• Support Wokingham Today
  • Get the print edition
  • Sign up for our daily newsletter
Tuesday, September 30, 2025
Wokingham.Today
  • HOME
  • MY AREA
    • All
    • Arborfield
    • Barkham
    • Beech Hill
    • Binfield
    • Bracknell
    • Charvil
    • Crowthorne
    • Earley
    • Emmbrook
    • Finchampstead
    • Grazeley
    • Henley
    • Hurst
    • Lower Earley
    • Norreys
    • Reading
    • Remenham
    • Riseley
    • Shinfield
    • Sindlesham
    • Sonning
    • Spencers Wood
    • Swallowfield
    • Three Mile Cross
    • Twyford
    • Wargrave
    • Winnersh
    • Wokingham
    • Wokingham Without
    • Woodley
    • Woosehill
    • Yateley
    Police

    Police seek witnesses following assault at Harmanswater Shops in Bracknell

    Clive Jones with Ming Campbell in the Wokingham MP?s back garden.

    Jones pays respects to former leader

    Wokingham Town

    Can you help Sumas hit the target?

    A similar Amazon delivery hub..Photo: John Millard/UNP.

    Amazon delivers 50 new jobs to Bracknell

    A Shinfield View care home movie night entertained residents, families and local Cub Scouts. Picture, Shinfield View

    Cub Scouts enjoy a wizard evening with care home residents

    Head of School Sarah Hilling, Izzy, 10, Freddie, nine, and Emily Quinn, with, in front, Thomas, seven, Taylor, eight, Megan, eight, Alfie, six, Edie, five and Haven, seven.Head of School Sarah Hilling, Izzy, 10, Freddie, nine, and Emily Quinn, with, in front, Thomas, seven, Taylor, eight, Megan, eight, Alfie, six, Edie, five and Haven, seven.

    Oak tree which had stood for generations at school takes on new life

    The sewer collapse has increased pressure on surrounding roads.

    Sewer repair needs more work

    Joanna Day's Empress Collection from Byzantium was shown during London Fashion Week. Pictures: RM Photography, Woking

    Crowthorne ethical designer empresses at London Fashion Show

    Wokingham In Need presents a night of opera at Wokingham Town Hall. Picture: courtesy of WIN

    Royal Opera House professionals to sing in Wokingham

  • SPORT
    • All
    • Binfield FC
    • Reading FC
    Wokingham Town

    Can you help Sumas hit the target?

    Reading Aces

    Reading Aces Volleyball Club celebrates three promotions in exceptional season

    Bobby Trundley Picture: Steve Borowick

    Racing sensation Bobby Trundley further extends championship lead

    Racketball champions

    Father from Reading celebrates as his three children win for England in the Racketball Internationals

    Shinfield Cricket Club

    Shinfield Cricket Club Juniors finish another successful season

    Reading FC

    Reading FC keep long-standing league record after Liverpool lose at Crystal Palace

    Football Picture: Pixabay

    Footballers encouraged to alter ‘offensive’ terms as Berks & Bucks FA produce language guide

    Rams RFC v Sale Pictures: Tim Pitfield

    Reynolds admits slow start cost Rams

    Andy Yiadom is currently out injured

    Reading FC: Hunt provides injury updates following away draw at Stockport

  • READING FC
  • COMMUNITY
    Wokingham Town

    Can you help Sumas hit the target?

    A Shinfield View care home movie night entertained residents, families and local Cub Scouts. Picture, Shinfield View

    Cub Scouts enjoy a wizard evening with care home residents

    The sewer collapse has increased pressure on surrounding roads.

    Sewer repair needs more work

    Wokingham In Need presents a night of opera at Wokingham Town Hall. Picture: courtesy of WIN

    Royal Opera House professionals to sing in Wokingham

    St James Church, Woodley is holding an Eco Afternoon on Saturday, October 18. Picture: St James Church

    Woodley church Eco Open Afternoon should be ‘wild and wonderful’

    Engineers installing a new junction. Pic: Network Rail.

    Plan ahead for three-day railway closure

    Hurst village shop is poised to reopen

    Hurst shop reopens

    Matthewsgreen Community Centre.

