Metanoia: Let your mind be renewedDo come and join us for one or more of the special Lent services that will be held on Wednesday evenings at 7:30pm in six churches in the locality. It is the opportunity to come together with people from other parishes to take time out of a busy week and reflect on the season. Lent is a period of preparation for Easter beginning on Ash Wednesday and ending at sunset on the day before Easter Sunday. It gives us 40 days to express sorrow at the wrong things we have done and provides for a 40-day fast (Sundays are excluded), in imitation of Jesus Christ's fasting in the wilderness before he began his public ministry.The dates are:22nd February (Ash Wednesday) at Marton Church During the service, the minister places the ashes on a worshipper's forehead in the shape of a cross. The ceremony shows that a person belongs to Jesus Christ, and it also represents a person's grief and mourning for their sins — the same sins that Christians believe Jesus Christ gave his life for when he died on the cross.1st March Evensong at Eaton8th March Evensong - Birtles 15th March Evensong at Siddington22nd March Evensong - Hulme Walfield29th March Holy Communion at SwettenhamAfter each service, Lenten refreshments will be served.
Application from Castle Green Housing planning reference: 22/1930C The Parish Council has submitted observations. At present it has recommended refusal of the application, principally because of the implications for Giantswood Lane and adjacent residential areas and rural lanes. However, following the very constructive public meeting with the applicants on the 27 July, significant revisions are expected to be submitted, with only emergency, pedestrian and cycle access from Giantswood Lane. On this basis, the Parish Council will retract the above and recommend approval with a number of other observations relating to rights of way infrastructure, speed limits, design code and wildlife/habitat conservation. Rural Housing Needs Survey The Parish Council has commissioned Cheshire Community Action, a local charity with expertise in supporting rural communities to influence development, to independently carry out a housing needs survey and assessment of the parish. The survey will provide information on the current housing needs of the parish and how this may change in the future. This will help the Parish Council influence future planning applications to help ensure they meet local needs. There will be a number of methods available to access the survey which should only take 15 minutes to complete. All responses will be kept confidential and all data will be used anonymously and solely for the purpose of informing the Parish Council and Local Authority of the current and future level of housing need. We will let everyone know as soon as the survey is live and hope that you will take part in this important process.Grant Applications The Parish Council awards grants to not for profit organisations which can demonstrate a clear need for financial support to achieve an objective which will benefit the parish and its community. Examples of such objectives include:* Proposals for additional tree planting or amenity areas which will benefit the wider community, and be accessible to it.* Improvements to pedestrian or cycle accessibility. * Contributions towards purchase of fixed equipment, or tools to allow community groups to take care of amenity areas. To help establish groups whose specific remit has wider community benefit. Further details and an application form can be found on the website or by contacting the Clerk. Web address and contact details are below. Next Meeting The next meeting will take place on Thursday 15th September at Westlow Mere Fisheries at 7.30pm. Dates for future meetings are posted on the noticeboards at Newsbank and St. Michael’s Church and are also available on the website, www.hwsbparishcouncil.co.uk. Members of the public are encouraged to attend and there is a period of time set aside at the start of each meeting where residents can speak and ask questions. We look forward to seeing you there. Clerk: Emma Bambrook Telephone: 07967 302707 Email: clerk@hwsbparishcouncil.co.uk Website: www.hwsbparishcouncil.co.uk
Dear Friends, This month we, as a nation, mark an extraordinary milestone. For 70 years Queen Elizabeth has served our nation as monarch. She has done so with great grace and with personal reserve, and I shall be celebrating enthusiastically. There will be many things said about her character, and all that she has lived through, during this season of celebration. I should like to say one thing about her: that her reign has been about us. Perhaps it is the nature of our constitutional monarchy, or perhaps it is her Christian faith and her understanding of the nature of service most likely it is both. However it has come about, her lack of political agenda makes her able to represent all of us in a way no elected president ever could do. We do not know her opinions on many matters, or her thoughts on how these nations should be run. We know of her love of horses, but not her views on fiscal policy or on devolution. It is precisely her willingness to serve a people, not an agenda, that has made her the finest and most respected of democratic heads of state, the wide world over. Certainly there is privilege as well as responsibility that goes with royal status, and it may seem unjust that this comes as a birthright, but I cannot think of a better way to represent us all. To elect or select a champion may be to select the very best of us (though I’m not at all sure that this is what our elections unfailingly do!). But, to have one family represent us means that monarchy is not about merit. Her Majesty represents all of us, born into whatever places and families we find ourselves in.We are born to be a nation together, regardless of our talents or opinions. And for seventy years, without fear or favour, The Queen has stood as our champion, through wars and troubles, through prosperity and disputes. Without judgement or agenda she has been there for us, the extraordinary embodiment of our ordinary lives. So let us say it loud and long, today and tomorrow: God save our gracious Queen, Long live our noble Queen, God save the Queen! Yours as ever, Ian
A great deal has happened over the last month locally in support of Ukrainian refugees. As we go to press (mid-May), around 50 Ukrainian visitors have arrived in our area. What was the “Marton Area Ukraine Support Network” is now the “Congleton Area Ukraine Support Network”, and the Congleton area has been growing! Many from our parishes have been active not only in hosting Ukrainian guests, but in helping others to navigate the hosting process, in liaising with other organisations and with local government and MPs, and in many other areas. A pop-up boutique has been providing clothing, a house has been fully furnished, bikes and computers donated. While there would have been advantages of the government taking full responsibility for refugees, the current (volunteer driven) system has allowed the generosity of our local community to be expressed to fully welcome our visitors into the community. There are many more Ukrainians in the visa process, and homes being offered. You can find out more, and get involved, through a new website: causn.com.