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Wednesday, 16 September 2020

Holywell School to Receive Prestigious Unicef UK Gold Award

Holywell School in Upchurch, Sittingbourne has been awarded Gold by Unicef UK’s Rights Respecting School programme.

Unicef is the world’s leading organisation working for children and their rights. The Rights Respecting Schools Award is granted to schools that show commitment to promoting and realising children’s rights and encouraging adults, children and young people to respect the rights of others in school. Gold is the highest accolade given by Unicef UK and shows a deep and thorough commitment to children’s rights at all levels of school life. There are over 500 schools across England, Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales that have received Gold.

The school has been working with Unicef UK since 2017. They received their Silver certificate in June 2017. Last year, children from Holywell School attended a special Parliamentary event and exhibition to speak out on behalf of children across the country for their right to clean air. In a speech to MPs and UNICEF representatives children from the school spoke of the dangers of toxic air on their health, the importance of monitoring and significantly reducing toxic levels of air pollution urging the government to action to protect children’s health.

Headteacher of Holywell School, Mr Darran Callaghan, said:

“I am immensely proud of our achievement and the work that children, staff and the community have done to receive this award and I want to thank everyone for their commitment to put the rights of children at the very centre of every decision we make. By embedding the UN Convention on the rights of the Child we help our pupils grow into confident, caring and responsible young people so they may realise their potential. As a result, children at our school not only have a voice, feel safe and well cared for but also have a greater understanding of equality, dignity, respect and non-discrimination and the impact they can have, not just in their community but in the wider world.”

Holywell School is one of only four schools in Kent to have received the Gold award from Unicef UK and the first school in Swale. The Award recognises achievement in putting the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child at the heart of a school’s planning, policies and practice. A Rights Respecting School is a community where children’s rights are learned, taught, practised, respected, protected and promoted.

Unicef UK Rights Respecting Schools Programme Director, Frances Bestley, said:

“We are very pleased to be awarding Holywell Primary School Gold; Rights Respecting. It is clear that the whole school has embraced a culture based on the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child. Holywell is a very inclusive school where children report feeling valued and safe irrespective of their background. Pupils also have many genuine opportunities to have their views heard and influence key aspect of school life, in turn creating a positive learning environment. It was also clear that children had an excellent grasp of children’s rights and social justice, and so did school staff, parents, carers and the school’s governors. Everyone should be very proud of their achievement particularly in achieving Gold at such a challenging time for schools.”

The Unicef UK Rights Respecting Schools initiative is aimed at schools across the UK, including those in an early years setting. This year the programme has received additional support from The People’s Postcode Lottery. This vital funding is helping Unicef UK continue its work with over 4500 primary schools, secondary schools, schools for children and young people with special educational needs and pupil referral units across England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales. Schools have reported a positive impact on pupil behaviour, relationships and well-being by enhancing pupil’s self-esteem, leading to less truancy and bullying, better learning and improved academic standards.

Mr Darran Callaghan
Headteacher
Holywell Primary School
Telephone: 01634 388416

Poolside Bar Music with Country Cousins at Upchurch River Valley Golf Course


From 7:30pm


Free Entry - Non-Members Welcome

Food Available Until 8:00pm

Jenny Giles - Upchurch River Valley Golf Course
Telephone: 01634 360626

Emergency Road Closure - Lower Rainham Road, Upchurch

It will be necessary to close Lower Rainham Road, Upchurch from Sunday 20th September 2020 for up to 1 day.

The road will be closed at Otterham Quay Lane to Station Road.

The alternative route is via Station Road, High Street and Otterham Quay Lane.

It is planned that the road will be closed between 09:00 hrs and 16:00 hrs.

This is to enable carriageway resurfacing to be carried out by Mostrim Groundworks.

