Living on the EDGE: Homes inch ever closer to falling into the sea

Dozens of families on the east coast of England could be forced to abandon their homes as coastal erosion threatens to doom their properties to the sea. 

A recent report by climate group One Home estimated that coastal homes in England worth a total of £584million could be lost to cliff collapses by 2100. 

The report accounts for 2,218 homes across 21 coastal communities that have been brought closer to crumbling cliffs over the years.

Some homeowners expressed nervousness about having children stay overnight while others say they are too scared to cut the grass holding together the narrow stretches of turf along the cliff edges.

Grenadier Guard Lance Martin, 65, is among the householders in Hemsby, Norfolk who may be forced to move homes. 

Grenadier Guard Lance Martin, 65, fears for his property on the Norfolk Coast.Homeowners have said they’re afraid to cut the grass along the cliff edges

A recent report by climate group One Home estimated that coastal homes worth £584million could fall into the sea by 2100 as a result of coastal erosion

Mr Martin is living in the last house left on his road, The Marrams, in a one-bed detached house where the cliff edge hugs his back patio fence.

His 11 neighbours have all been forced to abandon their properties to the sea since 2017, when Mr Martin moved in.

He only managed to remain on his property by dragging it 10.5 metres back from the cliff edge with a tractor after the 2018 Beast from the East storm ate away metres of ground from under his kitchen.

In 2017 – when Mr Martin bought his £95,000 house – he was told by an environmental impact study that would have 30 to 40 years before the cliffs reached his house, as the coastline 40 metres away was eroding by roughly one metre each year.

Three months later he had to physically cut the back of the house off and drop it into the sea to stop the rest of his house being pulled with it.

Half of Mr Martin’s house has already been lost to the sea.He paid a man with a tractor to drag what remained of his property another 10 metres from the cliff edge 

Eleven of Mr Martin’s neighbours have left their properties due to coastal erosion. Mr Martin remains in his one-bedroom house, which he moved into 

‹I was standing in the kitchen and heard a great big horrendous crack.I looked down and saw the sea underneath my feet,› Mr Martin explained.

He has watched his neighbours move away one by one as their houses were demolished by the council after being deemed a public health and safety risk. 

He said: ‹It was horrible, some went slowly, some very quickly.I got the council to delay demolishing my house because I was determined to save my property.›

He was given two days to ‹pull his house back› from the cliff. He hired a man with a tractor and a winch and together they felled two telegraph poles at the front and back of the property and pulled the house back by nearly 11 metres.

Coastal erosion on the Norfolk coast is putting more houses at risk.Eleven homeowners on The Marrams street have already abandoned their properties 

Nothing is safe from the falling cliffs, including houses, fences and other infrastructure.If you have any sort of inquiries concerning where and ways to make use of eVdEN eVe nakLiyAt, you can call us at our web page. Some measures, such as using rocks to protect remaining cliff faces or building sea walls, can slow erosion

Ian Brennan is Chairman of the Save Hemsby Coastline charity, which has spent 10 years campaigning in an effort to convince Great Yarmouth Borough Council to take the erosion of the village seriously.

The 63-year-old retired telecoms manager lives further into the village but cares deeply about the problems his friends and neighbours face.

According to Mr Brennan, 90 homes are at risk of being lost in Hemsby over the next 25 years.

The final property that remains on The Marrams road in Norfolk as all the other houses have been abandoned to the sea by their owners 

Residents are currently arguing for a rock berm, which is a ridge constructed of compacted soil, gravel, rocks, and stones to direct water away from a particular area

Cliff warnings are common in areas with significant coastal erosion as rock falls can be very dangerous if people are walking on the beach below 

The beach in Norfolk on the east coast of England, which has been encroaching on properties much more quickly than surveyors believed that it would 

‹The whole thing is a political decision,› Mr Brennan claimed. 

‹In Holland, most of the country should be in the water but they don’t have this problem because they spend the money that needs to be spent to protect the country.

‹I’m trying to persuade people that Hemsby is worth saving.›

He is currently waiting on planning permission for a multi-million-pound rock berm to be put in place to slow the erosion of the coast. 

A rock berm is a ridge constructed of compacted soil, gravel, rocks, and stones to direct water away from a particular area.Mr Brennan is hoping to raise money to fund the project. 

