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Southport Reporter®

Edition No. 182

Date:- 31 December 2004

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CHARITIES WANT YOUR OLD PHONES FOR CHRISTMAS

IF SANTA got you a new mobile phone for Christmas, don't forget you can put your old one to good use. It could help Marie Curie Cancer Care, the Roy Castle Lung Cancer Foundation, the Royal National Institute of the Blind, the Children's Hospice Association Scotland or Northern Ireland Hospice Care by alowing them to recycle it. 

The charities have teamed up with specialist recycling company The Recycling Appeal, to run eco-friendly fundraising appeals, meaning every mobile you donate can generate vital funds for your chosen cause.

The phones are refurbished and resold, with a substantial portion of the proceeds going to charitable organisations. All you have to do is choose which charity you want to donate the charitys we mentioned earlyer. 

Jamie Rae, chief executive of Eurosource, said:- "When people receive fancy new mobiles for Christmas, their old phones are often forgotten about. These phones join the UK's estimated 75million redundant mobiles - enough phones to stretch from London to Lapland more than three times! If you get a new mobile this year, choose a charity and give it a fantastic Christmas present - your old mobile!"

Whilst the festive season provides a fantastic opportunity to recycle old mobiles, there's another product which can also be recycled for money, empty printer cartridges. These too can raise much-needed cash, so if you work in an office or have a printer at home, you have the potential to boost charity funds.

If you have a mobile phone or printer cartridge to donate, simply call 08712 50 50 50 or visit www.recyclingappeal.com, state which of the five charities you'd like to support, and ask for a FREEPOST envelope. Then all you have to do is pop it in the post.

If your workplace uses company mobiles or printer cartridges, you can ask to make regular donations, we'll either send out freepost bags, or send a courier to your premises every few months to collect your donations. What's more, The Recycling Appeal can set up an account which allows regular donors to support any charity they want, including local causes.

So what are you waiting for? Call 08712 50 50 50 or visit www.recyclingappeal.com and support a charity this Christmas.

Diana Memorial work confirmed

THE planned reinstatement work for the Diana, Princess of Wales Memorial Fountain has been confirmed as starting on the 10 January 2005. The Memorial will be fully reopened on 1 May 2005.

The four month project will see the replacement of turf worn away by high visitor numbers in the summer; the extension of the existing path to facilitate visitor access to popular features; and the installation of an enhanced drainage system.

The need for such work was first announced on the 11 August 2004, when the Memorial reopened after two weeks closure for health & safety reasons. 

The work has been scheduled to take in the low season for visitors to Hyde Park and will catch the critical growing season for the turf.

Greg McErlean, Head of Major Projects, said:- "Following the reopening in August 2004 this is the first practical opportunity we have had to do this important work. The programme of work has required expert input from soil scientists, stonemasons, landscape designers and many others. The Memorial has had its problems in the last six months but this work will ensure that it is truly a special place of relaxation and remembrance for years to come."

The returfing will see the upgrading of the existing 12mm thick turf to 35mm thick wear-resistant rye grass turf. This turf, more usually found in sports grounds, will be robust enough to handle the high level of visitor interest at the Memorial, which saw up to 5000 people per hour at the site in the summer of 2004.

The existing pathway will be extended to run around the southern and western edges of the Memorial, taking in some of the most popular features including the tranquil pool, the mountain stream and the source. This path, which is subject to local authority planning processes, will reduce the pressure on the surrounding grass during adverse weather.

Drainage at the site will be enhanced, for example with the introduction of rootzone slits, to enable the area to cope with extreme wet weather, and there will be minor elements of work on the Memorial itself, including the introduction of under-bridge safety bars.

The current management system that asks people not to walk or run in the water and uses stewards to look after a fenced area around the Memorial site will continue into the summer. 

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