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DGWGO FRIDAY FOCUS

Ellies Fund are looking for businesses in D&G to possibly put a collection bin in their premises  , and they bare also looking to find volunteers to help with collections and storage ! its a fantastic cause folks and a great way of recycling and doing good at the same time !

 

Ellie’s Fund – Brain Tumour Trust was set up by Heather after her daughter Ellie lost her battle with a brain tumour at just age 14. The money raised by the charity goes to brain tumour research as only 7% of cancer research funding goes towards brain tumour research. 



Two years ago we started collecting empty baby wipe packets for recycling. The charity is paid 2p for every packet recycled and so far we have raised £32,255!

 

We also collect baby food pouches, including Ella’s Kitchen, and have just started collecting biscuit wrappers for recycling. 

 

We are required to collect a certain minimum amount of each item to qualify for the required free postage label from the recycling company. We ask the public to collect for us around the UK and we have collectors willing to store packets until they have enough to post off for us. For example at least 1300 baby wipe packets are required!

 

We are currently looking for businesses open Monday to Friday, 9am to 5pm ish, who are willing to have a collection bin in their premises for the public to drop off their packets. Also for volunteers willing to empty the bins, store the packets until they have enough, then package them up to post them. If the businesses are in Lockerbie, Dumfries or Annan areas then I personally may be able to empty the bins. 

About Ellie

 


In March 2007 Ellie, then aged 11, was diagnosed with a grade 4 Glioblastoma, an aggressive brain tumour. The Doctors expected her to survive for  between 6 and 12 months. She had already had a 7 1/2 hour operation to remove the tumour, and followed it with 6 weeks of radiotherapy and 26 months of chemotherapy.

In 2009 Ellie was diagnosed with a second tumour but continued to fight, inspiring a song that she recorded in November 2009.

Sadly, Ellie lost her fight on Valentine’s Day 2010 aged 14, 3 years after she first became ill. Her family were with her.

All information can be found on our website and Facebook page –

 

www.facebook.com/elliesfundbabywipecollection



http://www.elliesfund.com/events-calendar.php

Nithsdale Community Achievement Awards Winners 2014

Nithsdale Community Achievement Awards 2014

 

Thursday, 06 March 2014 03:02 PM

Community members and groups from throughout Nithsdale were rewarded and recognised for their achievements at this year’s Nithsdale Community Achievement Awards, held in DG One Leisure Complex.

The Nithsdale Community Achievement Awards 2014 recognises and celebrates the work and success of community groups and individuals  as well as highlighting the work that is going on to change the lives of people in this area. Volunteers in Nithsdale have a huge economic impact and it is vital that they are recognised for this.

This year there were a host of local adult learning and youth work awards presented, and 16 winners in the main awards ceremony.

1. Adult Learner of the Year – Kirsty Illana Knight
2. Young Person of the Year – Anthony Caven
3. School and Learning Award – Maxwelltown High School Band
4. Adult Volunteer of the Year – Katrina Geddes
5. Young Volunteer of the Year – Haylie Crosbie
6. Community Group of the Year – Village Pride Furniture Project
7. Local Partnership Award – Kirkconnel and Kelloholm Community Futures Project
8. Youth or Community Group Award – 2nd Company of the Dumfries Boys Brigade
9. Health and Wellbeing Award – Nithsdale Walking Works Network
10. Cultural Diversity Award – Dumfries Tattoo
11. Innovative Practice Award – Fitness Intervention Task Force
12. Community Event of the Year – Big Burns Supper
13. Long Term Commitment Award – James Pirrie
14. Community Resilience Award – Town of Kirkconnel
15. Active Citizenship Award – Dumfries North West Church – Free Meals Project
16. Outstanding Achievement Award – Dumfries North West Church – Free Meals Project

The evening was hosted by Chris Carruthers and was organised by Dumfries and Galloway Council’s Community Learning and Development Service Nithsdale.

Provost Ted Thompson said, “ This event is one from which I take the most personal satisfaction because it recognises the previously unsung heroes in our communities who give freely of their time in improving the opportunities for others. It also highlights the importance and value of the work done by our Community Learning and Development staff in facilitating this work and making our society a better place to live in.” 
 

Local Children Enjoy World Book Day at Neverland

 

Earlier today, Robert McFadzean and Glen Johnston of Subject 17 Productions went along to Moat Brae in Dumfries to see the launch of a six-week period of free public tours of the house.

