28/10/2013 Look North (Yorkshire)


28/10/2013

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power cuts to thousands of homes. Now we can join the news

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off Good evening and welcome to Monday's Look North. On the

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programme tonight: Our investigation finds dozens of assaults on staff at

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a Yorkshire school. One education expert calls it "disturbing." This

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is a significant figure and it is almost unprecedented. We'll have an

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exclusive report and ask ` just what has gone wrong at Foremost School in

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Harrogate? Also tonight: The mountain rescue volunteers forced to

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pay thousands of pounds of their own money because of rising costs. And

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can Three Little Pigs and a tutu get more families and young children

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into ballet? I will be back later in the programme with the full forecast

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for the week ahead. The number of assaults on teachers

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and carers at a North Yorkshire school has been described as

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"disturbing and almost unprecedented" following a Look

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North investigation. The Foremost School in Harrogate is for boys with

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behavioural problems. It opened last year after two other schools merged.

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Now figures obtained under the Freedom of Information Act have

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found there were almost 70 assaults in 18 months. That's despite the

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bill per pupil running to ?100,000 a year. Heidi Tomlinson has this

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exclusive report. Teenage boys with severe behavioural and social

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problems need skill, support and guidance. Foremost School near

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Harrogate was built to give vulnerable children a chance to

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succeed. But one year after opening, Ofsted inspectors found that leaders

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had failed to control students. Governors and teachers resigned,

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leaving the school in turmoil. A Freedom of information request has

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revealed that the school, which educates just 20 teenage boys costs

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?2 million per year to run, ?100,000 per pupil. Teachers have been

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subjected to regular attacks. Pupils have salted teacher sexy seven

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times. There were 13 attacks in one month last year. North Yorkshire

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police have been called to the site nine times to deal with violence,

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locate missing pupils and searched the drugs. Lawrence Charlton worked

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on similar schools for 30 years. He says that the number of assaults is

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disturbing. It is a shock. And I'm perplexed. I checked with colleagues

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how many colleagues `` how many assaults were taking place. I went

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to some of the leading experts to find this and this is an exceptional

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figure, it is a significant figure and it is almost unprecedented. In

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any other workplace it would be reported to the health and safety

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executive and interventions would take place immediately. The director

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of education at North Yorkshire County Council declined to be

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interviewed. He stated: one of the things I have been

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raising with the council is to make things as transparent as possible,

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and to be as open as possible. It is a difficult situation. I think we

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all want to do our best to make sure there is a positive solution. If the

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situation improves then Foremost School can begin accepting and

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helping new students. The council says it is in the middle of

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important reflections on the role of the school. We saw local MP Julian

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Smith in that report. We hope to hear from him later in the

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programme. Mountain Rescue teams in our region are warning that

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call`outs are becoming too expensive and the emergency service they

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provide is under threat. The teams are involved in helping people

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stranded in snow, rescuing walkers or searching for missing people.

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They apparently there are several people

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that have been there overnight. Mountain rescue Land Rover motorists

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stuck in snow. December 2010 on the A57. Wane has been a mountain rescue

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volunteer for 14 years but the costs have become too high and he has had

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to give up. We are looking at a full`time second career that is

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completely unpaid, costing in the region of ?5,000 per year, and that

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is only personal figures, but if you start to compute the fuel costs and

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battery costs... He has a search dog named Dodge. Together they have been

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called to find missing people across the country. I was having to put

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money to one side to do mountain rescue and that was stopping doing

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things with my family. He's not alone. As well as the money, team

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members find it difficult to get time off work to respond to calls.

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The days of the employer just letting people go are just harder

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and harder, so that has a big impact on the callouts, 9`to`5, Monday to

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Friday. There is some cash from the Government, ?165,000 PA but it does

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not go far with around 1500 callouts AGF, so this week they are in London

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asking politicians for more. The Government talks about the big

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society and volunteering. With the operational and non`operation hours,

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we give over 600,000 hours, and we just need some help from government.

