Woman 'repeatedly punched in face' while in her car in Braintree
Inspirational Trina named alongside Stephen Sutton on Independent on Sunday's Happy List
A TIRELESS mental health worker from Braintree has been named one of the country's 100 happiest people.
Trina Whittaker, 63, of Boscawen Gardens, woke up to a cascade of congratulatory e-mails last Sunday morning unaware she had been named in the Independent on Sunday Happy List 2014.
The mother of two says she owes her happiness to helping people, including her 40-year-old schizophrenic son.
"We've had our ups and downs but my son is my inspiration because I worked hard to bring him into this world and I will never give up on him," said Mrs Whittaker, who has cared for her son for the last 23 years.
Mrs Whittaker turned to a support group at Rethink Mental Illness 16 years ago, after her son was diagnosed with schizophrenia.
She has gone on to become a Rethink activist, regional committee member and co-ordinator of Braintree Rethink Carers Support and Braintree Rethink Self-help Art Group.
It was two carers from the support group team who nominated Trina, praising the difference she has made to so many lives.
She said: "My happiness comes from helping people, and not just my son, many people in my group don't have anyone to turn to.
"They call me 'Trina Hugs' because I am always at the end of the phone for every one of them."
The newspaper's Happy List serves as an "antidote to all those rich lists and celebrity lists" and invites all shortlisted to a party in their honour.
Mrs Whittaker is named alongside teacher Ray Coe, who donated his kidney to a pupil, and 19-year-old charity fundraiser Stephen Sutton, who died last month from bowel cancer after raising £3.2 million for the Teenage Cancer Trust.
"I cried when I realised that I had made the Happy List. It felt as if this was all happening to someone else, not to me," said Mrs Whittaker.
"I woke up early on Sunday morning because I couldn't sleep and decided to browse my e-mails.
"At first I didn't know what had happened because there were so many messages it took me a while to work out what was going on."
Rethink challenges assumptions and preconceptions about mental illness while Time to Change aims to end discrimination faced by people with mental health problems.
Mrs Whittaker said: "People are too quick to judge mental illness.
"They hear the term and they get scared. If people took the time to find out more and to show a little understanding there would not be such stigma attached to mental illness."
Waste lorries could travel to Dengie Peninsula for 15 more years
PLANS to turn a gravel quarry into a landfill site holding more than 800,000 cubic metres of waste at the edge of the Dengie Peninsula will be considered at a district council meeting tonight (June 9).
Haulage firm G&B Finch Ltd has requested a 15-year extension to their extraction work at the quarry in Asheldham, near Southminster, to allow for the removal of a further 1.1 million cubic metres of sand and gravel from the pit, and to replace it with tonnes of inert waste material.
If given approval residents on the peninsula will face more than a decade of up to 48 HGV lorries passing through the region's narrow roads each day as material is carried to and from the quarry, a prospect that has angered some of those living just minutes from the busy site.
"I believe a lot of people through the Dengie don't know this is happening but the area just can't cope with the volume of traffic if it goes ahead," said Jeff Faulkner, who has lived in his home just a mile from the site for 36 years.
"Turning the quarry into a landfill site, even though it is stated as only inert waste going in, will undoubtedly end up with all sorts of rubbish being tipped there to gain revenue, be it legally or illegally, which will allow skip lorries in from all directions adding to the already high volumes of traffic and destroying the area we all love.
"On top of all this our roads and hedgerows are being destroyed by all this traffic plus my property is suffering as a result of being shaken by heavy vehicles going by all of the time."
Essex County council has confirmed that public consultation on the application, which was first submitted in April this year, closed on May 22.
"There needs to be meaningful discussion of the scheme, it shouldn't just be a paper exercise, and so far there hasn't been sufficient discussion from the developers with outlying areas," added chairman of Southminster Parish council and district councillor Brian Beale.
"We don't know for sure if the route of the lorries would come through Southminster yet, but it's a possibility and Essex County Council never seem to care about traffic flow through our village."
Under the new scheme the firm hopes to import approximately 65,525 cubic metres of waste each year to the quarry, consisting of predominantly clay and soil, with small quantities of sand, brick and concrete.
But the Essex-based haulage company has reassured residents that the changes would not lead to further lorries travelling to and from the site.
"The proposed extension of time to this quarry will secure a continuation of and much needed support for the local economy and construction industry," said David Fletcher, of Strutt and Parker, agent for the application.
