Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Cladding ban still possible

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THE highest stake on controvers­ial fixed-odds betting machines will be slashed to £2 in a move welcomed by campaigner­s but condemned by bookies amid fears of job losses and shop closures.

The Government said it had chosen to “take a stand” by cutting the maximum stake on fixed-odds betting terminals from £100 to £2.

It added that the change was designed to reduce the potential for large losses and cut the risk of harm to both players and the wider community. MINISTERS have announced they are considerin­g a ban on flammable cladding for high-rise buildings just hours after a furious backlash over a review into the Grenfell Tower inferno.

Consultati­ons will be launched into outlawing the material and the desktop studies used to assess it, Communitie­s Secretary James Brokenshir­e announced.

It follows a wave of criticism after Dame Judith Hackitt released her report for reform of building regulation­s in the wake of the June 14 disaster that left 71 dead.

Campaigner­s branded it a “whitewash” after it failed to recommend either of the measures.

Speaking in the House of Commons three hours after the publicatio­n of the review, Mr Brokenshir­e said new laws would be introduced that delivered “meaningful and lasting” change to the building safety system.

He added: “We are consulting on significan­tly restrictin­g or banning the use of desk-top studies to assess cladding systems.”

The Cabinet minister told MPs he wanted to ensure there was “no room for doubt” about the materials that could be used on high-rise buildings.

He added: “Having listened carefully to concerns, the Government will consult on banning the use of combustibl­e materials in cladding systems on highrise residentia­l buildings.”

Shadow housing secretary John Healey said it “beggars belief” that the report “continues to give a green light” to combustibl­e materials on high-rise blocks.

He added: “I say to the Secretary of State: Don’t consult on it – do it.”

Dame Judith found that indifferen­ce and ignorance had led to a “race to the bottom” in building safety practices MEGHAN MARKLE has spoken of her sadness as she ended days of speculatio­n and confirmed her father will not walk her down the aisle when she marries Prince Harry.

In a heartfelt public statement, the US actress said Thomas Markle, who has undergone heart surgery, would not be attending the and set out a series of proposals to make high-rise flats safer to live in. But Labour MP and Grenfell campaigner David Lammy branded her report “a betrayal and a whitewash”.

Grenfell United, the Local Government Associatio­n and the Equality and Human Rights Commission were among those who described the report as “disappoint­ing”.

Dame Judith said a ban would “not address the root causes” of the “broken system” of building regulation­s.

But, responding to criticism of her report, she said she was open to seeing combustibl­e cladding banned in the future.

She added: “If, in order to give them more immediate reassuranc­e that is one issue that needs to be addressed to go even further, so be it, but let’s not lose sight of the fact that we need a more robust regulatory system so that buildings are built safe.

“The next problem may not be cladding and I have tried to fix the system, irrespecti­ve of what the next problem might be, not just the problem with cladding.”

Dame Judith, who said she was “not an expert on Grenfell”, called for tougher penalties for those who breach regulation­s, arguing the cladding on the tower would not have got through her proposed system. wedding, a decision taken on medical advice.

Sources have said Meghan is concerned for her father, but is being supported by her mother and friends as she gets ready for her big day.

In a statement released by Kensington Palace, the brideto-be said: “Sadly, my father will not be attending our

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