Friday, April 19, 2024
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Developers support New Farnley Cricket Club

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Owzat: John Baldwin (New Farnley Cricket Club), Mark Holt (New Farnley Cricket Club), Jane Adams (Stonebridge Beck New Homes Advisor), and Georgina Maud (Rushbond Plc)

Owzat! Developers behind the new Stonebridge Beck residential development in Wortley have agreed a major sponsorship deal with a West Leeds sports club. 

Rushbond Plc and Advent Developments have teamed up with New Farnley Cricket Club for the 2023 cricket season, as part of their joint community support programme.  

Georgina Maud, speaking on behalf of the developers, said: “The club is located very close to Stonebridge Beck and I am sure it will prove a popular social destination for residents. Not only do they run a number of cricket teams for both adults and juniors, they also have a lovely club house which is open during the week, serving delicious food.”

John Baldwin, Chairman of New Farnley Cricket Club, commented: “I cannot thank Georgina and her colleagues enough for their most generous support.  Hopefully the residents will take advantage of all the club has to offer which includes a fully equipped gym.    

“As someone who has spent a lifetime in the building industry I have watched the work being carried at Stonebridge Beck with interest. I have to say the whole scheme looks absolutely superb.”

On completion Stonebridge Beck will consist of 112 properties within a unique mill village location offering a choice of mill townhouses, cottages and new build homes. Prices start from £265,000.

The scheme is located on the former Stonebridge Mills site off Stonebridge Lane, next to the ring road.

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Paul Abraham: Windowsill gardening lifts your mood

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Herbs. Photo: Paul Abraham

By Paul Abraham of www.headingonwards.com

The most important thing to remember is that by cultivating even the smallest inside windowsill, will lift your mood and add lovely scents and lots of greenery to your home.  

So, if you’re looking for a new hobby that will help calm your mind and lift your spirits, give windowsill gardening a go: you’ll soon see, and feel, a real difference.

The other great thing about windowsill gardening is that it costs very little to get started.  A used butter tub makes an ideal growing container.  

Packets of seeds can be bought in supermarkets for £1 / £1-50 per packet, some even do special offers of three packets for the price of two, a gardening bargain!

If you have a friend or friends who intend to start windowsill gardening then why not share packets of seeds and compost with them to cut costs further. 

You could even create your own little gardening club with neighbours or friends. Each person could put a £1 a week in to a “gardening” fund, just three people would generate £12 by the end of the month which enables you to buy compost/pots in bigger packs to save each of you some money.

So after choosing your windowsill, preferably one which gets plenty of sun, decide what you want to grow. Six super and easy to grow herbs are;

Sweet Basil: Basil brings a taste of the Mediterranean to your food! This popular annual herb is fast-growing so will last just one season. Young foliage can be picked as required, avoiding whole stems as this weakens the plant.

Chives: This onion flavoured herb is an easy to grow perennial herb – great for salads! They can be harvested from spring to autumn and will then die down over winter. Shoots will emerge again the following spring.

Rosemary: This woody-stemmed evergreen herb produces tasty leaves that can be harvested year after year. Rosemary can be added to soups, stews and casseroles; whole sprigs can be roasted with root vegetables or sprinkled over Italian breads such as focaccia to add flavour.

Parsley:  Parsley is a biennial herb with a two-year life cycle. It is a hungry plant so ensure it is kept well fed and watered. Of the two varieties available, the curly-leaved parsley is commonly used as a garnish or in parsley sauce. Flat-leaved parsley has a stronger taste as is used more widely in Mediterranean recipes.

Thyme: This small leaved evergreen herb will form mounds of edible foliage all year round but it is best to ‘rest’ the plant in winter when it isn’t actively growing. There are many varieties of thyme available with different aromas and uses ranging from soups, sauces and adding to fish and meat dishes.

Lemon Balm: This herb is used in traditional medicine as both a sleep aid and digestive tonic. It can be consumed as a tea, taken as a supplement or extract, or applied to the skin in balms and lotion. Lemon balm essential oil is also popular in aromatherapy, where it is believed to promote calmness and ease stress.

If you decide to use butter tubs to grow your seeds in, then make some drainage holes in the bottom of the tub and place on a saucer or something similar to avoid marking and wetting you sill.  

Seed packets now give really clear instructions on how to sow your seeds and watering advice. One thing to always remember is not to fill your tub or pot full to the top, always leave a few centre meters from compost to the top to make watering your plants a lot easier.  

To speed seed germination, a great little tip is to place the tub/pot in a clear plastic bag which increases the humidity and encourages your seeds to wake up and get growing.  Inside a plastic bag, your seeds will be able to survive as plantsprovide all the “air” they need for their own survival. 

Once your plants are growing and you decide to use some of your fresh herbs then remember to never trim more than 1/3 of the plants foliage. Pruning more than that can stress the plant.

If your herbs are flourishing and you want to preserve some for future use then it is really easy.  All you need is an ice cube tray:

  • Always choose the freshest and healthiest looking shoots and wash well before chopping.
  • If you want to freeze whole leaves place them in the freezer on a baking tray and then put into bags once they have frozen individually
  • You can replace fresh herbs in recipes with the same amount of frozen herbs.

So there you have the basics of windowsill gardening, hopefully it will inspire you to give it a try and have fun and remember, talking to then helps them grow due to the carbon dioxide we exhale as we speak and if it’s good enough for King Charles to do then it’s good enough for us! Happy gardening.

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Comment: Farsley Celtic’s heroes perform footballing miracle by staying up – again

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Farsley Celtic players celebrate Chris Atkinson's goal against Gloucester earlier this month. Photo: John McEvoy

By John Baron

Farsley Celtic boss Russ Wilcox must surely be a contender for National League North manager of the season after guiding his team to safety for the second year running.

Of course, the footballing gods on high will look to towards the top of the table instead of the bottom, but let’s be clear – in reality what Wilcox, his staff and players have achieved for the second season running is nothing short of a footballing miracle.

To use a cliche, it’s been a rollercoaster of a season – both on and off the pitch – but be in no doubt that Farsley Celtic are punching above their weight in the National League North.

As Farsley fans are fond of saying: “We’re just a small village in Leeds.”

The club’s squad is so small that they haven’t been able to fill the bench for a number of occasions this season. The semi-professional club’s average attendance is a little over 450 and is one of the smallest in the league. It’s no surprise the club’s budget – in a league increasingly dominated by much bigger full-time or hybrid clubs – is stretched.

