to have to get our badges – spiritual, physical, educational and service – within about six weeks. Now it's not as intense.
She said one of her favourite memories was going on camp holidays.
"We used to have company holidays with the rest of the district, including groups from Chaddesden, Weston-on-Trent and Spondon," she remarked.
"We used to go to Weymouth, Sherringham and Matlock.
"I also remember one of the leaders, Miss Coxon, who would always come with her register and her books in this suitcase."
She pointed at the case. "It must be about 40 years old."
Former brigade member Christine Cameron was also at the event. She joined the Girls' Brigade in 1945 and was a member until 1958.
She said: "One of my favourite memories was going to the Royal Albert Hall and seeing the rally with all the other groups.
"Everywhere you walked, there were girls in their uniforms.
"The uniforms have definitely changed over the years. We used to have to wear black stockings and I hated it!"
Charlianne Sutcliffe, 10, one of the current members, said of the weekly meetings: "It's like a big girls' night out.
"Everyone is so much fun and we all bond like a family.
"We practised about six weeks for the performance. It was really good. I was a bit nervous, though."
And Rosie Bell, nine, said her favourite bit about the Girls' Brigade was "making new friends".
The group meets each Thursday in term time at Spondon Methodist Church, from 6.30pm to 8pm.
Alvaston club pair make it a hat-trick of wins in national awards
AN Alvaston social club has scooped two national awards following a £30,000 refurbishment.
Paul Walton and Denise Oakley who run Nunsfield House, on Boulton Lane, have been named Steward of the Year for their work.
The couple scooped the prize for the third year running, a feat which Paul believes is unprecedented.
Mr Walton, 52, said: "I was very proud to win it for the first time in 2011.
"Then to win it the year after makes you realise that it wasn't a fluke. But to have it for a third year really makes you realise that you are doing something special."
The couple beat competition from thousands of other clubs to scoop the prize handed out by Club Mirror Magazine, the national publication for social clubs around the UK.
Mr Walton and his partner Ms Oakley, 46, have run the club since 2007. Before that they were stewards at the British Legion in Repton.
The club also took home the Refurbishment Club of the Year honour following a £30,000 refit.
Mr Walton said: "The club was looking tired and the committee gave me £10,000. But me being me, I spent £30,000.
"I said to them that if we spent ten then it would look good for a year but if we spent thirty thousand it would make the club somewhere that people really wanted to use.
"We refitted the function room first as it looked tired.
"Then we did everywhere else in the club and it has made a massive difference."
In a climate that has seen pubs and clubs hit hard by the recession and changes in drinking patterns, the refurbishment has made a massive difference to the club.
Mr Walton said: "People weren't using the facilities that we had here as much as they were.
"Now I am completely booked for 2014 and already taking bookings well into 2015."
And for Mr Walton, both awards are a vindication for all the hard work the couple and all those involved in Nunsfield House have put in.
He said: "To win the steward award is nice for us on a personal level.
"But to get the award for the club is fantastic because it shows just how hard everyone who helps keep the club going has worked."
These latest awards come on top of a number of CAMRA awards for the club's real ales and it is success that Mr Walton hopes to continue.
He said: "If we can win it 10 years in a row, then we will try to. There are a number of other awards that we are going to go for which will keep us going as well."