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Be Bright Be Seen: Free reflective keyrings and jackets to help keep children stay safe this winter

04 October 2024
Be Bright Be Seen: Free reflective keyrings and jackets to help keep children stay safe this winter

We’re giving away thousands of reflective keyrings and high-vis jackets to help Medway’s school children remain visible in the darker days ahead.

Be Bright Be Seen: Free reflective keyrings to help keep children stay safe this winter

04 October 2024
Be Bright Be Seen: Free reflective keyrings to help keep children stay safe this winter

We have thousands of reflector keyrings to give away to help Kent pupils remain visible during the darker days to come.

‘Why did Tory hopeful Kemi, with her £91k salary, attack maternity pay?’

01 October 2024
‘Why did Tory hopeful Kemi, with her £91k salary, attack maternity pay?’

Why did an MP earning £91,000 a year attack maternity pay, ponders our columnist, but might it help those raising the next generation of taxpayers?

13

‘£1.65 for a first class stamp? I’ll grumble and yet I rarely send a letter’

24 September 2024
‘£1.65 for a first class stamp? I’ll grumble and yet I rarely send a letter’

Rising prices and unreliable deliveries - our columnist asks if she’s any right to grumble about postal services or is she part of the problem?

14

‘Parents won’t follow the rules unless the punishment is enough to dissuade them’

23 September 2024
‘Parents won’t follow the rules unless the punishment is enough to dissuade them’

Close to 900 parents have received multiple fines for term-time holidays - will the new threat of prison or a £2,500 penalty tackle repeat offenders?

144

‘Why only London or Wales? Every primary school pupil should get lunch for free’

17 September 2024
‘Why only London or Wales? Every primary school pupil should get lunch for free’

Free lunches are being served in London’s primary schools for the second year running and our columnist believes it’s time this happened everywhere.

33

‘The winter fuel debate could save the country £1.2bn but will it leave MPs out in the cold?’

10 September 2024
‘The winter fuel debate could save the country £1.2bn but will it leave MPs out in the cold?’

People are watching which way MPs vote on winter fuel payments, believes our columnist, with debates rumbling as autumn’s first cold snap arrives.

113

‘They face every day with incredible bravery and unwavering courage’

07 September 2024
‘They face every day with incredible bravery and unwavering courage’

A young boy fundraising for memorial benches after losing his own brother suddenly just last year is among this year’s Children’s Awards winners.

‘Oasis’ dynamic pricing isn’t new - families face inflated holiday costs every August’

04 September 2024
‘Oasis’ dynamic pricing isn’t new - families face inflated holiday costs every August’

Why the fuss about Oasis ticket prices, asks our columnist, who argues families needing August holidays have paid inflated prices for years.

19

‘I’m sick of celebrities queuing up to tell us how bad their exam results were’

20 August 2024
‘I’m sick of celebrities queuing up to tell us how bad their exam results were’

It’s exam results time and our columnist is getting irritated by the multi-millionaire celebrities lining up to tell students grades don’t matter.

4

100 possible ‘grey belt’ plots identified in Kent for housing

19 August 2024
100 possible ‘grey belt’ plots identified in Kent for housing

There may be 100 likely sites of ‘grey belt’ land in Kent that could be suitable for housing development, suggests a report, but where are they?

127

‘Viral videos of solidarity since the riots remind us of the good that comes when we exercise our moral duty’

13 August 2024
‘Viral videos of solidarity since the riots remind us of the good that comes when we exercise our moral duty’

From the imam offering chips to rioters to the ‘nans against Nazis’ our columnist has become entranced by online videos showing acts of solidarity.

24

‘Society prefers children who aren’t seen and not heard to those who play in our streets’

07 August 2024
‘Society prefers children who aren’t seen and not heard to those who play in our streets’

‘Where are all the children?’ asks our columnist, who fears society is gradually waging a war on play that means fewer youngsters are on the streets.

1

Rural churches face ‘funding crisis’ in increasingly cashless society

04 August 2024
Rural churches face ‘funding crisis’ in increasingly cashless society

Rural churches reportedly face a funding crisis as fewer visitors carry cash, banks close and village internet struggles - can Kent’s parishes adapt?

24

‘Winter fuel payments need restricting but to say all but the poorest can afford heating is wrong’

30 July 2024
‘Winter fuel payments need restricting but to say all but the poorest can afford heating is wrong’

Pensioners’ winter fuel payments need capping just as TV Licences did, says our columnist, but it’s wrong to say all but the poorest can afford it.

225

The despicable rise in dine and dash: ‘It’s greed and opportunism’

28 July 2024
The despicable rise in dine and dash: ‘It’s greed and opportunism’

Greedy customers who ‘dine and dash’ before paying are leaving owners out of pocket and staff disheartened but what is behind the rising trend?

47

‘It’s full steam ahead for Great British Railways - so will trains run in the national interest?’

23 July 2024
‘It’s full steam ahead for Great British Railways - so will trains run in the national interest?’

Could the government’s vision for our railways signal a new era for public transport and train travel in this country, asks our columnist?

13

Kent braces itself as summer getaway starts

19 July 2024
Kent braces itself as summer getaway starts

Kent is braced for a busy weekend on the roads and at its borders as schools begin to break-up, the weather warms up and Paris’ Olympics get closer.

6

‘We thought we’d got rid of rickets but now it’s back’

18 July 2024
‘We thought we’d got rid of rickets but now it’s back’

There has been a sharp rise in the number of rickets cases recorded in one part of Kent but are Victorian diseases really making a comeback?

25

‘A lack of cash is turning education and our schools into a business’

16 July 2024
‘A lack of cash is turning education and our schools into a business’

A lack of cash is turning education and schools into businesses, fears our columnist, when they should be in nothing but the business of education.

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