0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Quote from: Sprotyrover on March 21, 2024, 10:29:50 pmQuote from: tommy toes on March 21, 2024, 07:32:19 pmQuote from: drfchound on March 21, 2024, 06:29:21 pmI have no idea what Nick Fletcher did or didn’t do with regards getting the deal over the line but I can remember him highlighting quite a few times on the news that the airport should be reopened.He did keep it in vogue.He obviously led the whole thing hound. It wasn't Ros Jones and her cabinet that worked hard for months on end to see this result, and threatening Peel with a CPO, it was Nick having his photo taken outside the Airport that did the trick.I'm sure he was right when he wrote that the Council had closed it in the first place.You can't trust them hound, you old wind up merchant. Vote T.... Oh I forgot. What Fletcher did was continuously lobby the local Labour Mayor Coppard to utilise funding streams he has access to due to devolution to the tune of £2.4 billion. Coppard did his level best to claim he had no such resources and in any case could not spend a penny on the Airport, it got to the point where the Government had to step in and tell Coppard that he could spend his funds on reopening the Airport! Ollie the wally actually tried to play politics and went on to claim the Government was preventing him from spending £30 million allocated for the construction of a Rail link into DSA.It was all a bit embarrassing really, as he had hoisted himself by his own Petard by failing to lend Peel £20 million which caused them to close it, He has gradually realised that he had undermined the City of Doncaster and also severely reduced his own place in the Pecking order of other Northern Mayors, such as Burnham and co. He had walked into a job where he was a lower Premiership manager and by his own stupidity and lack of foresight he lowered his status to a lowly league 2 manager, South Yorkshhire had under his tenure moved from being a large Metropolitain region boasting its own international Airport boasting an 800 acre advanced engineering business park(Gate way East) to the only Metropolitan area without an Airport! Plus any interest in companies thinking about moving onto Gateway East had wilted. Thankfully those pesky Tories have made the area a development zone and provided £160 worth of funding ..how dare they!Thats just b*llocks and you know it
Quote from: tommy toes on March 21, 2024, 07:32:19 pmQuote from: drfchound on March 21, 2024, 06:29:21 pmI have no idea what Nick Fletcher did or didn’t do with regards getting the deal over the line but I can remember him highlighting quite a few times on the news that the airport should be reopened.He did keep it in vogue.He obviously led the whole thing hound. It wasn't Ros Jones and her cabinet that worked hard for months on end to see this result, and threatening Peel with a CPO, it was Nick having his photo taken outside the Airport that did the trick.I'm sure he was right when he wrote that the Council had closed it in the first place.You can't trust them hound, you old wind up merchant. Vote T.... Oh I forgot. What Fletcher did was continuously lobby the local Labour Mayor Coppard to utilise funding streams he has access to due to devolution to the tune of £2.4 billion. Coppard did his level best to claim he had no such resources and in any case could not spend a penny on the Airport, it got to the point where the Government had to step in and tell Coppard that he could spend his funds on reopening the Airport! Ollie the wally actually tried to play politics and went on to claim the Government was preventing him from spending £30 million allocated for the construction of a Rail link into DSA.It was all a bit embarrassing really, as he had hoisted himself by his own Petard by failing to lend Peel £20 million which caused them to close it, He has gradually realised that he had undermined the City of Doncaster and also severely reduced his own place in the Pecking order of other Northern Mayors, such as Burnham and co. He had walked into a job where he was a lower Premiership manager and by his own stupidity and lack of foresight he lowered his status to a lowly league 2 manager, South Yorkshhire had under his tenure moved from being a large Metropolitain region boasting its own international Airport boasting an 800 acre advanced engineering business park(Gate way East) to the only Metropolitan area without an Airport! Plus any interest in companies thinking about moving onto Gateway East had wilted. Thankfully those pesky Tories have made the area a development zone and provided £160 worth of funding ..how dare they!
Quote from: drfchound on March 21, 2024, 06:29:21 pmI have no idea what Nick Fletcher did or didn’t do with regards getting the deal over the line but I can remember him highlighting quite a few times on the news that the airport should be reopened.He did keep it in vogue.He obviously led the whole thing hound. It wasn't Ros Jones and her cabinet that worked hard for months on end to see this result, and threatening Peel with a CPO, it was Nick having his photo taken outside the Airport that did the trick.I'm sure he was right when he wrote that the Council had closed it in the first place.You can't trust them hound, you old wind up merchant. Vote T.... Oh I forgot.
