16/03/2017 Look North (Yorkshire)


16/03/2017

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independence. And that's all from the BBC News at

:00:00.:00:00.

John Atkinson played rugby league for Leeds and Great Britain and now

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he has Alzheimer's. I never ever understood

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really what hopeless meant until this happened,

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this absolute total lack of hope. We will hear more about Carol's

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story and the pressures carers are under.

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The new task force set up to tackle scams and doorstep crime,

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and crack down on those behind the exploitation.

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A multi-million-pound investment in Yorkshire's steel

:00:43.:00:43.

industry to keep Sheffield at the cutting edge.

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Find out what happens when a fashionista gets

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Turning very unsettled over the next few days, quite a bit of rain in

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West and areas as well. Join me for all of the very latest.

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Tonight, the wife of former Leeds Rugby League star

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John Atkinson has told the BBC there have been times when she's

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thought about ending her life, as the strain of coping

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with her husband's dementia pushed her to the brink of despair.

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John, who played for Leeds and Great Britain, developed

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Alzheimer's about five years ago and in that time has become

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She has now decided to share their story in an effort to show

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what she describes as the "hopeless lives" many carers endure.

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Are we going to have a shower? No.

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It's now mid-March and he's had two showers since the 2nd of January,

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but it seems that it's quite common that they develop

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That's a good scrub you're giving them.

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He's still very sweet and very gentle, and there are parts of John

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that I still recognise, but the saddest thing is, mostly,

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It's just hard, because he is still, despite everything, he's still got

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that resemblance of that big strong man, but it's... He's...

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That's gone - the thing that made John John has gone.

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Just go up the path and it's on the road.

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I feel like I'm the mother of a 6-foot tall,

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Might he need to go to the loo before we leave this

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So it's really like being the mum of a small child.

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Good morning. How are you?

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I don't think you have, because you've not spilled

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I never, ever understood really what what hopeless meant,

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until this happened, and this absolute total lack of hope...

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Is your ankle bothering you? No.

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Nothing is going to get better until the person dies,

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but you don't want the person to die, you just want them to get

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I have got you some clean pyjamas out.

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I don't want John to go into a home, because he can do exactly

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what he wants here and he has got a happy life.

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I don't think carers have happy lives.

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Whilst I sit here and I can say I have no intention

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of taking my life, it does get fairly hopeless sometimes,

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and it comforts me to know that, if I need to, I can step away.

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I could never leave him, but I could finish both of us off,

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Devastating, isn't it, Carol showed such bravery for that. I must

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confess, I know John very well and I have interviewed him many times. He

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is a super guy. Michael White from the Alzheimer's

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Society is with us now. Is it common for carers to feel that

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way about the commitment? Absolutely. It is one of the hardest

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things someone ever has to do in their life, and turns lives upside

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down and there are times people can feel depressed and stressed and find

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it difficult to adjust. What can you do and offered to give

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some kind of help to Carol and presumably scores of other people in

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Yorkshire? We can try and support the carer as

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much as possible, because the better the carer feels and the more support

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and they feel the more chance there is the other person will feel more

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supported as well. Can you ever prepare yourself for

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looking after somebody with dementia? Nobody knows who is going

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to get dementia but as soon as they have been diagnosed what can you do?

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It is difficult. A lot of carers do not immediately identified

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themselves as carers, there are still a husband or wife or father or

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son or daughter. But it is important, after somebody has a

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diagnosis, to make sure there is support and advice there

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straightaway and they have ongoing contact with an organisation like

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Alzheimer's Society or other charities.

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Is it in reality, when you know somebody is diagnosed with dementia,

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you have to go to a grieving process before they have actually died?

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Yes. You lose that person?

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Carers describe loss and a sense of grief...

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And with proper planning and support that is possible.

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So many tweets when we mentioned this would be mentioned. From Leeds

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Rugby league fans. Fans of sport generally because they wanted to

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offer support to John. Is there anything that can be done now?

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I think it is really about, if anyone with dementia, what ever

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states they are at, people around them still keeping in contact... The

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things people face is a sense of withdrawal from society or a family.

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We encourage people to keep in contact, even if the person with

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dementia is struggling to remember who they are or identify where they

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are, it is important that people have close contact with loved ones

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and keep up as normal a life as possible for as long as possible.