    Day service on the move

    Woodley Repair Cafe operates on the first Sunday of the month, at Christ Church, Crockhamwell Road, between 2pm and 4pm. Picture: Emma Merchant

    Get things fixed in Woodley

  • LIFESTYLE
    • All
    • Food
    • Health
    • Obituaries
    • People
    A Shinfield View care home movie night entertained residents, families and local Cub Scouts. Picture, Shinfield View

    Cub Scouts enjoy a wizard evening with care home residents

    Reginald Ashley Pick

    Matthewsgreen Community Centre.

    Day service on the move

    Thames Hospice Sunflower Walk 2025. Picture by Emma Sheppard

    Sunflower Walk raises thousands for charity

    New students are being urged to register with a GP and download the NHS App as they prepare to start university. Picture: Nicolas J Leclercq via Unsplash

    NHS urges new students to get ‘NHS ready’ as they move to university

    Revd Mark Nam is delighted to have won a National Diversity Award. Picture: Diocese of Oxford

    Woodley vicar wins national award for diversity

    Sit & Sip Wokingham is bringing back its popular Oktoberfest celebration.

    Oktoberfest returns this weekend

    David Dunham (left) with David Cliff.

    Can you help this year’s poppy appeal?

    With just 10 minutes until the end of the event, there were still plenty of people in Wokingham Town Hall at the Volunteer Fair. Picture: Emma Merchant

    Fair to showcase volunteer opportunities

  • WHAT’S ON
    • All
    • Arts
    • Entertainment
    London's New Players' Theatre Company, with Tom carradine on pianoforte, will entertain at Wokingham's Whitty Theatre on Saturday, October 4. Picture: New Players Theatre Company

    My lords, ladies and gentlemen, for your delight and delectation, an old time music hall show

    A Fairytale for Christmas

    Irish Christmas concert extravaganza A Fairytale for Christmas returns for 2025 tour, including date at The Hexagon, Reading

    CSI will perform for one night only at Wokingham Theatre, on . Picture: Jayda Fogel

    An absurdly funny murder mystery is coming to Wokingham

    Audiences can see Mozart's The Magic Flute, performed by Park Opera, at Wokingham's Whitty Theatre at the end of October. Picture: A Different Perspective via Pixabay

    Enjoy a night of opera in Wokingham

    Hurst Morris People (HuMP) invite new dancers and musicians to join them at two trial sessions this month. Picture: Picasa

    Try Morris dancing with HuMP

    Find out more about EVs at an event in Elms Field on September 20. Picture: Wokingham Borough Council

    Switch on to EV – at Elms Field

    Reading School for Boys has named the Royal Berks Charity as its charity of the year. Picture: Reading School

    Reading students will enjoy musical rivalry as part of their school’s 900th anniversary celebrations

    Wokingham Theatre's new season of plays begin with Dead Guilty, a psychological thriller. Pictures: Emma Merchant

    When is going to the theatre a guilty pleasure? When it’s Dead Guilty in Wokingham

    EMMANUEL SONUBI

    Life After Near Death: Emmanuel Sonubi announces new tour, including Bracknell date

  • JOBS
  • ADVERTISE
  • CONTACT
No Result
View All Result
Wokingham.Today
No Result
View All Result
Home Featured

LETTERS: We must support our market during regeneration

by Phil Creighton
August 24, 2017
in Featured, Opinion
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

A word in your shell, like

So, “you can’t make an omelette without breaking some eggs” (Keep On Shopping, The Wokingham Paper, August 10).

Let’s hope that this is not a municipal euphemism for something more sinister as the council sets out to metamorphose a once-delightful, historic and quintessentially English market town with some kind of chic continental style “shoppers paradise” packed with piazzas, plazas, cafes, coffee shops and assorted other eateries (nothing new there then).

A green and pleasant land, free from congestion and roadworks, all achieved by breaking the aforementioned metaphoric eggs, designed to seduce residents and visitors alike into regenerating the town’s fortunes of yesteryear.

I, as do many others who have lived in and supported Wokingham for considerably more years than have a goodly number of our current councillors, hope their visions of the future materialise.

However, and whilst not wishing to rain on their parade – a word in their administrative shell likes – ne vous laissez pas berner par vos propres relations publiques, or as we Brits would say, don’t be fooled by your own public relations.

J W Blaney, Wokingham

Related posts

Honest Motherhood: Breaking point

Tom Webber sets date for newest single, Face In The Crowd

We must support our market during regeneration

I am very concerned about the plight of our market traders who have, for obvious reasons, been relocated to various areas around Erftstadt Court and very few people seem to know they are there.