"This both includes the employment of staff workers and lorry drivers on the site and assistance with provision of material for local construction projects."
Affordable home plans in pipeline for six-acre site in Maldon
PLANS for nearly 70 homes to be built on a field used to graze ponies in Maldon are to be considered by town councillors today (June 9).
Linden Limited, in conjunction with charities Cancer Research UK and Barnados, want to transform the six-acre site off London Road into a development of 67 two and three-storey properties, many of which will be available as affordable housing.
A new mini-roundabout providing access from London Road is also proposed to cater for the development.
In the outline planning application, the developer said: "The proposals have been subject to discussion with Maldon District Council and local residents through a series of meetings including a public exhibition.
"The views of council officers and local residents have been duly considered and the proposals amended to address those concerns wherever it has been possible to do so."
About 150 people attended a public exhibition in October last year to provide feedback on the plans to transform the area, which is currently used to graze ponies.
"There were concerns expressed about the proposals and these pertained to traffic along London Road and the impact on the conservation area," the spokesman added.
The town council meeting at which the proposals will be discussed will take place at 7.30pm at Maldon's Town Hall.
Teenager in warning against legal highs after death of best friend Bradley Cockel of Braintree
A TEENAGER has warned people to stay away from drugs after a rare hallucinogenic drug killed his best friend.
Bradley Cockel, 19, of Beatty Gardens, Braintree, died at a friend's flat in Bramble Court, Witham, after taking the then legal substance known as 2CE, which has properties similar to LSD and ecstasy.
But as the drugs started to take effect Bradley started to convulse and his friends were not able to help him due to the hallucinogenic effects of the drugs on their own bodies.
One of them eventually managed to successfully call an ambulance, but when it arrived he was already dead.
Best friend Alex Tucker, 19, giving evidence at an inquest, said: "We were told by our friend who got it that it would give us trips.
"He said he'd tried it before or something similar and that this wasn't that strong and wasn't that bad and before we left my house we looked on the internet to see what it was like.
"But when we took it, it felt different, things started moving about. I wasn't conscious of what was going on, I couldn't work out the depth of things, we were in a completely different world.
"I tried to call an ambulance for Brad, but the keys on my phone were all moving about. "The next thing I remember I was in a hospital bed," adding he did not know who successfully made the call to the ambulance.
Mr Cockel's two friends, who took a similar substance but with a slightly different make-up, were taken to Broomfield Hospital for treatment and released the next day.
Area coroner, Eleanor McGann, who presided over the inquest held at County Hall in Chelmsford on Wednesday, said that as a result of the evidence given she would recommend to the government that 2CE is made illegal.
"I have heard all the evidence about this designer drug and it is quite clear that people who take it are not in control and that although it was legal at the time, it has subsequently caused deaths, it is a completely horrendous drug" she said.
"To try and prevent further deaths I will recommend in my report to the Ministry of Justice that this drug and all its combinations should be made fully and properly illegal."
A postmortem examination was carried out at Broomfield Hospital by Dr Olaf Biedrzycki, who gave evidence the hearing, which found there was no natural disease that could have caused Bradley's death.
Dr Olaf Biedrzycki told the court: "The toxicology report identified a rare compound, so rare that very little research has been done on it, but we do know it has been linked to a handful of deaths.
"It has the potential to create life-threatening serotonin levels in the brain, which can cause fitting.
"If the fitting is of a high level it can affect the muscles and breathing can become restricted – it would only take a few minutes of this to starve the brain of oxygen.
"The effects can be dizziness, nausea, vomiting, sweating, as well as a raised heart rate."
Prior to his death Mr Cockel worked for the family business, an asbestos consultancy firm based in Finchingfield.
At the time police thought the drug came from "a crude batch" of LSD, but at the inquest both Mrs McGann, and DI Martin Pasmore, who investigated the case, told the court that 2CE was legal in April 2013, but has since been put under a government protection order, with the intention of it being made completely illegal.
Mrs McGann recorded a verdict of death caused by a drug overdose for Mr Cockel.
'Please let this serve as a lesson' IN a statement Bradley Cockel's parents said: "Bradley was a loving and beautiful son and brother. He was an important part of our close family.
"We enjoyed holidays together and he was a sensible young man who had the brightest of futures in front of him.