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Thank you. Next tonight, West Yorkshire Police

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and Trading Standards are stepping up the fight against scams,

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frauds and doorstep crime, with the launch of a new task force

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that will tackle financial It's thought that only 5%

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of victims report the crime, because they feel ashamed

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about what's happened, and it's not just the elderly

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and vulnerable falling victim Here's our home affairs

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correspondent Spencer Stokes. For its size, this could be one

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of the most expensive Over the course of the last year,

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Dr Paul Goulden has spent nearly Workmen from the same firm have

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visited on more than 30 occasions, but Dr Goulden says the roof

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is no better. It is a saga that started

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with a visit from a doorstep trader. I was having to dig

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into savings to pay the money. I'm trying to get them to stop

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and say, look, this is a... I feel I've let it run on too long,

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really, because I hadn't got a clear After neighbours filmed a video

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of one of the workers, Dr Goulden turned to

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Trading Standards, who launched an investigation, which will be

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carried out by their new Police say financial exploitation

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is an underreported crime, with just 5% of victims coming

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forward, but it's not just The new unit will seek out those

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who set up online financial scams, and also mass-marketing fraudsters

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who bombard homes with mail. Some of the criminals that

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are getting involved in the financial exploitation

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are potentially looking at profiling people,

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and gathering information online, and then deciding to then visit

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someone in person if they think someone is targeted or vulnerable

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around assets or And these are emerging trends

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that we have to target. There were times when I even

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felt a certain amount of sympathy for them,

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because their employers seemed to be working them very hard

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in very poor conditions. And every visit, ?1,000 here,

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a couple of thousand pounds there? Yes, they'd never do

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anything for nothing. Dr Goulden has now stopped

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paying the reverse, But, like so many victims

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of financial exploitation, it's unlikely he'll see

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the money again. Spencer Stokes, BBC

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Look North, Dewsbury. A South Yorkshire headteacher

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is warning her school is so poorly Jo Higgins has called a meeting

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tonight with parents at Penistone Grammar to explain

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the problems she's facing. She says the school is the fourth

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worst funded in the whole of the country, and the lack of cash

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means bigger class sizes, and increased pressure on staff

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trying to teach new GCSE Penistone Grammar is a popular

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school and a good school according to Ofsted. The problems they are

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facing are about the way the Government works out how much money

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they are given. The school is the worst funded in Barnsley, says the

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head, and she also says it is the fourth worst funded in the country.

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They get around ?3600 per pupil, but the Association of School business

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management say you need 4000... We are facing a funding crisis. That

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means we do not have sufficient funding to adequately run our

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school. We don't have enough money

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to pay for, literally, putting our teachers

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in front of classes. And I must stress that we have

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very large class sizes, It is certainly desperate. I am

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sorry for the picture is breaking up. What impact is this having on

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the pupils? As the head explained, bigger class

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sizes, fewer staff... Teachers and nonteaching staff... And they have

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closed a pupil support Centre. Lots of changes they are having to make

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and parents here are not happy. I feel that we are being let

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down by the Government Everybody appears to be

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burying their heads in the sand and nobody appears to want to talk

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about it or come up with a solution. I feel that we are being

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penalised for where we live. Whether you are in Newcastle

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or whether you are down in London, all those kids should really get

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the same core amount, but that's not happening,

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and there doesn't seem to be a very fair system as to how it's

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actually worked out. And we'll have a full report

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from that meeting in our late programme as part of

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the BBC News At Ten. We will have the Government argument

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and the side of the Council as well on that.

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A newly-wed couple and two relatives were killed when the car

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they were travelling in veered onto the wrong side of the road

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and collided with a lorry on the A64 in North Yorkshire.

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The Suzuki Ignis was being driven by 63-year-old Derek Green,

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They were taking Paul and Susan Dockerty from their wedding in Leeds

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All four were killed instantly when the car flipped onto its roof

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It's thought Mr Green had been somehow distracted while driving.

