Wednesday March 7 | 2018
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ION 10 0TH EDIT
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Times OF TONBRIDGE
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Cyber security furore dismissed as ‘just a matter of terminology’ THE Borough Council has dismissed the findings of a report into cyber security after it was named as having suffered three times more attacks on its computer system than any other local authority in the country. The civil liberties and privacy campaign group Big Brother Watch identified Tonbridge & Malling Borough Council [TMBC] as having experienced 62 ‘cyber incidents’ between 2013-17. The next worst was Herefordshire with 22. Their report ‘Cyber Attacks in Local Authorities’ also noted that TMBC suffered two ‘total cyber security incidents that resulted in loss or breach of data’.
Personal The data was collected from a Freedom of Information request by Big Brother Watch, who warn of a growing risk to the public’s privacy as more personal details are stored online by councils. The group says: “Local authorities are holding everexpanding troves of personal information about citizens. “Under the banner of datadriven government, they are seeking to actively gather more information about people.” It found that local authorities have experienced more than 98 million cyber attacks over five years, and at least one in four suffered an ‘incident – that is, an actual security breach’. The National Cyber Security Centre, which monitors all
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FELINE GENEROUS?
Public responds to Sapphie the station cat’s woes Page 3
ROTOR MOTIVATION
Man saved by Air Ambulance joins charity’s board Page 2
SELFIE SERVICE: The five Lions Zone Presidents arrive at a snowy Buckingham Palace to attend the service organisation’s 100th birthday party – (l-r) Tony Constable (Southborough), Gordon Hill (Tonbridge), Hilary Lyon (Crowborough), Liz Brown (Sevenoaks) and Christine Small (Paddock Wood). Tonbridge was the first club in the country; turn to page 2 to find out more
Petition calls for creation of dedicated town council By Andy Tong andy@timesoftonbridge.co.uk A CAMPAIGN has been launched to form a town council after a survey of 500 residents last year revealed that 80 per cent supported the idea. The town is the only part of the borough of Tonbridge & Malling that does not have its own dedicated authority. Residents are demanding that, since they are providing the borough council with a payment specifically for services in the town, this money should be administered by a bespoke public body. A meeting was held at the Scout Hut in Lamberts Yard on February 28 to launch
the Tonbridge Town Council Campaign, using the crest of the old Tonbridge Urban District Council. Campaigner Mark Hood said: “We settled on basic requirements, to be as open to individual involvement as pos-
‘It should balance good value with accountability’ sible at every stage and that the new council should balance good value with accountability.” They will launch a petition and if 7.5 per cent of people in the town are in favour, then consultation by the borough council will be mandatory.
The movement is asking shops to hold petitions for the public to sign. Activists will be out collecting the 3,040 signatures needed to trigger the consultation. There had been an Urban District Council from 1894 until the Local Government Act of 1972 saw its merger with Malling Rural District and parts of Tonbridge Rural District to become Tonbridge & Malling District Council. The umbrella body began functioning on April 1, 1974, then received the status of a borough on December 16, 1983. Since last year residents have paid a precept as if the town had its own council
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LEST WE FORGET...
Penshurst’s WW1 art grabs attention nationwide Page 4
HADLOW HOME RUN
New baseball club is pitching to join the big hitters Page 78