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These volunteers love what they do but they are providing a vital

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emergency service. They are saying that a need more support to help

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them carry on. `` they need more support. There's lots of comments on

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our Facebook Page. Wayne Richardson says "having seen the work of Kinder

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Mountain Rescue ` these guys are real heroes. They deserve every

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penny they get. But Sue Wheatley says others need to take

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responsibility. She says "make the climbers and walkers who need

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rescuing pay a fee." And Mark Larden thinks we should "stop giving

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billions away to other countries", then "we will be able to fund vital

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services like Mountain Rescue." They do some very good work. I have been

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out with Colne Valley a few times. Later on Look North ` are we about

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to feel the chill? A leading scientist tells Paul hudson how a

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fall in activity on the sun could lead to more severe winters. Police

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in Cyprus are looking into a possible sighting of missing

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Sheffield toddler Ben Needham. The investigation is focusing on whether

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Ben ` who would now be in his early twenties ` could be the man seen

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here in the blue top. The video shows a Roma religious celebration

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in the Limassol area ` and was handed to Greek authorities. The man

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is said to resemble this computer`generated image of how Ben

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would look now. The Sheffield toddler disappeared from the Greek

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island of Kos 22 years ago. Police have launched a murder investigation

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after a man was stabbed to death in Sheffield. The 25 year`old's body

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was found in Southey Crescent last night. Three men have been arrested

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and officers say they're helping police with their inquiries.

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Yorkshire escaped the worst of the stormy weather ` but trains between

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our region and the south of England have been delayed and cancelled.

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This was the scene at York earlier, with East Coast services to London

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stopping at Peterborough. Passengers planning to travel tomorrow are

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advised to check with their operator before setting off. We have had

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trees falling at three separate locations south of Peterborough and

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there was flooding as well, so we have been advising passengers,

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please do not travel if you intend to travel to London because the line

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is closed south of Peterborough. Engineers are working hard overnight

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to get the line back open and we're hopeful of a resumption of service

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tomorrow morning. Chesterfield's Market Hall has re`opened after a

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major refurbishment. And as you can hear ` there was lots to shout

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about. Today sees the grand opening of the marketplace. The ?4 million

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redevelopment took a year to complete, and includes a revamped

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main retail hall and a redesigned extension. The historic building is

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already more than 80% occupied. We made a promise to the small,

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independent traders that we would not want over two Christmases. We

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have kept that promise. We have kept it on time. That is difficult these

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days but the contractors have been amazing. An investigation by BBC

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Yorkshire's Inside Out programme has found we could be returning to a

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period in climate history known as the "mini`Ice Age." Scientists have

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been noticing a big drop in sunspot activity. In the past, these have

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been linked to a number of "Siberian winters." I have been speaking to

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Paul Hudson about this. First, he explained some of the science behind

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this prediction. It is known by climatologists as the mini`Ice Age,

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period in the 1600 when winters across the UK and Europe were often

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severe. The severe cold went hand`in`hand with fall in sunspot

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activity. Now, a leading solar scientist has told me he believes

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that sunspots are declining at their fastest rate for 10,000 years,

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increasing the risk of our exposure to severe Siberian`style winters.

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This is a major change. The solar activity seems to tie up with more

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cold winters in central Europe and the UK. Our winter weather comes

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from the West and is usually generally mild and wet, but a lack

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of solar activity could order the strength of the Jetstream, leaving

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us vulnerable to harsher winter conditions from the East. Not every

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winter would be a bad one, but they could become more frequent.

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Something that could have implications for energy policy and

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transport infrastructure. It is fascinating research. What is the

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basis of the scientific background? Professor Lockwood told me that

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solar activity is collapsing at a rate not seen in 10,000 years of ice

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records. That is significant. The last time this happened, and this is

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only a projection, bear in mind, the last time this happened, if it

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continues, we look back to the 1600s, it was a period that

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climatologists called the mini`Ice Age. Not every winter was called,

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not every summer was poor, but we had some harsh winters. More

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recently we saw something similar in the early 1800s. Professor Lockwood

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is right and solar activity continues to decline at its current

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rate, there could be real implications for our climate. What

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does it mean in terms of the kind of whether we might experience?

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Harsher, icy conditions, more snow and fog? He things we have seen the

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signature of the beginning of the decline down to this mini`Ice Age.

