Jump to content

Recommended Posts

There has been land movement (the area has been prone to water logging, which will certainly have made some stones unstable). The cemetery staff tip them over, if it seems possible they might fall spontaneously, as a safety measure. Some have been re-settled, but that can be an expensive job. Probably some vandalism as well, of course.

As Penguin says, most of the movement is a combination of land movement, ongoing construction work and terribly thought out drainage. The ground alternately floods and then dries out which makes a lot of the older monuments wobble and then fall over.


According to one of the gardening team it?s not being helped by the number of people who park off the tarmac and on the grass verges - which compacts the ground causing more flooding and poor drainage. They put up parking markers to stop this a couple of years ago but some of them have been knocked over and people worry about their car blocking others so it?s a regular occurrence.


There was a survey team there about a month ago so I wonder if it?s related to that - pre-emptive to avoid injury.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • I trust people who act  according to their convictions regardless of what other people might think. I don't trust people  who stick with things which no longer feel right for them. I was once a fully paid up member of the Labour party, and went to local meetings. Along with a number of other people I know, I left the Labour party and  no longer go to local meetings. The Labour party has moved a long way to the right, and the Green party now represents much of what Labour used to stand for. I don't think "political rivalry" has anything to do with it. I find that a very strange choice of words.
    • I don't really understand the question in this context? I mean, yes, most of us are motivated by a degree of self interest but Rockets is not standing for election as a local councillor( is he?), nor did he stand for leadership of the Council, so in that sense does not have the power or influence to significantly affect thousands of voter lives. 
    • @Sue of course it matters - 100% it matters. He was an elected official who asked the electorate to entrust the running of a local ward to him as a Labour councillor, under Labour's mandate. He also held a senior position within the Labour local leadership team. Suddenly he leaves and jumps to a political rival and gives his previous political party both barrels. This is why many people distrust all politicians and things like this just goes to confirm that.
    • We may never know, but does it actually matter?
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...