Category: News

Mathew is new ambassador for top North Wales construction firm

Anwyl Construction?s New Construction Ambassador Mathew Allport

An award-winning North Wales builder has just appointed its first Construction Ambassador to develop links with schools and communities.

Mathew Allport, a 25-year-old trainee site manager with Rhyl-based Anwyl Construction, has just completed a course designed to enable him to represent the building industry and the firm.

The course run by the Construction Industry Training Board has trained him to liaise with schools, colleges and local community groups to give them an insight into employment opportunities and engagement with the building industry.

Mathew, from Prestatyn, and now living in St Asaph, joined Anwyl Construction eight years ago as a trainee joiner and is excited at the new role.

He said: “The training means I can go to schools, colleges and other organisations and tell them what the construction industry is all about and the employment opportunities it provides.

“I will be representing Anwyl Construction at careers conventions and seminars, giving presentations and answering questions about working in the industry, organising site visits and activity days and arranging mentoring opportunities.

“It’s also about safety because we need to make young people aware that building sites can be dangerous places and we need to discourage them from playing there.”

Mathew qualified as a joiner after a three-year apprenticeship and is currently on a day release course at Llandrillo College studying for a BSc Honours in Construction Science.

He said: “Once I get my qualifications next year and with more experience under my belt I hope to be a site manager.

“I am an assistant site manager and running a job in Dolgellau and I’ve invited the building trainees over from Llandrillo to see how we work so I have been liaising with them and giving them an insight into what we expect on site.

“Anwyls are very professional in the way they work, they provide very clear career pathways and you learn a lot with them.

“They’re great in terms of supporting me and I would like to become a project manager and continue to work towards a Masters degree.”

Emrys Roberts, Construction Careers Adviser with the CITB, said: “The course at St Asaph was designed to equip Construction Ambassadors to go to schools and meetings to represent the industry and to tell people about the career opportunities it offers.

“They could be talking to a group of sixth formers or a Women’s Institute but they should be able to engage with that audience and help them understand the contribution the construction industry makes to society.

“We have worked extensively with Anwyl Construction over the years both in terms of apprenticeships and employment opportunities and with site visits and community engagement and I’m sure Mathew will be an excellent ambassador for them.”

Anwyl Construction Director Tom Anwyl said: “Mathew has made the most of the opportunities we’ve offered him since he joined us as an apprentice and he is a bright and articulate young man which is why we believe he will make a very good Construction Ambassador for us.

“We want to attract other young people like him to apply to work for us because we view apprentices as the lifeblood of the building industry and we take particular pride in developing them to become the site managers and contracts managers of the future – 20 per cent of our workforce, over 30 people, actually began with us as apprentices.

“We have a good relationship with the CITB and consciously take care to invest in our staff going forward and that helps us to operate better and more consistently and gives benefit to our staff and our clients.”

Wednesday December 11th, 2013

News

Toy testers chart the Christmas chuckle factor with free fun event at Church Square Shopping Centre

CHURCH SQUARE SHOPPING CENTRE, ST HELENS. Toy Testers were children became official ?Toy Testers? . pictured are Toy Testers Emeilia Daffern,3 and Emma Daffern,9 withLotte Norgard (Elfera)

Junior toy testers donned their lab coats at St Helen’s Church Square Shopping Centre to trial the chuckle factor of a host of Christmas games.

Santa’s scientists landed at the centre to set up their free Laughter Laboratory and invite St Helens youngsters to enjoy some unique festive fun for free.

The children, aged three to eight,  donned white coats and goggles to put a range of toys and games to the test, then logged the chuckle factor to chart which toy came out tops.

The first sessions were held on Saturday and Sunday, with more toy tests lined up for next weekend at the shopping centre, which is experiencing one of its busiest times of year.

Church Square Shopping Centre Manager Steven Brogan said: “We wanted to bring back the fun for Christmas, so we invited Santa to send his top boffins down from the North Pole to St Helens.

“The children loved having the chance to play with the toys and try them out for free while their parents were able to catch up on some Christmas shopping.

“We took the opportunity of having an empty shop unit –  the former Dolland and Aitchson Opticians – which we’ve transformed  into the Laughter Laboratory. It was great to hear all the laughs coming from there this weekend – the youngsters obviously had a great time.

“The results from the Chart of Chuckles this weekend and next weekend will go back to Santa’s Fun Factory so he knows exactly what to pack in his sack as he flies off on Christmas Eve in his sleigh to bring presents to the children of St Helens.”