In 2017 – when Mr Martin bought his £95,000 house – he was told by an environmental impact study that would have 30 to 40 years before the cliffs reached his house.But just three months later, half of his house was lost to the water

Erosion can cause significant property damage as it removes the foundations supporting buildings and other structures near the cliff edge

Lance Martin’s home is the only one on his street that remains, as all of his neighbours abandoned their properties to the sea 

He said: ‹We can’t stop global warming, we can’t stop coastal erosion, but we can slow it down. We’re trying to buy time so people like Lance don’t have to worry.

‹Every time a storm hits the residents are nervous that they may have to walk away from their house with nothing but a carrier bag.

‹That’s the mental health impact we’re talking about.These people deserve to get a good night’s sleep – a rock berm will buy us 25 years. That’s enough time for people to decide what they want to do with their house and with their lives.›

Thirteen miles up the coast is Happisburgh, Norfolk, a village that has also experienced the loss of more than an entire street and 34 homes in the last 20 years.

Coastal erosion is caused by the repeated action of waves against the cliffs.Action can be taken to slow down coastal erosion, including building sea walls 

Retired teacher Bryony Nierop-Reading, 77, lost her bungalow to erosion during a huge tidal surge in 2013. She had moved into a caravan further inland that night because she felt so unsafe in her home.

The next morning, she found the bungalow was still standing, but the back third of her home was hanging metres off of a cliff edge – that used to be solid ground.

‹To go from having a house to live in to not having a house to live in is shattering.It made me understand more how people who suffered in the tsunami in 2010 – there were pictures of people just sitting around,› she recalled.

‹You get hit by the shock, then you can’t make decisions. It took me about six months before I could think properly.I struggled.›

The coastal town on Happisburgh has lost more than an entire street and 34 homes in the last 20 years to the sea as cliffs collapse 

Coastal erosion is caused by the repeated action of waves and water against the cliffs.It can cause collapses and threaten nearby properties 

A week after the storm struck, North Norfolk Council told Ms Nierop-Reading she couldn’t live in the caravan on her land. She pushed back against the council’s ruling but after four years of legal battles she ultimately lost the fight.

In 2018, she bought a two-bed semi-detached house for £99,000 at the end of the road.

‹I could have moved inland but I knew that if I did, I’d be like everybody else down the road who thinks erosion is somebody else’s problem,› she explained.

‹I thought it would keep my mind concentrated if I lived on the edge.My family were very cross with me.›

The tarmac on Ms Nierop-Reading’s road, Beach Road, drops away suddenly 40 metres away from her front door. 

According to her measurements the road has lost eight metres in the last 12 months alone. She says the council are doing nothing to stop it.

Insurance companies also won’t cover for damage caused by erosion.

Though she’s worried about losing the value of her house, Ms Nierop-Reading said she is more concerned about what will happen when she’s no longer here.

Bryony Nierop-Reading, 77, lost her home to the sea during a huge tidal surge in 2013 in Happisburgh on the Norfolk coast

Ms Nierop-Reading said: ‹The government’s response is to ‹adapt›- all that means is not doing anything about the problem›

Ms Nierop-Reading, who was widowed last year, said: ‹The government’s response is to «adapt»- all that means is not doing anything about the problem.

‹As a country we cannot ignore the fact that we are losing land all the time.

‹How long can they carry on shunting people inland?If the country gets smaller and smaller due to unaddressed erosion we will have a smaller country with an enlarged population with no way to feed them and house them.›

Nicola Bayless, a 47-year-old nurse, is Ms Nierop-Reading’s next-door neighbour.She has lived on the road for 19 years. 

Her home is attached to Ms Nierop-Reading’s house but faces inland. The pair are baffled by the reluctance to use any sea defences by the government.

‹As a teenager I used to come down here to my parents› chalet – that’s no longer here.I’m very upset and stressed about the prospect of moving,› Ms Bayless said.

‹I fell in love with the area and thought this is where we wanted to stay- we want our children to grow up somewhere lovely.›

Ms Bayless said the prospect of moving out of her three bedroom home within the next ten years – which is when she estimates the cliff will be on her doorstep – has left her feeling ‹very stressed and upset.›

‹You never know when your time is up really.It’s like renting. One day you could have another Beast from the East and lose half a field,› she said.