"Please let this serve as a lesson to anyone who thinks that it is safe to experiment with drugs because if anyone could see or feel the pain that our family is suffering then they would realise that it is a risk not worth taking."
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Comedian Rik Mayall dies at the age of 56
@Essex_Chronicle Has to be the young ones, pushed the boundaries of comedy, parents hated it, so it must've been good! #RIPRik
— Steve Thomas (@tommoofessex) June 9, 2014
@BeautySwot responded: "Ooh hard!! The New Statesman was fab
And @kymreeves added: "How to be a little sod and the young ones."@Essex_Chronicle Bottom was my fave but I also loved his appearances in Blackadder. Will miss his comedy genius, RIP & thanks for the laughs
— M6MDR (@M6MDR) June 9, 2014
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800 homes a year could be built in Braintree as population grows
AROUND 800 new homes a year could be built in the Braintree district after it emerged the council may be forced to scrap its current proposals and treble the amount of housebuilding.
After nearly a decade of preparation, the authority's Site Allocation Plan, which is part of the Local Development Framework (LDF), could be set back a year while the figures are reassessed.
This blueprint for where housing should be built up until 2026 originally predicted 4,080 homes, but it could now be ditched.
A recent change in guidance in the Government's National Planning Policy Framework means the council will have to rethink its new homes projections and build up to 883 new homes a year, up from the current target of 272.
Graham Butland, leader of Braintree District Council, said: "Councils are now required to gather evidence on future housing need, rather than meeting a housing target that was set on an historic and regional basis.
"The Strategic Housing Market Assessment is just part of the jigsaw, but it is important that as a district council we look at the stark facts. The report indicates a need for between 761 and 883 new dwellings per year across the district – considerably higher than currently planned for."
Braintree District Council took the decision in April to reassess its plan before submitting it to the Government's Planning Inspectorate for approval, and a public consultation began in May that runs until June 20. In light of the change in Government policy, the authority is eager to avoid having its LDF dismissed completely by the planning inspector, potentially costing the authority £80,000 of taxpayer's money.
Green Party councillor James Abbott said: "If this is confirmed it will have developers queuing up, not just at sites where they have been turned down in the recent process but at much larger new greenfield sites – Braintree district does not have anywhere near enough brownfield sites to cover the gap.
"The district is now facing development rates that could be three times higher than originally required, and communities will have to go through several more years of the process they have just been through.
"This is not the fault of BDC at all, these changes are being imposed by Government policy."
Councillors will be asked to make a decision on whether to stop the process on the current LDF and produce a new revised plan at a meeting on June 12, before a full council meeting on June 30.
"This figure comes from estimated population growth of up to 23 per cent by 2035 – it is clear that more people are moving into the district from neighbouring areas than are leaving," added Cllr Butland.
"We are seeing a large number of people moving to the district, but commuting to the south of the county or into the city where house prices are much higher.
"At the other end of the market the report also looked at the issue of affordable housing and highlights a need for new one and two-bedroom properties.
"We expect to see 8,000 more households by 2021, but affordability is a concern, with the average price of a flat in the district at more than £100,000 and private rent over £500 per month.
"For many people even the cheapest local housing is priced out of reach."
The current plans include proposals for 600 new homes, a 6,000-seater football stadium and a 36-acre extension to an industrial estate in Panfield Lane, as well as building on land on the A131 near Great Notley.
Slimming World members 'liberated' as baggy clothes are given away
SLIMMERS in Chelmsford banded together last month for a cancer charity – by donating over 200 bags of their unwanted clothes.
Members of the city's 15 Slimming World groups gave their unwanted garments, shoes and accessories to their local Cancer Research UK shop to raise funds – and wave bye-bye to their old, bigger clothes.
Consultant Emma Lodge said: "We support members to make healthy changes to the way they shop, cook and eat that they can keep up for life. We're delighted that our members are always so keen to pull together and support local good causes. Cancer touches so many people's lives so most people are keen to contribute."
Kate Shoard, a member from the Chelmer Village group who has lost 2st, 12lb since August, said: "I found it really liberating to get rid of all my old clothes and I'm not worried about ever needing them again because this is the new me now.
"It's great to know that the money raised from my donated items will go towards research to find better ways to treat cancer."
The 205 bags collected could raise around £6,000 for Cancer Research UK.
Visit www.slimmingworld.com or call Emma Lodge on 07887 692906 or 01245 464940.