I have no idea what Nick Fletcher did or didn’t do with regards getting the deal over the line but I can remember him highlighting quite a few times on the news that the airport should be reopened.He did keep it in vogue.
Quote from: Filo on March 22, 2024, 06:45:23 amQuote from: Sprotyrover on March 21, 2024, 10:29:50 pmQuote from: tommy toes on March 21, 2024, 07:32:19 pmQuote from: drfchound on March 21, 2024, 06:29:21 pmI have no idea what Nick Fletcher did or didn’t do with regards getting the deal over the line but I can remember him highlighting quite a few times on the news that the airport should be reopened.He did keep it in vogue.He obviously led the whole thing hound. It wasn't Ros Jones and her cabinet that worked hard for months on end to see this result, and threatening Peel with a CPO, it was Nick having his photo taken outside the Airport that did the trick.I'm sure he was right when he wrote that the Council had closed it in the first place.You can't trust them hound, you old wind up merchant. Vote T.... Oh I forgot. What Fletcher did was continuously lobby the local Labour Mayor Coppard to utilise funding streams he has access to due to devolution to the tune of £2.4 billion. Coppard did his level best to claim he had no such resources and in any case could not spend a penny on the Airport, it got to the point where the Government had to step in and tell Coppard that he could spend his funds on reopening the Airport! Ollie the wally actually tried to play politics and went on to claim the Government was preventing him from spending £30 million allocated for the construction of a Rail link into DSA.It was all a bit embarrassing really, as he had hoisted himself by his own Petard by failing to lend Peel £20 million which caused them to close it, He has gradually realised that he had undermined the City of Doncaster and also severely reduced his own place in the Pecking order of other Northern Mayors, such as Burnham and co. He had walked into a job where he was a lower Premiership manager and by his own stupidity and lack of foresight he lowered his status to a lowly league 2 manager, South Yorkshhire had under his tenure moved from being a large Metropolitain region boasting its own international Airport boasting an 800 acre advanced engineering business park(Gate way East) to the only Metropolitan area without an Airport! Plus any interest in companies thinking about moving onto Gateway East had wilted. Thankfully those pesky Tories have made the area a development zone and provided £160 worth of funding ..how dare they!Thats just b*llocks and you know itProve me wrong mr one liner?
Quote from: SydneyRover on March 21, 2024, 10:37:37 pmNot sure if this is relevant sprot?Oliver Coppard''For the record this is the letter I sent requesting the change, so we could use the £30M for the reopening costs at DSA, rather than for the proposed rail link. I would certainly consider this a sufficiently formal request''https://twitter.com/olivercoppard/status/1749789542217912402Not relevant he was put in his place prior to that
Not sure if this is relevant sprot?Oliver Coppard''For the record this is the letter I sent requesting the change, so we could use the £30M for the reopening costs at DSA, rather than for the proposed rail link. I would certainly consider this a sufficiently formal request''https://twitter.com/olivercoppard/status/1749789542217912402
Some good points there!The local authorities can do something about the rail link as they can access the £30 million, but I understand that they must also put £20 Million into the investment!When Coppard approached the Government for the money to be Vied he was playing Politics as he would have been advised by whoever manages the Regions funding streams,that the money could only be used for the Rail link.
Quote from: Sprotyrover on March 22, 2024, 05:20:40 pmSome good points there!The local authorities can do something about the rail link as they can access the £30 million, but I understand that they must also put £20 Million into the investment!When Coppard approached the Government for the money to be Vied he was playing Politics as he would have been advised by whoever manages the Regions funding streams,that the money could only be used for the Rail link.More rubbish
Personally on the politics of it;Fletcher is right to raise a number of points, the local devolved politicians have made mistakes, particularly the SY mayor who could and should have done much more.They are then quite right to call out that the conservative government has offered nothing of note throughout the issue, including him.The local council have IMO so far done a brilliant job at doing this in a professional, quiet manner following clear processes, though I still believe the SY mayor should have intervened before closure in a much better way.But overall actually the campaigning from all sides has driven a strong outcome and that's vital in politics. Fletcher has talked some proper rubbish at times but that constant pressure does help to keep the local authorities on their toes. It's vital we have that in this area rather than a one party monopoly. It's created good debate regardless of doing much of substance.I think a lease led by the authorities but run by a good private operator is a good way forward, it would probably be stronger if the site was owned, but a long lease is as good as that. What I think has been clear is that the local population don't want another warehouse site, it wants an airport and it's an airport that if they get it right can really thrive. Good location, easy to get to and a local area that embraces it. It just needs a slightly better public transport offering, particularly by rail and it'll thrive with the right operators.
