Could the pandemic kill off HS2?published at 06:29 Greenwich Mean Time 30 January 2021
Covid-19 has intensified the debate among environmental groups about the benefits of the project.
Read MoreUpdates from Friday 29 January
Covid-19 has intensified the debate among environmental groups about the benefits of the project.
Read MoreBristol City sign midfielder Henri Lansbury on a deal until the end of the season, after he leaves Aston Villa by mutual consent.
Read MoreLive updates have now finished for the West Midlands.
We'll be back with you from 08:00 on Monday for the latest news, travel, weather and sport.
Most of the coronavirus transmission in the West Midlands is happening between workplaces and households, health officials say.
"It is people going out to work, catching it at work and bringing it home," Clive Wright, the regional convenor for the Department of Health and Social Care in the West Midlands, told a regional press briefing, highlighting small and medium-sized businesses.
"There may also be instances where people are letting their guard down, but most of it is workplace to household and household back into the workplace," he said.
This could in part, he added, be why Sandwell and other areas of the Black Country were particularly affected at the moment, as the area had a high concentration of small businesses.
More than 60 suspected Covid outbreaks in offices were recorded in the first two weeks of the current lockdown in England, a BBC investigation has found. Current restrictions state people should only travel to work if they cannot reasonably do their job from home.
A hospital boss has warned the impact of the coronavirus pandemic on the mental health of front-line workers "will suffer for a long time to come".
Speaking at a West Midlands Combined Authority briefing, Prof David Loughton, CEO of the Royal Wolverhampton NHS Trust, said the psychological impact on staff was "the greatest pressure".
"No one went into medicine, nursing or the health service to watch people die on the scale we have seen," he said. "NHS staff are running on adrenaline.
"The mental health impact will be seen for a decade to come in my opinion, but I don’t think NHS staff are alone in that."
He said the trust had employed three psychologists to support staff since March 2020, but added more will need to be done to boost mental health provision "to deal with the aftermath of this".
The 15-year-old is suspected of murdering Keon in a street attack in Handsworth, Birmingham.
Read MoreOne of the last flights back to the UK from Dubai has landed at Birmingham Airport.
The government said it was adding the UAE, Burundi and Rwanda to a travel ban list because of worries of the spread of a more contagious coronavirus variant.
The delayed flight landed at 11:25 ahead of the ban coming into effect at 13:00.
Student Emma Rhodes, 21, was among passengers who landed after a holiday in Dubai.
She said she agreed with the government's actions but added "I understand why people have chosen to go [abroad] as well."
Businessman Tony Harris had been in Dubai on business
He said the Birmingham-bound plane had been "full", including business class.
The 52-year-old said said his hotel in Dubai had arranged for him to have a Covid-19 test three days before his flight back to Birmingham.
The mounting pressure on hospitals due to the coronavirus pandemic led to 66 ambulances waiting more than an hour at the Royal Wolverhampton Hospital this week before they were able to hand over their patients.
Latest figures reveal Wolverhampton has the fourth highest number of cases in the country, with 697.2 positive cases per 100,000 people.
Although he accepted it was unacceptable, Prof David Loughton, the hospital trust's CEO, said normally during winter pressures ambulances would unload patients who would wait to be seen by medical staff in corridors.
However, due to the risk of infection, this was no longer an option, he told a regional press briefing, and was contributing to the delays getting patients into hospitals.
West Midlands Ambulance Service has previously reported "horrendous" delays at hospitals -including one instance where a patient was not handed over for seven hours.
"The whole health service, community services... everything is under strain due to volume of patients," Prof Loughton said.
Joseph Quigley has been jailed for more than 11 years for abuse carried out between 2006 and 2009.
Read MoreA man has been charged with death by dangerous driving after a hit-and-run crash in Shropshire last year.
It happened on the B5476 in Coton in July 2020 and 58-year-old Ian Edwards died at the scene.
The accused, a 22-year-old man from Whitchurch, has also been charged with failing to stop after a road traffic collision, failing to report a road traffic collision, driving without a licence and driving without insurance.
He is set to appear at Telford Magistrates' Court on Tuesday 23 February.
What's believed to be the world's first air hub for flying electric cars and delivery drones is to be built in Coventry.
The Air One facility, built through a partnership involving car-maker Hyundai, will host Vertical Take-Off and Landing (eVTL) aircraft including electric air taxis and autonomous deliver drones, it has been announced.
The site, which is being developed by the company Urban Air Port, is set to be unveiled later this year during the Coventry City of Culture celebrations after being awarded a £1.2m government grant.
Hyundai is planning to develop its own eVTOL and hopes to have commercialised a flying car by 2028. Urban Air Port said it had picked Coventry because of its central location, meaning travellers could access most parts of the UK mainland within four hours, and because it was a "historic hub" for the automotive and aerospace sectors.
BBC Radio WM
Police in Wolverhampton handed out eight fixed penalty notices during a day-long crackdown on Covid-19 violations.
They included fines to five occupants of one car, all from different households, who were out socialising.
Officers also issued 83 directions to leave affecting 161 people who didn't have a valid reason to be out.
The GMB union has said 50 jobs have been saved at the Dunlop Aircraft Tyres factory at Erdington in Birmingham.
The company cut 149 jobs last year, blaming a collapse in orders from airlines due to the coronavirus shut down.
These 50 jobs were due to go in December, but the union said the company was able to secure new orders, including work for the Ministry of Defence, with the help of the Erdington MP Jack Dromey.
Mr Dromey said the move meant the the future of the plant was "now secure".
Sabrina Bridge in Worcester has reopened today after a refurbishment project was completed, despite delays caused by floods.
It's one of the key routes into the city for pedestrians and was meant to open last week.
Some work is still continuing around the site and the temporary traffic lights on Hylton Road will remain in place for about two more weeks.
Allow Twitter content?
This article contains content provided by Twitter. We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies. You may want to read Twitter’s cookie policy, external and privacy policy, external before accepting. To view this content choose ‘accept and continue’.
Coventry Live
Some of the Coventry Live headlines today include:
Local Democracy Reporting Service
Mark Cardwell
More than 100 outbreaks of Covid-19 have infected patients and staff in Birmingham hospitals since September.
Documents presented at the University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Trust board meeting on Thursday showed there had been 113 outbreaks – but numbers of people affected were not revealed.
Queen Elizabeth Hospital saw the most outbreaks at 46, followed by Heartlands Hospital at 29.
There were 18 outbreaks at Good Hope Hospital while there were 20 outbreaks designated as among staff.
A man has been taken to hospital after two cars were involved in a crash on the A34 in Talke, Staffordshire.
Two others, both drivers, suffered minor injuries.
The crash happened just after 06:30.
A US private equity firm has made an "unsolicited" offer to buy the British pub giant.
Read MoreA weather warning for snow on Saturday, external has been updated, and now only affects parts of Shropshire, Warwickshire, Herefordshire and Worcestershire.
However new warnings have been issued , externalthat will affect the whole of the region from 21:00 on Monday through to Wednesday evening.
About 5 to 10cm of snow is expected on higher areas, said the Met Office.
Allow Twitter content?
This article contains content provided by Twitter. We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies. You may want to read Twitter’s cookie policy, external and privacy policy, external before accepting. To view this content choose ‘accept and continue’.
A takeover proposal has been made for Marston's, the pub group has confirmed.
The Wolverhampton-based company said a proposal had been made by US private equity firm Platinum Equity Advisors.
The company said it would evaluate the proposal regarding a possible cash offer with its advisers and will make a further announcement in due course.
It added that "there can be no certainty that any firm offer will be made for the company, nor as to the terms on which any firm offer might be made".