Here are their images from the day which included local school children enjoying World Book Day.

 

Visitors will also have the opportunity to find out about the future plans to create an international family visitor attraction and a national centre for children’s literature and storytelling. Views, thoughts and ideas will be welcome from visitors in order to inform the process. The Trust would like to know what local people think and what they would like to see and do at Moat Brae.

OPENING TIMES (Sat 8th March to Sat 19th April 2014)

The house will be open for half-hour conducted tours, led by volunteers

Wednesdays 2pm – 6pm (last entry 5.30pm) Saturdays & Sundays 12pm – 4pm (last entry 3.30pm)

TWYNHOLM COMMUNITY RAISE FUNDS FOR DEFIBRILLATOR

The Star Hotel and Twynholm Community have raised enough  funds to Purchase the village a Defibrillator
Defibrillator Fund Update written by the Star Hotel

As you all know, we set out to raise £1000 last year to purchase a community defibrillator for Twynholm. We reached our target, and we have in place a community Defibrillator – which anyone can access in an emergency. If we’re closed, just hammer on the front door!!

We’ve also had 2 HeartStart sessions in the village, which has shown people how to carry out emergency first aid & see how easy it is to use the Defib machines.

The good news was that we were able to purchase a refurbished machine from the Stewartry Voluntary Service for £250, which meant we had money spare (£1151.95) – it was then agreed that this was to be used towards setting up a First Responder Team in the Village. We have a number of volunteers willing to be involved and we have been awaiting news from SVS about the training and setting up the team.

After waiting for a long time, I decided to contact the Ambulance Service directly, to see if I could speed things up. The cost of the equipment is about £3000, so I needed to check exact costs, timing, so that we could apply for additional funding through the SVS.

Well, I’ve finally got somewhere… to cut a long story short, it doesn’t seem that there is a need for a First Responder Team in Twynholm – which I suppose is excellent news for all the residents!!

However, this does mean, that we have spare funds, which we need to ‘redirect’. I suggest a meeting of anyone involved/interested to discuss possible options. I can also give details of the conversation I had with the First Responder Team Coordinator about the First Responder Team.

Tuesday 11th March – Star Hotel at 7pm

I will also ask the Shop, Burnbank & Garage to display posters asking people to attend the meeting – if you could all pass on the day/time to anyone you think might be interested, that would be great.

TROQUEER PRIMARY SCHOOL LASS ‘EMILY’ IS SINGING SENSATION

Emily is ten years old and is in P6 at Troqueer Primary School in Dumfries. Her music teacher is Mrs Fiona Watson also of Dumfries. Emily’s Dad contacted DGWGO this week to let us know all about her amazing success , D&G has a wealth of Musical talent , and it is fantastic to see someone so young loving music and doing so well . 

Emily’s Dad told DGWGO – On Saturday 1st of March this year at the Dumfries and District Music Festival Assoc., she won the P6 age group Classical song group and a certificate of performance of Distinction, and was runner up in the P5- P7 Scottish song group with another performance of Distinction.

On the 1st of February this year at the Southern Scottish Counties Burns Association she won the the P6/7 section, the adjudicator, the well known folk singer Emily Smith wrote, ” A beautiful performance, you could hear a pin drop! Etc..”, she also won best overall primary school singer and performer for the second year running. This allows Emily to represent Dumfries and Galloway Schools at the R.B.W.F. nationals finals in Prestwick to be held in May.

Emily is the current national Robert Burns World Federation singer in The P4/5 section, which she has held for the past two years (the only person ever to do so) and was the runner up as young Burnsian of the Year, last year.In January she sang at the Hamish the Haggis Burns Supper as part of the Big Burns Supper held in Dumfries.

She sings regularly at St Michaels Church children’s choir and sings at various retirement homes in Dumfries at christmas time. She sings at fund raising events for Ellisland Farm, is a regular singer athe Globe Inn, Dumfries and at various charity events throughout Dumfries.

In the attached photo Emily is holding the Duff Cup which she won at the recent Dumfries and District music Festival for the best P6 singer.

 

 

 

PRODUCERS MUST NOT CARRY THE CAN FOR MILK PRICE WAR

 

Farmgate prices should lift despite supermarket milk price cuts

 

NFU Scotland is adamant that dairy farmers must not carry the can for the milk price war being waged between UK supermarkets.

