Martin Wilson, a champion of the Visually Impaired (Sight Support Derbyshire)
Martin Sykes is the Chair of Trustees of the Long Eaton & District Talking Newspaper and knows only too well that referrals are the life blood for any Talking Newspaper.
Martin Sykes is the Chair of Trustees of the Long Eaton & District Talking Newspaper and knows only too well that referrals are the life blood for any Talking Newspaper.
Derbyshire has been chosen as one of only three national non-Violence Reduction Unit (VRU) pathfinder areas in the country to lead the Young Futures pilot from October 2025 to March 2026.
Hundreds of people from across the East Midlands came together in Nottingham on 6th October to back a powerful regional drive to prevent violence against women and girls (VAWG).
Derbyshire County Council has voted by a majority to oppose the development of large-scale solar-panel farms and battery energy storage systems on greenfield sites in the county in what it claims is a bid to protect the area’s countryside and food security.
Derbyshire County Council is on track to clear its pothole backlog by mid-October, following significant investment in its highways service.
Fifteen years ago, the then Chief Executive Officer of Derbyshire Association for the Blind changed the legal name of the charity to Sight Support Derbyshire. He talked to people inside the organisation, asking them what they would like the charity to be called, and Sight Support Derbyshire was chosen. It was ratified by the board, because it describes exactly what they do.
A fleet of trains built in Derby by Alstom has carried more than 12 million passengers in its first full year of operation.
Derby College Group (DCG) is celebrating after a team of staff presented their pioneering research at this year’s British Educational Research Association (BERA) Annual Conference, recently held at the University of Sussex.
Derbyshire’s council leadership is “rolling out the red carpet” to entice a company to set up a major film studio in the county.
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