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An inquest today recorded verdicts of accidental death and said

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the driver of the lorry, Vladis Monius,

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North Yorkshire Police's historic headquarters

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at Newby Wiske Hall have been sold, after serving the force

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The Hall, which was built more than 300 years ago,

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still retains many original features, but is deemed to be no

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It will now be turned into a young people's educational

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We've got a really good buyer who will look after the building

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and be a great neighbour for the community, and it allows

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the police to move into a modern, fit-for-purpose building,

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A West Yorkshire theatre has put forward plans for a multi-million

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West Yorkshire Playhouse wants to build a new entrance,

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improve the theatre space and put in extra seats.

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A final decision on the project will be made by the council

:14:21.:14:23.

An off-duty South Yorkshire firefighter's been hailed a hero,

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after helping to save the life of a Leicester City

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supporter during the club's Champions League win over Sevilla.

:14:32.:14:34.

Caz Whiteman was in the crowd on Tuesday when a fellow

:14:35.:14:38.

spectator collapsed with a suspected heart attack.

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She helped first-aiders give CPR for more than 15 minutes,

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before the man was taken to hospital by ambulance.

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A Barnsley man has been picked as one of the skippers in this

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year's Clipper Round The World Yacht Race.

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Sailing instructor Roy Taylor will lead a team

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in the 40,000-nautical-mile race, which is regarded as the one

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of the toughest endurance challenges in the world.

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The competition, which will take almost a year to complete,

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is the only event of its kind for amateur sailors.

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Invest in it or lose it - that's the thinking behind

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a ?6 million investment in one of Sheffield's oldest

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William Cook Holdings designs and manufactures components

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for blue-chip customers in the energy, defence,

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Today a new factory has been officially opened,

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which is home to cutting-edge technology that will help

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Our business correspondent Danni Hewson is there for us this

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Yes, I am told that this particular robot does not have a name yet and

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is one of the new bits of kit this Sheffield company has invested in.

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The idea is it will allow them to create bigger holds for casting, and

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seek out new markets. With everything we have heard about the

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state of the steel industry over the last month, those new markets and

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new business will be crucial going forward.

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Since the 1800s, this company has been steel-casting,

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crafting world-class products used in trains, planes,

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There have been many changes, and many challenges,

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and the last couple of years are no exception.

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Faced with competition from places like China,

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many manufacturers have had to think hard about the future.

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Many people say, why don't you just pack it in?

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This is my life's work and I want it to last after I'm long gone.

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I have invested to give this company a future and to give

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And, if you like, to give British manufacturing a future.

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So, when you reason it like that, the decision, after all,

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?6 million has brought new toys, including the world's largest

:16:59.:17:05.

Those invited to the official opening of the factory

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were shown how the technology will change the business.

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Guest of honour, double Olympic champion Lord Sebastien Coe,

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whose father once worked at a Sheffield cutlers'.

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We need more young people to want to think the manufacturing

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We want more young people to become engineers, particularly women,

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So this is very much a part of what I've always been

:17:29.:17:32.

I'm not an engineer, I'm an economist by profession.

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Most of the engineers in my family thought that was a bit of a copout

:17:38.:17:41.

and wasn't really a proper job, but, having said that, this

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While Lord Coe thinks back, workers here are looking forward.

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200 jobs safeguarded, another chapter begun

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Crucially, all of these bits of kit have been designed to work alongside

:17:53.:18:08.

the workforce. The bosses said, without the investment, this company

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would probably become a warehouse within a matter of weeks. They now

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have to go out and find new business but it is a challenge which

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everybody here says they are very much looking forward to.

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Now, hundreds of young reporters have been joining the BBC today

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to take part in School Report day, with thousands more having held

:18:24.:18:26.

We've been giving them the chance to learn more about journalism,

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media and the BBC, and they taught us a thing or two as well.

:18:31.:18:34.

Pupils from Upper Batley High School have sent us this report.

:18:35.:18:39.

Hello and welcome to the school report of Upper Batley High School.

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In 2016, recycling dropped for the first time in five years.

:18:51.:18:54.

Every day, over 80 million food and drink cans end up

:18:55.:18:57.

If all cans were recycled in the UK, we would need 14 million fewer bins.

:18:58.:19:04.

This time last year, we spoke to the late MP Jo Cox

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and she gave us some tips on how to help the environment.

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I think you should encourage all students to walk to school,

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I think secondly you should recycle everything that you can as a school

:19:14.:19:18.

because obviously you eat lots of food, and lots of things

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will arrive in packages and you will use paper,

:19:22.:19:25.