Applause: Russ Wilcox and experienced defender Adam Clayton. Photo: John McEvoy

The ground is also desperately in need of investment.

The club is powered by a dedicated and awe-inspiring band of volunteers who love and give countless hours to the club. What they help achieve on a weekly basis is a testament to their loyalty and hard work.

It’s against this David versus Goliath backdrop that Wilcox and his players have achieved what, at times this season, looked impossible. The club couldn’t have had a better group of players and management team.

They got off to a slow start, with only one win in the first ten league games (travelling fans will recall the trip home after a sunny August opening day 4-0 defeat at Leamington and the overwhelming feeling of doom for the season ahead).

Curiously, the Celts have also beaten most of the top seven sides but somehow not managed to beat many of the bottom seven teams. The team seemed to pull together at the start of the year and began turning promising performances into points. Arguably it shouldn’t have gone to the last day to secure safety.

Farsley Celtic fans gave vocal backing to their side at Gateshead. Photo: Megan Fleming

The Celts also had a great FA Trophy run that ended only on the lottery of a penalty shootout in the quarter finals at Gateshead – a match they should have won inside the 90 minutes.

Keeping the team together over the summer will prove an obvious challenge for Wilcox and co on a limited budget. Andy Butler may have turned 40, but he’s been a rock in the heart of the defence alongside Tom Allan. Bobby Johnson was a major loss in midfield through injury and up front talisman Frank Mulhern has stepped in to lead the goal-scoring threat, alongside inspired loanee Theo Williams.

It would be remiss not to mention the outstanding successes of Farsley Celtic’s Deaf Team, who have won cups and are set for a summer Champions’ League appearance. The impressive women’s side have also won their league and have another final to look forward to. All in a season which saw Farsley pay an emotional farewell to former owner John Palmer, whose family did so much to support the club, on and off the field.

Dated: The Citadel is the home of National League North club Farsley Celtic. Photo: Farsley Celtic

But it’s off the pitch which have caused fans the most concern this season.

There have been difficult times where players haven’t been paid on time and cash-flow has been an issue, leading to owner Paul Barthorpe issuing an unprecedented ‘we’re not going bust’ statement over what he called ‘gossip’ over the club’s finances in January.

Whether it’s gossip or not, a number of appointments have since been made to strengthen the board, which is to be welcomed. Only time will tell whether the new appointments and restructure produces much-needed stability for the club.

Mr Barthorpe’s tenure as owner started in 2019 to appearances by fire eaters and stilt walkers at the first home game, as well as a club re-brand. Optimism cautiously seeped through the club at what appeared to be the start of a bright new era.

This was accompanied by talk of building a covered ‘next generation’ artificial pitch on the site of the current training pitch to help boost the club’s finances and provide a useful community facility. Former boss Adam Lakeland even claimed in 2019 there was ambitious talk of going full-time.

Four years on and nothing tangible has materialised.

While the team on the pitch may – by the skin of their teeth – be National League North standard, the set-up off it is still playing catch up. It’s going to be a big few months for the owner if he is to stop the increasing ‘Barthorpe out’ chants of the Farsley faithful.

All eyes are now on you, Mr Barthorpe…

Farsley Celtic boss Wilcox: “Over 46 games we deserve to stay up”

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Relieved: Farsley Celtic boss Russ Wilcox. Photo: Simon Cullingworth

Farsley Celtic boss Russ Wilcox hailed his players’ commitment, endeavour and togetherness as they avoided relegation from National League North on a final day of high drama.

Spennymoor Town beat The Celts 2-1, but Kettering’s 3-0 defeat at Kidderminster saw the team from West Leeds avoid relegation to the Northern Premier League by just one point.

Wilcox thanked the supporters’ for believing in his side during a season of ‘highs and lows’ and added: “It would have killed us if we’d have gone down on 50 points. The main thing is we got over the line.

“Last year on 87 minutes we were down, this year was a little easier when Kidderminster went 3-0 up against Kettering.”

Here’s his post-match interview in full:

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The great escape: Farsley Celtic avoid relegation despite Spennymoor defeat

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Farsley Celtic players await the result of the Kidderminster v Kettering game after the final whistle. Photo: John Baron

By John Baron

Farsley Celtic avoided relegation by the skin of their teeth for the second season running, despite a 2-1 defeat at play-off chasing Spennymoor Town yesterday.

A 3-0 defeat for Kettering Town at Kidderminster Harriers meant The Celts avoided relegation to the Northern Premier League by just one point, sparking wild celebrations from the travelling Celt Army at the final whistle.

The final day saw any one of Farsley, Bradford Park Avenue, Kettering and Blyth facing the drop, with Bradford and Kettering ultimately going down amid a day of high drama at the top and bottom of the league. The match also saw Spennymoor miss out on the play-offs, despite a fourth straight win.

Spennymoor were by far the better side for the first hour, and were only denied more goals by an outstanding display by Farsley keeper Max Dearnley.

Strikes from Glen Taylor and Mark Anderson had put the dominant home side in the driving seat, only for Sheffield United loanee Theo Williams to cut the deficit with a clinical finish when played through by Frank Mulhern with 20 minutes remaining.

Farsley slipped to a 2-1 defeat at Spennymnoor town yesterday – but avoided relegation. Photo: John Baron

Farsley – cheered on by 90 or so vociferous fans – then saw a powerful Andy Butler header denied by a brilliant save by Harry Flatters in the Spennymoor goal as the Celts poured forward for an equaliser.

News of Kidderminster’s second-half demolition of Kettering brought loud cheers from Farsley fans and chants of ‘we are staying up’ as the Celts avoided relegation by the narrowest of margins for the second successive season.

Farsley fans gave their players and manager a heroes’ reception after the match following a dramatic end to a rollercoaster season.

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Farsley Celtic pay tribute to club stalwarts Dave Syers and Caroline Harriman

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Dave Syers on the attack for Farsley Celtic against Blyth Spartans. Photo: John McEvoy

By John Baron

Farsley Celtic have paid tribute to two club stalwarts who are stepping back from the club after many years’ service.

Farsley Celtic skipper David Syers played his last match before retirement in the club’s 2-1 defeat at Spennymoor Town yesterday, with players forming a guard of honour as the club legend left the field for the final time.

And dedicated volunteer Caroline Harriman – who has been Head of Football Administration at Farsley since 2019 and had occupied a number of roles since 2015 – has also stepped down.

Farsley Celtic Supporters’ Club chief John Stubbs presented an emotional Caroline with flowers to thank her for her work before boarding the coach for yesterday’s match.

