The 58-year-old from Bridgend faces further claims up to 2021 that he referred to the appearance or sexuality of women, giving them nicknames like Ferrari, Rolls-Royce and Porsche.
The Royal College of Midwives has said staffing is the "most important issue" and the gap needs to close.Speaking at the official opening ceremony for the new campus, Prof Alison Honour, vice-chancellor of Bournemouth University, said: "The UK needs more trained midwives and I'm so pleased that this facility allows us to educate a future workforce with the skills and expertise the UK needs."
The campus replaces a previous training facility at St Mary's Hospital.Prof Anand Pandyan, executive dean of the health and social sciences faculty said: "The integrated design of the midwifery satellite campus at Portsmouth provides an environment to foster learning and support student wellbeing."Such a facility will ensure that the midwifery graduates of Bournemouth University will serve the women of the region well."
Sensors to monitor water quality are going to be placed on part of the River Severn and data from them will be fed into a wild swimming app.The devices will allow the Environment Agency to check up on bacteria, including E. coli, in the waterway in Shrewsbury at the town's designated bathing site.
The use of the sensors will let the agency take readings remotely every day alongside manual readings which have to be taken by staff on site, each week, during the bathing season.
The app will be made available to the public and show swimmers when it is safe to enter the water and when to avoid swimming, a spokesperson for the agency said.Frustrated residents said they had already waited "years and years" and were fed up with heavy traffic.
The southbound section of the bypass has already opened, but there is work left to do on the northern carriageway, with temporary traffic lights controlling queues at busy times.The council said the bypass is designed to reduce traffic, making the area safer and reducing pollution.
The project has been funded with £28m of council money, developer contributions and from the Coast to Capital Growth Hub.Sarah Metcalfe, who lives nearby, told BBC Radio Sussex talk of a bypass first began 50 years ago when she moved to Lyminster.