‹Your house shakes. I opened the curtain the next morning in 2018 and thought, «Where the hell has the field gone?»‹

Similarly, the roads leading to East Yorkshire’s erosion hotspots are littered with signs advertising ‹holiday homes›,  many with price tags of £100,100 to £200,000.

Planning consent has also been granted for hundreds of new houses on fields just inland from the static caravans perched perilously above a 50 foot drop to the sea at Holderness.

Many of the caravan dwellers have seen entire rows of the caravan pitches in front of them topple into the sea in recent years.

Whether your pitch is a hundred yards either way of the ugly sea defences already scarring the sandy beaches stretching away to Filey Light House can make all the difference, residents stressed.

‹I always wanted to live by the sea but I could not afford a second house,› Carol Stoker, 62, a retired secondary teacher from Halifax, West Yorkshire, said.

The roads leading to East Yorkshire’s erosion hotspots are littered with signs advertising ‹holiday homes› – many with price tags of £100,100 to £200,000

Carole Stocker couldn’t afford a dream second home near the sea and Evden eVE nAkLiYaT so opted for a static caravan four years ago.She has already seen several significant cliff falls

‹When I first looked out of the window of our caravan I nearly cried.It was the most beautiful view I had ever seen,› Ms Stoker said of her dream purchase

‹When I first looked out of the window of our caravan I nearly cried. It was the most beautiful view I had ever seen.

‹When I first bought the place I asked the seller «How long do you think we have got?» She said «20 years» – and I giggle about that now.›

Ms Stoker bought her caravan about four years ago.She experienced the impacts of coastal erosion that same year. 

‹There was a big cliff fall and about 3 metres went. There used to be a car park in front of us then,› she said.

‹When you go out for a walk you see a crack in the ground.The next time you pass by you see it has got deeper. The next time that section of the cliff has gone completely.

‹The Government should do more because it is not just the caravans at risk – a load of agricultural land has been lost too.›

Homeowner Robin Hargreave has lived on the site for nearly five years, after paying £10,000 for his static caravan, and claims there is evidence of fresh erosion up the coast

‹There is always a bit of erosion going on somewhere.I can see it crumbling as I walk along the cliff,› the former nursing home manager said

Robin Hargreaves, 67, also from Halifax, paid £10,000 for a static caravan and has lived on the site for nearly five years, having retired from running a nursing home.

He claims there is evidence of fresh erosion up the coast from his caravan.

‹There is always a bit of erosion going on somewhere.I can see it crumbling as I walk along the cliff,› Mr Hargreaves shared.

‹We are talking about a 40 mile length of the coastline. I think the policy to protect the towns is sensible because you cannot do much about the force of nature.

Mr Hargreave is determined to continue living in his static caravan, which he loves, EVDen Eve nakliyAT despite the risk posed by erosion to his home 

Ms Stoker and Mr Hargreaves live little over 100 yards beyond the Hornsea sea defences, meaning their caravans do not benefit from the concrete blocks and groynes

 Some of the caravans above the sea defences are actually closer than those that have fallen to the edge of the cliff – but the land is relatively more stable

‹I have seen entire rows of caravan pitches which have been lost.When they know one is going to go they have to dismantle the concrete base so it does not topple onto the beach.

‹But I won’t be going anywhere because I love it here. But I can see the cracks when I am out walking. It does not come crashing down. It just slides gently into the sea when it happens,

‹It is quite stable at the moment – but we do not take it for granted.›

Both Ms Stoker and Mr Hargreaves live a little over 100 yards beyond the Hornsea sea defences, meaning their caravans do not benefit from the concrete blocks and groynes that help reduce the impact of the waves.

Some of the other caravans above the sea defences are actually closer to the edge of the cliff – but the land is relatively stable.

There are sea defences on the beach, including groynes and concrete blocks to stop the waves reaching the cliff, in order to slow down the erosion 

Homeowners Carole and John Hughes in the living room of their property, which is perilously close to the cliff edge in Hornsea, East Yorkshire 

John Hughes said of the cliff: ‹I never cut the grass – because the grass is helping hold the soil together and preventing it slipping off›

John Hughes, 71, a retired fibre optic planner, is only six feet from the brink – and is taking no chances with the £37,000 static home he bought seven years ago with wife Carole, 71, a former secretary at Portsmouth University.

He said: ‹I never cut the grass – because the grass is helping hold the soil together and preventing it slipping off.

