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10 Million+ Hits / 10 Thousand Posts
This is the 'Only' site with regular updates on Community and
Council news.
Cllr Roy Gerstner is proud to have provided these Facts & Figures for over 15 years. -
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I have been promoting this for a number of weeks, yes I have completed the survey it took less than 5 minutes and ‘could’ have weight and impact on the next generations living here in Fenland.
You can fill in the form (5 minutes) by going directly to this link Click Here
More information can be found by Clicking Here

Operation Hypernova: Tackling county lines exploitation and drug supply
We’re writing to tell you about one of the biggest operations Cambridgeshire has ever seen to tackle exploitation and illegal drugs.
Operation Hypernova was launched by Cambridgeshire Police in a bid to make the county hostile towards county lines drug dealers, prevent further exploitation of young and vulnerable people and reduce serious street-based violence.
So far 44 people have been arrested with 39 of those charged with more than 139 drug and human trafficking offences.
It’s been happening on a street near you.
Officers carried out more than 15 dawn raids across places including Cambridge, Peterborough, Ramsey, March, Yaxley, Haverhill, Luton and London following weeks of intelligence gathering into those bringing class A drugs into Cambridgeshire and exploiting vulnerable people.
Thirty-three county lines have been dismantled with crack cocaine, cocaine, heroin and cannabis worth more than £600,000 seized along with hundreds of thousands of pounds in cash and assets including vehicles, jewellery and clothing.
Several weapons including push daggers and knives have also been seized.
Watch the operation unfold here.
We are working harder than ever to crack down on county lines, which bring misery to our communities in the form of exploitation, drug dealing and violence.
Tackling county lines is in equal parts about safeguarding victims, shutting down the line and targeting line holders.
You can find out more about the work of Operation Hypernova, including pictures and video as well as understanding what county lines and cuckooing are and how to spot the signs on our website.
If you are concerned about drug-related crime in your area or think someone may be a victim of drug exploitation, report it to us by calling 101 or online.
Thanks for your support.
Detective Chief Inspector Chris O’Brien
Intelligence and Specialist Crime Department
What a @Hertiage Centre’ may have looked like….
£1m heritage centre ‘will not give good value for money’
Fenland Council says £1m for a Whittlesey heritage centre ‘will not give good value for money’
Rocketing costs – now expected to be £1m – could have put a block on it. For good.
Although Whittlesey town council, which offered £8,000 towards it, has put it on the back burner, Fenland District Council concedes “the project will not give good value for money to the taxpayer”.
Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Combined Authority offered £500,000 for a new visitor centre to showcase local artefacts and tell the story of Whittlesey.
It was backed with £1,666 from the district council as well as the £8,000 from the town council. Land worth approximately £100,000 and gifted by Forterra PLC was also factored into the original estimates.
The building would have been built on land owned by Forterra and adjacent to King’s Dyke nature reserve, about three quarters of a miles outside the town.
“Substantial work has been undertaken by third party consultants prior to the Growing Fenland project regarding this project,” says a report from Fenland Council
It says that following the Combined Authority’s approval of the grant, the town council put together a project working group consisting of three elected members.
Work on the design of the facility has been underway since 2021 but halted in March 2022. “Whilst a design now exists, there is a substantial gap in funding between the expected cost of the new building and the funding available,” says Fenland Council.
“Other funders have been considered with no success – the funding gap is too large and requires a national funder such as the Heritage Lottery Fund.”
In February the Heritage Lottery Fund refused a bid for £244,000 towards it – around 28 per cent of the projected cost.
Fenland Council says with the current climate in the construction market, alongside the abnormal inflation seen in the UK, any build project would need to add in a substantial inflationary contingency. It would also need to add in “contingencies for unforeseen issues encountered during the build.
“These considerations increase the funding gap further.
“The project team has considered the location and the gap in funding, alongside market conditions and believe that continuing with the project at this time is unlikely to produce a facility in a timely, affordable manner.”
Fenland Council says: “The project will not give good value for money to the taxpayer and work on the heritage centre has been suspended since early summer 2022.”