The Laughter Laboratory – which is free for youngsters –  will be running again on Saturday December 14 from 11am-4pm, and Sunday  December 15 from noon to 4pm.

Also making an appearance at the weekend workshops, and helping youngsters have festive fun, was Shopper Whopper.

He’s the official mascot of Church Square Shopping Centre’s children’s club, with free fun for youngsters aged three to eight. Members receive special offers, advance notice of events, VIP invites to character appearances and discounts at selected shops at the shopping centre.

Church Square Shopping Centre  is open daily and home to a range of big name stores -  such as River Island, BHS, Boots and Superdrug -   along with independent retailers plus the busy St Mary’s Market. Details on what’s happening at the centre at www.churchsquaresthelens.co.uk

Wednesday December 11th, 2013

News

Wrexham FC aims to score a big financial hit with Christmas club shop

EAGLES MEADOW , WREXHAM W.F.C SHOP. Pictured is Esther Dooley, Mike Griffiths and  Shop Manager Steve Cooke.

Wrexham FC is aiming to score a major financial coup by opening its latest temporary shop in the town’s busy Eagles Meadow shopping centre in time to capture the lucrative pre-Christmas market.

The club’s commercial manager Steve Cook says the goal is to set the seasonal till jingling to the same tune which reaped an £80,000 sales bonanza for the Dragons from the pop-up shop they had at the centre in the run-up to their memorable  FA Trophy victory last year.

Early signs of success are good as the new shop is already notching up takings of around £1,300 day from fans clamouring to get their hands on a wide range of club-branded goods, from traditional ties and mugs to a new line of babywear.

And its opening coincides perfectly with a new exhibition at Eagles Meadow highlighting the history and impact of social and business co-operation of which the highly successful takeover of Wrexham FC by its fans two years ago is one of two shining local examples, along with the revival of a shut-down Wrexham town centre pub as a Welsh cultural centre.

The new club shop went into business last weekend in a high-profile spot at Eagles Meadow where it will remain open, seven days a week, until January 6.

Commercial manager Steve Cook said: “Since the new club went under new management we have been lucky enough to have two temporary pop-up shops at Eagles Meadow and both have done extremely well for us.

“The first one was there for the weeks covering our FA Trophy run in the spring of 2012, which ended in our historic 4-1 defeat of Grimsby Town 4-1 on penalties. From that we had sales of £80,000 from which we made a fantastic profit of about £35,000.

“We also had the trophy on display in the shop for a week following our win at Wembley.

“Last August we were able to open the shop again to tide us over the period while our regular club shop at The Glyndwr Racecourse ground was undergoing a major facelift.

“That coincided with the launch of our new home shirt one memorable Saturday morning when we had crowds queuing up outside to buy them as they were being filmed for a Welsh-language documentary on Wrexham screened on S4C.

“In the four weeks it was open that shop did very well for us and took £18,000 on its first day of opening.”

Steve added: “We’re very grateful to the management team at Eagles Meadow for letting us have the latest temporary shop so we can cover the Christmas and New Year period.

“It’s being manned by a handful of our staff and a large team of volunteers.

“We’re selling club-branded ties, mugs and slippers along with seasonal items such as winter hats and dressing gowns.

“We’ve also got a neat line in babywear, including things like sleep-sets and a bib which carries the motto ‘Dragons’ Best Dribbler’.

“As it’s the club’s 150th anniversary next year we will be previewing a few of the special commemorative items we’ve had made for that.

“The shop will be open from 9am-5pm from Monday to Saturday and from 11am-5pm on Sundays.

“The shops we’ve had at Eagles Meadow have always done really well for us because it’s such a prime location which attracts an enormous football.

“We tend to attract dormant fans who don’t always get to see us on match days but still like to be associated with the club. We’re also getting quite a few parents in who want to buy Wrexham FC  merchandise for their sons or daughters as Christmas presents.

“The takings are already healthy and in just the first couple of days we were open it was about £1,300. Our aim is to get to the same levels we reached in the FA Trophy run.”

Not far away from the Wrexham FC shop at Eagles Meadow is a new outdoor exhibition celebrating the success of British co-operatives.

On at the centre until January 8, The Co-operative Revolution Street Gallery, is a giant street display of photographs illustrating the spirit of co-operation in successful ventures from football clubs to farming and pubs to the performing arts.

In the large circular area beneath the Odeon Cinema and Ten Pin Bowling, it is illuminated at night and features 24 images on three-metre high installations.

