"The coastal management team is working with their contractors and consenting organisations for the works to be brought forward."
Having relinquished his bid last year, Bluebird was welcomed back to Coniston by cheering crowds, with record numbers of visitors flocking to see it., Mr Smith paid £25,000 towards the museum's costs and it was also agreed he would have no "further right, title or interest" in the craft.
Work on the construction of a £10m maritime facility in a seaside town is set to begin, a council has said.The Whitby Maritime Training Hub will provide training facilities and accommodation for maritime businesses and service providers, North Yorkshire Council said.The council said the hub, on Endeavour Wharf, would also have space for engineering workshops and office space for marine-based start-up businesses, with construction due to be completed in April 2026.
Councillor Mark Crane said: We believe the hub can open the door to new economic growth in coastal areas and be a key development for Whitby."He added: "It is imperative that there is a sustainable and diverse range of job opportunities for our communities and the building of a world-class training facility can only help inspire the future apprentices and professionals in the maritime sector."
The authority said it would initially manage the facility, with the potential for a community interest company to be developed to take on the running of the hub.
Whitby Town Board chair Barry Harland said: "Presenting new opportunities for people in and around Whitby is the main reason for the hub being built."Mr Galloway was in Sparkbrook to endorse independent and Workers Party candidates across the city standing on the issue of Gaza.
Speaking to the BBC, he said: “We’re not single issue, but if we were, Gaza is the mother of all single issues.”The party believes it can attract votes in the West Midlands, after witnessing
Some in the Labour Partythat Workers Party candidates and independents endorsed by the party could eat into their vote,