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It will be something that happens over the coming decades. In the last

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seven years we have had poor summers and cold winters, and the winter of

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62`63 is an example of a harsh winter which could become more

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frequent in the coming years. Global warming has gone, then? This is

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something separate, a natural phenomenon. The last time it

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happened it dented global temperatures by 0.3 Celsius, but

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man`made global warming will win through, climate scientists believe,

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but this is more of a regional climactic effect that will affect

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areas such as the UK and Europe. And we're not talking about this

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happening next month, necessarily. Professor Lockwood thinks we are

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already beginning to see the signs. The great Fire of London happened

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after a very warm summer. It does not mean that every summer will be

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warm, every winter will because, but that is the trend that we will be

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going in, if this research is correct. And Paul will have more on

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this on tonight's Inside Out at 7:30pm on BBC One. We can return to

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the top story about in Harrogate. `` about Foremost School in Harrogate.

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We can speak now to the local MP, Julian Smith. First thing to point

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out, the council says progress is being made and a number of sorts is

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decreasing, so is the situation as serious as it sounds? It is very

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serious when teachers who work with some of the most vulnerable children

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in the country are getting assaulted. I pay tribute to the

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teachers who are working at this school. I think improvements are

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being made. The most recent Ofsted report seemed more positive. But,

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there was obviously a long way to go. Is it unusual to have these

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issues at a school for boys who have been taken out of mainstream

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education? They have severe behavioural problems before being

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lumped in together. That is right. We have to remember the type of

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pupil that the school is looking after. Some of the most vulnerable

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children, some of the most needing of care children that we have, and

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the council is trying to do the right thing and help them. That is

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not to say that the council has been perfect with this school. I have

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been calling for better transparency and clarity on the financial aspects

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of this school, but they are trying to solve a difficult issue with very

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vulnerable pupils. And it comes down to staffing. How can you attract the

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best staff to such a school? There are very good, motivated staff at

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the school and many of the pupil referral units across North

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Yorkshire, but the thing I am asking the council to do is be more open

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and transparent. They have made changes at senior level within the

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education authority, but we need to look at the taxpayer impact of the

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spiralling expenditure. The Ofsted inspection was damning and talk

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about teaching and safety being inadequate. What needs to happen

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now? The most recent update on that report showed progress. The council

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needs to set out a plan for the next year and beyond which might involve

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other partners, and may involve different strategies, but also

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demonstrates that the taxpayer is getting value for money from this

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school. It is going to cost most `` more per pupil than most schools,

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but, we need to make sure that there is value for money and that there is

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a vision for the school, going forward.

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Before 7pm ` a champion in the wings. Sheffield's Kell Brook is

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only one bout away from a world title ` he joins us in the studio.

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And ballet for kids ` a new production of The Three Little Pigs

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aims to introduce children to live dance and theatre.

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What a fantastic start to the Rugby league World Cup. 45,000 people in

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Cardiff, 2 million watching on BBC Two. It was a fantastic night.

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England against Australia was a very tight match. It has been a good

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weekend all round. England will be without Sam Burgess for the sell`out

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game at Huddersfield on Saturday. He's been given a one match ban for

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this high challenge on Australia's Sam Thaiday, meaning he'll miss the

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game against Ireland. I don't think he can have too many complaints

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about that. There's been some amazing action over the opening

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weekend of the tournament, but you know even the very best can get it

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wrong. New Zealand's Sonny Bill Williams, one the best players in

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the world, was left a little embarrassed when he failed to ground

:16:32.:16:35.

the ball in time. He'd done all the hard work, but he slipped. Just look

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at the expression on his face. His coach said afterwards he might need

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to check his studs next time. Football now and there were bragging

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rights up for grabs this weekend and a winning start for Yorkshire's

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newest managerial recruit. With our pick of the highlights and lowlights

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here's Danny Carpenter. It was a derby day special in The

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Championship with bad neighbours colliding. Huddersfield against

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Leeds was the pick of the day. It was like basketball. World of

:17:07.:17:14.

Huddersfield got an equaliser. Then leapt up one into his own net. ``

:17:15.:17:22.

Lee popped one into. And the more dramatic late winner. Huddersfield

:17:23.:17:25.

took the points and late but Leeds in the table on goal difference. ``

:17:26.:17:33.

leapfrogged Leeds. Barnsley and Sheffield Wednesday were competing

:17:34.:17:40.

for the bottom place. The 1`1 draw left them one point behind the South

:17:41.:17:43.

