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News
Fundraisers have handed over a cheque of more than £500 in aid of new floodlights for a Black Country football club.

A charity football match in December saw members of the press take on local politicians to help raise money for Bilston Town Football Club.

The politicians’ team, which was led by Wolverhampton South East MP Pat McFadden, fell to a 8-2 loss back in December, against a team of Express & Star, PA and Free Radio journalists.

Despite the comfortable scoreline, those who came to watch and the players themselves helped to raise raise £525 for the vital fund at Bilston Town.

The money was added to the fund for the club to pay off the debt for their new floodlights, with a crowdfunding page reaching almost £2,200 and private donations meaning the club reached their goal of £20,000.

Now, Mr McFadden, Express & Star reporter Liam Keen and Gavin Miller from trade union group Community, have handed the cheque over to staff at the club.

Community were an integral part of the fundraiser, donating £250 towards the final total.

Club chairman Denise Frankham said: “We’re ecstatic, we couldn’t have continued without the money, we would have had to close our doors, all our teams need the lights.”
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News
Some of the finest budding photographers have been recognised for their work at a prestigious awards ceremony, thanks to a panel of judges including MNA chief photographer Tim Thursfield.

Schoolchildren from across Wolverhampton were honoured for their bright, thoughtful and impressive photography skills at Wolverhampton Grammar School.

Organised by Wolverhampton Photographic Society, almost 300 young people entered the competition, doubling the number of entries from last year.

Judged by three photographic experts, including four time MNA Real Award winner Tim Thursfield, the hundreds of entries were reduced to a final 10, before the top three were announced at the awards evening.

Pictured are winners of the Wolverhampton Young Photographer of the Year, Natasha Rodrigues, front, with category winners, back, from left, Lyla Harris, Simi Kaur, Emily Rodwell and Sam Jones.

All of the top three were presented with a certificate, while the winner of each category was also given a £50 cash prize. This year there was an under 15 category, followed by four categories covering different photography styles – creative, open, portrait and reflection.

The four winners from those categories were then up for the overall award, with that artist receiving a trophy and being crowned Wolverhampton Young Photographer 2018.

Rob Cowell, chairman of Wolverhampton Photographic Society, said: “The whole idea of this competition is to inspire young people to get hold of a camera, go out and think about what they’re taking.

“If we just inspire one person a year to go into photography then that would be a success.

“It’s vitally important for young people to get involved. There is some real skill in the photos we have here, it’s fantastic.

“It gives them confidence to put their ideas forward and it takes a lot to come on a night like this and wonder if you’re going to win. Everybody achieved so much.

“The judges were unanimous that the standard of the work for the age group was extremely high.” Natasha Rodrigues was thrilled when she picked up first place in the portrait category with her piece titled Rembrandt.

But the 18-year-old from Ormiston New Academy was soon shocked when she was named Wolverhampton Young Photographer 2018.

She said: “I can’t believe it, I really didn’t think I’d win, let alone win one category and then the overall category. The school and my teachers got me into photography in the first place.”

The winner in the under 15 category was 13-year-old Lyla Harris with her photo titled London Bridge in Motion.

After picking up the gong, the Saint Matthias School pupil is planning to continue with her snaps.

The winner in the creative category was 18-year-old Simi Kaur with her piece titled Abandoned III.

The Wolverhampton Grammar School student said: “My mum was so happy when it was announced that I had won, I really didn’t expect it.

Fellow grammar school student Sam Jones, 16, was the winner in the reflection category for his clever illusion piece titled Empty.

Ormiston New Academy student Emily Rodwell, 17, won the open category with her photo, New Beginnings.

The final Schools Award, new for this year, and was presented to the school with the most children in the top three, which was Ormiston New Academy.
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Events, News
Young engineers of the future have been given the chance to put their classroom lessons to the ultimate test in a challenge launched for school pupils in Shropshire.

The Shropshire Star has launched the STEM Challenge 2019 – Science, Technology, Engineering, and Maths – in order to boost student engagement with these key topics and also to give them an understanding of how what they learn in the classroom will play a vital role in future careers.

The competition is forging valuable links between local businesses and schools, while also providing students with an insight into the world of industry and the opportunities it provides.

This is the second year Midlands News Association (MNA), the publisher of the Shropshire Star, has held the challenge.

Last year, a joint initiative was run between the Shropshire Star and sister title the Express & Star – but the scheme proved so successful that challenges are now being held from both newspapers.

Each Shropshire school signed up to the challenge is partnered with a mentor from businesses or organisations involved in the industry.
Schools have been asked to design a product using the elements of STEM that has a positive benefit to an individual/group and the environment, or just the environment.

