We also provide training and consultancy services for professionals across the private, public and voluntary sector.
Group sessions: Group sessions can be delivered within educational or other youth settings for children and young people aged from 11 years. For more information and costings on these services please contact us. Our qualified counsellors will work with young people individually or as part of a family unit, giving them the opportunity to express feelings, explore and understand difficulties as well as help and support to try and find ways of better managing these. Counselling appointments are available at different venues throughout the Bassetlaw area, however we cannot offer counselling sessions within the home.
Appointments can be offered at different times and days during the week and limited appointments are available on Saturdays. Please contact us to arrange an appointment.
LGBT+ Service Nottinghamshire
One-to-one sessions are available by appointment only. Our group sessions are open to young people aged over 15 years and run on the first Thursday of every month from 6. We have subject matter experts who can assist your organisation in a range of areas including policy and strategy development. All packages are delivered by our highly skilled training and consultancy team.
Notts LGBT+ Network
This supports professionals and organisations to be up-to-date, meet legal requirements, improve quality and promote diversity and inclusion. We can also provide bespoke training services tailored to meet individual organisational requirements on both a full and half day basis. To discuss the needs of an organisation and the services we are able to provide in more detail please contact us. If you are aged under 13 then the referral will need to be made by someone over the age of Most people can't just put an extension on their home or build a new house on land without getting approval - so why should it be different for them?
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It's very easy for people to say when they're living comfortably. We're asking to be able to be part of the community at no expense to the council. Charlotte and her neighbours appealed against the council's enforcement notice to the Planning Inspectorate. In April , inspector Chris Preston ruled the families shouldn't be given planning permission to allow them to live there. He said the reasons were due to the risk of flooding, the noise from nearby traffic and the "harmful effect" the caravans had on the openness of the land. He concluded those issues outweighed the personal circumstances of the families and the benefits of the children having a "settled base".
There is a large travellers' site in Newark called Tolney Lane - which also sits within a flood zone and has flooded before - and they claim the local council wants all travellers to go and live on there. I put this to the council who told me that Tolney Lane is a "longstanding location for Gypsy and Traveller accommodation". The government requires local authorities in England to regularly assess how many sites they need in order to serve their Gypsy and Traveller communities and come up with a five-year plan on how they will deliver them.
If they fail to come up with one, it says this should "be a significant material consideration" when deciding whether to grant temporary planning permission to a traveller site. Newark and Sherwood District Council currently doesn't have an up-to-date plan.
It told me its proposals will be published and consulted on next year. And it's admitted it doesn't have any alternative traveller sites for the six families to relocate to if they are kicked off their own land.
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I did ask the council where it expects the families to go if they can't stay and it said it wasn't "appropriate to comment on the individual circumstances" of those involved. The families are now taking their fight to the High Court and a hearing is due to be held in October.
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They've been allowed to challenge the Planning Inspectorate's decision on three claims:. Charlotte says her "stomach sinks" if she thinks about losing the case and being forced to leave the place they call home. A lot of people say 'Oh, yeah, travellers rocked up and they did this and they were doing that' - not us. Newark and Sherwood District Council said it is respectful of its "large and very long-established Gypsy and Traveller communities" and remained "committed to finding future appropriate sites". Councillor Roger Blaney, chairman of the planning committee, added: "The council has called for sites on a number of occasions since , including actively writing to all landowners who have previously expressed an interest in developing land.
The council has not ruled out purchasing a site to meet its future needs. The council said it would encourage Traveller families "to pursue a number of avenues" before purchasing and occupying a site without having planning permission first.
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Cherry Wilson is a proud northerner who recently moved back to Stockport, Greater Manchester, where she grew up. She studied journalism in Sheffield and was the first in her family to go to university.
Her passion is telling the stories of the people and communities behind the headlines, exploring issues that matter to them. She has a great love for cups of tea, jerk chicken, chips and gravy and Coronation Street. Follow Cherry on Twitter. Gypsy and traveller site numbers 'not being met'. But the local council has served an injunction and told them they need to leave the land. The children's education is a big factor in them wanting to stay here.