Wednesday December 27 | 2017
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Dementia site offers one-stop shop with funds from fraudsters
A bright new dawn – and a Happy New Year
THE team behind the town’s Dementia Friendly Community (DFC) have set up a website designed to be a ‘one-stop shop’ for people who are living with dementia or who have just received a diagnosis and ‘don’t know where to begin’. The site was created with financial support from Kent’s Police and Crime Commissioner, Matthew Scott, who came to a DFC meeting to discuss the issue of people living with dementia being taken advantage of by scammers and rogue traders.
Reinvest The commissioner’s office runs a fund to support community groups who were focused on crime prevention. Mr Scott is committed to making offenders pay for the harm they cause so he created the Communities Together Fund to reinvest this money in places they harmed. DFC Chair Chris Parker said: “We are so grateful to the PCC for his enormous support. We plan to turn this website into a hub of information for those members of our community who live with dementia, those who care for them and those for whom a new diagnosis has left them in turmoil. “Tonbridge is a wonderful, caring community and we can use this website to illustrate all that is being done in dementia care and support, available local services and advice.”
INSIDE
GREAT EXPECTATIONS Doyens of the community gaze into their crystal balls Page 5
AWESOME OARSMEN
Brave pair take on endurance race rowing the Atlantic Page 55
Tony Rogers of Grey2BlackPhotography shot this beautiful image of the Racecourse sportsground, which adorns the front cover of Tonbridge Daily’s calendar for 2018. The Times of Tonbridge would like to wish all its readers the best for the New Year
Rail passengers hope for light at the end of the tunnel after long delays By William Mata
will@timesoftunbridgewells.co.uk COMMUTERS are hoping engineering works that have brought ten days of severe disruption and misery will be finished by the end of the Christmas holidays. Passengers travelling from Tonbridge to London Bridge, a journey that takes usually 35 minutes, have faced a two-and-half-hour trip at times with up to five changes. Franchise holder Southeastern suspended all services into London Bridge, Charing Cross, Cannon Street and Waterloo East from December 23 to Monday [January 1]. The festive disruption comes as part of the
Thameslink Programme in which Network Rail is looking to speed up north-south travel through the capital by upgrading London Bridge. John Reynolds, Chairman of the pressure group Tonbridge Line Commuters, said: “We
‘We hope all will be working from day one next week’ can understand why London Bridge has to be rebuilt and they need to close the station. “But we hope all will be working from day one next week. In the past we have had ongoing disruption and for this to continue would be unacceptable.”
From today [December 27] and for the duration of this working week trains will travel into London Victoria instead of the other London stations, a journey that will take up to an hour – or even longer – from Tonbridge. Passengers will also see some services terminate at Waterloo. The Saturday and Sunday before Christmas proved a particularly tricky test for anyone braving the railways trying to escape for the holidays or do some last-minute shopping, with both Southeastern and Southern scheduling engineering works. They faced extreme journeys into the capital with Network Rail’s own website
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CELEBRATE AT HOME Mary Berry prepares a perfect New Year’s Eve feast Page 38
GIANT THRILLER
Jack and the Bean Stalk keeps panto season going Page 50