
The Southern Shropshire
LEADER programme’s next funding round opens on Wednesday 4th January
2017 and closes on Monday 8th February 2016 (future funding rounds
will open later in the year).
The
Southern Shropshire LEADER Local Action Group has approved 10 projects with a
total grant allocation to date of £305,250.
The 10 projects, of which 8 are now contracted, are forecast to create 13.8
new jobs, this equates to £22,611.67 of LEADER intervention per full time equivent
post.
The
first LEADER grant intervention supported a business involved in the creation
of locally sourced wood chips.
This
project is concerned with the investment of a mobile wood chipping machine. The
applicant will travel around farms chipping wood for livestock bedding and
biomass boilers. The applicant aims to supply farmers with an affordable and
sustainable wood chip solution, whilst diversifying and expanding his own
small, family-run business in a sustainable way so the business is less reliant
on income from traditional agriculture.
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The LEADER Local
Development Strategy seeks to implement the six national LEADER priorities:
- Increasing farm productivity in ways which
enhance natural capital;
- Developing sustainable micro and small
enterprises and farm diversification;
- Building rural tourism making the most of
Shropshire’s assets;
- Improving rural services to support business
growth and development;
- Enhancing the natural, cultural and heritage
attractions of the area;
- Increasing woodland and forest productivity in
ways which enhance natural capital.
Businesses, groups or
organisations wishing to apply for funding will need to demonstrate a benefit
to the local rural economy and a connection to the landscape which should
contribute to the creation of jobs or the development of businesses in the
Southern Shropshire LEADER rural area.
The amount of grant
available is dependent on the outputs of the project but a typical maximum
grant will be between £35,000 and £40,000 (larger grants will be considered
where significant outputs can are forecasted).
The next round of funding opens on Wednesday 4th
January 2017. Outline applications (OA) will need to be
submitted by Wednesday 8th February 2017. If your OA is deemed
to be eligible and meets the local priorities of the Southern Shropshire LEADER
Programme, you will be invited to the Full Application (FA) stage. Please
contact the LEADER Programme Manager to ascertain if the idea is suitable to
make an application for LEADER funding. If the project is seen to meet
the LEADER requirements, you'll be sent an Outline Application form to complete
and return.
To
find out more about the Southern Shropshire LEADER programme or to discuss a
potential project idea, please contact the LEADER Programme Manager at Shropshire
Council on 01743 254796 or email. Further details about the Southern Shropshire
LEADER programme can be found at this link.
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Earlier in the year the Outdoor Partnerships Service was
approached by the Meres and Mosses Landscape Partnership Scheme to deliver some training to include Rights of Way Law and Practice; installation
of access furniture and a brushcutter course.
On November 30th 2016 the first two of these sessions was
delivered at Whixall Social Centre and the surrounding footpath network. Shona Butter, Head of Mapping and
Enforcement, gave two talks on the relative roles and responsibilities of the Local
Authority and Landowners in maintaining Rights of Way. Paul Butter and David Hardwick also held two
sessions on installing kissing gates giving a hands-on experience for the
attendees. The day was a great success
with 56 participants attending over the day and feedback from the event has
been very positive. The final part of
these training session will be held before March when a brushcutter course will
be offered to those who attended on the day. We would like to thank the Meres and Mosses
LPS for funding the training.
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Things are slowly happening along the Shropshire section of
Offa’s Dyke Path National Trail this year as we have managed to change most of
the ordinary latches for “easy latches” on the wooden kissing gate along quite
a bit of the trail, especially at Middle Knuck as part of an ongoing effort to
help walkers travel the path as easily as possible. Several sections of stone
filled steps in the south of the County have been repaired as the original
timbers had rotted away. Further step
repair work is planned in the Weston Rhyn area where a section of steps and
handrails have again deteriorated.
The main project undertaken to date this year has been the
drainage and surfacing work on part of the Trail between Springhill and Lower
Spoad, near Newcastle on Clun, where a spring which flows across the route all
year round causes the surface to become rather muddy with walkers have been
diverting around for many years.