Quote from: Filo on March 22, 2024, 06:21:03 pmQuote from: Sprotyrover on March 22, 2024, 05:20:40 pmSome good points there!The local authorities can do something about the rail link as they can access the £30 million, but I understand that they must also put £20 Million into the investment!When Coppard approached the Government for the money to be Vied he was playing Politics as he would have been advised by whoever manages the Regions funding streams,that the money could only be used for the Rail link.More rubbishProve me wrong!
There's a bit more here on that, thanks for posting phil.''Two Boeing 727's owned by 2Excel Aviation and operating on behalf of Oil Spill Response Limited were relocated to Teesside Airport from Doncaster Sheffield Airport in November 2022. The aircraft are deployed anywhere in the world in the event of a major oil spill to spray dispersant material.[65]''https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teesside_International_Airport
That is really positive news.
Quote from: Sprotyrover on March 23, 2024, 12:07:37 amQuote from: Filo on March 22, 2024, 06:21:03 pmQuote from: Sprotyrover on March 22, 2024, 05:20:40 pmSome good points there!The local authorities can do something about the rail link as they can access the £30 million, but I understand that they must also put £20 Million into the investment!When Coppard approached the Government for the money to be Vied he was playing Politics as he would have been advised by whoever manages the Regions funding streams,that the money could only be used for the Rail link.More rubbishProve me wrong!You’ve yet to prove yourself right from your first load of b*llocks
Quote from: Filo on March 23, 2024, 07:38:26 amQuote from: Sprotyrover on March 23, 2024, 12:07:37 amQuote from: Filo on March 22, 2024, 06:21:03 pmQuote from: Sprotyrover on March 22, 2024, 05:20:40 pmSome good points there!The local authorities can do something about the rail link as they can access the £30 million, but I understand that they must also put £20 Million into the investment!When Coppard approached the Government for the money to be Vied he was playing Politics as he would have been advised by whoever manages the Regions funding streams,that the money could only be used for the Rail link.More rubbishProve me wrong!You’ve yet to prove yourself right from your first load of b*llocksNo I am not wasting 2 hours of my life to prove you wrong just go on Fletchers FB page or look at the Free Press!
Quote from: big fat yorkshire pudding on March 22, 2024, 11:51:06 amPersonally on the politics of it;Fletcher is right to raise a number of points, the local devolved politicians have made mistakes, particularly the SY mayor who could and should have done much more.They are then quite right to call out that the conservative government has offered nothing of note throughout the issue, including him.The local council have IMO so far done a brilliant job at doing this in a professional, quiet manner following clear processes, though I still believe the SY mayor should have intervened before closure in a much better way.But overall actually the campaigning from all sides has driven a strong outcome and that's vital in politics. Fletcher has talked some proper rubbish at times but that constant pressure does help to keep the local authorities on their toes. It's vital we have that in this area rather than a one party monopoly. It's created good debate regardless of doing much of substance.I think a lease led by the authorities but run by a good private operator is a good way forward, it would probably be stronger if the site was owned, but a long lease is as good as that. What I think has been clear is that the local population don't want another warehouse site, it wants an airport and it's an airport that if they get it right can really thrive. Good location, easy to get to and a local area that embraces it. It just needs a slightly better public transport offering, particularly by rail and it'll thrive with the right operators.An interesting point pud, DSA was a private enterprise, what could the SY Mayor have done, what powers did/does he have that would have been useful in preventing of DSA closing without the support of the government?
Fletcher has a point there, DMBC fixated on parking charges making the Town centre unattractive to Motorists! No doubt he’s wrong on that one too!
