| Win a place on a special 
	tour of the Bombed Out Church  
	 TWENTY 'Golden Tickets' 
	are up for grabs for people to get a view of restoration work on the 
	historic St Luke's 'Bombed Out' Church in Liverpool.  
	Liverpool City Council and Historic England are jointly funding a £150k 
	programme of structural works, which has meant the Church and gardens have 
	been closed since October 2015. Now 
	a restoration open day is to be held on Thursday, 14 January 2016, from 1pm 
	to 2pm, where a few lucky people will have the opportunity to take a look 
	inside the Church while the work is underway and learn about the restoration 
	process from the architect, specialist contractors and heritage officers. 
	People wishing to request a place must send email to:- 
	
	Melanie.Lamb@Liverpool.Gov.UK, by midday on Wednesday, 6 
	January 2016, with tickets limited to 2 per application. For health and 
	safety reasons, only people who have been notified that they have been 
	successful and issued with a ticket will be allowed admission to the site. 
	Councillor Mark Norris, the Council's Heritage Champion, 
	said:- "St Luke's Church is 1 of the City's most loved landmarks and 
	we know that people feel very strongly about it. The Open Day is a chance 
	for people to find out more about the expertise and skills that are used to 
	carry out important heritage projects, as well as seeing the historic 
	structure close up." The 
	majority of the 6,300 people who responded to a recent consultation over the 
	future of the Church were supportive of limited development and events 
	taking place at the site including the installation of toilets, food and 
	drink facilities, seating and a performance area. 
	In the new year, the City Council will invite expressions of 
	interest from operators to run the site. 
 |  | Job creation still a 
	priority for North West SME's, despite National Living Wage concerns 
	 SMALL and medium sized businesses in the 
	North West will continue to create new jobs in 2016, despite concerns the 
	introduction of the National Living Wage may increase wage bills. According 
	to research by Yorkshire Bank, nearly ¼ of SMEs (24%) will invest additional 
	funds into hiring new staff in the next 12 months.  1 in 4 (27%) North 
	West SMEs will also invest more money into staff training to support their 
	belief that skilled people are the key to innovation, creativity and 
	business growth.  However, more than ½ (55%) of small and medium sized 
	businesses believe the introduction of the National Living Wage in 2016 will 
	lead to an increase in staff costs. 1 in 5 SMEs (22%) expect their salary 
	costs to go up by as much as 10% as a result of the National Living Wage 
	introduction. From April 2016, employers will be required to pay all staff 
	over the age 25 a National Living Wage of £7.20 an hour, a 50p increase on 
	the current national minimum wage of £6.80. By 2020 this will rise to £9 an 
	hour.  Just under ½ of SMEs in the North West 
	(46%) think the National Living Wage will have no impact on their salary 
	costs at all.  Across the UK however, the belief that salary costs will 
	increase is most acutely felt in businesses with between 50 and 100 
	employees, suggesting larger enterprises (100+ employees) may be able to 
	absorb increased wage bills. It also suggests the National Living Wage may 
	not have as much of an impact on micro businesses and sole traders, which 
	make up around¾ of all businesses in the UK. 
 Simon Wright, Regional Director for Business and Private Banking at 
	Yorkshire Bank in the North West, said:- "We know businesses are 
	investing in their most precious assets; their people. Having the right 
	people and skills is a big issue for businesses to manage as our economy 
	shifts from 1 of traditional manufacturing to being knowledge led. It's 
	crucial for all businesses to be equipped with talented, creative and 
	innovative people to drive innovation and growth. There are many benefits 
	brought about by raising basic salaries; improved staff retention, increased 
	productivity and staff satisfaction. While businesses will need to manage 
	this increase in costs in what is already a competitive, albeit growing, 
	economy, there is support available both in terms of funding and advice."
 GMB is worried about 
	keeping the lights on!  WHEN your electricity supply has:-
	"Gone with the Wind" the response of the renewable energy 
	suppliers that:- "frankly my dear we don't give a damn" is 
	just not acceptable says GMB. Since the start of winter 2015/16; since the 
	beginning of October to 21 December 2015; there has been 12 days when the 
	output of the installed and connected wind turbines in the UK have produced 
	10% or less of the installed and connected capacity of 8,972MW.  Paul 
	Kenny, GMB General Secretary said:- "There were 12 days so far this 
	winter when wind was supplying 10% or less of the installed and connected 
	wind capacity to the grid. On 4 November 2015, the National Grid had to 
	invoke special measures to keep the lights on. There can be up to eight to 
	ten days per month when there is not a lot of output from the 8.9GW of 
	installed and connected wind capacity in the UK. GMB will publish a regular 
	wind watch to assist public debate. The renewables lobby has to face up to 
	the need for a base load electricity capacity that is reliable and clean on 
	the days that the wind does not blow and the sun doesn't shines. When your 
	electricity supply has:- 'Gone with the Wind' the response of the renewable 
	energy suppliers that:- 'frankly my dear we don't give a damn' is just not 
	acceptable. 639,000 GMB members want the keep the lights on. Unless there is 
	a scientific breakthrough on carbon capture nuclear and gas are the only 
	shows in town. Those advocating renewable energy have to accept this." 
	Let us know what you think about this GMB view, via emailing us to:-
	
	News24@SouthportReporter.com and let us know what you thoughts 
	are! |