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The Scheduled Monument Consents required from Historic
England have just come through so we can now get on with the practical work
within the monument area, mainly changing stiles for either kissing gates or
wicket gates as part of the National Trail’s “least resistance policy”. Most of this work will be carried out in the
Mardu area with another batch of gates at Brompton Hall, other stile to gate
work is planned at Trefonen which has just been agreed.
The next couple of months are going to be rather busy, so we
are hoping for some fine weather over the winter months to get all the planned
work done in time for the final claim cut off at the end of February, so watch
this space to see how we get on! For more information about the Offa's Dyke Path in Shropshire please email Andy Lipa or call on 01743 791984

The decline in bees
and other pollinators is one of the most worrying problems facing humanity.
These insects play a vital role in pollinating crops that we depend on for food
production. Staff and volunteers at Shropshire Council are leading the way in
creating habitat to allow these important insects to thrive. Their efforts have
now been recognised in a national award scheme that celebrates the National
Pollinator Strategy.
Shropshire Council has been given the Bees Needs Champions
Award for creating over 5 hectares of pollen-rich hay meadows at Severn Valley
Country Park in Alveley and Highley. The Minister for Rural Affairs and
Biosecurity, Lord Gardiner, presented the award to the local authority at a
high-profile event at Kew Gardens in London on Tuesday 8th November.
Speaking ahead of the Bees’ Needs Champions Awards, Lord Gardiner
said:
“Pollinators are essential for food production and the
environment. The Bees’ Needs champions show us how to keep our pollinators
happy and healthy all year round, and their efforts are an inspiration for us
all. They show that whether you have access to acres of land or just a window
box, everyone can play a part in helping these vital insects thrive.”
Areas of coal spoil at Severn Valley Country Park have been
transformed into species-rich hay meadows covered in native wildflowers. These
provide a bumper nectar-source for pollinators. Volunteers have also installed
bee hives and trained as bee-keepers, producing local honey. They have also put
up nestboxes for solitary bees such as red-mason bees.
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This autumn Outdoor Partnerships piloted a project called
‘Healthy Outdoors for Schools’, working with schools across the county. The project aims to help schools to increase
children’s activity levels, focuses on regular walking as it is an excellent way
for all children, especially the least active to improve their physical
fitness, stamina, self-confidence and well-being.
Planning for the project started earlier this year, details
were sent out to the schools and twelve primary schools expressed an interest in
participating. Three schools were
selected to take part in the initial pilot and we aim to roll the project out
to other schools during next year.
We are tailoring our provision for each individual school
depending on their location, grounds, needs and wishes. For example it may
include supporting the school to start and develop the ‘Daily Mile’, providing
walks leaders training for parents/teachers/teaching assistants to develop
after school or lunchtime walking clubs, a tool-kit of ideas and links to
useful resources for themed walks or developing a reward scheme for the schools
to adopt.
We are currently working with two schools, St. George’s in
Clun and St. Leonard’s in Bridgnorth, with a third shortly joining the pilot. The support provided has included helping to
set up the Daily Mile initiative in their schools, recceing and risk assessing
school grounds and community routes, and also promoting local facilities (parks,
sites, nature reserves and ROW) to encourage families to go on walks
outside school hours.
Both schools started the Daily Mile as a whole school
approach back in September and now approximately 364 pupils are now walking or
running a mile a day within the school day with the initiative now fully
embedded into the school day. A
full evaluation is yet to be completed with the staff following the initial
stage of the project but we have received positive feedback from the
staff involved with comments including:
"They really love
doing it…all join in and those who cannot run walk,
they do it every day”.
“It’s great as
refocuses them and they are ready to learn”
“Some of the children in my class feel sense
of achievement, they feel very proud. Those who have built up to running the
mile and doing the 12 laps without stopping”
A bid for Big Lottery funding has be submitted which
includes the Healthy Outdoors for Schools project and if successful it will
enable us to expand the scheme and develop the project further. For more information on please email Helen d’Albert
or call on 01743 255059.
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And finally.....Everyone here at Shropshire Outdoor Partnerships would like to wish all our Service Newsletter subscribers a very Merry Christmas, thank you for showing an interest in what we do.
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