I live very close to that area and very often pass by on my way through the town but even I did not realise that apart from the two stalls which can be seen from Denmark Street, others are dispersed around the Court. For example the veg man is tucked away in a corner by the Citizens’ Advice bureau and two other stalls are located opposite the Gig House pub in the Plaza.

The traders are very concerned at their loss of business and some of them are saying that if trade does not pick up soon they will have to give up. They are suffering huge losses. No doubt the Council has not reduced their rents!

I would urge everyone to wander down Denmark Street and patronise these businesses before we lose them altogether.

Name and address supplied

How we got the news through Wokingham

(with apologies to Robert Browning)

He jumped in the Volvo with Maurice and me.
I buckled my seat-belt, we buckled all three,
then fired up the engine, demisted the screen,
and wiped the dashboard, where my coffee had been.
With road works denying its chance to deduce,
we knew that the Satnav would be of no use.

Arborfield, Coppid Beech and Twyford Road, too,
are building sites now, with new housing in view,
while old Denmark Street, which has long been one-way,
will be “No-Way, Jose”, for many a day.
The rat-run was tailed back on Evendons Lane,
with Blagrove Lane closed, just to add to the pain.

So which way to go to avoid the great jam
that is choking the traffic through Wokingham?
With the damned threeway lights on Finchampstead Road
confounding our progress, our journey was slowed.
For the first half an hour we moved at a crawl.
The next 15 minutes we moved not at all.

As we sat in the queue we found with dismay
it gets even worse on Veolia day.
At last we agreed, with sad resignation,
we could yet be hours from our destination
and as we’d set out without toothbrush or comb,
we turned round our motor and headed back home.

Tired and defeated, we pulled into my drive
and mugs of tea later, began to revive.
The news that we carried must now arrive late.
Those eager to hear it would ponder our fate.
So as that harsh journey our spirits had vexed,
we played Grand Theft Auto and sent them a text.

Alan Brown,
Wokingham Library Poetry Group

Underhand bank sale is reckless

The Tories have sneakily flogged off the Green Investment Bank under cover of Parliamentary recess.

Greens have long and vocally opposed the sale.

This latest underhand move is deeply irresponsible and shows contempt towards tackling climate change — one of the biggest challenges the world faces.

Through public ownership, the Green Investment Bank has helped fuel a transition towards a greener economy by funding some innovative low-carbon and renewable energy projects.
Flogging it off to the highest bidder is disastrous news for everyone who cares about the future of renewable energy.

It’s also a bad deal for the planet and a bad deal for taxpayers. In 2016, the GIB started to make a profit and, under public ownership, was due to deliver an annual return of 10%.
The Macquarie Group, which will now operate the Green Investment Bank under a new guise, has a worrying and dubious track record of asset stripping – and dismal environmental credentials.

As we grapple with soaring temperatures and a climate change denier in the White House we need to be investing in green energy, not sell off our future security to those more interested in making a quick buck.

This sale further jeopardises our chances of meeting our commitments under the Paris Agreement on climate change. It’s a disgraceful, environmentally reckless, wasted opportunity and a kick in the teeth for taxpayers.

Keith Taylor
Green Party MEP for the South East

Fighting for mental health

Prime Minister – and local MP – Theresa May, like her predecessors, has made many pledges and promises to increase the early detection of mental health problems in the UK’s teens and pre-teens without increasing NHS child and adolescent mental health (CAMH) places, services and staff.

For example, here in Berkshire, only nine NHS CAMH places are commissioned for the entire Royal County, from the local NHS mental health trust – the same commissioning as in the 1990s. No NHS CAMH staff or services are commissioned at weekends and bank holidays, other than for those already hospitalised.

There are no NHS specialist/holistic help commissioned for the ever-increasing numbers, according to Thames Valley Police figures, of underaged victims of sexual abuses.

So this increasing of early CAMH intervention, thereby increasing demand for NHS CAMH services without increasing commissioning makes no sense – and Mrs May should be made aware of this by all of us living in Berkshire, if not across the entire country.

Paul Farmer, a long-term – and totally unsuccessful – NHS CAMH campaigner for at least adequate commissioning across Berkshire and Beyond

Name and shame abusers

Many Pakistanis, North African and Turkish origin continue to abuse white girls in England for fun and depravity: these men should be named and shamed throughout this country and the world.

Jeremy Corbyn should consider his position and stand down as Labour leader because he was wrong to sack Sarah Champion who spoke out. The Labour leader is not up to it he is a weak leader on rights and wrongs. This country is crying out for a strong leader and Corbyn is no good.

