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Pub to be funeral parlour? Over our dead bodies, say Derbyshire villagers
A NEW offer is being lined up by villagers to buy a former Derbyshire pub and stop it becoming a funeral directors.
Mark Gregory said the offer is "substantially higher" than £300,000 he has already put in on behalf of other angry Findern folk to buy The Wheel Inn.
South Derbyshire District Council has given permission to Murray's Funeral Directors, of Burton, to convert the pub.
Mr Gregory, 50, of Longlands Lane, Findern, said: "I hope that the hassle will put pressure on them to realise this is not wanted here.
"When the offer is organised I will send it off in writing. I can't see much point in the building being turned into a funeral directors.
"We will not want a funeral cortege coming through all day. Life is depressing enough without one of those here. We need to try and enjoy life.
"If it was down a back street then fine, but this parlour will be on the main road in the village. This new offer will be the new fight."
Punch Taverns closed the pub in April. Mr Gregory said anger in the village has not died down.
South Derbyshire MP Heather Wheeler is backing the residents' campaign and proudly wore a Save the Wheel Inn T-shirt at the Findern village fete last weekend.
Mrs Wheeler said she would be campaigning against planning rules, which meant a pub can remain if it is the last in the village, unless there is permission for a funeral parlour. She said: "The legislation needs to be replaced and that is my focus in Parliament by talking to ministers."
Steve Johnson, managing director of Archway Motors, is also backing the campaign and sees the benefits of a village pub. He said: "Regardless of whom the potential buyers may be, we believe that, for the long-term benefit of the community, The Wheel Inn must remain as a pub, which is why we are backing this campaign.
"Archway Motors is the longest-established business in the village and generations of my family have frequented The Wheel over the years.
"We need businesses like The Wheel to maintain community cohesion – and it would be a great shame if we were to lose such an asset, which, with the right level of investment, has the potential to be a great community pub once again."
David Barke, from Murray's Funeral Directors, said: "Contrary to the many false rumours circulated by the Save the Wheel group, we have received only one unsolicited expression of interest, but as they didn't give an address or even cover the true costs of purchasing the site, we decided not to take it any further.
"We are continuing with our plans to refurbish our new premises. There is much to be done as the building was left in a poor state of repair. Once the renovations are completed, we look forward to playing an active role in the community for many years to come."
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Minister rejects help plea from trust looking to take over derelict Derby Hippodrome
THE trust which has applied to transform the front part of Derby's derelict Hippodrome theatre has hit a snag in its plans for the revamp.
Derby Hippodrome Restoration Trust had called on Saqid Javid, Secretary of State for Culture, Media, and Sport, to use his powers to help it take over the building. But that application has now been rejected.
The trust, which eventually wants to make the site a theatre again, has submitted an outline planning application to rebuild the former front of house area of the theatre, in Green Lane.
This would see it become a cafe, offices, meeting spaces, and exhibition area.
The plan would involve multi-million-pound funding from the Heritage Lottery Fund.
The trust then plans to use this as a springboard to bid for more cash to make it into a 1,000-plus-seater theatre.
But, to apply for that first funding, it needs to be able to show it could take up ownership of the derelict former Hippodrome theatre, something it cannot currently do.
The trust asked Mr Javid to issue a compulsory purchase order (CPO) on the building, which would make it possible to take ownership of the building without the current owner's consent.
That person, according to the Land Registry, is Christopher Anthony, who bought the site in 2007.
The theatre, which originally opened in 1914, was damaged in 2008 during work ordered by him.
Had the CPO request been successful, Mr Anthony would still have been able to appeal against the decision. But it would have been a step towards the trust being able to take over the building.
Trust director Peter Steer said his organisation "wasn't disappointed as in some ways the decision was anticipated".
He said: "We are now talking to our barrister about what or what might not be done with the decision from the Secretary of State and one or two other options."
Mr Steer said that, had the CPO been granted, "under normal circumstances", Mr Javid would have instructed Derby City Council to "open negotiations" for the compulsory purchase of the building.
He said that, once bought by the authority, there could have been a deal struck for the trust to take over the building on a long lease, enabling it to carry out its revamp work.
The authority says it has no intention of spending any more cash on the former theatre because of the way cuts to its grants from the Government have affected its budget.
A letter from the Department for Culture, Media, and Sport, said of its decision not to issue a CPO: "The view is that a building listed at grade two, that meets the criteria for compulsory purchase to ensure its preservation, is most appropriately a consideration for the local authority [Derby City Council].
"The authority is best placed to evaluate the viability of proposals for a building's restoration."
We WILL meet £1.2m savings target on brown bins, vows Derby City Council
A £1.2 million savings target which Derby City Council needs to achieve through its new paid-for garden waste collection service will be reached, the authority has said.
This is despite not yet having achieved its aim of getting 20,000 households signed up for the scheme in its first year. A leading Tory opposition councillor said he found it "extremely unlikely" that the target would be achieved.
The council now charges £40 per household for the first brown bin to be collected and £20 for each additional bin, instead of offering the service for free. It says it must do this because of crippling Government cuts to its funding.
At one stage it set a date of March 22 to get people signed up for the service so they "could take full advantage of the scheme", which runs from April to November.
It now has 11,478 homes signed up, with 12,469 bins being emptied, and a third of this year's collections already completed.
Councillor Asaf Afzal, cabinet member for neighbourhoods and Streetpride, said signing up fewer than 20,000 so far was not a problem because it meant a smaller cost for providing the service.
He said: "The figure continues to grow as customers sign up on a daily basis, which we expect to grow to 20,000.
"Because we currently have a smaller number of customers our costs are less than anticipated and we expect to make the savings we set out to achieve. Many residents are choosing to compost their garden waste, which is great for the environment."
Councillor Chris Poulter, Tory shadow cabinet member for neighbourhoods and Streetpride, said he thought the explanation for how the savings target would be reached was "extremely unlikely". He said: "They've got to say that because, ultimately, if there's that many people who have not signed up, they are falling short.
"A lot of those more than 7,000 people are putting their garden waste in black bins, which is going to landfill."
The Derby Telegraph reported yesterday that recycling rates in the city appeared to have fallen and that this could be as a result of the brown bin charge.
The council says that, in the last financial year, the figure stood at 45% of household waste being recycled, down to 41% between May this year and now.
Mr Afzal said: "Recycling targets are measured by the weight of materials collected and, since garden waste consists mainly of water, it is heavier than other materials such as aluminium. Now we're collecting less garden waste we expect this to be reflected in the figures."