The planning application for development of land to the north of Norman Road and between Romney Marsh Road and the East Stour river has been published.
South Ashford Community Forum will review the application and comment.
The Ashford Borough Council planning case reference is 19/00709/AS
In England, Scotland and Wales, there’s only one way to ensure that your vote counts at the European Parliamentary elections. You must clearly mark a X next to the party you wish to vote for.
A Better Choice for Property Ltd., the property investment company owned by Ashford Borough Council, has announced an exhibition of proposals for development of the site of the Homeplus home furnishings store in Beaver Road.
The site was purchased by A Better Choice fot Property earlier this year from Southern Housing Group. Although Southern Housing had commissioned outline designs for development of the site, no planning application for the proposals had been published.
Thursday 16th May 2019 3pm – 8pm The Stour Centre, Station Approach, Ashford, Kent, TN23 1ET
A Better Choice for Property Development Ltd invites you To attend a public exhibition event in relation to a proposed high quality mixed use (residential and commercial) development on the former B&Q (now Home Plus) site in Beaver Road.
The public exhibilion provides an informal opportunity for the local community to learn more about this development and to provide feedback to the team.
A model of the initial scheme for the site will be on display and representatives from A Better Choice for Property Development Ltd as well as members of the project team will be on hand to answer any questions you may have.
Opt-out organ donation: organs and tissues excluded from the new system
Department of Health and Social Care
Opened: 29 April 2019 Closes: 22 July 2019
This consultation is to ask you if the government is excluding the right organs and tissues from opt-out organ donation. We would like you to answer five questions about what you think should happen.
The government recently passed a law to change the rules for organ donation in England from 2020. The law introduced a system commonly called “opt-out” or “deemed consent”.
From 2020, everyone in England over the age of 18 will be considered to be in favour of donating their organs and tissue after death unless they:
have said they do not want to donate (opted out)
have appointed someone to decide for them after death
are in an excluded group
When the law was passing through Parliament, the government agreed that the law would only apply to routine transplants, and not novel or rare transplants.
The government proposes that novel or rare transplants will still require express consent. This means you or someone representing you must explicitly give permission for your organs or tissues to be donated for novel or rare transplants. Such transplants also cover what is called Advanced Therapy Medicinal Products (ATMP). This is when tissues, cells and genes are manipulated in a laboratory for treatment of a disease or injury. Some of the tissues and cells come from deceased donors.
This consultation is to ask you if the government is excluding the right organs and tissues. They would like you to answer five questions about what you think should happen.