Farsley’s Dave Syers stretches for the ball against Gloucester. Photo: John McEvoy

Dave Syers is without doubt a Farsley legend, first playing for the original Celtic club in 2009/10, before re-joining in 2018.

It was his performances in the National League North for the Celts during that season that undoubtedly caught the eyes of club’s higher up the pyramid, and he would join Bradford City in the summer of 2010.

Syers made the jump to full-time football with ease, scoring 10 goals in his first season at Valley Parade, whilst being named the Players’ Player of the Year at the conclusion of his first campaign at the club.

He would spend six seasons in the Football League with the Bantams, Doncaster Rovers, Scunthorpe United and Rochdale, before a return to non-league football with Guiseley and Darlington.

Club legend: Dave Syers. Photo: John McEvoy

It wasn’t just football in which Syers represented Farsley, as he also turned out for Farsley CC, helping them to the Priestley Cup Final in 2010, before his move to Bradford City brought an end to his cricket career.

The midfielder, who has also featured as a centre-half, centre-forward, and goalkeeper, has made over 500 career appearances, but it is the Celts with whom he was the longest affinity.

He has made 189 appearances across his two spells in West Leeds, 144 in his current stint, finding the back of the net on 41 occasions.

He has also stepped up off the pitch at the club towards the end of his playing days, leading the club as interim manager at Brackley Town last season, before becoming a player/coach under Russ Wilcox.

Syers has delivered some incredible moments in a Farsley shirt, but perhaps none more so than the 3-1 victory over AFC Telford United in 2009.

Dave Syers put Farsley Celtic 2-0 up against Spennymoor earlier this season, but the Celts were thwarted at the death. Photo: Simon CUllingworth

Goalkeeper Piotr Skiba had earlier been forced off through concussion, and with no substitute ‘keeper, it was Syers who stepped between the sticks; no stranger to donning the gloves as a wicket-keeper. And he would be the hero for the Celts, saving Damien Reeves’ penalty to help his side to a 3-1 victory.

But of course, Syers will be best remembered for his role in this current Farsley side.

Re-joining Farsley from Darlington in November 2018 he would have an immediate impact that season as he helped drive Adam Lakeland’s side onto the Northern Premier League title, and promotion to the National League North.

He would continue to be an integral part of the Farsley sides that adapted to the step-up, maintaining National League North status for five seasons.

Following the departure of Danny Ellis early on in the 2021/22 season, Syers was made Farsley captain, and he has continued to wear the armband since.

His retirement brings to an end a five-year stint at the Citadel, and ends an association with the club that stretches back 14 years.

A clubs spokesperson said: “Dave Syers is without doubt a Farsley legend, and has played an integral part across two generations of this football club.

“Everyone at the club would like to think him for his immense efforts when representing the club, and wish him all the best for the future.”

Caroline Harriman. Photo: Farsley Celtic FC

Caroline Harriman has been an integral part of the Farsley Celtic set up for a number of years, and was recognised as the Vanarama National League North October Volunteer of the Month last October.

Caroline says she ‘started off being a bossy parent helping in her son’s team’ but her volunteering started in earnest in 2015 in the role of Club Welfare Officer, and after working as Development Secretary and Assistant Club Secretary, she was promoted to Head of Football Administration in 2019.

She is the single point of contact for all football-associated matters across the club, including the first team, women’s team, academy teams and the club’s many junior teams.

As well as running matchday operations, Caroline is the single point of contact for all football associated matters across the club; this includes the first team, women’s team, academy teams and the many junior teams at the club.

It’s a large role but she told the club website in October: “Fortunately, there any many other volunteers at the club who support me, and we definitely work well as a team, and I can delegate some tasks.

“The majority of my time is spent dealing with first-team matters, such as player registrations/contracts, discipline, match arrangements and making sure we are compliant with the many FA and league rules.

“I also run the first team match day operations and am generally the organiser of football matters.”

Caroline’s love of the club also shines through. She added: “Farsley Celtic is absolutely in my heart, and I am very passionate about it. In fact, I am too passionate sometimes, I usually have a lot to say about all club matters!

“I have had to learn to concentrate on things within my control only and occasionally have to tell myself to “wind my neck in.”

Thankfully for both Caroline and Dave, the Celts managed to avoid relegation from National League North yesterday, despite a 2-1 defeat.

Former Farsley Celtic media manager Tom Ritchie. Photo: John McEvoy

Earlier this month Farsley Celtic’s media manager Thomas Ritchie left the club to take up a paid role in Edinburgh with Cricket Scotland.

Tom had volunteered with the club since he was 15-years-old, starting off by writing match reports. Tom also contributed match reports to West Leeds Dispatch, writing more than 200 articles on the club. We wish him well for the future.

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Farsley Celtic face final fight for survival in last game of season

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Farsley's Dave Syers stretches for the ball against Gloucester last April. Photo: John McEvoy

By Josh Makin

The 2022/23 season comes to a conclusion this Saturday as Farsley Celtic travel to Spennymoor looking to avoid the drop.

It’s a day of massive importance in the National League North as the Celts and other teams battling to stay in the league learn of their fate.

The Celts go into the final day with momentum behind them after a crucial 2-1 win against Gloucester City at the Citadel last Saturday which took them three points clear of the drop zone.

It was a seismic result following the disappointment of losing 2-0 to relegation rivals Blyth Spartans in the week leading up to the match, with the Celts needing just a single point from the Spennymoor match to guarantee their survival.

If Farsley are to lose at Spennymoor however, then they will be hoping Hereford and Kidderminster Harriers can do them a favour as they face Blyth and Kettering Town respectively.

Spennymoor head into the match in good form after taking nine points out of nine in the previous three matches which included wins over Banbury United, Southport and Kettering.

Spennymoor’s recent results mean they are still in with a shout when it comes to the race for the play-offs, sitting in 12th place but just two points off seventh-placed Buxton.

They will be looking for all three points to give them the best chance at sneaking into the top seven on the last day.

It will be an emotional day for everyone associated with Farsley Celtic, as we say thank you to Dave Syers who will play his last match for the Celts before hanging up his boots as Celt legend.

TEAM NEWS

Russ Wilcox has no fresh injury concerns ahead of Saturday’s match.

Isaac Assenso has a chance of being involved whilst the match comes too early for Luke Parkin and Bobby Johnson.

TICKETS

Tickets can be purchased on the gate or in advance by clicking here.