People should cheer Ms Champion for speaking out the truth – good on her.

Victor Rones, Advocate for real Justice and Rights no cover ups, Bracknell

Childhood obesity is a threat

Childhood obesity is one of the biggest health threats that the UK faces and a year on from the Government’s published childhood obesity strategy we are no closer to having a solution to the problem.

We agree with Cancer Research UK; more needs to be done. Today’s announcement on cracking down on calories in popular foods is something, but it’s not the whole picture.
What about the amount of physical activity our children are getting each day? The recommended amount is 60 minutes but just one in five achieve this.

The Obesity Strategy refers to the recently published Cycling and Walking Investment Strategy. But this only commits to increasing the number of primary school children normally walking to school to 55%. Although an increase, it’s a small one. We want to see more ambitious targets around increasing everyday physical activity in our young children so that more are walking and learning vital lifetime healthy habits.

Steve Chambers, Policy & Research Coordinator, Living Streets

We welcome your thoughts for our letters page. Either reply to this post, leave a message on Facebook or email [email protected]

Keep up to date by signing up for our daily newsletter

We don’t spam we only send our newsletter to people who have requested it.

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

Tags: commentLettersopinionviewswokingham letterswokingham view
Previous Post

Solicitors raise £600,000 for cancer charity

Next Post

Two-bed apartment available to buy in Wokingham

FOLLOW US

POPULAR THIS WEEK

Racketball champions

Father from Reading celebrates as his three children win for England in the Racketball Internationals

September 29, 2025
The Swan pub in Basingstoke Road, Three Mile Cross. Credit: Tait Architects

Landlady defends pub over smashed glass and noise complaints

September 29, 2025
London's New Players' Theatre Company, with Tom carradine on pianoforte, will entertain at Wokingham's Whitty Theatre on Saturday, October 4. Picture: New Players Theatre Company

My lords, ladies and gentlemen, for your delight and delectation, an old time music hall show

September 24, 2025
Football Picture: Pixabay

Footballers encouraged to alter ‘offensive’ terms as Berks & Bucks FA produce language guide

September 28, 2025
A Shinfield View care home movie night entertained residents, families and local Cub Scouts. Picture, Shinfield View

Cub Scouts enjoy a wizard evening with care home residents

September 30, 2025
A cafe refit at Squire's Garden Centre, Hare Hatch pays homage to the company's founding year, 1936. Picture: Squire's Garden Centres

Squire’s in Twyford launches new look café bar

September 24, 2025

ABOUT US

Wokingham Today is dedicated to providing news online across the whole of the Borough of Wokingham. It is a Social Enterprise, existing to support the various communities in Wokingham Borough.

Wokingham.Today is a Social Enterprise and aims to ensure that everyone within the Borough has free access to independent and up-to-date news. However, providing this service is not without costs. If you are able to, please make a contribution to support our work.

CONTACT US

[email protected]

Keep up to date with our daily newsletter

We don’t spam we only send our newsletter to people that have subscribed

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

  • Support Us
  • Book Advertising
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Get the Print Edition
  • Sign up for our daily newsletter

The Wokingham Paper Ltd publications are regulated by IPSO – the Independent Press Standards Organisation.
If you have a complaint about a  The Wokingham Paper Ltd  publication in print or online, you should, in the first instance, contact the publication concerned, email: [email protected], or telephone: 0118 327 2662. If it is not resolved to your satisfaction, you should contact IPSO by telephone: 0300 123 2220, or visit its website: www.ipso.co.uk. Members of the public are welcome to contact IPSO at any time if they are not sure how to proceed, or need advice on how to frame a complaint.

No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
  • MY AREA
    • Arborfield
    • Barkham
    • Beech Hill
    • Binfield
    • Bracknell
    • Charvil
    • Crowthorne
    • Earley
    • Emmbrook
    • Finchampstead
    • Grazeley
    • Henley
    • Hurst
    • Lower Earley
    • Norreys
    • Reading
    • Remenham
  • COMMUNITY
  • LIFESTYLE
  • SPORT
  • READING FC
  • OBITUARIES
  • WHAT’S ON
  • JOBS
  • PHOTOS
  • ADVERTISE WITH US
  • CONTACT US
  • WHERE TO GET THE PRINT EDITION
  • SUPPORT US

© 2022 - The Wokingham Paper Ltd - All Right Reserved.