Our reporter has been to talk to the headteacher to find out more.

:19:26.:19:31.

I am joined here by Mrs Vickers, the headteacher of

:19:32.:19:33.

Upper Batley High School, and I am going to ask her a few

:19:34.:19:37.

What does the school do to promote recycling?

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We try to promote recycling with our staff team and our pupils

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in many different ways so anything that we do use in school might come

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through from the Department of Education, anything we don't

:19:49.:19:50.

Thank you, Mrs Vickers, for a brilliant interview.

:19:51.:19:54.

Well, our reporter has been finding out more.

:19:55.:20:05.

Hello and today I am out of the school and I am going to be

:20:06.:20:09.

talking to some students about how they get to school.

:20:10.:20:17.

I think walking is a good idea because it helps

:20:18.:20:20.

I walk to school, I don't go in a car because I think

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I walk to school with my friends, so you talk more instead of just

:20:30.:20:34.

being bored walking, so it takes longer.

:20:35.:20:39.

And you can find stories by other young reporters from all over the UK

:20:40.:20:48.

With us now we have the anchorman, Abdulla. In the nicest possible way,

:20:49.:20:57.

what did you like most about what happened today?

:20:58.:21:03.

It is all be looking at the technical aspects of what goes on,

:21:04.:21:06.

because you don't realise when you are watching at home how much is

:21:07.:21:10.

actually done by the rest of the team and how they are the actual

:21:11.:21:16.

ones that have everything actually going on.

:21:17.:21:20.

Yes, they do all the hard work and it is teamwork. But you don't seem

:21:21.:21:23.

to have been phased and you seem confident, have you enjoyed it?

:21:24.:21:29.

Yes, I have enjoyed it all, and being part of the BBC school news

:21:30.:21:33.

report is fantastic and a great opportunity, and lots of people have

:21:34.:21:37.

taken part in it, which is lovely and really great.

:21:38.:21:40.

Do you think you would like to be a journalist?

:21:41.:21:45.

I would consider it. Good luck with that. Your film was

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about the environment. What have you learnt about the environment? Have

:21:52.:21:55.

you got a tip you can share today? We have tips such as, when you are

:21:56.:22:00.

driving, you don't realise sometimes when you can actually walk such

:22:01.:22:05.

short distances you take the car instead, and people can work on

:22:06.:22:08.

walking. Also recycling more. People don't realise how much they can just

:22:09.:22:15.

recycle and put in their recycling bin at home which can help the

:22:16.:22:19.

environment on a massive scale. You have both done a terrific job

:22:20.:22:22.

today and we have enjoyed having you here, and we'll get back to you just

:22:23.:22:26.

before the weather. We will catch up with you then. Thank you.

:22:27.:22:32.

We have young reporters from all over the UK on the website.

:22:33.:22:37.

It's not known for its fashion credentials, but Wakefield

:22:38.:22:41.

is the current hot spot for all the fashionistas who can't

:22:42.:22:44.

They're beating a path to the Hepworth gallery to see

:22:45.:22:48.

a new exhibition curated by leading fashion designer JW Anderson.

:22:49.:22:50.

Fashion and art have an uneasy relationship usually.

:22:51.:23:07.

Fashion is dismissed as the frivolous and fast

:23:08.:23:09.

little sister of serious, eternal Art with a capital A.

:23:10.:23:14.

For fashion designer and art lover Jonathan Anderson,

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he has pulled the two together and made them get along,

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in a luxurious show at the Hepworth, airing sculpture and haute couture.

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The meeting point is the way both treat the human form.

:23:25.:23:28.

We embody it to make it come to life.

:23:29.:23:35.

And that's what I, kind of, like, that in this exhibition you can get

:23:36.:23:40.

You know, we have done our very best to reduce glass cabinets,

:23:41.:23:47.

because I feel that fashion is textural.

:23:48.:23:51.

JW Anderson's designs set at the cutting edge

:23:52.:23:53.

He designs for both men and women, blurring the boundaries

:23:54.:23:57.

And joyfully stretching garments to new limits.

:23:58.:24:03.