All of the important information for supporters can be found here.

Dilapidated 17th century barn could become new home

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The Grade II Listed Clock Barn on the Farnley Hall Estate.

Plans to transform a barn which dates back to the 17th century into a new five bedroomed home have been submitted by developers.

Appllicant Karl Shaw, of Morley, says the Grade II Listed Clock Barn, on the Farnley Hall Estate off Hall Lane, is in a ‘severely dilapidated state’, has been left to decay for 40 years. It is listed on the council’s heritage at risk register.

A heritage statement submitted with the application said the plans would preserve the future use of the bulking and maintain its existing features.

“Overall, the Clock Barn is perilously close to complete collapse, which the current owner is determined to prevent,” the statement adds.

The Clock Barn is situated within the curtilage of Farnley Hall, the Potting Sheds and the stables north of Farnley Hall.

The plans can be read in full here.

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West Leeds planning applications: 28 April 2023

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Each week we publish a list of the latest planning applications related to the six council wards in West Leeds.

The following new applications were published on the Leeds City Council website in the past seven days:

Armley Ward

Bramley & Stanningley Ward

  • None submitted.

Calverley & Farsley Ward

Farnley & Wortley Ward

Kirkstall Ward

Pudsey Ward


Decided applications

Here are the planning applications decided by Leeds City Council this week:

Armley Ward

  • None decided.

Bramley & Stanningley Ward

  • None decided.

Calverley & Farsley Ward

Farnley & Wortley Ward

Kirkstall Ward

Pudsey Ward

Burley man’s marathon challenge after transforming his life in memory of his grandmother

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Ashley Dee (right) with his brother and late grandmother, Anne Wilson.

A Burley man who transformed his life following the death of his much-loved grandmother is taking on the Rob Burrow Leeds Marathon to raise funds for the hospice that cared for her at the end of her life.

“From as far back as I can remember I have always spent a lot of time with my nana – I was always round at her house and she really looked after me,” says 30-year-old Ashley Dee.

“She was more like another parent to me than a grandparent. Growing up I took a few wrong turns in life, and I had an extremely unhealthy lifestyle which included heavy drinking and smoking 30-40 cigarettes a day.

“I know that she worried about what would happen to me – she’d ring me every night before I went to bed and every morning to check I was alright.”

In 2020 Ashley’s grandmother, Anne Wilson, started becoming unwell and after seeing her GP she was referred to the hospital for a scan, which revealed that she had brain cancer.

“The doctors gave her six months to live, and it felt like someone had torn a hole in my heart,” Ashley said. “During that time, alongside my family, the roles were reversed, and I had to care for her in the way she had always done for me – it was something I never thought I would have to do.”

In her final weeks, Anne received expert end-of-life care and support from Sue Ryder Wheatfields Hospice in Headingley.

“We were so grateful for the support of the hospice’s community team, who regularly visited her at home to provide care and phoned us daily to make sure we were all OK.

“There was one particular Sue Ryder Nurse, Sarah, who had also cared for my grandad six years previously, and I think it was comforting for my nana to see a familiar face. Because of the amazing care my grandad had received, she’d always said that if the time came, she wanted to be cared for by Sue Ryder too.

“She was admitted to the hospice for a couple of weeks for some specialist care, but it was always her wish to die at home and the Sue Ryder Nurses helped to make sure that could happen. She died on the 13 October, just a few days after coming home, in the same place as my grandad.”

After her death, Ashley struggled to cope with his grief.

“I was in a really bad place. My OCD was out of control, my depression was at an all-time high. I just spent days just lying on the sofa and I wasn’t dealing with it,” he said. “Eventually, after suggestions from friends and family, I decided to get out and start walking and I just noticed the weight falling off me.

“I knew my nana would have loved to see me changing my life for the better as she was always so worried about me and keen for me to improve my health and lifestyle. She’d told me that she was worried I wouldn’t make it to 30.”

Ashley says that exercise has not only benefited him physically but improved his mental health too.

“The more I walked the more I enjoyed it, and from there I started running and going to the gym. I went from not being able to walk for 20 seconds without coughing and lighting up a cigarette, to now running 10k or 15k without a problem.

“Getting more active has also massively impacted my mental health for the better. I’d got to a stage where I had stopped being invited to family occasions or out with friends because they didn’t like the person I was. But I am a totally different man now – I live a very clean lifestyle and have completely stopped smoking and drinking.”

Ashley hopes he can inspire others to make positive changes in their lives, especially if they are dealing with the loss of a loved one. 

“I would really encourage anyone dealing with grief to consider getting more active – whether it is going for a walk, a run or spending time in the gym. For me, it helped to keep my mind busy and channel my emotion into something positive.”

He is now preparing to take on the challenge of the Rob Burrow Leeds Marathon on the 14th of May – his first-ever marathon – and will be raising money for Sue Ryder Wheatfields Hospice to say thank you for the care his grandmother received.

“I used to look at people who ran marathons and think ‘you’re mad doing that’ and now here I am! This is the first sporting challenge I’ve ever done and I’m starting with a full marathon – go big or go home!

“On the race day it’s going to be a challenge being around so many people as I’m not good with busy environments and normally run and train alone, but I’m going to be supported by all my family and I’ll be wearing a necklace with my nana’s ashes in it to push me on. I really believe that she has made this happen. She always wanted me to become a better man and I think this is the right way to prove to her how far I have come in life. My nana saw me at my worst – I just wish she could have seen me at my best.”

Ashley hopes to raise at least £1,000 for Sue Ryder Wheatfields Hospice. Donate to his fundraising page here.

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Long read: Party leaders speak ahead of Leeds local election 2023

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Decision: Leeds Civic Hall.

Leeds goes to the polls next Thursday, 4 May to elect councillors to represent our communities on Leeds City Council.

Local Democracy Reporter David Spereall has spoken to party leaders in Leeds about why you should vote for them on Thursday. Their interviews are below, in alphabetic order.

You can also read our coverage of candidate profiles for all six wards in West Leeds here. And remember, you’ll need to bring photo ID with you to vote at a polling booth – here’s what ID will be accepted.

Conservatives: ‘Arrogant’ Labour has ‘lost touch’ with people of Leeds

Andrew Carter, Conservatives.

Leeds’ “arrogant” Labour administration has “lost touch” with the people of the city, the local Conservative group has claimed.

Andrew Carter, leader of Leeds City Council’s Tory opposition, accused the ruling party of not taking responsibility for their “mistakes” in office.

