Fires broke out inside three bin lorries in one week in Leeds, prompting the council to issue an urgent warning about the safe disposal of batteries and barbecues.
It gives several options as an answer – the man who started the thread, forwarded the photo, laughed, lurked, or made the images, or the man who reported it.Jonny Wiseman, WMR customer experience director, said the rail operators' charity partner was White Ribbon UK, which advocates against violence towards women and girls, with a three-year action plan in place to raise awareness of the charity's work.
Lynne Elliott, chief executive of White Ribbon UK, said: "By placing these artworks where thousands pass through daily, we're encouraging people, especially men, to pause, reflect, and consider the steps they can take."She said the charity was already working with many "brilliant, inspiring men", who were working to build a world where everyone was equal, safe and respected, adding: "We want more to join in."The artworks, commissioned by Heart of England Community Rail Partnership, can be seen at Tile Hill, Adderley Park, Hampton-in-Arden, Marston Green and Stechford stations.
A disabled photography student has travelled more than 850 miles on buses across England to highlight the challenges faced by disabled bus pass users.Dan Bowhay, who is visually impaired, travelled for up to 10 hours a day, catching 26 buses over 10 days from Land's End to Berwick-upon-Tweed.
The final-year student at Arts University Bournemouth (AUB) has made a 10-hour film documentary about his trip.
He says Between These Times is a "slow cinema" style film which aims to show "how agonisingly slow it is to travel by bus".But it may be disrupting species' breeding patterns and could bring an influx of jellyfish that like warmer waters, including the huge barrel jellyfish, to seas and beaches.
It could also cause harmful algae to grow out of control, creating wide patches of green algae that can poison other life."We will be watching closely to monitor the impacts of the current UK heatwave on marine life and fisheries," John Pinnegar, Lead Advisor on Climate Change at the UK Centre for Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture Science.
Previous heatwaves have caused harmful blooms of algae and in 2018 caused mass mortality among mussels.In 2023, jellyfish sightings increased by 32% following a marine heatwave with temperatures 3-4C above average.