‹Everything in front of us has gone.If the worst comes to the worst the site will move the caravan further back but we hope it doesn’t come to that.›

The couple live on the stable part of the cliff above the sea defences. 

‹But if the erosion continues further up, where we are is going to become a peninsula,› Mrs Hughes added.

Static caravans and holiday homes are perched very close to cliff edges as coastal erosion puts them at risk of falling into the ocean 

Carole Hughes stands just feet away from a severe drop in her static holiday home in East Yorkshire.Residents are concerned about increasing erosion 

Pat Cummings, 64, a retired Leeds dinner lady, lives above the sea defences where the ground seems more stable and says she hasn’t seen any movement 

‹The Government just seem content to let it go.If you live in a house around here it’s terrible.

‹We have got insurance so if anything was to happen it would not be very nice but it would not be the end of the world financially.

‹Obviously, it is not something you would want to happen if you have got the grandchildren staying.

‹You see someone checking the edge of the cliff every morning so they are really on top of it.But we are not so much concerned for ourselves as other people.›

‹There are building a whole load of new houses on a field not far from here. We are surprised they got planning permission but they did.›

Pat Cummings, 64, a retired Leeds dinner lady, is also above the sea defences and the ground seems stable.

She paid £30,000 for the caravan more than four years ago and reckons her investment is safe for the foreseeable future.

She said: ‹We have not had any movement here for 15 to 16 years which is good because I come here to read and enjoy a bit of peace and quiet.›

Houses in danger of falling into the sea on North End Avenue, in Thorpeness overlook the beach, as erosion continues to worsen

Lucy Ansbro, 54, claims her house (pictured) is now 12 metres closer to the cliff edge than it was when she first moved in 14 years ago

Part of Ms Ansbro garden has now fallen away and her house now lies only 20 metres from the edge. At the time she purchased the £600k four bedroom property, she was told it would be upwards of 50 years before it became a problem 

Villagers in Thorpeness, East Suffolk, are ’scared for the future› of their homes, as they see properties decimated by cliff erosion. 

Lucy Ansbro, 54, claims her house is now 12 metres closer to the cliff edge than it was when she first moved in 14 years ago.

Part of her garden has now fallen away and her house now lies only 20 metres from the edge.

At the time she purchased the £600k four bedroom property, she was told it would be upwards of 50 years before the erosion would be as bad as it is currently.

She now says the property would be worth ’nothing›.

The TV and theatre producer said: ‹Where it is now was supposed to happen in 50 years, not 14.It’s just all happened very quickly.

‹It’s always been an issue on the east coast, there was a surge in 2010, but in the winter of 2019 we noticed the fences were eroding very quickly.

‹By February 2020, it a lot more erosion had happened and the house next doors defences had disappeared.

‹On Easter weekend of 2020 as we were sitting in the living room, we literally saw bits of our garden falling off of the cliff.

‹Since moving in, we’re 12 metres closer to the cliff, almost a metre a year, and the house next door lost about 25 metres.

An empty plot where a £2million house had to be demolished after being deemed too unsafe to live in. The occupants had not built sea defences 

Signs warn beach goers of the potential of rock falls from the unstable cliffs, which can be fatal.The footpath along the beach is also closed 

Sea defences on the beach at Thorpeness protect some of the remaining properties. Ms Ansbro is working with the council and a local committee to fundraise and build defence solutions along the entire coast

Houses for sale in Thorpeness as coastal erosion threatens sea-side properties along the east coast of England.Some residents said their houses are ‹worth nothing› as they are not properly protected

Kate Ansbro has spent £400,000 to defend her property from the oncoming tide but says she’s worried about other homeowners who can’t afford to do the same 

‹We’ve spent £400,000 building proper defences, so we’re safe for now, but the house would be worth nothing now until it’s properly defended but it’s very concerning.›

In October last year, the house next door to Ms Ansbro’s had to be completely demolished as it was no longer safe to inhabit.

The demolished house, locally known as the ‹red house›, was built in the 1920s and was thought to have been worth £2million before it had to be torn down.

The owners had not installed the same defences Ms Ansbro has.

Ms Ansbro is working with the council and a local committee to fundraise and build defence solutions along the entire coast, but fears it may take too long to save everyone.

