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Timber worth £5m stuck in roadless remote forest

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Jo LonsdaleNorth East and Cumbria Investigations

imageBBC Ian Glenndinning is a man in his 60s wearing a green cap and green coat. He has a closely cropped grey beard and moustache. He's standing on a snowy track with a large expanse of conifer forest behind him under a turquoise cloudy skyBBC

In a remote Northumberland forest, £5m worth of timber remains unfelled because of trouble transporting it out. With some of it literally rotting away, what is going on?

From her home deep in Upper Coquetdale, Sam Wood squints into the sun as she looks up the narrow silvery road which winds up the valley where many farming families have lived for generations.

“Imagine meeting a timber lorry coming down there,” she says.

imageSam Wood, who is a woman in her 40s and wearing a green coat with a furry hood with a red scarf and hat, is standing by the side of a single track road. On one side there is a stone wall, on the other a shallow river.

She is one of many in this isolated community opposing plans by Forestry England to bring out at least 260,000 tonnes of timber from Uswayford Forest via seven miles of narrow single-track road down the Upper Coquet valley to the village of Alwinton.

“There are so many blind bends on this road when you just can’t see what’s coming,” Mrs Wood says.

“Just think of the school minibuses meeting those wagons, in the winter when it’s icy and snowy.

image

Planted in the 1970s on land which was cheap because it was so far off the beaten track, getting the timber out of Uswayford was never going to be easy.

Forestry England will need to upgrade about 10 miles (18km) of forest tracks and build new bridges.

But the cost of widening and strengthening the U4023 road through the valley, with new passing places constructed, would be the responsibility of the indebted Northumberland County Council and was estimated in 2015 to be at least £2m.

imageSimon Taylor stands unsmilingly on the edge of a small rural village made up of rows of cottages on each side of a narrow road. He is wearing a brown jacket and checked shirt and is in his 60s with grey hair and glasses.

Chair of Alwinton Parish Council Simon Taylor believes the cost today would be “more like four or five million”.

He fears without that investment the road will collapse into the River Coquet under the weight of the lorries.

He is also worried about the long-term effect on tourism.

“So many people come to our beautiful valley in their campervans and motorhomes.

“Imagine them meeting a timber truck and trying to reverse.

“We honestly fear someone will get badly hurt, or worse.”

imageIan Glendinning A red squirrel sits on a rock stretched out with his paws on one rock, his rear legs on a second and his tail on a third. His tufty ears are blowing in the windIan Glendinning

It is not just the impact on people that is causing concern.

This is one of the few places in England where our native red squirrels are just about holding on, largely thanks to a small group of pensioners who make up the Coquetdale Squirrel Group and trap and kill the encroaching greys.

Chair Ian Glendinning says “in an ideal world” Uswayford, a designated red squirrel reserve, would be left unfelled.

“At the very least, I’d like to see some of it set aside for the red squirrels,” he says.

Forestry England points out the work will be carried out over 10 years and red squirrels could move to the adjacent Kidland Forest.

imageTom Coates is wearing hi-vis clothing and a hard hat and is standing at the edge of a timber yard. He is in his 30s, with a stubbly beard and is smiling broadly. Behind him a lorry is unloading timber onto a conveyor belt. It sits next to a yellow tractor and there is a stack of cut timber.

Given the cost to the public purse of getting the timber out of Uswayford, and the environmental objections, why not just leave it where it is?

James Jones and Sons, which is investing £70m in a new sawmill near Durham, is one of a number of companies counting on it.

Supply manager Tom Coates says Uswayford “underpins that investment”.

“When we build in a new mill we look at the production forecast and where wood is going to be produced and it was among those forests.”

The UK currently imports about 80% of its timber, something Mr Coates says makes him feel “a little bit ashamed”.

imageOutdoorlads Golden moorland with purple shrubs in the foreground give way to a denser concentration of trees with some conifers. Behind them the mountains of the Lake District rise steeply.Outdoorlads

John Bruce, the England manager for the Confederation of Forest Industries (Confor) which represents the timber industry, accepts Uswayford’s location is “far from ideal”.

He was involved in the felling of another remote site, Hardknott in the Lake District, which is now being restored to native woodlands with the gradual “removal of commercial areas”.

“The problem is we are losing conifer forest,” he says.

“We haven’t put the conifers back and the nation needs timber.”

imageA single track road runs alongside a brook with a steep bank to one side and hills in the distance. At the bottom of the picture there is a black spaniel sitting on the road.

Woodland covers 14% of the land area of the UK , whereas across European Union countries the average is 39%.

A spokesperson for the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs said tree planting was at its “highest rate for 20 years”, but acknowledged there is “much more to do”.

Uswayford is already past what Forestry England considers its optimum felling period, with some of the timber decaying on the ground following storm damage.

But, for now at least, that wood is going nowhere, as the County Council “undertakes further investigation works to confirm the improvements needed”.

It has left the community unsure of what will be coming down the valley and when.

“They’ve known about this for years,” says Simon Taylor.

“I just think much more thought could have been given to a safe way of getting that timber out, but instead they’ve chosen a route which will impact so many people.”

imageUswayford Forest stretches into the distance, carpeting the side of rolling hills with a grey cloudy sky above. Rolling hills stretch out into the distance with not a hint of human activity in sight.

In a statement, Forestry England said delays to the work – which would provide “rural employment” – were already having “negative environmental impacts”.

“The improvements needed to the U4023 will leave a legacy of better infrastructure for the local community,” it said.

