West Sussex County Times

Great to join charity’s annual fundraisin­g walk

- Andrew Griffith MP for Arundel & South Downs

On Sunday I joined hundreds at Arundel Castle for the annual sponsored walk in aid of the Sussex Snowdrop Trust. The trust is a Walberton-based charity who provides nursing care at home for children with life-threatenin­g and terminal illnesses. With annual running costs of £350,000, this is a regular highlight in its fundraisin­g calendar, and tickets sold out within hours of being released with many families wanting to take part.

I started the event with the trust’s founder, Di Levantine, and my predecesso­r Lord Herbert of South Downs, who is the trust’s patron. It was a delight to support them and the trust at this year’s walk. They do such incredible work for local children and their families.

It was a wonderful way to enjoy the open space of the Arundel Castle Estate Park and to be part of the fundraisin­g effort for such a good cause.

Last week saw the largest set of elections for decades, with contests for county councils, mayoraltie­s, the Scottish and Welsh assemblies and a Westminste­r by-election in Hartlepool. I congratula­te every single candidate who took part and in particular I welcome our newly-elected West Sussex County Councillor­s. The county council’s responsibi­lities include the vital areas of schools, roads, social services, waste collection and much else, so I look forward to working with new colleagues to focus on these real issues reflecting residents’ priorities across West Sussex.

In Parliament this week I attended the Queen’s Speech, which announces the Government’s legislativ­e priorities for the year ahead. The speech itself is an elaborate ceremony, with the Queen’s messenger ‘Black Rod’ having to bang on the slammed doors of the House of Commons to summon MPs to listen – an act which symbolises elected representa­tives’ independen­ce from the monarch since the days of the Civil War.

This year, a centrepiec­e of the Government’s agenda will be the rollout of major programmes to support lifetime skills, retraining and adult education. I am personally a big fan of the Lifetime Skills Guarantee which will offer a new flexible loan scheme to allow wider participat­ion in further education for all ages, and a £2.5billion National Skills Fund.

Many adults missed out the first time round on a university or further education, and these measures will give them the chance to access loans and grants to support lifelong learning ensuring that people can train and retrain at any stage in their lives, supporting them to move into higher paid jobs and equipping the workforce with the modern skills that businesses need.

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