 

Following an announcement by Tesco this week, it now joins Asda, Aldi and Lidl in the group of supermarkets all selling four pints of fresh milk for only £1.

 

Reassurances have been given that the price received by farmers will be unaffected.  However, past experience has shown that selling a high value product like milk as a loss leader drives value out of the chain, places significant pressure on milk processors to meet retailer demands and makes it more difficult to lift the price paid to farmers even if market signals are positive.

 

NFU Scotland Milk Committee Chairman Gary Mitchell said:

 

“It is very important that processors and producers do not ultimately fund any retailer price wars.

 

“In the competitive retailer world, we appreciate that strategies designed to increase footfall in stores are necessary to improve business.  However, the fact that retailers regularly choose fresh milk as the key sector in attracting customers to stores is evidence of the importance of dairy to shoppers.  All the more reason not to undermine a progressive and sustainable UK dairy supply chain by short-sighted and often transient price wars.

 

“All retailers must accept that if they value fresh dairy produce, produced and processed to the highest standards in the world, then it surely deserves not to be the first port of call when retailers opt to slash prices in a bid to attract business.

 

“Tesco has assured us that it is fully committed to the group of dairy farmers contracted to supply it with its own-label milk and the price that group receives will reflect that commitment.

 

“But the damage of milk price wars stretches beyond those groups dedicated to supplying retailers. It can have impact on those supplying fresh milk markets but not aligned to any one supermarket, as well as those dairy farmers whose milk goes into cheese or high value dairy products.

 

“The dairy industry – processors and producers – are putting strategies into place at a Scottish and UK level that look to drive value into the dairy chain, growing home and export markets for products.  A retail price war on liquid milk – our biggest dairy sector – hinders that approach”    Ends

 

This message is private and confidential. If you have received this message in error, please notify us and remove it from your system. All information or opinions expressed in this message and/or any attachments are those of the author and are not necessarily those of NFUS. NFUS accepts no responsibility for loss or damage arising from its use, including damage from virus. NFU Scotland is a company limited by guarantee. Registered Office – Rural Centre, West Mains, Ingliston, Newbridge, Midlothian, EH28 8LT, Registered in Scotland No – 214564 www.nfus.org.uk

RURAL DEVELOPMENT MEASURES MUST DELIVER

 

Calls for a simpler, re-prioritised and more accessible scheme

 

NFU Scotland has mapped out its vision for a simpler, re-prioritised and more accessible rural development scheme that can deliver for Scotland’s food and farming sectors, its rural economy and its environmental well-being.

 

The Union’s response to the Scottish Government’s consultation on Scotland Rural Development Programme (SRDP) 2014-2020 clearly states that this should be a vehicle to drive the rural economy and also spin off multiple benefits, including a significant contribution to ambitious climate change targets.

 

Working within the confines of an extremely limited rural development budget, the Union believes that these limited Pillar 2 funds must also be used to complement the direct support available to farmers and crofters through Pillar 1 of the CAP.

 

To be most effective, it calls on the Scottish Government to match – or increase – the level of funding it committed to the SRDP in 2007 to 2013.  Specifically, the Union calls on the Scottish Government to match fund the 9.5 percent of funds that it will transfer from Scotland’s direct support (Pillar 1) pot for farmers to the SRDP.

 

The Union has also proposed the following:

          A three-tier structure for the schemes available, including an easier access level to increase participation, improved delivery and ceilings set on funding levels

          Continuation of the Less Favoured Areas Support Scheme (LFASS) in its current form and with its existing budget

          A package for resilience measures for all sectors and farm types, including small-scale drainage, flood management options, precision technology and recording – to drive business and carbon efficiency across Scottish agriculture

          Cattle development programmes – to drive efficiency, genetic development and a reduced carbon footprint, and linked to increases in quality and yield  

           Support for innovation, collaboration and new entrants

          A reinvigorated approach to support for crofting in the Highlands and Islands which also extends support to small farms.

          A bigger agri-environment budget that goes further than biodiversity and landscapes to deliver carbon efficiency and water quality.

 

To achieve this, the Union believes the SRDP’s proposed budgets need to be re-prioritised.  It believes woodland creation targets should be reduced by 50 percent to free up some £16 million per year for farm efficiency measures – contributing to climate change goals and improving farm business performance, whilst still increasing Scotland’s tree cover.