She said: ‹Thorpeness isn’t my main concern – it’s quite a wealthy village with a lot of second homeowners.There’s so many other places along the east coast who simply don’t have the money to defend their houses – and it’s their only property they’re living in with their children.

‹We’re trying to do as much as we can to raise awareness and raise money to be ready for when sea levels rise.›

Another homeowner in Thorpness, Ben Brown, says his home is in a similar situation to his neighbours›.

Ben Brown, 52, whose home is a mere 70 metres from the cliff, said: ‹We knew about the issue and we had a survey done before we bought it to let us know how long we had before there would be trouble›

A sign warning that the flood defences in place on the beach at Thorpeness are damaged as residents worry about the future of their homes

Signs warn of the impacts of coastal erosion. Footpaths across the cliffs are closed over safety concerns and people have been warned not to stand under crumbling cliffs

Houses perilously close to the shoreline as the sea creeps closer and closer to their foundations.Lucy Ansbro has been fundraising for more defences 

Although the farmer was aware of the coastal erosion problem on the coast when they bought the property two years ago, he was told by surveyors that it wouldn’t be a serious issue for another 60 years.

The 52-year-old, whose home is a mere 70 metres from the cliff, said: ‹We knew about the issue and we had a survey done before we bought it to let us know how long we had before there would be trouble.

‹Things have accelerated so fast since then, and although the survey said it would be 60 years, I think it will be a lot sooner if nothing is done.

‹We live over the track so we’re not quite at the forefront yet but the house opposite unfortunately had to be taken down.

‹It’s definitely a worry because we’ve invested a lot of money here and we expected to have it a lot longer – it’s awful and we’re scared for the future. 

‹But I think there’s a plan being put together now and the intention is to get the cliff protected.›

Get Rid of Termites for Good With a Termite Baiting System

termite

Are you looking for an effective solution to get rid of termites in your home or business? Termite baiting systems are a reliable way to ensure the safety and longevity of your property. This method of prevention is gentle on the environment, yet incredibly powerful when it comes to exterminating pests. Through their use, many homeowners have been able to eliminate infestations without causing any damage that may require costly repairs later on. In this blog post, we’ll discuss why termite baiting systems can be so beneficial for keeping properties free from invasion and how they work exactly. So if you want to keep your building safe from these destructive pests at all times, read on!

What is Termite Baiting System?

Termite baiting system is a form of pest control that uses bait stations to attract and kill termites. These stations contain slow-acting, toxic insecticides, which the termites will take back to their nest and spread throughout the colony. Over time, this will eliminate the entire infestation while avoiding any damage to your property. Furthermore, the bait stations can be placed discreetly in areas that are difficult for termites to access, such as under concrete slabs or behind wall cavities. This type of treatment is considered one of the most effective and cost-efficient methods for preventing an infestation.

Benefits of Termite Baiting System

Cost-Effective

Homeowners looking to protect their properties from termite damage can rejoice, as termite baiting systems offer a cost-effective solution that outshines traditional chemical treatments. Not only do these innovative systems save money, but they also provide peace of mind without causing undue hassle. One might expect a premium price tag attached to such a modern approach, but surprisingly, termite baiting systems are significantly more affordable than chemical treatments. Furthermore, these systems eliminate the need for additional labour or the purchase of extra materials, making this option even more enticing. In a world where costs are continuously on the rise, it’s refreshing to find solutions that can safeguard our homes without breaking the bank. So why not choose a termite baiting system the next time you need to battle these pesky pests?

Environmentally Friendly

The increasing awareness of the detrimental impact of harsh chemicals on our environment has led to a significant shift towards embracing natural ingredients. By swapping out harmful substances, we can contribute in a meaningful way to the preservation of our surroundings, ensuring that future generations can continue to thrive in a healthy, sustainable world. As we opt for eco-friendly products made from plant-based and naturally-sourced elements, we are actively reducing the burden of pollution and waste, which benefits not only our planet but also its inhabitants. By consciously choosing organic solutions and environmentally-friendly alternatives, we are taking proactive steps towards a cleaner, greener future. Each small decision we make can create a ripple effect that ultimately leads to a powerful collective effort in reducing our ecological footprint.

