Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Fear that fate of HRI will not be noticed at the top

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Complete nuisance. Happens every year when they are all converging on Lea Gap Fair. Nothing will change until Kirklees Council provides them with a proper camp. WELL done to the campaigner­s who staged an all night vigil outside entrance to HRI and to all those who came along to support them including Thelma Walker and Jason McCartney.

Pity about the problem over T-shirts – they are not offensive so why the hassle?

Anyway, along with Town briefly top of the Premier League it was a double success ... although success is said to come in threes?

There’s nothing in this area as there is no government leadership whatsoever except a lot of in-fighting about who is to succeed Theresa May.

Surely with all this she cannot possibly be leader at the Tory party conference in October!

Consequent­ly l’m afraid our life and death issue about the hospital will go unnoticed due to this unholy mess!

Jeremy Hunt – remember him? – is our Secretary of State for Health and he is certainly concerned about hygiene as he has just upgraded his office ablutions by installing a £40,000 new bathroom suite.

I wonder if he has really heard of HRI and it’s life and death situation. At a tumultuous time like this he concentrat­es on a new shower – and that is exactly what this new administra­tion is! NEXT month the British Heart Foundation (BHF) is raising awareness of Women and Heart Disease and I want to encourage your readers to help fund lifesaving heart research by taking part in our Bag It Beat It campaign throughout September.

It’s a sad reality that cardiovasc­ular disease (CVD) causes the deaths of over 7,000 women in Yorkshire and the Humber each year and there are also around 3.5 million women living with cardiovasc­ular disease across the UK.

As the nation’s heart charity, the BHF is determined to fund as much vital research as possible into every aspect of CVD, including causes, better drugs and improved surgical techniques to improve the prospects for anyone affected by CVD.

Having a clear out and donating any unwanted items to your local BHF shop as part of Bag It. Beat It. this September is a really simple way everyone can get involved and help in the fight for every heartbeat.

Every single item donated to your local BHF shop, whether it is clothing shoes, books or records will help continue the fight against coronary heart disease, the UKs single biggest killer.

To help make donating completely hassle-free, we even offer a free home collection service which can be booked either through your local shop or by calling our free phone line on 0800 915 3000.

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