 

It also proposes that to allow funds to be re-prioritised, proposals for the National Rural Networks budget could be cut and existing networks on the ground utilised instead, supporting them through the Advisory Service and the Knowledge Transfer and Innovation Fund. 

 

Commenting on the Union’s vision for SRDP delivery, President Nigel Miller said:

 

“Scotland’s Rural Development Programme must be a programme for people, production and a living, carbon-efficient landscape.

 

“We firmly believe that the priorities we have mapped out for the future SRDP create a foundation for the development of a smarter and more efficient agricultural industry which can operate in a tougher economic and environmental climate.

“The three-tier approach we have mapped out would, we believe, improve access to the scheme while the use of ceilings will help to make sure that, over the whole term of the programme, the reach of the SRDP extends into every corner of Scotland and hits holdings, of every type and size.

 

“Given the severe budgetary constraints, our rural development programme is an opportunity to complement the support delivered to our food and farming sectors by Pillar 1.

 

“The ongoing delivery of a fully funded Less Favoured Areas Support Scheme is a priority as this currently does so much for livestock production in our hills and uplands.  The huge pressure that changes to our weather patterns have brought on farming businesses in recent years means that measures to support drainage and resilience are essential if we are to underpin our ability to produce.  And we also want to ensure that we get better at what we do, so a scheme that drives efficiency and improvement into our cattle systems could be a game changer.

 

“To deliver such transformational change and unlock the potential in our agricultural systems requires budgets to be re-prioritised.  We believe that there is scope to re-focus elements of the budget proposals that would still deliver woodland or rural network ambitions but free up funds to deliver greater value from the programme.”  Ends 

 

Notes to Editors

·         NFU Scotland has responded to the Scottish Government consultation: ‘Scotland Rural Development Programme (SRDP) 2014-2020 Stage 2: Final Proposals’, issued in December, which set out the final proposals for the new rural development programme period (2014-2020).  In summary, the Union’s submission stated:

 

          The new SRDP must complement Pillar 1 of the CAP.  

          It should be a vehicle to drive the rural economy and also spin-off multiple benefits, including a significant contribution to climate change targets.

          The total financial commitment from the Scottish Government must be at least as great as that of the SRDP 2007-2013, including match funding of the Pillar 1 to Pillar 2 transfer (modulation). 

          A three-tier structure, including an easier access level to increase participation and improve delivery

          Continuation of the Less Favoured Areas Support Scheme (LFASS) in its current form and with its existing budget

          A package for resilience measures for all sectors and farm types, including small-scale drainage, flood management options, precision technology and recording – to drive business and carbon efficiency across Scottish agriculture

          Cattle development programmes – to drive efficiency, genetic development and a reduced carbon footprint, and linked to increases in quality and yield  

          Woodland creation targets should be reduced by 50 percent to free up some £16 million per year for farming systems efficiency measures – contributing to climate change goals and improving farm business performance whilst still increasing Scotland’s tree cover.

          The National Rural Networks budget could be cut by utilising existing networks on the ground and support them through the Advisory Service and the Knowledge Transfer and Innovation Fund. 

A copy of the Union’s full submission (8500 words) is available on request from [email protected]

The Scottish Fire and Rescue Service (SFRS) is spearheading a new multi-angled drive to combat wildfires across Scotland.

The Scottish Fire and Rescue Service (SFRS) is spearheading a new multi-angled drive to combat wildfires across Scotland.

 

SFRS Assistant Chief Officer Robert Scott is Chair of the Scottish Wildfire Forum (SWFF) and under his leadership he has reformed and re-energised the forum, ensuring a wide range of partners are involved and empowered.

 

ACO Scott, who is also the director of service delivery for the north (the area mostly affected by wildfires last year), last week appointed a new, full-time senior manager who will be responsible for looking into all aspects of wildfire management.

 

Wildfires placed significant strain on SFRS resources last year and Mr Scott hopes that this new approach to wildfire management will raise awareness, encourage public responsibility, improve firefighter safety and reduce demand on SFRS resources during wildfire season.

 

Last year the SWFF launched the UK’s only Wildfire Operational Guidance Manual, which was commissioned by the Scottish Government.

 

Mr Scott said: “In addition to the launch of the guidance manual we have committed significant resources to training a number of senior officers to an advanced level to ensure we have subject matter experts available across the country to attend and control wildfire incidents.

