Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Gove calls water bosses over leaks

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on Saturday afternoon.

The South East Coast Ambulance Service and the RNLI were part of the rescue effort.

Kent Police confirmed in a statement yesterday that she had died. PEOPLE with “hidden disabiliti­es” including autism and mental health conditions will become eligible for blue badge parking permits under the largest overhaul of the system in 40 years.

From next year, those with less immediatel­y obvious illnesses will have the same right to a badge allowing them to park closer to their destinatio­ns as those with physical disabiliti­es.

Transport Minister Jesse Norman said: “Blue badges are a lifeline for disabled people.” THE Beano plans to continue to laugh at the world from “a kid’s-eye view” as the comic celebrates its 80th birthday.

Home to characters such as Dennis the Menace, Minnie the Minx and The Bash Street Kids, it first hit news stands on July 30, 1938 as a companion paper to The Dandy, which went on sale eight months earlier. Created by publisher DC Thomson in Dundee, it sold almost two million copies weekly in the 1950s and has continued to be popular over the decades.

Dennis The Menace is the longest-running character to appear in the comic after making his Beano debut on March 17, 1951. WATER company chief executives have been summoned to a meeting with Environmen­t Secretary Michael Gove to explain why they have not met leakage targets as the country struggles to cope with the dry summer.

Mr Gove said customers expect a “reliable and resilient water supply” amid low levels in some reservoirs and the introducti­on by North West supplier United Utilities of a hosepipe ban from August 5.

It comes as farmers were also due to meet with Government officials for a “drought summit” to discuss the effect on the country’s food supplies of the extensive heatwave that has scorched the UK.

The first half of the summer in the UK has been the driest since 1961, with Thursday and Friday’s wet weather and storms the first rainfall in weeks.

Mr Gove said that firms “have much more to do to tackle leakage”, adding: “That is why I have repeatedly made clear that companies must improve and recently wrote to them to outline my expectatio­ns during this period of dry weather.

“Next week I will ask the chief executives of the water companies that have failed to

Actor and children’s author David Walliams has guest edited a commemorat­ive issue also marking the anniversar­y. In his editor’s letter, Walliams said: “What I always loved about the Beano was that it felt naughty.

“I don’t think I’d have got into writing my books without Beano.” meet their leakage targets to a meeting at Defra to discuss how they are going to address this serious issue and improve their performanc­e.”

United Utilities has previously been accused of “wasting” 430 million litres of water every day from leakages.

The GMB union said earlier this month that its research showed that United Utilities was allowing 175 Olympic-sized swimming pools’ worth of water to go “down the plughole” every day.

The company said at the time that “reducing leaks is a top priority”.

Irrigation water shortages, a lack of fresh forage for animals and growing conditions for cereal crops are among issues that will be discussed at separate talks chaired by National Farmers’ Union president Minette Batters.

She will sit down on Wednesday with officials from Defra and a wide array of rural agencies, plus figures from farming charities after a July that has seen England receive just 15% of its long-term average rainfall.

Ms Batters described the situation as “hugely challengin­g” for all sectors of farming, warning that the thundersto­rms and showers some areas are receiving “won’t mitigate the many issues farmers are experienci­ng”.

She said: “There could be serious concerns for many farmers if this extended spell of warmer, drier weather continues as the long-range forecast suggests.”

Last week the Environmen­t Agency said it had responded to 44 “significan­t” environmen­tal incidents since the end of June, including moorland fires, algal blooms, dry boreholes, low river flows and fish rescues as the hot, dry weather continues to grip.

The last month of dry, hot weather followed the driest June since 1925, the Environmen­t Agency added.

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