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Events
Little Josh Home crawls across the floor, excitedly placing his hand on images beamed down from a machine above.
 
 As he forcibly splats the pictures, they disappear, only to reappear on another part of the floor, causing Josh to rush towards them.
Watching Josh energetically scrambling across the floor, it seems hard to believe that just a few years ago he was unable to even sit up in a chair unaided.
 
“Just before his second birthday we were told Josh would be in a vegetative state for much of his life,” says his father Matt.
 
“He can now walk about independently with the use of a walking aid,” adds mother Sarah.
 
Josh, now seven, who lives with his parents on the outskirts of Bridgnorth, is even able to play football with his friends. And this is thanks in no small part due to the work of The Movement Centre, in Gobowen, a pioneering charity which uses specialist therapies to help children with mobility problems.
 
The equipment Josh is using is known among staff as “the magic carpet”. The £10,000 machine, which has been bought with the help of our 2017 Cash For Your Community scheme, helps youngsters like Josh develop the use of their limbs by monitoring their movements and responding interactively.
 
Josh, who had suffered from brain scarring as a result of an metabolic condition, is one of the hundreds of youngsters who have seen their lives transformed by the Movement Centre, which provides a unique therapy system from its modest base in a portable building in the grounds of the Robert Jones and Agnes Hunt orthopaedic hospital.
 
“A lot of the children who come here will learn to walk during their time with us,” says head of fundraising, Victoria Handbury-Madin.
“It’s incredible when you see that.
 
“But we also have children here who have been unable to sit up without holding themselves each side, if they move one of their hands they fall over, which is obviously difficult for them as they can’t do anything.
 
“Some children who have attended the centre for nine to 12 months have gained head control, which enables them to interact with their family and friends, or have been able to sit unaided so that they can play.”All of the children who visit the charity have a disability, such as cerebral palsy, which affects their movement control. Targeted training helps children gain functional skills and independence, which can truly transform their lives.” She says the youngsters often defy the expectations of doctors with the way they respond to the treatments.
 
The Movement Centre was the biggest beneficiary of last year’s Cash For Your Community scheme, receiving £5,000 from the scheme run by the Shropshire Star in partnership with Enterprise Flex-E-Rent.
 
Victoria says she was amazed by the public response to the scheme, where charities are invited to collect tokens printed in the newspaper to win a share of a £20,000 dream fund.
 
“It was fantastic for us, it was a complete surprise,” she says.
“We had no idea we would be in the top three, we were just delighted to have been selected.  
“We have been a charity for quite a long time, but we had been quiet about it. 
 
“As well as getting the money, all the coverage in the Shropshire Star was really good, and it was lovely to meet the people from the other organisations.”
 
The charity was formed in 1996, and initially focused on the research and development of the new therapies.
“In the last few years we have seen a lot of children who are really benefitting from, but there are still a lot of people who haven’t heard of us.
 
“But now we are ready to grow and help more and more children.”
Victoria says she was humbled by the support the charity received from the community in Shropshire during last year’s Cash For Your Community Campaign, and will definitely be applying for this year’s scheme.
 
“We had many people writing in, some did not include a return address, but they said they had read about what we did in the Shropshire Star, and sent us their tokens,” says Victoria.
“It is really nice that so many people chose to support us.”
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News
The father of a teenager killed by a speeding driver has backed an Express & Star campaign for tougher sentences.

This newspaper launched the Stop the Speeders petition last week after reporting on two men jailed for less than eight years for each causing the death of a man by dangerous driving.

So far, the petition has more than 1,100 signatures. It calls for judges to put down longer sentences for killer drivers and will be sent to Prime Minister Theresa May.

The latest person to back it is Richard Evans, whose daughter Georgie Evans, a former pupil of Kinver High School, died when her car was hit by an Audi A6 driven by Kuba Oles.

The Polish immigrant was speeding along Priory Road in Dudley when it happened, Wolverhampton Crown Court heard.

The 24-year-old, of Beaconview Road, West Bromwich, fled the scene after the crash. He was later jailed for six years, after pleading guilty to causing death by dangerous driving.

The parents of Miss Evans, from Himley, could not attend the court hearing as they were still too upset, following the crash on October 27.

But today Mr Evans said: “We lost our daughter 27th October 2016 on Priory Road, Dudley, due to a driver speeding at nearly 100mph in a 30mph zone.

“He struck her car with such force it tore it in half. She hadn’t a prayer.

“The driver then made off from the scene and handed himself in 18 hours later – he was sentenced to six years imprisonment and probably will be out in four. We are paying the ultimate sentence. Enough is enough.” Wolverhampton Crown Court heard how Oles was helped to the side of the road by passers-by but fled from the scene when their backs were turned.

He did not hand himself into the police until 18 hours later, making it impossible for him to be checked for drink and drugs.

He then tried to pass blame onto the victim, claiming she was inexperienced and had been travelling too slowly.

But these allegations were dismissed by the findings of the police investigation.

The crash took place at the junction of Cedar Road. Judge Challinor, who also banned Ole from driving for 14 years, said: “This was a prolonged, persistent and deliberate course of bad driving with reckless disregard for other road users.

“It was just a matter of time before your precipitative actions led to catastrophe. You pose a significant risk of causing serious harm through your driving.”

Figures from the Department of Transport show 54 people died on the roads in the West Midlands in the 12 months up to October 27.
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