 

“We have trained over 100 supervisory managers based in fire stations most likely to attend these types of incidents to ensure they do so safely and to maximum effect.”

 

The SWFF has also formed a working group made up of senior fire officers from various departments.

 

He said: “We want to ensure they consider all aspects of wildfire management from prevention, to training, to fire tactics and that we do so across the entire country.

 

“Just last week we appointed a senior manager, Group Manager Garry Burnett, who will be based in Aberdeen and work on wildfire management issues on a full time basis.”

 

Group Manager Garry Burnett said: “I am very much looking forward to managing the Wildfire Project and effectively supporting the ACO to deliver national wildfire objectives and improvements.

 

“For me, personally, I am delighted to be returning to the wildfire environment nearly 10 years after supporting the delivery of the first ever Scottish Wildfire Forum back in 2005.

 

“I am keen to strengthen relationships with key stakeholders to firstly deliver preventative measures implemented to reduce the impact of extensive wildfire both financially and environmentally. I am also highly focused to ensure improved development of our firefighters and incident managers benefiting firefighter safety when tackling wildfire.

 

“The full implementation of the Scottish Government’s Operational Guidance will be key to delivering that improved operational response.”

 

The SWFF has been extremely pro-active, forming partnerships with colleagues in England, Wales and Northern Island to ensure members can share experiences, tactics and training opportunities.

 

ACO Scott added: “This type of investment and partnership working will raise awareness of the issues around wildfires, encourage people to act responsibly in and around the countryside, lead to improved safety for firefighters and reduce the burden on the service and on partner agencies.”

 

Community Safety Minister Roseanna Cunningham commented: “Wildfires can have a truly devastating impact on communities, agriculture and environment across the country, and particularly the north of Scotland.

 

“The Wildfire Operational Guidance has provided Fire and Rescue Services with an invaluable source of information on how to tackle the behaviour, prevention and management of wildfire.

 

“Joint working between agencies and the training of officers to avoid and manage these incidents should also help protect communities, firefighters and our countryside from these dangerous and damaging fires.”

 

Drew McFarlane-Slack, Highland Regional Manager for Scottish Land and Estates, said: “We value the opportunity to work in partnership with the Scottish Fire and Rescue Service.

 

“Together we can pool our resources and experience in a bid to reduce the number of wildfires in Scotland, which have a damaging effect on our environment and communities.”

 

Information on wildfires is available on the Scottish Fire and Rescue Service website www.firescotland.gov.uk

 

SOLWAY SHARKS WEEKLY UPDATE 7/3/14

Solway Sharks Ice Hockey Club

 

Match Report

 

 

This weekend the Magnox Ltd. Solway Sharks welcome the Telford Titans back to the Ice Bowl on Saturday night before heading off on the road to Billingham on Sunday for a crucial Northern Cup fixture against the Stars. Many supporters will remember the plucky performance that an extremely short-benched and inexperienced Telford side produced on their last visit to Dumfries and they way they held their heads high and claimed the St Andrew’s Cup on a pre-arranged penalty shootout. On Sunday the Sharks visit Billingham knowing that victory would leave them needing just a point at home to Blackburn to reach the cup final. However, should they lose this game Solway would then need to beat Blackburn by three goals or more to progress to the cup final. For supporters who would like to travel with the Sharks, the bus will leave the Ice Bowl at 1:30pm on Sunday and the fare will be just £10 not including rink entry. Face-off against Telford at Dumfries Ice Bowl on Saturday evening is at the usual time of 7pm.

 

 

Last Saturday the Solway Sharks, sponsored by Magnox Ltd, welcomed old friends and rivals the Sutton Sting to the Shark Tank and produced a measured performance that eventually saw them run out winners by five goals to two.

After a cagy start the game swung into life in the third minute when good work on the boards by Ross Murray gave Stevie Moore the chance to flash a pass across the face of goal where it was met by the ever-improving Joe Coulter but his redirection was well saved by Zimozdra in the Sutton goal. Suddenly play was swinging from end to end and Adam Robinson progressed down the middle and forced a save from Gary Russell before Frazer Goldie was robbed of a counter by the swift reactions of Zimozdra. The Sharks eventually broke the deadlock in the ninth minute when a Craig Thurston pass sent Pavol Melichercik surging through the centre. The Slovakian marksman pushed his shot wide of the target but he was alert enough to skate around the Sutton goal, collect possession and pass perfectly for Iain Bowie to convert from close range.