The teams of pupils will then need to demonstrate their product or prototype as a working model at a presentation on July 4, 2019 at the Marches Centre of Manufacturing and Technology, the associate sponsor hosting the event.

There are seven team prizes to be won including: Best Work Plan, sponsored by EPSON; Best Presentation, sponsored by Avara Foods; Best Team Work, sponsored by Telford & Wrekin Council; Best Operating Model, sponsored by Protolabs; Best Entrepreneurial Team, sponsored by Ironbridge Gorge Museums; and Business Champion, sponsored by Hitachi Capital Invoice Finance.

There will also be a Mentor Recognition Award, sponsored by The Careers and Enterprise Company as well as an award for the overall winner, judged by the headline sponsor, DENSO.

The mentors, who have all been given formal STEM training, will visit the schools regularly between now and July to work with the teams to monitor progress and also provide support where needed.
Each school involved in the challenge will receive £100 to help buy materials and fund their design.

This year’s challenge was announced by Martin Wright, editor of the Shropshire Star, and Malcolm Eyre, of Entrust STEM educational support and the lead ambassador of the STEM Challenge, at a launch event held at Marches Centre of Manufacturing and Technology yesterday.

Mr Wright, said: “The last campaign was a huge success so we decided to do it again, but this time we split it into two, one for the Shropshire Star and one for our sister paper, the Express & Star.

“For a number of us we really did not know what to expect from the teams taking part in last year’s competition but the standard of work produced blew us away – we were expecting cardboard boxes and elastic bands and how wrong we were.

“We’re sure that our next group of inventors will produce work of a similarly high standard.

“The challenge starts running now right through until the summer where our teams will be judged in all of our categories.

“Over the six months we want the teams to plan their project to manufacture a product or prototype reflecting the challenge.

“In the design and manufacture we need to see the real application of STEM – Science, Technology, Engineering and Maths – after all, this is what the campaign is about, and teams must make sure the product has a positive benefit. We look forward to seeing everyone back here at Marches Centre of Manufacturing and Technology on the judging and awards day in July where teams will showcase their projects to all of our judges.”



Among the schools taking part is Mary Webb School and Science College, in Pontesbury, which has been partnered with Western Power Distribution.

Teacher Chris Thorley, said: “We’ve worked on STEM projects before in our school and it has had an obvious benefit for the students. We’re delighted to be part of the challenge this year and we can’t wait to get started on this and find out what our students are capable of given the opportunity.

“It’s important students are given that vital link between learning in schools and applying what they have learnt to industry related projects and real life ideas, without it many students may not really know what’s ahead of them and what the industry can offer and provide.”

Malcolm Eyre, of Entrust STEM educational support, said: “Our STEM ambassadors are the key way of enthusing young people into working in STEM careers in the future and we are looking to bring real life projects into the school curriculum.

“This is important because if children are stimulated by something, find it interesting and find it’s connected to real life, their endeavours are so much better.

“What this challenge is going to provide over the next six months is exactly that, a real life scenario, real life support from the industry outside of schools and a link and mentor that will help these young people – along with the funding that a lot of schools can’t afford at the moment to provide something extra. As far as we’re concerned, this marks the start of something very special for the young people in our care.

“It’s something that we as a group will be proud about and we will know that we’ve made an impact among these young people and I know those who have not been involved previously will enjoy the experience.

“Young people will get a tremendous amount out of this and they will give us all a lot back as well.”

Schools will now put together teams of students to work with their industry mentors and come up with a design to fit the given challenge.

Reports and updates of teams’ progression and ideas will be monitored by their mentors throughout the project before the final judging on July 4.
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News
It’s coming back. Cash For Your Community returns once more this year, once more distributing £20,000 among the unsung good causes which make our area so special.

This year’s campaign, which we are once more running in partnership with Enterprise Flex-e-Rent, will take the total amount shared out between charities and community groups to a whopping £100,000.

Once more, one group is guaranteed to receive £5,000 from our prize fund, and we are inviting charities and voluntary groups to register their interest now.

The £5,000 handed over to last year’s biggest recipient, Shropshire and Staffordshire Blood Bikes, is already being used to help saves lives in the county.

The charity, formed five years ago, is staffed entirely by volunteers, and fundraising manager Lynne Stone said it meant that they could more easily carry vital medical supplies to hospitals in the area.

“Our substantial win enabled us to purchase and install a new secure motorbike shed in north Shropshire, which meant that the many volunteer bikers in the area had ready access to a liveried blood bike and could speedily serve the operational needs of our local Shropshire hospitals and beyond.”

