Summary

  • Updates for Friday, 3 February 2017

  • Dirty Norwich artist takes on Ed Sheeran

  • Norwich City part company with chief executive after just six months

  • 'Stay away unless emergency' asks hospital

  • Hoax calls to paramedics revealed

  • Thieves target Broads Post Office

  • Erosion battle pensioner packing up home

  1. Club-by-club guide to Premier League returnpublished at 20:02 British Summer Time 14 June 2020

    What's changed during the break and what are the big questions for each club as the Premier League returns?

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  2. 'If this is viewed enough times I will get abuse'published at 00:15 British Summer Time 14 June 2020

    Poet Piers Harrison-Reid tackles racism in his latest work "More Blacks, More Dogs, More Irish".

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  3. How do you teach dance to 300 pupils in lockdown?published at 09:49 British Summer Time 13 June 2020

    Anglia Region Theatre School had to find a way to reach their pupils when coronavirus hit.

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  4. Food bank given 'best before 1987' anchovies tinpublished at 16:03 British Summer Time 12 June 2020

    "We couldn't quite believe it," said a volunteer, about the tinned fish that is 33 years out of date.

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  5. '4,000 new homes' could replace mustard factorypublished at 15:00 British Summer Time 12 June 2020

    Planners create a "blueprint" to redevelop the site of a city's famous mustard factory.

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  6. 'I won't be forming a support bubble'published at 12:41 British Summer Time 12 June 2020

    Mariam Issimdar
    BBC News

    Further down the page, we heard about a single woman delighted to be coming out of isolation and being allowed to expand her social "bubble" and being allowed to visit her mother again.

    However, despite single people being able to regularly spend the night at one other household, single dad Kevin Copplestone, 32, from Watton in Norfolk, fears a resurgence of Covid-19 cases from the relaxation of the rules and will not be forming a social bubble.

    The pig farm worker said "my son misses his nanny and granddad a lot" and since his own father is shielding, it means they cannot meet.

    He has also kept his five-year-old son off school.

    Kevin Copplestone and his son RielyImage source, Kevin Copplestone

    Mr Copplestone said he believed the easing of the rules means "we will be back to square one soon".

    "I think he's not quite right with what he {Prime Minister Boris Johnson] is doing, as he says he's following the science, but they are all saying he's doing it too quickly," he said.

    "We're coping not too bad to be honest in this situation, just strange not seeing family everyday like it was before, so it's to social media for the video calls."

  7. Stories of Basque child refugees revealedpublished at 12:24 British Summer Time 12 June 2020

    Nearly 4,000 children escaped the Spanish Civil War and many found refuge in Cambridge and Norfolk.

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  8. Forest to remove dog mess poo bins after 'misuse'published at 17:27 British Summer Time 11 June 2020

    Dog mess bins in a forest are to be removed due to "misuse".

    Theftord Forest, run by Forestry England, is asking visitors to Shouldham Woods to take their litter home with them after bins were left overflowing.

    Overflowing dog binImage source, Thetford Forest
  9. Ex-NHS boss charged with corruption in Australiapublished at 09:57 British Summer Time 11 June 2020

    Malcolm Stamp is accused of arranging a job with a hospital contractor for his daughter.

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  10. Young people's mental health summit taking place in Norfolkpublished at 16:34 British Summer Time 10 June 2020

    Norman LambImage source, PA

    The wellbeing and mental health of young people in Norfolk during the pandemic has been the focus of a summit today

    The virtual event is being led by the former North Norfolk MP and mental health campaigner, Norman Lamb (pictured), and Norfolk Community Foundation.

    Community Foundation chief executive, Claire Cullens, said mental health is becoming an increasingly high profile issue among young people during the coronavirus outbreak.

    She said: "We are working with Norman to understand and talk to some of the front-line charities about how that feels and the sorts of things young people are experiencing."

  11. What will happen when zoos reopen?published at 14:07 British Summer Time 10 June 2020

    Social distancing "won't be a problem" for open-air sites, but other limitations may prove trickier.