Quote from: Sprotyrover on March 22, 2024, 10:59:33 amQuote from: Filo on March 22, 2024, 06:45:23 amQuote from: Sprotyrover on March 21, 2024, 10:29:50 pmQuote from: tommy toes on March 21, 2024, 07:32:19 pmQuote from: drfchound on March 21, 2024, 06:29:21 pmI have no idea what Nick Fletcher did or didn’t do with regards getting the deal over the line but I can remember him highlighting quite a few times on the news that the airport should be reopened.He did keep it in vogue.He obviously led the whole thing hound. It wasn't Ros Jones and her cabinet that worked hard for months on end to see this result, and threatening Peel with a CPO, it was Nick having his photo taken outside the Airport that did the trick.I'm sure he was right when he wrote that the Council had closed it in the first place.You can't trust them hound, you old wind up merchant. Vote T.... Oh I forgot. What Fletcher did was continuously lobby the local Labour Mayor Coppard to utilise funding streams he has access to due to devolution to the tune of £2.4 billion. Coppard did his level best to claim he had no such resources and in any case could not spend a penny on the Airport, it got to the point where the Government had to step in and tell Coppard that he could spend his funds on reopening the Airport! Ollie the wally actually tried to play politics and went on to claim the Government was preventing him from spending £30 million allocated for the construction of a Rail link into DSA.It was all a bit embarrassing really, as he had hoisted himself by his own Petard by failing to lend Peel £20 million which caused them to close it, He has gradually realised that he had undermined the City of Doncaster and also severely reduced his own place in the Pecking order of other Northern Mayors, such as Burnham and co. He had walked into a job where he was a lower Premiership manager and by his own stupidity and lack of foresight he lowered his status to a lowly league 2 manager, South Yorkshhire had under his tenure moved from being a large Metropolitain region boasting its own international Airport boasting an 800 acre advanced engineering business park(Gate way East) to the only Metropolitan area without an Airport! Plus any interest in companies thinking about moving onto Gateway East had wilted. Thankfully those pesky Tories have made the area a development zone and provided £160 worth of funding ..how dare they!Thats just b*llocks and you know itProve me wrong mr one liner?You made the allegations, you prove yourself right
Quote from: Sprotyrover on March 23, 2024, 06:35:36 pmFletcher has a point there, DMBC fixated on parking charges making the Town centre unattractive to Motorists! No doubt he’s wrong on that one too!Doncaster Council, like Local Authorities, will have little option in that area. The costs of looking after vulnerable children and adults are rising exponentially, central government settlement through the formula grants (especially for northern councils) is squeezed further under Tory governments. Borrowing to fund revenue spending is not sustainable, there are limits on how far council tax increases can be imposed, so raising discretionary charges is sadly inevitable to fund the delivery of essential services. Neither elected members nor officers (most of whom I expect live in the city) will revel in increasing parking charges. But honestly, what do you expect them to do? They have to balance the budget. There are statutory services that they must deliver, but the funding support just isn’t there. It’s broken and that will be a huge challenge for the incoming Labour Goverment, but we must surely hope they’ll aim to deliver are fairer and more equitable society than the current mob. Even the dyed in the wool tories on here must surely see that this is broken and that invariably the northern towns and cities suffer the most. The numbers are all there for you. Huge credit to the mayor and to the council for their roles in getting the airport ready to reopen. It’s to be hoped that it can prove to be the catalyst to bring some much needed prosperity back to the area. I agree fully with BFYP that better transport links are crucial and they must be one of the key strategic investment priorities.
Quote from: Jonathan on March 23, 2024, 07:10:22 pmQuote from: Sprotyrover on March 23, 2024, 06:35:36 pmFletcher has a point there, DMBC fixated on parking charges making the Town centre unattractive to Motorists! No doubt he’s wrong on that one too!Doncaster Council, like Local Authorities, will have little option in that area. The costs of looking after vulnerable children and adults are rising exponentially, central government settlement through the formula grants (especially for northern councils) is squeezed further under Tory governments. Borrowing to fund revenue spending is not sustainable, there are limits on how far council tax increases can be imposed, so raising discretionary charges is sadly inevitable to fund the delivery of essential services. Neither elected members nor officers (most of whom I expect live in the city) will revel in increasing parking charges. But honestly, what do you expect them to do? They have to balance the budget. There are statutory services that they must deliver, but the funding support just isn’t there. It’s broken and that will be a huge challenge for the incoming Labour Goverment, but we must surely hope they’ll aim to deliver are fairer and more equitable society than the current mob. Even the dyed in the wool tories on here must surely see that this is broken and that invariably the northern towns and cities suffer the most. The numbers are all there for you. Huge credit to the mayor and to the council for their roles in getting the airport ready to reopen. It’s to be hoped that it can prove to be the catalyst to bring some much needed prosperity back to the area. I agree fully with BFYP that better transport links are crucial and they must be one of the key strategic investment priorities. I agree with you Jonathan, but they are losing revenue due to loss of business tax on the likes of M&S god knows how much M&S have been paying on their Frenchgate store but there aren’t losing anything now! The loss of M&S will kill off a great deal of footfall into the Town centre.