Since its launch in 2015, Cash For Your Community has handed over 180 cheques to 139 different groups, totalling £80,000.

This year we are looking to help 35 groups.

Once the groups have been chosen, it is our readers who will decide how the money is shared out by collecting tokens that are printed in the Shropshire Star.

Each organisation will get a share of the money depending on how many tokens they have been able to collect.

In 2017, we gave £5,000 to The Movement Centre, based at the Robert Jones and Orthopaedic Hospital in Gobowen, near Oswestry. It used the money to buy a machine known as ‘the magic carpet’, which helps children with conditions such as cerebral palsy improve their ability to move about, and in some cases help them to walk. It was fantastic for us, it was a complete surprise,” she said.

“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.”

Tom McDonald of Enterprise Flex-e-Rent said he was delighted to be working with the Shropshire Star once more. He said the good work of local groups was “awe inspiring”.

“We at Enterprise pride ourselves on our founding values, working to strengthen our bonds with the communities our customers and colleagues live and work in.

“As a proud Shropshire resident, we are delighted to again be supporting fantastic charities and community groups throughout the region as part of the Cash For Your Community campaign.”
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News
Shropshire Star photographer Steve Leath got a surprise when he turned up to cover a presentation being made by Telford & Wrekin’s Mayor Raj Mehta – when he discovered the presentation was being made to himself.

Raj had chosen Steve for one of his community awards in recognition of his going the extra mile in his work.

And when Raj sprung the surprise as unsuspecting Steve arrived with his camera at the Shropshire Star offices, he said: “No way! I don’t get awards. That’s fantastic – awesome.

“I’ve been doing this job for 14 years and that’s something really special. It means a lot.”

Raj said: “Ever since I became mayor I have wanted to make sure the gems of the community are not missed and the efforts of people are recognised.

“Whenever I have met him I have been struck by his politeness and humbleness, and his going the extra mile and out of his way.
“He is not just there as a photographer – he looks after everything and everyone.

“It’s very hard to find somebody who has those qualities all in one.
“And it’s without wanting something back.

“I noticed that, and that’s the key.

“He is the first journalist to receive this award.”

Steve, who lives in Perton, Wolverhampton, said: “I was told that I would be doing a certificate presentation. I didn’t realise it was for me!

“I’ve never been given a certificate before.

“I’m going to have to think about where to keep it, but I think I may have it in my dining room on the cabinet.

“Sometimes in this job I end up doing a lot of hours and it’s because you don’t want to let people down.

“You hope it is appreciated, and this shows that it is.”

The citation on the Mayor’s Certificate of Recognition 2018 reads: “I proudly award Steve Leath, for your outstanding contribution and commitment with the Shropshire Star and wider community.”
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News
An incredible 16,000 food items and toiletries were donated to the Express & Star’s Feed a Family This Christmas appeal.

The MNA have been overwhelmed by the kindness of people across the Black Country and Staffordshire who have really dug deep to help those less fortunate.

Our drop-off points have been inundated with an array of food and toiletries with schools, businesses, scouts and health workers among those lending a helping hand.

Among the charities supported by the appeal was The Well (Home of the Wolverhampton Foodbank).

Project leader Gary Price said: “I want to say a big thank you to everybody who has collected for the appeal. It’s going to be a huge help to people at Christmas.

“Demand is growing and growing so these donations will make a big difference to families.”

The appeal has also benefitted the Black Country Food Bank, which has centres across Dudley, Sandwell and Walsall, the Good Shepherd Ministry, based in Wolverhampton, the Haven women’s and children’s refuge and Cannock and District Food Bank.

The E&S launched the appeal for the third year running in response to food banks and charities seeing numbers needing support continuing to rise.

Many are faced with the choice of either eating or heating their home.

Food banks and charities are also supporting many homeless people as well as rough sleepers and ‘sofa-surfers’.

All of the donations will help to make their lives a little easier this Christmas.

Express & Star editor Martin Wright said: “The response has been absolutely incredible.

“For so many people and organisations to support this campaign is incredibly humbling.

“There is no doubt that the generosity of our readers helped to make an enormous difference this Christmas and I would like to express my sincere thanks to all those who have supported the campaign. It certainly made Christmas a lot merrier for many people.”
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News
The Shropshire Star Toy Appeal campaign 2018 was a huge success.

An incredible lunchtime saw hundreds of gifts pour into the Shropshire Star office and Storage King Christmas Toy Appeal within the space of a few minutes.

A group of six youngsters from Charlton School in Wellington delivered 160 gifts into the reception the head office in Telford – just moments after a group of workers from Moba UK brought in a further 40 gifts worth a total of £235.