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  12. Paramotor pilot captures city airport from the airpublished at 12:51 British Summer Time 10 June 2020

    He captured the unique view while the coronavirus lockdown caused planes to be grounded.

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  13. School won't have to close despite positive coronavirus testpublished at 10:48 British Summer Time 10 June 2020

    A school has been told by Public Health England it doesn't have to shut completely after a teacher tested positive for coronavirus.

    The teacher at Heacham Junior School, external in west Norfolk had been in a socially distanced meeting with three other staff before falling ill. All involved are now self isolating, although the school said they were not showing any Covid-19 symptoms.

    Heacham Primary SchoolImage source, Google

    A statement, external on the school's website said: "Public Health England does not believe we need to close the school at this stage.

    "We have, however, made the decision to keep the Albatross and Avocet bubbles closed for the remainder of this week. This is not a decision we've taken lightly, but we believe it is in the best interest of our staff and children. Our aim is to reopen these bubbles on Monday, 15 June."

  14. 'Nothing's open - it's heartbreaking'published at 03:58 British Summer Time 10 June 2020

    Will the effects of the coronavirus lockdown tip seaside towns into a terminal decline?

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  15. Financial adviser jailed for £300k fraudpublished at 18:43 British Summer Time 9 June 2020

    Luke Durrant was about to be made a director by a family firm before they uncovered his crime.

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  16. School strike rally cancelled for the first time in 36-year historypublished at 17:06 British Summer Time 9 June 2020

    Pete Cooper
    BBC News

    The Burston Strike School Rally in Norfolk has been cancelled due to coronavirus.

    The event was due to be held on 6 September and marks the longest industrial strike in British history.

    It is the first time since the rally started in 1984 at the village near Diss that the event has not been held.

    Inscribed stones on the Burston Strike SchoolImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Inscribed stones on the Burston Strike School which is now a museum

    Miles Hubbard, one of the organisers from the union Unite, said: "It would be unwise to go ahead."

    He said the event, external would return "just as vibrant" next year.

    The Burston Strike School was established as a result of the sacking of two teachers, Tom and Kitty Higdon, in 1914.

    Children and parents then refused to attend the local Church of England school and instead an alternative school was set up on the village green, which remained open until 1939.

    Past speakers at the rally have included Jeremy Corbyn, Tony Benn and Diane Abbott.

  17. 'Cynical' Monty Python email PR boss leaves trustpublished at 13:43 British Summer Time 9 June 2020

    The Norfolk and Suffolk health trust communications manager said it was 'saved' from scrutiny.

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  18. Boat builder turns sewer in lockdownpublished at 12:07 British Summer Time 9 June 2020

    BBC Look East

    A former boat builder, who was furloughed from his job, has turned his hand to sewing and is now making face masks.

    Mickey Sykes, from Stalham in Norfolk, has sold more than 2,500 and is employing two other people.

    Mickey Sykes and his sewing machine

    Materials like elastic have doubled in price, and once the cost of postage is factored in too, profit margins are very small, he said.

    "People are losing their jobs and struggling for money. Who wants to pay for an £8 mask when £3.50 is reasonable, affordable and realistic in the situation?"

  19. Sundown postponed but tickets for 2021 honouredpublished at 08:42 British Summer Time 9 June 2020

    Patrick Byrne
    BBC News

    A dance music festival that usually attracts about 20,000 fans on each of its three days in September has been postponed until 2021 because of the coronavirus pandemic.

    Festival sceneImage source, Sundown Festival

    The Sundown, external event at the Norfolk Showground, featuring drum & bass, electronic, garage, house and pop artists, had been planned as one "one of our most epic parties to date", the festival website said.

    Acts due to play this year included Loyle Carner, Sean Paul, Fredo, Becky Hill, Wilkinson and Example.

    "The continued impact of this unprecedented situation will limit our ability to deliver the festival experience that you guys expect, and most importantly to deliver it in a way which protects you, the artists, our team and the local community," it added.

    Tickets will be valid for the next Sundown on 3-5 September 2021.

    "Look after each other, big up the NHS and all those working hard to enable us to come together again soon," the website added.