News

Reading New Pedestrian and Cycle Bridge Exhibition

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A public exhibition outlining progress being made on Reading’s new pedestrian and cycle bridge is being hosted in Caversham in May, as Reading Borough Council works towards starting construction of the landmark structure in the Autumn.

The exhibition in Caversham Library will be held over two separate days, on Friday May 9th between 1pm and 5pm, and on Tuesday May 13th, between 3pm and 7pm. Residents will be able to drop in where officers will be on hand to talk them through the latest developments on the new bridge over the Thames.

The structure – located to the east of Fry’s Island, between the existing Caversham and Reading Bridges – will provide a key new route for pedestrians and cyclists from Caversham into the town centre and to and from Reading Station. On the northern side it will link to the existing paths running through Christchurch Meadows. To the south it will link to an improved riverside foot and cycle path and connect via Norman Place onto Vastern Road.

When complete, the bridge structure will be approximately 120m long, with a 68m span over the River Thames. The single supporting mast – on the north bank of the River Thames – will be 39m high.

Construction of the bridge will require heavy machinery and building materials being transported onto a temporary construction compound on the far eastern boundary of Christchurch Meadows whilst building works take place. An application for a temporary construction access will be considered by a meeting of the Council’s Planning Applications Committee in June. The public exhibitions on May 9 and 13 are an opportunity for residents to discuss any concerns and ask any questions about the construction phase of the project.

April 30, 2014 |

Reading residents need to register to vote by 6 May

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In most wards there are two separate elections being held on Thursday 22 May – the European Parliamentary Elections and local Borough Elections. In Park Ward voters will have three ballot papers as there is also a by-election. In Mapledurham ward there is no council election.

A full list of the parties and candidates will be published on Thursday 24 April and full details will go up on notices in the Civic Centre and on the council’s website – www.reading.gov.uk

Residents are reminded they need to be registered to vote to have their say in the poll. Electoral registration forms were sent to every household across the Borough from October 2013 until February 2014. People can phone 0118 937 3717 to check whether they are registered to vote.

The deadline for registering for a postal vote is 17.00 on Wednesday 7th May. You have to be registered in order to have a postal vote.

Residents not yet on the Electoral Register need to ring 0118 937 3717 or email [email protected] as soon as possible to request a registration form or postal voting application form. Forms can also be downloaded from http://www.reading.gov.uk/council/elections-and-voting/RegistertoVote.

Registration forms need to be completed and returned to the Council’s Elections team by Tuesday 6th May 2014 at the latest.

April 20, 2014 |

Grants awarded for Reading ‘green’ travel projects

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A total of eleven organisations across Reading have successfully secured grants from the Council’s Sustainable Travel Challenge Fund for this year.
Successful groups will deliver a range of initiatives from campaigns that encourage walking and cycling, to the introduction of loyalty schemes for people who use sustainable travel around town.

It is the second time Reading Borough Council has offered groups across Reading the opportunity to bid for cash as part of its Local Sustainable Transport Fund (LSTF). Last year it was Caversham’s ‘Beat the Street’ which grabbed the headlines as part of the first round of grants.

Successful charities, businesses and voluntary groups were those who scored well on LSTF objectives. They are:

• Launchpad proposes to help those with either a history of homelessness or at risk of homelessness to start a new way of life by providing in house cycling training along with a second hand bicycle, plus the opportunity to join a cycling club and take further training.

• St Martins Catholic Primary School aims to achieve a permanent change in attitudes so that walking or park and stride become the preferred journey to school. It promotes walking to school through mapping and way markers for pedestrian routes to the school.

• Grace Church, Caversham plans to install a cycle shelter to encourage the hundreds of people using the building each week to cycle rather than take the car on what is often a local journey within Caversham.

• Reading Bicycle Kitchen offers a ‘fix it yourself’ bicycle maintenance project where cyclists can hire a work stand and get hold of tools and advice as needed.

• Reward Your World will build on the success of last year’s Challenge Fund project where it developed a smart phone app to promote and encourage sustainable travel in Reading. This second phase will incorporate new features into the app including gameplay techniques for individuals to publish their travel activities, sharing information on traffic issues and incidents, extending the loyalty scheme for Park and Ride and car sharing, and enabling people to access to the app via their preferred social media.

• University of Reading will develop and pilot an urban design audit to better understand the quality of cycle journeys in Reading. It will aim to produce a design guide to show how to create places that enhance and encourage cycling.

• University of Reading Students’ Union plans a new cycle shed and shelter as a work base to enlarge their current project, Unicycle, which collects abandoned bicycles from around the campus and, using volunteers, repairs them to loan out to students.

• Readibus will run a scheme, ‘The Virtual Readibus’, that researches through case studies the feasibility of some people with restricted mobility making journeys by mainstream public transport with the help of a Readibus guide.

• CTC plans to set up new adult cycle clubs and to forge links between existing youth cycle clubs and other groups to reach and engage the wider community into cycling. The proposal includes particular consideration for minority groups.

• MPIE Ltd proposes a high quality freight journey planning solution across the Reading Borough, aiming to reduce congestion and free up road space for bicycles and public transport and reduce HGV traffic in sensitive areas such as residential areas and schools. By its nature this project will help reduce carbon emissions.

• Reading Voluntary Action Group aims to promote its building as an active travel hub, including providing shower facilities to people using the building and working nearby. The group will also help to overcome other key barriers to active travel, including safety and lack of fitness, by running fitness courses targeted at those who do not normally exercise regularly.

April 17, 2014 |

Reading Children’s Commissioning Team Wins Awards

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The Council team picked up the Commissioning Award for the second year in a row and the Pearson Outstanding Achievement Award at the 2013/2014 Shine a Light Awards. The awards recognised the work the team had done to cut the number of children being identified as at risk of speech and language delay by nearly 50% in the academic year spanning September 2012 to July 2013.

Judges were impressed by the joint working between Speech and Language Therapists (SLT), Health Services, including health visitors, Children’s Centres and Early Year’s childcare settings to improve the identification of communication delays in children

The team developed a Communication Pack for parents and professionals, distributing it to all 13 Children’s Centres and 35 Early Year’s settings across the borough. This helps people to implement strategies themselves without the need for specialist support, making services more sustainable for the authority in the current economic climate.

As a result of the support the team offers Children’s Centres and Early Year’s settings, several have received inspection results praising their focus on communication development, (including those from Ofsted.) The introduction of Young Commissioners helped the service broaden its reach via the internet to increase parental understanding of Speech, Language and Communication Needs (SLCN), and via offering dedicated sessions to young parent groups.

The Awards, held in London on Thursday 3rd April and hosted by Broadcaster and Health Campaigner, Anne Diamond, are run by Pearson Assessment in partnership with The Communication Trust to honour individuals, teams, campaigns, communication friendly settings and communities that have excelled in their support of children and young people’s communication.

For the full list of Shine a Light winners and highly commended finalists, visit http://www.shinealightawards.co.uk

April 11, 2014 |

Reading Council Welcome Crossrail Extension

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Reading Borough Council has welcomed news that Crossrail will extend to Reading. It follows repeated calls by the Council to make Reading the final calling point of the vital new rail link, rather than Maidenhead.

These included:
• Providing much-needed additional rail capacity to Reading and the wider Thames Valley, meaning fewer delays and less overcrowding for passengers
• Acknowledging Reading as a key, major employment centre and destination in the South East
• Making best use of the new Reading Station redevelopment, which brings with it new platforms, increased capacity and provision for a future Crossrail link

April 7, 2014 |