All these enormous jumpers have been designed by Jonathan,

:24:04.:24:07.

with one aim in mind - to dress up and have some fun.

:24:08.:24:10.

So, the idea is, you drape yourself around, get out your phone

:24:11.:24:15.

In a weird way, the show is like this massive, exploding

:24:16.:24:27.

visual mood-board, and it gives you an insight

:24:28.:24:29.

into what fashion can be, and what sculpture can be as well.

:24:30.:24:32.

Here is one example of those two worlds meeting -

:24:33.:24:36.

paper sculptures from the '50s by Noguchi

:24:37.:24:38.

It's a clever pairing, showing that fashion and art can

:24:39.:24:42.

talk to each other and maybe should more often.

:24:43.:24:44.

Cathy Killick, BBC Look North, Wakefield.

:24:45.:24:58.

Fantastic. You are going to enjoy this. First of all, congratulations,

:24:59.:25:06.

the weather show has won an award, hasn't it?

:25:07.:25:10.

Best weather in the country, you'll be pleased about that. This is a

:25:11.:25:15.

real laugh, because if I ask you to turn around... I can't turn round at

:25:16.:25:19.

this point in time. Why not?

:25:20.:25:25.

I did bend over in the weather studio and my pants had split

:25:26.:25:28.

earlier. A full moon?

:25:29.:25:31.

Very good. It is certainly very draughty and I'm glad I am facing

:25:32.:25:35.

the camera. Let me show you some pictures from the 24 hours. That is

:25:36.:25:41.

at Crossgates. Better than that is this example of this cloud. Taking

:25:42.:25:48.

in Sheffield on Monday. An extraordinary picture, thank you for

:25:49.:25:53.

sending back in. Keep the pictures coming in to Weather Watchers. You

:25:54.:25:59.

can also tweak them to me. Very unsettled over the next few days and

:26:00.:26:02.

it looks as though there will be a bit of rain in the Pennines. Amounts

:26:03.:26:07.

relatively small further east and jet stream powering across the

:26:08.:26:10.

country. These weather fronts as we had through Friday, strung out right

:26:11.:26:17.

across us. Appreciable rainfall totals in Pennine areas. Further

:26:18.:26:23.

east, some shelter, with West South West rain patch here in nature. It

:26:24.:26:27.

weather front pushing down from the Northwest now. A week feature

:26:28.:26:30.

bringing patchy rain across Yorkshire in the next couple of

:26:31.:26:34.

hours. Quickly clearing out of the way and all parts will be dry with

:26:35.:26:39.

clear periods. Turning windy later on, and with shelter from the

:26:40.:26:44.

breeze, some down relate to two Celsius or 36 Fahrenheit. Rises, and

:26:45.:26:54.

high water time... Western areas cloudy from the word go. Some clouds

:26:55.:27:00.

further east, and turning increasingly wet. By mid turning to

:27:01.:27:04.

chuck down of the Pennines, and bring getting further east than the

:27:05.:27:09.

A1, dividing line at Leeds or Sheffield, east of here. Patchy rain

:27:10.:27:13.

and not a great deal. Over towards the Pennines, Skipton and Penistone

:27:14.:27:18.

and those sort of areas, thoroughly miserable and wet by tomorrow

:27:19.:27:21.

afternoon. Strong and gusty wind as well with Doctor Bridge is purely

:27:22.:27:25.

academic with the central breeze billing chilly, with nine or 10

:27:26.:27:29.

Celsius. More rain to come over the weekend. That is the feel. And wind

:27:30.:27:35.

as well. I am glad.

:27:36.:27:39.

What do you think of it? Rubbish? Yes.

:27:40.:27:43.

Give us a twirl, Paul. Eat your heart out, Bill.

:27:44.:27:45.

I will see you later. Bye-bye. It was the most beautiful view

:27:46.:27:48.

I've ever been through. For one second, I was swimming on my

:27:49.:27:55.

back, and I was looking to the sky. I was swimming across

:27:56.:28:01.

the Aegean Sea. I was a refugee,

:28:02.:28:06.

going from Syria to Germany. MasterChef is back, to find the

:28:07.:28:22.

country's best home chef. The MasterChef kitchen is alive once

:28:23.:28:26.

more. Come on, let's go!

:28:27.:28:32.

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