'I lost my 15-year career to the pandemic'published at 06:13 Greenwich Mean Time 11 February 2021
Matthew Weeks was forced to find a new job during lockdown and it's put a big strain on his home life.
Read MoreMatthew Weeks was forced to find a new job during lockdown and it's put a big strain on his home life.
Read MoreRegulator dismisses bid by Grand Union Trains to run new services from Cardiff and Carmarthen.
Read MoreSven Badzak was attacked as he went to buy a bagel in north-west London.
Read MoreMinisters say dangerous materials will be removed from England's high-rises "at no cost to residents".
Read MoreHousing minister Kevin Stewart says the Scottish government will ensure funding reaches 'those that need it most'.
Read MoreLavaun Witter was stabbed to death in south London on Friday night.
Read MoreThe website says it opposes any attempts to ‘silence consumers' freedom of speech’.
Read MoreThe Women's Super League derby between Birmingham and Aston Villa is postponed five minutes before kick-off because of a frozen pitch.
Read MorePolice say the three people, who travelled from London to Derbyshire, were fined and had their car seized.
Read MoreThe inquiry is shown an email from a sales manager at Arconic warning of the risk of high-rise fires.
Read MoreLocal Democracy Reporting Service
A West End club which has hosted bands since the 1960s, from the Stones to Amy Winehouse, will trial technology designed to keep people Covid-secure when it is able to reopen.
Jeff Horton who runs the 100 Club said he hopes it will be a "game changer" so entertainment venues can open once London is out of lockdown. He said: “When this is over it will be like the Roaring 20s without any question.”
The ventilation system is designed to wipe out 99.9 per cent of pathogens using high intensity ultraviolet light, similar to systems used to disinfect operating theatres.
Mr Horton stressed other safety measures such as requiring a negative Covid test will also be used. He said it could be some time before the venue is back to its 350 capacity.
Anti-HS2 activists have been living under Euston Square Gardens in an attempt to stop their eviction.
Read MoreThe housing secretary says cladding scandal will end "in a way that is fair and generous" to leaseholders.
Read MoreHomeless Alexandru Stan has been described by a legal expert as a victim of the "innocence tax".
Read MoreProtesters objecting to the HS2 rail link have daubed the front of the Department of Transport with pink paint.
Activists from the group Burning Pink claimed on social media that two members had "sent a message of love for our world and disdain at the corporate killing machine".
Police were stationed near the building on Wednesday morning where paint had been thrown over the door, windows, walls and pavement.
Burning Pink said it was "disgusted by the Department of Transport and their complicity in the demise of what little we have left in the way of nature and beauty".
It follows recent protest action that saw anti-HS2 activists dig and inhabit tunnels outside Euston station in a bid to protect gardens at the front of the rail hub.
The housing secretary will make a statement later, as thousands face huge bills for safety renovations.
Read MoreLocal Democracy Reporting Service
The number of patients catching Covid at two hospitals in east London spiked in December because on-site tests were not catching the new variant.
The Barking, Havering and Redbridge University Hospitals NHS Trust (BHRUT) suggests outbreaks increased sharply since November because on-site Covid tests were “not fully sensitive to the newly identified variant strain”.
During December, the new UK variant of the Covid virus was thought to be responsible for almost two-thirds of infections in London.
About a fifth of patients who have tested positive for Covid at King George Hospital in Ilford and Queen’s Hospital in Romford since the start of the pandemic, "definitely or probably" caught it in hospital.
On December 23, the trust “urgently stopped in-house testing and sent all tests to outsourced laboratories”. It plans to look into how many of its patients that tested negative in hospital later tested positive for the new strain of the virus at a testing facility.
The force is accused of having a "cover-up" culture following its inquiry into false allegations.
Read MoreFirefighters are tackling a blaze at a six-storey block in Greenwich.
Around 40 firefighters are working to put the blaze out which started in a second floor flat on Parkside Avenue. London Fire Brigade were called at 08:12 GMT and crews from Greenwich, Lewisham, Deptford, New Cross, Lee Green and Forest Hill are at the scene.
The cause of the fire is not known at this stage. No injuries have been reported.
The men did not manage to take any beauty spot photos as their phone batteries had died, police say.
Read More