Yorkshire neighbours. In Sheffield, the United players clearly felt the

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need to impress the new boss. They were three to the good before Crewe

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managed to reply. What we have seen in the first couple of days with the

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players is a very honest bunch. Eager to work and listen. And you

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can see that on the pitch. Most of things to improve on what it is an

:18:06.:18:11.

honest group of players. I am happy to work with them. In league two

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there was disappointment for goalless Chesterfield and for York

:18:17.:18:21.

city, whose marketing won the award for the unluckiest goalkeeper of the

:18:22.:18:29.

week. `` Mark Ingham. You can see all the goals on The Football League

:18:30.:18:36.

Show on the BBC iPlayer. It was a great weekend for Sheffield's Kell

:18:37.:18:39.

Brook. The welterweight ` who remains unbeaten ` stopped his

:18:40.:18:42.

opponent Vyacheslav Senchenko in the fourth round. He's now just one win

:18:43.:18:45.

away from a world title. We'll speak to Kell and his trainer Dominic

:18:46.:18:49.

Ingle in a moment. First, here's how he won. It is a city that loves its

:18:50.:18:51.

boxing. He is going for it, and he has got

:18:52.:19:16.

it. With a great ride. Much better from Brook. `` a great right. Kell

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Brook, you said to me in the run`up, you need to put on a show. Do you

:19:31.:19:34.

think you did that? I think I did. No one has ever done that to a

:19:35.:19:43.

champion like Vyacheslav Senchenko. You did wobble in the fourth but you

:19:44.:19:50.

came back. I caught him in the third and I thought that I could take him

:19:51.:19:56.

out. You never stop learning in this game. And I thought to myself after

:19:57.:20:03.

I got caught, I am going to get you back for that. You can see, I took

:20:04.:20:11.

him out. Would it be fair to say that he has grown up, and is taking

:20:12.:20:19.

boxing even more seriously? He's 27, going on 21. He has got that kind of

:20:20.:20:24.

mentality. He is physically fresh. He is not had a lot of hard fights,

:20:25.:20:31.

really. He is physically maturing. He is switched on for this fight. He

:20:32.:20:37.

spent eight weeks in camp and it paid off with a fantastic

:20:38.:20:42.

performance. He finished the job and it was a great night's work, really.

:20:43.:20:48.

How important was the crowd for you? The crowd in the arena, when I am

:20:49.:20:54.

walking out, and the roar from the crowd, I really get poorer, it was

:20:55.:21:00.

amazing, the atmosphere was immense. `` I really get up for it. Are you

:21:01.:21:09.

going to allow him to keep the body over Christmas? It must be tempting

:21:10.:21:14.

for him to have a blow out. Last year he spent Christmas in

:21:15.:21:22.

Fuerteventura. He's going to make up for it this year. Can we get a date

:21:23.:21:30.

street after Christmas to keep in `` him in the gym. If you offered a

:21:31.:21:37.

world title fight against Devon Alexander the domestic title fight

:21:38.:21:40.

against army camp which would you go for? It is a difficult one. I want

:21:41.:21:48.

bad world title fight but I do also want to fight Amir Khan, because I

:21:49.:21:52.

know that I can definitely beat him. It has been running too long.

:21:53.:21:57.

The British public want the fight. I want the fight. I made a statement

:21:58.:22:04.

on Saturday night showing that I belong at that top level. That fight

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needs to happen. It could be a big year for you next year. Thank you,

:22:11.:22:17.

and well done. I wanted a respect to Glenn Stephenson, who is facing a

:22:18.:22:21.

battle for his life in hospital. Every Yorkshire cricketer will wish

:22:22.:22:24.

him the best in his fight against serious illness. Come on, Graham,

:22:25.:22:34.

you can get through this. Now, from boxing to ballet. Last year,

:22:35.:22:37.

Northern Ballet's Ugly Duckling ` a ballet specially for children ` was

:22:38.:22:41.

seen by 25,000 people in the theatre and then hundreds of thousands more

:22:42.:22:44.

when it was televised for Cbeebies. It was such a success, the company's

:22:45.:22:47.

devised another show for children which has just opened in Leeds.

:22:48.:22:55.