 

Three minutes later the Solway sniper added his second goal of the evening when he collected another Melichercik pass in the slot, pulled to his right and beat Zimozdra with a neat back-handed shot at the keeper’s near post. The Sting were desperate for the points that would help them in their quest to return to Dumfries for next month’s NIHL Play-Off weekend and upped their play employing a more aggressive fore-checking game plan. Two minutes from the first interval it paid dividends when Gary Russell could only parry Thomas Stuart-Dant’s shot into the path of Adam Robinson. The Sharks complained that their netminder had been impeded in the build-up to the goal but the officials were unimpressed and impartial observers might have pointed out that the Sutton goal was clearly off its moorings when the Sharks opened the scoring.

 

Supporters of both teams must have been expecting the tempo and intensity of the game to rise as the second period began but instead it soon settled into hockey’s equivalent of a midfield battle with plenty of effort from both sides but precious few scoring opportunities. Scoring chances may have been at a premium but the two goals that the supporters saw were of the highest calibre. In the twenty-sixth minute Bob Chalmers rolled back the clock when he collected a pass deep in his own defensive area, sped up the left wing and rifled a superb wrist shot into the smallest of gaps just under the crossbar. Sutton were not to be undone and three minutes from the second break Simon Butterworh and Robert Streetly combined on the left for veteran D-man Matt Jeffcock to convert with an equally impressive shot.

 

Everything was still to play for when the players returned to the ice for the third period but within a minute Stevie Moore had eased the home supporters nerves. Sutton should have cleared their lines but the ever-alert Moore pounced on a weak pass and drew the puck across the keeper before lifting a deft back-handed shot back over the keeper and into the net. Sutton never stopped trying to force their way back into the game but the Sharks had their two goal cushion and they never once took their eyes off the prize as they generally controlled possession and territory throughout the final session. All that was left was for the home side to wrap up the scoring with a powerplay goal five minutes from time. Iain Bowie won a face-off to the right of the Sutton goal and Juraj Senko looked up to spot Struan Tonnar drifting into free ice in the slot. When the pass came Tonnar’s way he wasted no time in dispatching the puck into the roof of the Sting goal to conclude the scoring at Sharks five Sutton two.

 

Scoring statistics for the Sharks were as follows: Iain Bowie two goals and one assist, Bob Chalmers, Struan Tonnar and Stevie Moore all 1+0, Juraj Senko and Pavol Melichercik both 0+2, Connor Henderson and Craig Thurston both 0+1. Netminder Gary Russell saved twenty-six of the twenty-eight shots that he faced (save percentage 92.86%). The Alive Radio Man of the Match Awards were presented to Iain Bowie for the Sharks and to Chris Sykes for the visitors.

 

On Sunday a short-benched Magnox Ltd. Solway Sharks travelled down to Blackburn to play the Hawks in a fixture that many believed to be insignificant. The Sharks had the league tied up and the Hawks were guaranteed second place so what was there to play for? With a possible meeting in next month’s NIHL Play-Off Weekend in Dumfries next month and a crucial cup match in three weeks time the Sharks knew that this fixture was all about momentum and gaining a psychological advantage over your opponent. With this firmly set in their mind they produced a perfect road game to record a four-two victory while their opponents turned into “flappy birds”.

 

Having succumbed to Blackburn on their previous three visits Solway were eager to get off to a good start on Sunday evening but they could little hope for the opening they created. With just three minutes on the clock Ross Murray collected possession at centre ice and immediately found Joe Coulter on the right wing. The Solway youngster has shown steady improvement this season thanks to greater ice time and to the support of the Holywood Trust. Realising he had time, Coulter looked up and spotted Stevie Moore moving into the danger area and laid off a perfect pass for the latter to stroke home the opener from the slot. Three minutes later the Sharks doubled their advantage with Moore again the scorer when he was quick to pounce on the rebound from Ross Murray’s snap shot to score from the low slot.

 

Games against Blackburn have been physical encounters of late and Solway must have been expecting the same again but on the night the home side seemed strangely subdued and unable to rise to the heights that we’ve come to expect from them. That, however, may have been largely down to the way the Sharks carried out coach Grubb’s game plan. The only real danger to the Solway defence seemed to be coming through Adam Brittle and on the thirteen minute mark he forced Gary Russell into making an incredible glove save at his near post to maintain the two goal advantage.