Alternative propositions include awaiting further gap funding although “given the current estimated cost of the facility now exceeds £1m, it is considered that the facility will not represent good value to the taxpayer.
“Additional supportive gap funding will not change the poor value for money that the project would represent in the current construction climate and this option has been discounted”. The council says various ideas were considered including “relocating the heritage centre to a more central position within the town and reducing the scope of the design.
“Whilst this is possible, the facility that would be developed as a result is unlikely to be able to provide the facilities necessary in an effective heritage centre and would not meet community or visitor expectations.
“The project group has discounted this option.”
Councillors will be told of plans to focus the remaining Growing Fenland fund on improving community provision in the town.
“As the heritage centre either in its original form and location, or in a reduced form and different location has now been halted, local elected members have discussed other options for the remaining funding to improve community assets within Whittlesey,” says the Fenland Council report.
“Members are determined to retain the grant funding to improve the town for local residents.
“Members focus has been drawn to the very popular community green space that is central within the town – the Manor Field and Leisure Centre – and the community
“In summary, members have been very committed to delivery of the Heritage Centre in Whittlesey.
“Unfortunately, the development of a facility to match local ambition has proved far more costly than originally envisaged due to a changing construction market and abnormal inflation levels.” However the town council seems either not to have given up on the heritage centre or are singing from a different hymn book.
In July mayor Cllr David Mason successfully put forward a motion from the town council to the Combined Authority and backed unanimously by colleagues.
He asked for an extension to March 2025 for the £500,000 to be spent.
Cllr Mason said the extra time would allow the town council to make changes and produce a more cost-effective heritage centre.
The heritage centre would have been a “relatively modest building”.
It would have included one or more education spaces or classrooms, flexible space to incorporate small exhibitions and indoor events, coffee shop, toilets, and office and storage space suitable for staff and volunteers.©
I decided in 2011 when first elected as an Independent Councillor, that my means of communicating and keeping ‘my’ electorate informed would by a Website.
Like every thing it takes a while for the platform to get known and established.
Some 11 years later, the average number of individuals having a look is around 1,200 – 1,400 a day.
As I stated in 2011 – You will only get ‘facts’ and not fiction here and I wish the same could be said for Social Media.
I am always contactable and will always listen to issues and concerns.
Hoping another year or two before I ‘retire’ – and let (ha) someone else keep you all up to date and informed.
You may ‘if’ you’re lucky get a once or twice newsletter from other Councillors, on the otherhand you may not get anything at all until election time?
5,859 Posting on this Web-blog – 2,500,000+ Hits
January 2014 I was there…..History in the making….well maybe,
and we are still waiting for ‘a’ Supermarket to be built?
Like the KD Bridge …slowly, slowly – it will come eventually – just be patient?
I have now attended 8 yes that is 8 planning meetings regarding the ‘Supermarket’ coming to Whittlesey…. 4 for Whittlesey Town Council (as consultees) and 2 at March and 2 at Whittlesey.
Yesterdays meeting started at 14:30 and concluded after legal advice at 22:45.
It was a very good turn out and in general the meeting was well handled and behaved.
I still think that the Independent Councillor Mark Archer was the most robust in his questioning of all concerned. To be fair it was Marks first time ‘listening’ to this debate.
Simon King another newcomer to the debate was also one of the better questioners.
So after listening to various comments this morning, everyone is ‘Happy’ – BUT the decision is still open to appeal and legal challenge. It needs to go to the Secretary of State for ratification.
I hope that Harrier/Tesco now see sense…. and come to some agreement to give up their
plans for Station Road…… there is of course one way to make it work…..
Sort the Railway crossing out and who know!!!!
I and the majority of Whittlesey residents look forward to the long term, a new supermarket, a business park and a country park for future generations.
Keep Dreaming…..
In serious need of some R&R…. Connie and I had a nice week away in Jersey last week.
Some 40 years since we last visited….(On a Motorbike) – all very good, however everything is much more expensive than here on the mainland.
Whilst there we met up on several occasions with one of my Ship Mates, Jonathan P, who
has the inherited the ‘title’ Lord Louth (bestowed on his family by Henry VIII)
10 minute article about how ‘we’ all take many things for granted….