Quote from: Sprotyrover on March 23, 2024, 07:22:10 pmQuote from: Jonathan on March 23, 2024, 07:10:22 pmQuote from: Sprotyrover on March 23, 2024, 06:35:36 pmFletcher has a point there, DMBC fixated on parking charges making the Town centre unattractive to Motorists! No doubt he’s wrong on that one too!Doncaster Council, like Local Authorities, will have little option in that area. The costs of looking after vulnerable children and adults are rising exponentially, central government settlement through the formula grants (especially for northern councils) is squeezed further under Tory governments. Borrowing to fund revenue spending is not sustainable, there are limits on how far council tax increases can be imposed, so raising discretionary charges is sadly inevitable to fund the delivery of essential services. Neither elected members nor officers (most of whom I expect live in the city) will revel in increasing parking charges. But honestly, what do you expect them to do? They have to balance the budget. There are statutory services that they must deliver, but the funding support just isn’t there. It’s broken and that will be a huge challenge for the incoming Labour Goverment, but we must surely hope they’ll aim to deliver are fairer and more equitable society than the current mob. Even the dyed in the wool tories on here must surely see that this is broken and that invariably the northern towns and cities suffer the most. The numbers are all there for you. Huge credit to the mayor and to the council for their roles in getting the airport ready to reopen. It’s to be hoped that it can prove to be the catalyst to bring some much needed prosperity back to the area. I agree fully with BFYP that better transport links are crucial and they must be one of the key strategic investment priorities. I agree with you Jonathan, but they are losing revenue due to loss of business tax on the likes of M&S god knows how much M&S have been paying on their Frenchgate store but there aren’t losing anything now! The loss of M&S will kill off a great deal of footfall into the Town centre.It’s not simply Business Rates that are causing the closure of the M&S store. The city centre business is failing. It’s a great shame and I feel it as someone that grew up in the town. I know how important that store is particularly to the elderly community. But the fall in turnover is symptomatic of high street shopping trends and the huge shift online. The bigger cities are trying to move with the times and encourage more interactive city centre experiences but the death of the high street is a challenge facing all Local Authorities. A business rates subsidy wouldn’t save the Doncaster M&S, it’s a cut throat business decision and you can’t just lay the blame at the council’s door. People shop online increasingly now, and we’re seeing the consequence. Aside from which if you do want to blame Business Rates, which you appear to be, who are you blaming?
Quote from: Jonathan on March 23, 2024, 07:10:22 pmQuote from: Sprotyrover on March 23, 2024, 06:35:36 pmFletcher has a point there, DMBC fixated on parking charges making the Town centre unattractive to Motorists! No doubt he’s wrong on that one too!Doncaster Council, like Local Authorities, will have little option in that area. The costs of looking after vulnerable children and adults are rising exponentially, central government settlement through the formula grants (especially for northern councils) is squeezed further under Tory governments. Borrowing to fund revenue spending is not sustainable, there are limits on how far council tax increases can be imposed, so raising discretionary charges is sadly inevitable to fund the delivery of essential services. Neither elected members nor officers (most of whom I expect live in the city) will revel in increasing parking charges. But honestly, what do you expect them to do? They have to balance the budget. There are statutory services that they must deliver, but the funding support just isn’t there. It’s broken and that will be a huge challenge for the incoming Labour Goverment, but we must surely hope they’ll aim to deliver are fairer and more equitable society than the current mob. Even the dyed in the wool tories on here must surely see that this is broken and that invariably the northern towns and cities suffer the most. The numbers are all there for you. Huge credit to the mayor and to the council for their roles in getting the airport ready to reopen. It’s to be hoped that it can prove to be the catalyst to bring some much needed prosperity back to the area. I agree fully with BFYP that better transport links are crucial and they must be one of the key strategic investment priorities. I agree with you Jonathan, but they are losing revenue due to loss of business tax on the likes of M&S god knows how much M&S have been paying on their Frenchgate store but there aren’t losing anything now! The loss of M&S will kill off a great deal of footfall into the Town centre.
