Ipswich Borough Council has given The Station Hotel in Ipswich the nod to serve alcohol from 8am.
The big picture: This change allows The Station Hotel, located opposite Ipswich railway station, to start serving two hours earlier than before, potentially benefiting from increased trade from away football fans on match days.
Key details:
The Station Hotel is on Burrell Road, near Portman Road stadium.
Ipswich Borough Council approved the pub's application to alter its licence to allow it to serve alcohol from 8am.
The pub's entertainment licence and opening hours remain unchanged.
The bottom line: This is the most recent in a number of developments at the pub, having recently had an application approved for a second bar in the basement and unveiled a new £200,000 garden bar to accommodate more customers.
It has emerged there is no contractual agreement for M&S to maintain its high street store alongside the planned development in Copdock. The revelation comes after council leaders described the deal as "fantastic news for Ipswich" that "secures an ongoing M&S presence in Ipswich town centre." It doesn't.
The government minister responsible for primary care has met with Ipswich's MPs to discuss the cancelled development of a 'super surgery' in north west Ipswich. Stephen Kinnock MP held talks with local representatives following the scrapping of Cardinal Medical Practice's planned development at the former Tooks Bakery site.
Why it matters: The meeting signals high-level government engagement with Ipswich's primary care challenges, particularly in the north west of the town where the cancelled development was planned.
The big picture: The development at the former Tooks Bakery site was intended to create a new 'super surgery' that would embed healthcare services within the local community, aligning with the government's long-term NHS strategy.
The details: Jack Abbott MP and Patrick Spencer MP met with Health Minister Stephen Kinnock on Saturday 30 November:
Both MPs emphasised the need for improved primary care in north west Ipswich
The minister reaffirmed the government's commitment to community-based healthcare
The project was meant to align with recommendations from the Darzi Report on NHS strategy
Health bosses and council officials are going back to the drawing board after plans for a new £7.5m Cardinal Medical Practice 'super surgery' in northwest Ipswich were scrapped due to "rising costs".
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55 days ago
What they're saying:
"I will continue to work with local and national politicians and our local NHS to try and find a workable solution," said Jack Abbott MP
Patrick Spencer MP described the cancellation as "bitterly disappointing" for both the medical practice and local residents
Spencer added that the promised new 'super surgery' would "deliver exactly what the Government has committed to – health services embedded in the local community"
The bottom line: While the minister has reinforced the government's commitment to community healthcare, no immediate solution has been proposed for the cancelled development. Both MPs have pledged to continue working towards a sustainable solution.