Wednesday January 10 | 2018
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OF TUNBRIDGE WELLS
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Last minute reprieve for MP as he holds on to his seat at Cabinet
Fashion retailer leaves shopping mall
SOAPBOX CHALLENGE Dunorlan to host new charity go karting event Page 3
By Jonathan Banks MP Greg Clark has held on to his job as Business Secretary in a Government reshuffle, that some commentators described as ‘shambolic’. The Tunbridge Wells Member of Parliament was widely predicted to lose his Cabinet role to allow Prime Minister Theresa May to bring in fresh faces. National media reported over the weekend that Mr Clark was likely to step aside to allow Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt to take on the business role.
Refusal But an apparent refusal by Mr Hunt to move meant Mr Clark kept his position as Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, which he has held since 2016. Mr Clark told the Times yesterday: “I’m delighted to be reappointed. “It is a great privilege to serve in the Government, as it is to continue to represent the people of Tunbridge Wells, and I look forward to building on the progress we’ve made in championing British businesses and ensuring the UK is at the forefront of sustainable energy production.” Mr Clark had previously been Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government from 2015-16. Wealden MP Nus Ghani was one of six female MPs promoted, to become Government whip.
INSIDE
ROUTE MASTER GOES KCC Councillor loses role as county’s transport chief Page 3
MOVING OUT: H&M is pulling its kidswear store out of Royal Victoria Place. It is the latest in a line of retailers to quit the shopping centre where there’s now 24 vacant units. Expansion plans for the centre have stalled while its sale to British Land is being negotiated. Full story pages 4-5
Police reshuffle means the town centre will now have its own unit
RECIPE FOR HEALTH How to enjoy delicious and nutritious dishes Pages 44-45
Officers move to Tonbridge but no reduction in numbers on duty By Andy Tong andy@timesoftonbridge.co.uk
SWEEPING changes are taking place in the way that the police operate in the town. From next month, for a trial period, some officers will be working out of Tonbridge police station as their base. But there will also be a new team for Tunbridge Wells town centre. In a move that is described as a ‘pooling of resources’, officers with patrols in and around Tunbridge Wells will report for duty and pick up their cars in Tonbridge, which has much larger facilities than the police station in Crescent Road – though the latter will remain open for business as usual.
But otherwise the brief will remain the same and officers will continue to cover their usual detail. Beat bobbies will continue to report for duty in Tunbridge Wells.
‘It is hoped they will be deployed more quickly in response to major incidents’ The introduction of a dedicated crew for the retail areas of town will offer a more visible presence on the streets. Against a backdrop of swingeing cuts to police forces across the country, with almost 20,000 fewer officers since 2010, the news will come as a welcome boost to
residents and businesses. Previously, Community Safety Units have operated in other parts of the town and across the borough in places like Cranbrook. According to Kent Police, the ‘new crew will bolster the existing numbers’ and their ‘specific remit is the retail centre at the heart of Tunbridge Wells’. Meanwhile the use of Tonbridge as a headquarters will allow officers to get to know each others’ patches. While they will stick to their beats, it is hoped that they will be able to deploy more quickly in response to major incidents because of shared knowledge.
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POETRY IN MOTION
We meet the Happy Bus poet Louisa Campbell Page 58