Meanwhile, over at Storage King in Shrewsbury, a school from Whitchurch brought in dozens more gifts, while Ian Middleton brought in a massive hoard of presents suitable for youngsters of all ages.

The gifts, which included toys, games, biscuits, books, stationery and toiletries, will be shared out among five different groups at a special handover ceremony in December.

Charlton pupil Chloe Ballantyne, 16, said she and her schoolmates had been delighted to help with the appeal.

“Everybody should have a nice Christmas, and everybody should get something for Christmas,” she said.

“We know that we are privileged, and we want to help children who might be living in difficult circumstances.”

Maisie Neill, 15, added: “We wanted to make a difference.”

Eimutis Bartkev, who works at Moba, in Red Lees, Ketley, said he had supported a similar appeal to help children in his native Lithuania last year, but wanted to do something to help youngsters closer to home.

“I found out about this in the Shropshire Star, so I asked the people at work if they could give some money so we could buy some toys.”

The appeal aims to bring a little joy to children who might otherwise find Christmas a difficult time of year.

In 2018, the Shropshire Star supported five different organisations, including The Movement Centre in Gobowen, which provides therapies for children with cerebral palsy; Telford Young Carers which supports youngsters who care for a loved one; and The Harry Johnson Trust which provides help for children being treated for cancer. Hope House Children’s Hospice at Morda, near Oswestry, and the children’s ward at Shrewsbury and Telford Hospital NHS Trust will also benefit.
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Events, News
Students from schools across the Black Country came together for a Young Chamber of Commerce event held at the Express and Star on December 4.

Sixteen pupils from Q3 Academy in Great Barr, Walsall Academy, RSA Academy in Tipton, Pegasus Academy DAT in Dudley, Aldersley High in Wolverhampton, Moreton, George Salter in West Bromwich and Bloxwich Academy worked on ideas and produced articles for the latest issue of the Chamber’s Prosper magazine, which is published by the MNA.

The session started with a welcome from Darren Griffin, advertising sales manager, followed by a talk from careers and enterprise coordinator at the Chamber, Vikki Haines, at the offices in Queen Street, Wolverhampton.

The pupils shared ideas and discussed their ideas for the Young Chamber pages in the upcoming issue of Prosper in an editorial meeting, with director of policy, marketing and communications at the Chamber, Lisa Broughton, press and communications officer Sarah Thompson and Prosper co-ordinator, Heather Loat. They were joined by Express & Star head of production Heather Broome.

Vikki Haines, who co-ordinated the event, said: “The Young Chamber really enjoyed their visit to the Express & Star.

“They have worked extremely hard on their articles for Prosper and asked engaging questions about the newspaper and journalism.

“Thankyou to the Express & Star for hosting such an interesting visit.”

The meeting was followed by a tour of the Express & Star news rooms by political editor Pete Madeley, where the students were given the opportunity to look at the different areas of editorial and see an example of how a newspaper is put together.

MNA communications executive Rebecca Heyes, who oversaw the event, said: “The students enjoyed their visit to the Express & Star and were given the opportunity to ask questions during the tour of the newsroom.”
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Events, News, Press Release
A local construction provider has scored itself a sponsorship win with the infamous Express & Star Wolves football podcast.

Wolverhampton Building Supplies, based on Bilston Road in the city, has bagged the position of headline sponsor for the Wolverhampton Wanderers podcast with Tim Spiers and Nathan Judah.

The sponsorship will run for the rest of the season, and has coincided with live recording at Molineux for the 100th episode.

Sports writer duo, Tim and Nathan, will be recording the centenary special live and uncut at Molineux’s WV1 bar on Thursday December 6 at 7pm.

Tim and Nathan will be chewing the Wolves fat with plenty of fan interaction throughout the night, including a special ‘Abuse of the Week’ live edition and a live Q&A.

Simon Patron, who owns Wolverhampton Building Supplies, said he is excited to be part of this opportunity.

Simon, who is a lifelong Wolves fan, said: “My business has been going for four years and we are official partners with Wolverhampton Wanderers and are lucky enough to have a company box.

“The club has been instilled into my family and I even worked as a steward there for 20 years previously, so to now be a part of the podcast is an exciting opportunity.

“The reason we got involved is because there is such a large number of listeners and viewers. The popularity of the podcast is what attracted us to be part of it.

“It is about brand awareness for us and our company can grow with the podcast.”

We have a dedicated team on the trade counter who can offer you guidance on your project as well as excellent customer service.

Wolverhampton Building Supplies have three delivery vehicles in operation with reliable drivers who will provide you with fast and efficient deliveries.

The team supply products, plastering, tools, timber and much more.
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