Interviewed ahead of next month’s local elections, where 33 council seats across Leeds are being contested, Councillor Carter said a Conservative administration would overhaul the city’s planning system to make it “more robust” and tougher on developers.

And he said Labour’s rhetoric on climate change and the environment was “contradicted” by development taking place on the greenbelt. Labour has said its cross-party plans panels are bound by law to accept certain planning applications.

Councillor Carter said: “We’re the only opposition party which consistently holds the Labour administration to account.

“Far too often other parties vote with the controlling group when they really ought to be considering their own independent views.

“They vote with an administration which gets more and more arrogant by the month and takes little notice, if any, of what the people of Leeds actually think.

He added: “In a nutshell, Labour has lost touch with the people of Leeds.”

Councillor Carter highlighted recent Labour proposals to bring in parking charges at public parks in the city, as well as its plans to close Queensway School in Yeadon.

Although both schemes were later scrapped after U-turns, Councillor Carter claimed they were part of a “litany” of errors. He also referenced “dreadful” failings in the authority’s children’s services, which led to a young girl being placed into the care of a convicted sex offender, and a damning report by the Housing Ombudsman, which criticised the council for its failure to treat damp and mould inside a residential flat.

Referring to the parking charges proposal, Coun Carter said: “How is that part of an agenda for a healthy city? It’s putting people off visiting parks.

“There’s no bus service to most of these parks, so people have to use the car. Of course when there was an outcry, they changed their minds. But it’s not about changing their minds. It’s about getting it right in the first place, and they singularly don’t.”

Asked if he felt the Conservative brand has been damaged over the last year by the revolving Downing Street door and chaos in Westminster, Councillor Carter defended the government’s response to the seismic events of the last three years.

He also urged voters to “think locally” and ask themselves if Labour “deserves” to retain power in Leeds.

“In my lifetime there’s never been a government that’s had so much to deal with of an external nature,” he insisted.

“I don’t think people have yet got their heads round how much damage Covid has done to individuals, to government finance and to people’s lifestyles.

“There’s been the war in Ukraine. Britain has been brilliant at supporting Ukraine, but it comes at a hell of a cost – not least the cost of energy.”

Councillor Carter accused Labour councillors of failing to hold local bus operators to account, amid waves of service cuts and timetable changes since the pandemic.

The West Yorkshire Combined Authority (WYCA) oversees public transport, but both the region’s Labour mayor Tracy Brabin and party colleagues insist they’re powerless to stop operators making cuts as private companies.

But Councillor Carter said: “You just have to look at the chaos on the roads in this city and the chaos on the buses. Don’t forget it’s members of the controlling group who sit on the transport committee on the mayoral authority.

“When they blame everyone but themselves, they should ask themselves why in other major local authorities they’ve not got the same problem with bus services that we’re having in Leeds.”

Councillor Carter called for stricter enforcement of planning rules to stop developers hurting communities and also took aim at Labour’s green credentials.

He said: “At planning meetings the first item on every agenda should be the naming and shaming of the builders who fail to fulfil their planning conditions.

“A planning department under a Conservative administration would be much more robust in enforcing the guidleines and policies that this council has set (at) cross-party (level).

“We know it’s hugely destructive to the environment when a digger starts excavating a greenbelt site for housing, when there are plenty of brownfield sites.

“And yet this council beats its chest about being environmentally friendly and the climate emergency. They’re simply not listening again.”

Conservatives in numbers 

Current seats on Leeds City Council: 21/99 (2nd largest party)

Number of candidates standing in 2023 local elections: 33 (out of 33 wards)

Year first Conservative councillor elected in Leeds (since council was reorganised in its present form) : 1973

Conservative candidates standing in your area

Armley – Tamas Kovacs

Bramley and Stanningley – Adam Daniel Cook

Calverley and Farsley – Jas Singh

Farnley and Wortley – Natalia Justyna Armitage

Kirkstall – Reiss Lewis Capitano

Pudsey – Trish Smith


Green Party: ‘If you care about the future, we’re the only party to vote for’

David Blackburn, Green Party. Photo: David Spereall

The Green Party is predicting the upcoming local elections will see it make a major political “breakthrough” in Leeds.

The local party is positioning itself as the sole option on the ballot paper for voters concerned about climate change and the future of the planet.

But besides its usual environmental message, the Greens also want to see allowances for Leeds councillors to be cut back and are calling for an overhaul of the planning system.

In an interview ahead of next month’s polls, the long-serving leader of the city council’s Green Group, Councillor David Blackburn said: “If you care about the future and you care about your kids, your grandkids and future generations, the Green Party is the only party to vote for.

“The future, our future and this planet’s future are part and parcel of what Green Party is about.

“The rest (other parties) are all about political necessities, and that’s why you need us at the centre of what’s going on.

“A lot’s been done on climate change, but nowhere near enough. The fact is people at the bottom of the pile will suffer if we don’t get our game together and deliver.”

The city council declared a climate emergency in 2019, which saw the local authority pledge to make Leeds carbon neutral by 2030.

Although the Labour administration says it’s on track to make the council itself net zero by this date, it recently admitted for the first time that they’re unlikely to meet the target for the wider city.

Councillor Blackburn said this admission was “not unexpected” and claimed local authorities need more powers from central government to go further on climate change.

He said he’d give the Labour administration “eight out of 10” for its record on climate change but called for more cross-party working to get more resources and powers from central government.

The housing crisis and the impact on communities and the environment from large-scale developments is also likely to be a key election battleground.

Councillor Blackburn said the type of properties being built across Leeds were too expensive for local people, and that the city needs more “cheap rented homes”

He explained: “What’s needed is a refresh of national planning guidelines, to make sure they take account of climate change, because at the moment they don’t do.

“We’re still passing planning permission for developments which in 30 or 40 years aren’t going to be zero carbon, or anywhere near zero carbon.”

He added: “It’s owner-occupied homes being built. They’re expensive and it’s tending to bring people outside from other areas to move into upmarket houses.

“Builders will do that because they’re there to make a profit. We need to find some way of stopping that, because we don’t need houses like that.”

With public money scarce, Councillor Blackburn has consistently argued for the allowances he and other elected members receive to be slashed.

It’s an unpopular argument among his peers. Several Leeds councillors standing down in recent months have complained the role has become less financially viable, while demands on their time and energy have increased.

While councillors aren’t paid a salary, their allowance rises the more responsibility they take on.