For information regarding this closure, please contact Kent County Council on:

03000 418181 (9:00am - 5:00pm)
03000 419191 (5:00pm - 9:00am)

For details of roadworks see: www.kenttraffic.info

Kent County Council - Highways, Transportation & Waste

Monday, 14 September 2020

Newington History Group - Newington Uncovered 2020

Follow on Twitter: twitter.com/NewingtonHG

Richard Thompstone - Newington History Group

September News from Upchurch Horticultural Society - From the Potting Shed



Sponsored by Upchurch River Valley Golf Course Ltd

As we move into September the evenings and mornings are certainly getting nippy, but the day time temperatures are lovely and we are being promised an Indian summer. Personally, I take that sort of talk with a pinch of manure and still haven’t forgotten Gordon Brown’s BBQ summer. I believed him, got the BBQ out and watched it go rusty. This year actually reminds me of 2008, which may not have been too memorable, other than the fact that Autumn arrived at the start of October and produced a cold winter. The fruit seems early this year, the pears are picked, and the apples are huge. My Braeburns are a month early, there is a mass of berries and the starlings are starting to flock together. There is always talk of hard winters at this time of year but there may be some truth in it this year.

My poor lawn has been clobbered again this year, just when it had almost recovered from a couple of years ago. It's greening up again after the summer but will need a lot of scarifying with a spring tyne rake to get the dead thatch out. I gave it an Autumn weed and feed with low Nitrogen (N) and high Phosphate (P) and Potassium (K) which will help to strengthen the roots through the winter. In a previous house, I dug up the lawn and re-seeded it with Canada Green. This is a mix of Red Fescue, Rye and Kentucky Bluegrass. It produced a thick mat of vigorous grass that was drought resistant but needed a lot of cutting. So that’s the plan for next year.


I finally managed to weed the borders recently after two years and they do look bare, although the spring bulbs will hopefully provide a good show. The perennials from a “local nursery” have taken well and provided more colour and the dahlias are looking good despite a couple of casualties. The plug plants did not do well, but really need to be raised under glass. The Duchess threw me out of the conservatory this spring to make room for her house plants so I need to get a greenhouse.

In my fervour to face up to pandemic, I tried to get ahead of nature in the vegetable patch this Spring and got caught by a late frost. The climbing beans have come to nothing and a late sowing just hasn’t made it in time. A solitary marrow has struggled into growth and I am patiently waiting for the first stuffed marrow of the year. Curiously the sweetcorn survived but has produced a lot of small cobs which have ripened but are half bald! Potatoes have been excellent along with the broad beans which this year were Exhibition Longpod. A mass of beans but no opportunity to exhibit them.

Earlier in the year, I noticed that my plums were oozing a clear resin so when it came to harvest I opened them up for signs of sawfly. Some were maggoty but not all, so I do not think that this indicates a parasite. All the plums that were infected had a neat little hole in them about 1mm wide where the larvae had burrowed their way in.

Next month is the big tidy up and this year I am going to lift the potatoes, just in case. The log store is full with plenty of kindling and I will steadily retire from the garden. There are parsnips in the ground waiting for the first hard frost to sweeten them up and a late sowing of leeks to go in because I lost those as well. It’s been a strange year and still strange and it is difficult to predict where all this is leading. Hopefully, things will get back to normal, the pandemic will pass and we can all enjoy a good Xmas. But one thing I will do is always making sure that I drink from a clean glass and remember to take the mask off.

We are always looking for new members and try to encourage a fun attitude towards friendly competition. So if you want to grow your own fruit, vegetables and flowers or even enter any of the 3 shows we hold each year, then please get in touch, we would be happy to hear from you.

If you are interested in becoming a new member, (all ages are welcome), please contact Rosey on: 01634 377812 (evenings) or Email: rosemary@ringwoodaccounting.co.uk

Sean Barry - Upchurch Horticultural Society

Friday, 11 September 2020

New Litter & Dog Waste Bins at the Recreation Ground

Upchurch Parish Council has installed two new litter & dog waste bins at the Recreation Ground.

Dog owners can also make use of the 2 TiksPac Station Dispensers, one situated on the Chaffes Lane side of the Recreation Ground, the other at the entrance to the tramline footpath in Chaffes Lane, leading to Forge Lane.

Bagged dog waste can be disposed of in any public litter bin or take it home to your household green bin.

Please leave the Recreation Ground and our village spaces clean and tidy for others.

Thank you

Cllr Pam Denny
Cllr Tyrone Ripley
Upchurch Parish Council

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