Two perfect examples of local co-operatives which have become major success stories are Wrexham FC’s takeover by its Supporters Trust in November, 2011 and, in the same year, the revival of the Seven Stars pub in Wrexham town centre, which is now run by a co-operative as a Welsh social and cultural centre known as Saith Seren.

The exhibition has been arranged by The Co-operative, whose North Wales membership officer for North Wales, Duncan Rees, said: “We are delighted to have brought this exhibition to Eagles Meadow as part of a national tour illustrating the history, scope and impact of co-operation worldwide.

“Wrexham FC is a good example of a successful co-operative after being taken over by its fans.

“The Supporters’ Trust which now runs the club is going from strength to strength, and The Co-operative is currently working with them by sponsoring the back of the players’ shirts this season.

“Saith Seren is another excellent example of  a co-operative in action after creating the Welsh centre in the centre of town.”

Wrexham Supporters Trust chair Peter Jones said: “I am glad to see that the exhibition on co-operatives is running at Eagles Meadow at the same time as our shop is open there.

“The club is a provident society very much on the same lines as The Co-operative in that it is owned and run by its members.

“Also, like The Co-operative Movement, Wrexham FC was started in Victorian times with members paying subscriptions. The subs the fans paid back then paid for things like travelling to away games and the hire of pitches and players’ expenses.

“On November 30 it was two years since the Trust took over the running of the club and we are doing quite well.

“We are now officially debt-free and hopefully we can enjoy the same sort of success going forward.”

Marc Jones, chair of Saith Seren, said: “We also run as a provident society for the benefit of the community and therefore another good example of a co-operative.

“We had 140 people investing in the Saith Seren venture to re-open an historic Wrexham landmark who all get an equal share.

“We are run on democratic lines and really do feel very much part of the co-operative family, so it’s good to see the current exhibition in Eagles Meadow.

“We will celebrate our second birthday in January and in the meantime we are looking forward to a successful Christmas period at Saith Seren.”

Eagles Meadow Manager Kevin Critchley was delighted to welcome Wrexham FC back.

He said: “We hope it will help the fill their Christmas stocking with plenty of much-needed funds.”

Wednesday December 11th, 2013

News

Swansea’s secret Santa sets up a collection point at Quadrant Centre

Quadrant Mr X Appeal 291113

Swansea’s secret Santa has set up a collection point in the city’s bustling Quadrant Shopping Centre.

The Mr X Appeal, one of Swansea’s best-loved and most enduring charities, has one of its focal points at the busy heart of the Centre and already generous local people are flocking to support it.

The charity provides Christmas gifts for underprivileged and needy youngsters and has been running for 53 years.

Its 89-year-old organiser said: “The Quadrant is a very popular collection point for the charity, it’s one of about a dozen we have.

“We began in the 1950s and since then we’ve worked it out that the number of children who have received gifts would fill the Millennium Stadium twice over.

“We’ve been giving gifts for between four and five thousand children a year and we receive about 15,000 gifts – people are so generous and some of the presents are very expensive.

“Often families go out and buy a present for their children and if their children are the same age as the children in the appeal then they buy the same for them.

Quadrant Centre Manager Ian Kirkpatrick plays his part, putting up the replica Christmas trees with their containers which he fills with small cards with the name and age of a needy child.

Donors take the cards and buy an appropriate present and then drop it off at a collection point.

Ian Kirkpatrick said: “The identity of Mr X is a mystery but he is a local man and his charity has done wonderful work over the years and we’re delighted to be able to help here at the Quadrant.

“There’s been a fantastic response ever since it started which just shows how kind the people of Swansea are.

“The gifts come in and we collect them and hand them over and they are still coming in after Christmas so I go and hand them over to the man himself – I’m one of the few who know who he is.”

Mr X added: “We’ve had wonderful support from everyone and especially from the South Wales Evening Post who have been right behind it right from the start – they have played a huge part in its success.

“We get presents from all sorts of places, businesses, churches and schools, even Swansea Prison.

“We go round the collection points to pick the presents up and then the child care agencies deliver them to the children.

“I even know people from as far away as Bristol and Cardiff who tell me they don’t have anything like this where they live and they buy for our charity here in Swansea.

“I’m also very grateful to all my volunteers for the job they do.

“It all dates back to when we befriended an orphan child, Francesca, who was seven and who used to come and stay with us every month.

“Friends brought a present to us for her and even people who were strangers started doing the same and it grew from there and people have enjoyed doing it and getting involved.”

Monday December 9th, 2013

News