But Councillor Blackburn says the £25,000 a year-or-so sums earned by senior councillors with an executive role are “extraordinarily large in my opinion”.

“I still think more can be done on allowances,” he said.

“We’ve cut staff by a huge amount since 2010. But we’ve still got 99 councillors. We haven’t got a choice on that because that’s what the electoral arrangements are, but we’ve done nothing to reduce those costs.”

Asked what would be the best case scenario for the Leeds Greens in this election would be, the long-serving group leader said he believed the party could pull off a handful of surprises.

“We could make some major breakthroughs in West Yorkshire this year, Councillor Blackburn said.

“We’ve been knocking on the door for a while. There is a strong possibility that after the local elections we’ll be third largest party on the council. We’re hopeful getting our number up to somewhere like eight, though that’s at the upper end of our expectations.”

Green Party in numbers 

Current seats on Leeds City Council: 4/99 (5th largest party)

Number of candidates standing in 2023 local elections: 33 (out of 33 wards)

Year first Green councillor elected in Leeds: 1998

Green Party candidates standing in your area

Armley – Lou Cunningham

Bramley and Stanningley – Keith Duncan Whittaker

Calverley and Farsley – Ellen Graham

Farnley and Wortley – Mark Terence Rollinson

Kirkstall – Victoria Helen Smith

Pudsey – Alaric Timothy Peter Hall.


‘Send government a message over appalling treatment of Leeds’ – Labour

James Lewis, Labour. Photo: David Spereall

Leeds’ Labour group has urged voters to “send the government a message” over what it claims is the “appalling treatment” of the city.

Council leader and local Labour chief James Lewis said he believed voters were “fired up” and “angry” over the state of the country.

But he said the gains Labour made at last year’s polls in Leeds showed his party’s local leadership was viewed favourably too. Labour became the ruling party on Leeds City Council in 2010, following a six-year coalition between the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats.

In a wide-ranging interview ahead of next week’s local elections, Councillor Lewis also defended Leeds’ 2023 Year of Culture and disputed claims from opposition parties that Labour “isn’t listening” to people.

He said: “The way the government has treated Leeds over the last 13 years has been appalling. We’ve seen £2.5bn taken away from our funding cumulatively. We’ve seen no progress on transport investment, whether it’s mass transit, or whether it’s better trains to London and Manchester.

“I know this isn’t a General Elecion but this is a real opportunity to send a strong message to the government.

“People are really angry about the government. There’s no doubt about it. But last May we won seats off not just the Conservatives, but the Green Party and Lib Dems as well. So people are clearly looking at the record of Labour councillors and see what we’ve done in the city as positive.”

Councillor Lewis said his party had protected frontline services despite the cuts, kept children’s centres open and pointed to the council’s district heating scheme as an example of how the authority was helping the city’s poorest, as well as reducing carbon emissions.

And he defended the administration’s decision to cut its financial support for local PCSOs, despite Labour campaigning hard on crime nationally.

The council leader also pointed to work being done by the authorities to tackle nuisance bike riders in the south and east of Leeds, with an on-the-spot fines system having been introduced this month.

Councillor Lewis, who has led the city since 2021, said: “We’ve had to face a situation where nearly 90 per cent of funding the government used to give us for local services is gone. So we are having to stretch people’s council tax further and further to cover everything we want to do.

“The police have put their council tax precept up over time and we’re getting extra officers on the streets of Leeds, so it’s not as if nothing’s happening in this area.”

Responding to criticism that Leeds’ landmark year of culture has failed to create a buzz with the public so far, Councillor Lewis said there was “lots going on” in the suburbs to get people engaged.

“I think the launch event went really well,” he said. “It got a significant amount of national coverage and really put Leeds on the map.

“There’s a lot of stuff happening through the summer and into the autumn. We’re bringing back Leeds Children’s Day (at Roundhay Park) for the first time in a decade in 2023. There’s the WOW Barn Festival on Woodhouse Moor (on May 13).

“It’s not just one or two big city centre events. It’s really important to me that it’s about all the different communities in Leeds.”

Councillor Lewis also disputed suggestions from opposition groups that Labour “isn’t listening” to the city’s people and “is out of touch”.

Councillor Lewis pointed to the authority’s U-turn over shutting Queensway School in Yeadon earlier this year, as an example of how residents’ views are taken on board.

He added: “Councillors Carter and Golton have to accept responsibility for the coalition government and the current government for the sheer amount of money that’s been taken out of Leeds’ budget by way of service cuts.

“If their parties had listened a bit more to us we’d maybe see more money for people in Leeds.

“There’ve been a number of things over time where we have consulted, listened to people and changed our minds. I don’t accept at all that we don’t listen.

“Hopefully the Conservatives will listen to our demands for investment in public services.”

Labour in numbers 

Current seats on Leeds City Council: 56/99 (Largest party)

Number of candidates standing in 2023 local elections: 33 (out of 33 wards)

Year first Labour councillor elected in Leeds (since council was reorganised in its present form) : 1973

Labour candidates standing in your area

Armley – Andy Parnham

Bramley and Stanningley – Tom Hinchcliffe

Calverley and Farsley – Peter Carlill

Farnley and Wortley – Adrian McCluskey

Kirkstall – Andy Rontree

Pudsey – Riaz Ahmed


Lib Dems claim Labour ‘isn’t listening’ ahead of local elections

Stuart Golton, Liberal Democrats. Photo: David Spereall

Leeds’ Liberal Democrats have claimed the city’s ruling Labour administration “isn’t listening”, as it fights for votes in next month’s local elections.

Lib Dem group leader Stewart Golton said his party had a strong track record in “speaking truth to power” in the areas of the city his councillors represent.

In an interview ahead of May’s polls, Councillor Golton accused Labour of starving the suburbs of cash to fund new city centre infrastructure and suggested Leeds had “nothing to show” for its flagship Year of Culture so far.

“Labour’s not listening,” Councillor Golton, whose party is fielding candidates in all of the city’s 33 wards and defending three seats, said.

“There’s a certain entitlement to the Leeds Labour group. They think they’re the only people worth listening to and that they’re the only ones where any creativity can come from.”

Councillor Golton cited his recent motion calling for a second homes tax to be introduced in Leeds, which was rejected by the ruling party, as “symptomatic” of this perceived approach.

In recent months, the council has U-turned on proposals to bring in parking charges at parks and green spaces and on its plans to close Queensway School in Yeadon. Both ideas had been strongly opposed by Lib Dems and other opposition councillors, as well as members of the public.