However, the Sharks stopper could do nothing to prevent Brittle from putting the home side on the scoreboard two minutes later when he had the relatively simple task of slotting home the rebound from close range after Gary Russell had made another good block from Jared Owen’s shot. The large, eight hundred plus crowd, were still on their feet celebrating twenty-three seconds later when Struan Tonnar stunned them into silence. Juraj Senko and Craig Mitchell combined to set Tonnar on his way from deep inside Sharks territory and the power forward ploughed straight through the centre of the Hawks defence before unleashing a superb shot into the roof of the net.

 

The second period began with the promise that it would turn into a cracker but in the end the Sharks played out their game plan to perfection and while they had to suck up periods of pressure their opponents never really looked like scoring. The only blemish came with six minutes remaining in the session when minor penalties on Ross Murray for delay of game and Craig Mitchell for slashing gave the Hawks a five-on-three man powerplay. Within seconds Gary Russell again showed his class with an incredible glove save to deny Adam Brittle but this was where his luck was to end. From the restart Owen fed the puck inside to Brittle who was again denied by Russell but this time the rebound fell kindly for Jonathan Adams to convert from close range. For the remainder of the period the home side tried to raise their game but the Solway defence remained resolute and the second interval arrived with the Sharks three-two ahead.

 

The final session played out much as the previous period had with the concerted onslaught on Gary Russell’s goal never really coming to fruition and the only real incident of note may have further reaching consequences for the home side. As the period progressed the Hawks were becoming more and more frustrated and this was to boil over when a minor penalty was called on David Meikle for hooking with the clock showing 51:11. Probably the least said about this the better but suffice to say the Blackburn’s import player Jonathan Adams suffered a total meltdown that saw him receive a total of fifty-five minutes of penalties including a rarely seen Travesty of Game. One can only hope that we will never see a referee subjected to such a barrage of physical and verbal abuse in the Shark Tank. When Blackburn’s tempers cooled the Sharks were on a powerplay and it didn’t take Bob Chalmers and James Wallace long to work the puck back to Juraj Senko on the Blackburn blueline from where the big D-man unleashed a trademark slapshot that flew into the roof of the Hawks net ensuring that there would be no last minute jitters for the Sharks supporters.

 

Scoring statistics for the Sharks were as follows: Stevie Moore two goals and no assists, Juraj Senko 1+1, Struan Tonnar 1+0, Ross Murray 0+2, Bob Chalmers, James Wallace, Craig Mitchell and Joe Coulter. Gery Russell in the Sharks goal saved twenty-one of the twenty-three shots that he faced (save percentage 91.30%) Stevie Moore was named the Sharks Man of the Match.

 

Key project funding to be discussed by D&G Council committee

Key project funding to be discussed by Council committee

Wednesday, 05 March 2014 11:47 AM

The allocation of funds for the region’s infrastructure , including major investment in local road improvements are to be discussed at the Council’s Economy, Environment and Infrastructure Committee next Tuesday. Over £13 million has been requested for 2014/15 from the Council’s Capital budget to cover a range of projects from road resurfacing to core paths through to providing vehicles for the new kerbside waste collection service due to be introduced this year. This is in addition to approximately £6m spent per year from the council’s revenue budget on road repairs.

The request for additional capital is over £3.5 million more than the budget agreed in October 2012, which emphasises the importance of improving the region’s roads according to the Councillor Colin Smyth Chair of the Council’s Economy, Environment and Infrastructure Committee.

Councillor Smyth said, “The new administration’s overall capital budget to be agreed on 18 March will set out our priorities in detail for the next three years, but also an overall strategy for the next decade which will see literally hundreds of millions of pounds invested in a whole range of projects from new schools to flood prevention schemes. A key part of that budget will be investment in our infrastructure, in particular road improvements. This funding request will need to be considered alongside the many others and the overall budget will be limited due to Government cuts. However, even at a time when the council is having to make savings due to these cuts, we are committed to maintaining and improving local roads as well as our coastal infrastructure which was so badly damaged by the recent adverse weather. Turning around the condition of the region’s roads in the face of growing cuts will be challenging, but it is something we are determined to do because it is clear this is a major priority for people in Dumfries and Galloway”.