Cathy Killick went to see it. Forget theories and swans, the way to go

:22:56.:22:59.

that this ballet season is takes. Not the most treats all of

:23:00.:23:04.

creatures. This is a tailor`made show for children from Northern

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Ballet. The emphasis is on fun from the four`year, on those. People tend

:23:09.:23:13.

to do cutdown versions of the classic ballets. We want to do

:23:14.:23:17.

something very much in the mind of children, something that really

:23:18.:23:23.

appeals to younger children. For most children this is their first

:23:24.:23:26.

experience of ballet, and as they take their seats they have no idea

:23:27.:23:30.

what to expect. They know the story, which certainly helps. It gives you

:23:31.:23:36.

such energy and it is so much nicer to perform, when you can feel the

:23:37.:23:40.

buzz from the audience. Because their reactions are so pure. They

:23:41.:23:45.

just react, what they feel at the moment. It is very different in the

:23:46.:23:52.

fact that they are very responsive so you want to exaggerate everything

:23:53.:23:55.

to get the reaction which is a nice experience, because I have not had

:23:56.:24:00.

quite such an interactive response with an audience. There are no

:24:01.:24:04.

words. But the children certainly followed

:24:05.:24:16.

the story. How do you take down the house? It was very good at the end

:24:17.:24:22.

of it. And later they danced, and that is what I like. When the wolf

:24:23.:24:29.

came, if I was one of the little piggies, I would try to run away.

:24:30.:24:35.

They kept falling over and I liked it when they walked along. Northern

:24:36.:24:41.

Ballet CDs children as their future audience. Judging by their faces,

:24:42.:24:46.

there is a good chance that they have been hooked. The show is on to

:24:47.:24:50.

the next five days and then it goes in the spring. `` it tours in the

:24:51.:24:55.

spring. My mother wanted a little girl to do

:24:56.:25:08.

ballet, and look what turned up. An interesting piece on inside out this

:25:09.:25:15.

evening at 7:30pm. It is going to be interesting in the weather

:25:16.:25:18.

department if we get a mini ice age nevertheless next few years. We have

:25:19.:25:26.

loads of pictures of rainbows from the weekend. A few more after

:25:27.:25:27.

tomorrow as well. And the third picture, a beautiful

:25:28.:25:38.

Bolton Abbey after the morning rain. Tomorrow, some blustery

:25:39.:25:42.

showers about but also some spells of sunshine through the course of

:25:43.:25:45.

the day, so keeping that breeze and that unsettled weather until

:25:46.:25:49.

Wednesday night, with Ng is calming down on Thursday and Friday before

:25:50.:25:53.

more unsettled, stormy weather heads in at the weekend. This fund will

:25:54.:25:56.

affect us on Wednesday night into Thursday. That is the storm tracked

:25:57.:26:01.

through the South Britain bringing rain `` winds of 120 mph to parts of

:26:02.:26:08.

Scandinavia. Into the evening, showers in the West, one of two

:26:09.:26:13.

people further east towards the end of the night will see them but most

:26:14.:26:17.

parts will stay dry. Temperatures. Act into single figures overnight.

:26:18.:26:20.

`` temperatures will slip back. Tomorrow, a mixed bag of sunny

:26:21.:26:33.

spells and sunshine but also showers. The showers will be hit and

:26:34.:26:39.

miss, blowing through on a fresh and gusting westerly breeze, but most

:26:40.:26:45.

places will avoid those showers and stay dry. Tomorrow, it is going to

:26:46.:26:52.

be a few degrees cooler, so around 10 Celsius. It will feel quite

:26:53.:26:55.

chilly but average for the time of year. As we go through the rest of

:26:56.:27:01.

the week, it will be a chilly start to Wednesday with post on this card

:27:02.:27:05.

is the start, then wet and windy into Thursday, Thursday not to bad,

:27:06.:27:10.

looking like there will be some sunshine on Friday. We have not seen

:27:11.:27:15.

Harry since his marathon. You are back in one piece. Yes ready for

:27:16.:27:23.

another one. Never again! It was great fun. Good night.

:27:24.:27:51.

This is Malcolm, who owns Iceland. He's the one

:27:52.:27:53.

that's going to present us with the ten grand. When we win it.

:27:54.:27:55.

You've just got to make it as bearable

:27:56.:27:58.

Here we are in the PR nerve centre of Iceland

:27:59.:28:03.

at the end of 96 hours of total hell.

:28:04.:28:05.

But we haven't tested for dog or cat either.

:28:06.:28:10.

Is this the warmest supermarket around?

:28:11.:28:14.

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