Asked if this suggested Labour was listening more than he claims, Councillor Golton said both examples were “the exception that proves the rule”.

“They gave in on those points after months and months of resistance,” he added. “It was only when they realised their policies didn’t make any sense that they had to withdraw them.

“That’s why the council needs effective challenge and that’s where strong opposition is really valuable.”

With councils across the UK in dire financial straits, Councillor Golton is frequently accused by Leeds’ Labour group of representing a party that started austerity when it was part of a Coalition government.

Asked for his response to that charge, the Lib Dem group leader replied: “I’m not sure that the people of Leeds want an administration that’s only interested in history lessons.

“What they want are decisons pertinent to the situation we’re in right here, right now. Playing the blame game isn’t very responsible from the people in charge. It’s not very effective in delivering public services shaped for the communities they serve.”

Councillor Golton claimed Labour are running a “two speed city” and was critical of the traffic “gridlock” that city centre roadworks have caused in recent months.

The works themselves have been staunchly defended by the administration, who say they will deliver lasting improvements.

But Councillor Golton said: “Hundreds of millions of pounds is spent on the city centre, but what is the council’s policy for all the district and town centres elsewhere, where the majority of Leeds residents – who don’t participate in the nine-to-five economy in and out of Leeds city centre – spend most of their time?”

“People aren’t stupid. They can see the line ‘we don’t have any money’ is wrong, because when the council does have priorities it will find the money.

“We’re one third of the way through Year of Culture and what have we got to show for it? There’s very little being delivered in our communities in the way that we were promised and I’ve yet to see a big spectacular in Leeds city centre, that we’ve been promised.

“If the Year of Culture was the excuse for dredging all the money that could have been spent on the suburbs, to spend it on the city centre, then it’s clearly not worked.”

Labour is keen to create so-called 15-minute neighbourhoods across Leeds – an idea geared towards ensuring everyone can access all the services they need within a short walk or cycle ride.

Councillor Golton and his colleagues have been outspoken in their support of the concept, but he claimed that Labour isn’t consulting communities enough about such schemes.

“We think 15-minute neighbourhoods should be the basis on which every council decision is made,” he said.

“The community should be the first place you go to, so they can express how they want to live their lives and say what improvements they want in their environment.

“It’s the only way the council can respond with any kind of educated understanding.

“That’s a better way of doing it rather than having a senior council officer, who thinks they know best, having their idea rubberstamped by Labour politicians who don’t want to question the opinions of a public servant.”

Liberal Democrats in numbers 

Current seats on Leeds City Council: 7/99 (3rd largest party)

Number of candidates standing in 2023 local elections: 33 (out of 33 wards)

Year first Lib Dem councillor elected in Leeds (since council was reorganised in its present form) : 1973

Liberal Democrat candidates standing in your area

Armley – Dan Walker

Bramley and Stanningley – Elizabeth Anne Bee

Calverley and Farsley – Stuart McLeod

Farnley and Wortley – Christine Mavis Golton

Kirkstall – Adam James Belcher

Pudsey – Christine Amy Glover


SDP attacks ‘war on cars’ and calls for ‘back to basics’ approach

Wayne Dixon, SDP. Photo: David Spereall

The Social Democratic Party (SDP) is aiming fire on the political establishment, as it tries to build on its success in last year’s local elections in Leeds.

The SDP caused an upset in the 2022 polls by winning its first council seat in the city since its 1980s heyday, and is hopeful of making further gains next month.

Councillor Wayne Dixon, who is overseeing the party in Leeds, has re-iterated calls for a “back to basics” approach in delivering council services and claimed the Labour-run local authority is pursuing a “war on cars”.

Interviewed ahead of the May 4 election, Councillor Dixon criticised the powers-that-be for making it too difficult for Leeds residents to access the heart of the city.

“We talk about having a strong economy in Leeds and we’ve killed the city centre because we can’t get there,” he said.

“The transport into the city centre is poor. Buses are getting cut left, right and centre and we’ve still no mass transit system, wich we’ve been promised for decades.

“I don’t just blame Labour locally for that, I blame the national government as well, because they’re all complicit. Even the Liberal Democrats are too because they were in power as well, in 2010.

“That’s my frustration with the big parties, because they all talk a good game, but when it comes down to it, none of them actually want to do anything. A lot of it is (a lack of) willingness to do it.”

The SDP has argued for buses and trains to be brought back into public ownership, a policy also supported by Leeds’ Green Party and the local Labour administration.

But Councillor Dixon claimed that moves such as the recent introduction of bus gates in the city centre – which have closed off some streets to private vehicles – had “messed the city up”.

Echoing similar remarks made publicly by one local Lib Dem earlier this year, Councillor Dixon added: “There’s a war on cars at the moment, which I don’t really get.

“I get the need to clean up pollution but the war on cars shouldn’t be a war on cars. It should be about converting people to electric and how we do that.

“For me, first things first, you have to get the basics right.

“The basics for me would have been having a mass transit system first before you start blocking cars.”

Social housing policy has also been made a priority by the SDP nationally, with the party calling for a heavy tax on developers to fund the building of 100,000 new council properties every year.

Councillor Dixon also called for a tougher stance on nuisance bikers, who’ve been causing noise and misery to communities across east and south Leeds over the last year.

He criticised the Labour administration for cutting funding for local PCSOs – a decision Labour says has been forced by its chronic cash shortage.

Councillor Dixon, who is one of just two SDP councillors across the UK, added: “We’ve got bikes zig-zagging up and down our roads at the minute. I accept that’s a police issue, but we’re a party that wants to do something about it and it doesn’t seem to me that the other parties do.”

Asked if he thought the recent introduction of on-the-spot £100 fines for nuisance bikers could tackle the problem, Councillor Dixon replied: “It’s fine if you’ve got the enforcement, but I don’t see the enforcement.

“I think the council could fund PCSOs for a start. Even if they’re just on the streets and reassuring people, it’s a start.

“They’re not doing that. That’s an own goal, especially when the Labour Party are shouting tough on law and order, and then they refuse to be tough on law and order themselves.”

Councillor Dixon criticised the Conservative government for the scale of “damaging” cuts to local authority budgets, but suggested Labour locally needed to be “more savvy” with the cash.

He also expressed scepticism about spending on Leeds’ Year of Culture, while annual events such as Bonfire Night displays will no longer be funded by the city council.

“To say we’re spending money on culture and then we’re cutting the main cultural events is just bonkers,” he said.