“Timber harvesting and transport will allow us to restructure Uswayford, increasing biodiversity by creating open habitats, restoring peatlands and planting of a wider mix of tree species.”

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Swinney apologises to injured footballer over ambulance wait

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imageCharlene Paterson

First Minister John Swinney has apologised to a young footballer who had to wait five hours for an ambulance after breaking her leg.

Brooke Paterson, 19, was injured while playing for Linlithgow Rose away at Cumbernauld United in North Lanarkshire on Sunday.

The central midfielder from Bo’ness, near Falkirk, has since undergone surgery in Forth Valley Hospital.

Speaking in parliament, Swinney apologised to Ms Paterson and expressed his “regret” at the situation.

The Scottish Ambulance Service (SAS) has also apologised for any distress caused by the delay in getting to the match, which it said was due to high demand and hospital turnaround times.

After the case was raised by Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar at First Minister’s Questions, Swinney said that it appeared the ambulance call had been misclassified, meaning it did not have “the priority it should have had”.

“That is not acceptable,” he said.

“That is an error that has been made and we have to look into whether that is the case and whether there are other steps that need to be taken to remedy that.”

Sarwar accused Swinney of having “broken the system” and said families across the country were suffering as a result of waits for accident and emergency treatment.

imageCharlene Paterson A girl with long brown hair smiles at the camera. She stands in front of a wire fence with grass behind it and she appears to be wearing a football stripCharlene Paterson

Ms Paterson said she ran to get the ball at the same time as a United player during the Lowland League match.

“She went for a slide tackle and I got the bad end of it,” she told BBC Scotland’s Drivetime programme.

“It just snapped straight away. I heard the snap and knew something bad happened.

“I just remember being in total agony and screaming and crying. I couldn’t focus – people were trying to talk to me and I couldn’t hear anybody. I was in a lot of pain.”

Teammates and onlookers at Guy’s Meadow Stadium rushed to her aid and several phoned for an ambulance after realising the seriousness of her injury.

“The ambulance said that it wasn’t a 999 emergency and I had to wait,” she said.

“The hours kept adding on and adding on, and I was getting more and more upset and frustrated. I was cold as well because I was lying on the ground.”

People covered her in jackets to keep her warm and comfortable as it got dark.

“I was more annoyed at the fact that they let me lie there on the wet grass, completely freezing with a bad injury,” she added.

“They took their time to come and get me. I just couldn’t believe they could do that to anyone.”

imageCharlene Paterson Two people kneel around a woman covered in a pile of jackets lying on the grass of a football pitch. It appears to be the eveningCharlene Paterson

When asked if the apology from the SAS was enough, she said: “I don’t know.

“I don’t know that they won’t do that to someone else and it’s obviously happened before. An apology isn’t enough to fix these problems.”

It is not known when Brooke will leave the hospital, as she is still struggling with the pain as well as putting weight on the injured leg.

“I’m just really, really sore and tired all the time,” she said.

The footballer said she had suffered bad injuries before, adding: “I know I can come back from something like this, but I know it’s going to take a while.

“I just need to remember why I play football in the first place and that will keep me going. It’ll get hard at points but I can’t give up. I’ve came too far to give up on football now.

“When I’m playing football, all my worries go out the door. I don’t have any problems when I’m playing football. It’s always brought me joy no matter what.”

Ambulance apology

A SAS spokesperson said: “We would like to sincerely apologise to Ms Paterson for the delay in the ambulance response and for any distress caused.

“We can confirm that we received a number of calls on 21 September to attend this incident but due to high demand and hospital turnaround times which ranged between 90 minutes to three hours in the area, this significantly delayed our response and we unfortunately could not attend immediately.

“When a time is appropriate, we would ask Ms Paterson or her family to contact our patient experience team directly so we can look into this case further and personally discuss our response. We hope Ms Paterson is recovering well.”

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Cork boy to meet Obama again during ex-president’s visit

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A 14-year-old boy from Cork, who was taken from a crowd and cuddled by Barack Obama in Co Offaly in 2011, has been invited to meet the former US president during his visit to Ireland this week.

Jamie Nolan was five weeks old when he was handed to Mr Obama in Moneygall, his ancestral home.

He was later christened James John Barack Nolan after the encounter.

Jamie will travel to Dublin tomorrow to meet Mr Obama ahead of an event in 3Arena where the former US president will be interviewed in front of a live audience by The Irish Times columnist Fintan O’Toole.

The teenager, who recently won the Fleadh Ceoil, says there are some nerves around meeting Mr Obama, describing it as a second in a lifetime opportunity in his case.

He says he is particularly looking forward to seeing the former US president’s face when he tells him about his middle name.

Jamie‘s parents, Brian and Caroline, will also meet Mr Obama tomorrow.

They say they are hoping to present him with a pen made by Jamie’s grandmother from bog oak from just outside Moneygall.

They say they are delighted that their son will have memories of meeting Mr Obama because he was too young to remember their first encounter.

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Second man dies after Downpatrick crash

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A second man has died following a two-vehicle crash in County Down last Monday.

Caoimhin Teggart was involved a collision between a silver VW Bora and a grey Toyota Avensis on the Ballydugan Road in Downpatrick on 15 September.

The 28 year old, from the Kilkeel area, died from his injuries in hospital on Monday night.

Ryan Cunningham, 21, also died from his injuries in hospital, the day after the crash.

Two women, who were in the Toyota car, also required hospital treatment.

Police say their investigation is ongoing.

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