Can we keep this on topic!
Quote from: Sprotyrover on March 23, 2024, 07:22:10 pmQuote from: Jonathan on March 23, 2024, 07:10:22 pmQuote from: Sprotyrover on March 23, 2024, 06:35:36 pmFletcher has a point there, DMBC fixated on parking charges making the Town centre unattractive to Motorists! No doubt he’s wrong on that one too!Doncaster Council, like Local Authorities, will have little option in that area. The costs of looking after vulnerable children and adults are rising exponentially, central government settlement through the formula grants (especially for northern councils) is squeezed further under Tory governments. Borrowing to fund revenue spending is not sustainable, there are limits on how far council tax increases can be imposed, so raising discretionary charges is sadly inevitable to fund the delivery of essential services. Neither elected members nor officers (most of whom I expect live in the city) will revel in increasing parking charges. But honestly, what do you expect them to do? They have to balance the budget. There are statutory services that they must deliver, but the funding support just isn’t there. It’s broken and that will be a huge challenge for the incoming Labour Goverment, but we must surely hope they’ll aim to deliver are fairer and more equitable society than the current mob. Even the dyed in the wool tories on here must surely see that this is broken and that invariably the northern towns and cities suffer the most. The numbers are all there for you. Huge credit to the mayor and to the council for their roles in getting the airport ready to reopen. It’s to be hoped that it can prove to be the catalyst to bring some much needed prosperity back to the area. I agree fully with BFYP that better transport links are crucial and they must be one of the key strategic investment priorities. I agree with you Jonathan, but they are losing revenue due to loss of business tax on the likes of M&S god knows how much M&S have been paying on their Frenchgate store but there aren’t losing anything now! The loss of M&S will kill off a great deal of footfall into the Town centre.It’s not simply Business Rates that are causing the closure of the M&S store. The city centre business is failing. It’s a great shame and I feel it as someone that grew up in the town. I know how important that store is particularly to the elderly community. But the fall in turnover is symptomatic of high street shopping trends and the huge shift online. The bigger cities are trying to move with the times and encourage more interactive city centre experiences but the death of the high street is a challenge facing all Local Authorities. A business rates subsidy wouldn’t save the Doncaster M&S, it’s a cut throat business decision and you can’t just lay the blame at the council’s door. People shop online increasingly now, and we’re seeing the consequence. Aside from which if you do want to blame Business Rates, which you appear to be, who are you blaming?
Quote from: SydneyRover on March 23, 2024, 12:39:33 amQuote from: big fat yorkshire pudding on March 22, 2024, 11:51:06 amPersonally on the politics of it;Fletcher is right to raise a number of points, the local devolved politicians have made mistakes, particularly the SY mayor who could and should have done much more.They are then quite right to call out that the conservative government has offered nothing of note throughout the issue, including him.The local council have IMO so far done a brilliant job at doing this in a professional, quiet manner following clear processes, though I still believe the SY mayor should have intervened before closure in a much better way.But overall actually the campaigning from all sides has driven a strong outcome and that's vital in politics. Fletcher has talked some proper rubbish at times but that constant pressure does help to keep the local authorities on their toes. It's vital we have that in this area rather than a one party monopoly. It's created good debate regardless of doing much of substance.I think a lease led by the authorities but run by a good private operator is a good way forward, it would probably be stronger if the site was owned, but a long lease is as good as that. What I think has been clear is that the local population don't want another warehouse site, it wants an airport and it's an airport that if they get it right can really thrive. Good location, easy to get to and a local area that embraces it. It just needs a slightly better public transport offering, particularly by rail and it'll thrive with the right operators.An interesting point pud, DSA was a private enterprise, what could the SY Mayor have done, what powers did/does he have that would have been useful in preventing of DSA closing without the support of the government?Here you go Skippy,https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/potential-use-of-funding-settlements-for-doncaster-sheffield-airport
There's a long way to go yet with the airport yet,but so long as we can keep cnuts like Fletcher and his like minded supporters away from it we have a chance.