“Leeds ’23 as a whole, I just think it’s loads of short-term jobs. When that money goes, what happens to those people? I don’t think there’ll be any legacy. It’s just a bit disappointing.”

SDP in numbers 

Current seats on Leeds City Council: 1/99 (7th largest party)

Number of candidates standing in 2023 local elections: 13 (out of 33 wards)

Year first SDP councillor elected in Leeds: 1982

SDP candidates standing in your area

Bramley and Stanningley – Richard David Riley

Farnley and Wortley – Jack Michael Bellfield


‘Don’t believe Westminster’s broken promises’ – Yorkshire Party

Bob Buxton, Yorkshire Party

The Yorkshire Party has called on Leeds voters to break the “unspoken alliance” between Labour and the Conservatives, if they want more devolved powers.

The party’s co-leader, Bob Buxton, said people were fed up with decades of broken central government promises to the region.

Although he conceded Leeds’ is one of the toughest places for the Yorkshire Party to break through, by virtue of the city’s size, Mr Buxton urged the electorate to vote “strategically”.

He said backing the Yorkshire Party would force the main parties to “chase” votes by supporting the transfer of more powers and money to the county.

In an interview ahead of the local elections next month, Mr Buxton said: “If the Yorkshire Party wins council seats that really shakes up politics in Yorkshire.

“It says to Labour and the Tories that what we have now is not good enough. It says we’re tired of the lack of housing, the poor economic management and the lack of investment in education.

“People have to think of this vote as a strategic vote. Those parties are coasting and are relying on you to vote for one or the other. There’s almost an unspoken alliance between them.”

Mr Buxton highlighted the government’s cancellation of HS2’s eastern leg, and the scrapping of a proposed trolleybus system for Leeds in 2016 as examples of broken promises.

Although work is due to start on a mass transit system for West Yorkshire by the end of the decade, Mr Buxton suggested people should be sceptical about whether or not it will ever be created.

“If you keep voting for Labour locally and the Tories nationally, we’ll keep getting a cycle of promises made, delayed, downgraded and cancelled,” he said. “That’s all we’re getting.”

Mr Buxton played down the idea that with a cost-of-living crisis and struggling public services dominating the political agenda, the Yorkshire Party’s messages may get lost.

The party was set up in 2014 and has won only a smattering of local authority seats during its near-decade in existence.

But Mr Buxton, who’s been co-leader since 2020, said every local issue voters cared about could be “honestly linked” to the perceived shortage of powers the region has.

He said: “If we had a mass transit system already, as we should have, would our economy be better off? Yes it would. If we had better investment in education, would we have a more skilled workforce and lower crime? Yes, absolutely.

“I think people can see that would be self-evident.”

In 2021 Tracy Brabin became West Yorkshire’s first elected mayor, under the terms of the region’s devolution deal that was agreed with the government the previous year.

However, the Yorkshire Party insists that arrangement goes nowhere near far enough. Its ambition is for the whole county to have its own regional parliament with a devolved administration, akin to the setup in Scotland and Wales.

Mr Buxton described the current West Yorkshire Combined Authority (WYCA) system as “bizarre” and a “mess”, claiming it’s still too reliant on Westminster signing off big decisions.

Mr Buxton said: “The powers Yorkshire has now are less than what Scotland has and yet we have the same population.

“They’re less than what Wales has and our economy is 50 per cent larger than that of Wales. It’s even less than what London has.

“This is lip service for devolution.

“You’ve got to realise that if the Yorkshire Party wins then Yorkshire wins. We would get more funding and we would get more powers.

“Then you get accountability and people who are elected purely for what they want to do in Yorkshire – not on Brexit, or Partygate or any other nonsense.

“Labour and Tories will be fighting for those devolution votes. They’re doing devolution but they’re fighting in the featherweight division.

“If you want heavyweight devolution, you need to scare them more.”

Yorkshire Party in numbers 

Current seats on Leeds City Council: 0/99

Number of candidates standing in 2023 local elections: 8 (out of 33 wards)

Yorkshire Party candidates standing in your area

Armley – Edana Niamh McDonald

Calverley and Farsley – Rob Lees


And finally, Independents

Stuart Long is standing under no affiliation in Kirkstall ward. Photo: David Spereall

There are 175 candidates standing across Leeds’ 33 wards at the local elections on May 4.

And while most represent mainstream political parties, or groups with a foothold in the city, there is a smattering of names on the ballot paper you may not have heard before.

In total, there are six independent candidates standing in different parts of Leeds all vying for your vote.

Also standing on an independent platform is 47 year-old Stuart Long, in Kirkstall.

Mr Long has put himself forward to raise awareness about radon gas, which he believes increased the risk of the ovarian cancer that claimed his beloved mum’s life in 2018.

Mr Long says that data from the Health Security Agency suggests 52,000 homes across Leeds are affected by the gas, and has accused the city council of failing to address the problem.

“I felt it was time to make the public aware, because it’s so important,” Mr Long, who has stood for council on four previous occasions, said.

“I believe if people’s health is being affected by something you should tell them the truth. I’m a Kirkstall lad. I’ve lived here for more than 40 years and I love the place.”

The city council said it’s currently testing for radon gas in some of the properties it owns and is making contact with residents whose homes have been identified as potentially having higher levels of the gas.

It insisted, however, that “there is no suggestion that tenants are at risk” and that “the properties are safe to continue living in throughout the test period”.

Other independent candidates standing in West Leeds include Jim Muller in Armley and Bev Lockwood in Farnley and Wortley.

Police re-issue wanted appeal over Armley stabbing

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Police are stepping up their search for four Leeds men wanted the fatal stabbing of Jamie Meah in Armley. 

Aquade Jeffers, Caleb Awe, Enham Nishat, all aged 20, and Ranei Wilks, aged 21, are all from Leeds and are wanted for murder following the attack at the junction of Hall Lane and Brentwood Terrace on 31 March 2023.  

Det Chf Insp Damian Roebuck, of West Yorkshire Police’s Homicide and Major Enquiry Team, said: “Our enquiries are ongoing in West Yorkshire, Merseyside and Greater Manchester and I would like to thank members of the public who have contacted us so far.

“However, I would like to urge that anyone who has information about the whereabouts of these four people, or who thinks they may have seen them, to please contact us.”

Tributes have been paid to 18-year-old Jamie Meah. Photo: Connor Briggs

Anyone with information is asked not to approach them but to call 999 quoting West Yorkshire Police crime reference 13230180255. Alternatively, call independent charity Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.