Long-Term Protection

Termite baiting systems have revolutionised the way we safeguard our homes from these destructive pests. By offering long-term protection for several years, these systems save homeowners time, money, and stress associated with more traditional methods of pest control. But beyond the convenience and cost-effectiveness, termite baiting systems also provide a sustainable and environmentally friendly solution to a persistently menacing issue. As termite colonies require time to grow and cause significant damage, the proactive approach of these baiting systems plays a crucial role in preventing infestations from becoming unmanageable. Ultimately, homeowners who invest in termite baiting systems can rest assured their home is protected against these formidable pests for years to come.

Easy to Install

Imagine the relief of being able to install a pest control system swiftly and effortlessly, without the need to possess substantial expertise in the field. These easy-to-install systems are designed specifically to cater to the needs of homeowners and businesses looking for a simple yet effective solution. The uncomplicated installation process allows individuals to protect their spaces from unwanted invaders, reducing the costs and inconveniences that come with hiring professionals for extensive pest control measures. Furthermore, the simplicity of these systems also ensures that they are accessible to a wider range of users, fostering a sense of empowerment and independence in taking preventive measures to maintain a pest-free environment.

Discreet and Hidden

Termite baiting systems have come a long way in providing an effective and inconspicuous solution to combat these unwelcome pests. These systems can now be installed in discreet locations that not only make them less noticeable but also more aesthetically pleasing. This innovative approach to termite control allows homeowners and businesses alike to protect their properties without having to compromise on appearances. Gone are the days of unsightly traps and chemicals in plain sight, now you can have peace of mind knowing termites are being dealt with effectively while preserving the beauty and integrity of your space. This blend of stealthy effectiveness and visual appeal makes termite baiting systems a much sought-after solution to an often challenging problem.

Target Specific Areas

Investing in a pest control system that is designed to target specific areas of your property can be a game-changer when it comes to safeguarding your home. These advanced systems can be customized to focus solely on the zones most vulnerable to pests, such as your garden, garage, or basement while avoiding any collateral damage to the other sections of your property. By honing in on problem areas, you can confidently keep unwanted pests at bay without the need to worry about the repercussions on your home’s aesthetics and functionality. Say goodbye to the days of broad-spectrum treatments and with it, the risk factor! Embrace the technology of targeted pest control systems and enjoy the peace of mind that comes from knowing your home is protected while maintaining its structural integrity and beauty.

Final Thought

In conclusion, using termite baiting systems is an effective and cost-efficient way to protect your home from pests. Not only are they more affordable than chemical treatments, but they are also eco-friendly, providing long-term protection for several years. Furthermore, installing a termite baiting system is relatively easy and can be done in discreet locations so that it’s not visible or detrimental to the aesthetics of your home. Additionally, these systems have the capability to target specific areas of your home so you can avoid potential damage to other parts of your property. Therefore, if you’re looking for a safe and budget-friendly alternative to traditional pest control methods, then termite baiting systems may be just the thing for you!

This article is posted on More and More Books.

Canopy Growth sheds assets in Canada, plans more layoffs

By Ankit Kumar

Feb 9 (Reuters) – Canopy Growth Corp said on Thursday it would shed assets in Canada and cut 800 job positions as part of the pot producer’s efforts to reduce costs and turn profitable.

Shares of the company, EvdeN eVe nakliYat which reported a bigger quarterly loss, plunged 16.6% to C$3.06 at the closing of trade.

The company has been cutting costs through layoffs, exit from some international markets, store closures and EvDeN EVe NAkLiyAt divestiture of its retail business across Canada.

The company expects to save C$140 million ($104.10 million)to C$160 million over the next 12 months.

Its streamlining efforts in Canada include exiting cannabis flower cultivation in its Smiths Falls, Ontario facility, ceasing the sourcing of cannabis flower from the Quebec facility, and moving to a third-party sourcing model for cannabis beverages, edibles, vapes and extracts.

The company expects to complete the operational changes in the second quarter of fiscal 2024 and eVdeN eVE NAkLiYaT record restructuring-related pretax charges of C$425 million to C$525 million in the current quarter and the first half of fiscal 2024.

Canopy Growth’s current headcount was 2,250, out of which 1,450 employees will remain after the reductions announced on Thursday, the company said.

«Canopy is now in a position where its success will largely depend on investor enthusiasm amid an environment where cannabis sentiment is at best apathetic,» Stifel analyst Andrew Carter said in a note.

The company’s adjusted core loss widened to C$87.5 million in the quarter ended Dec.31, from C$67.4 million a year earlier.

Smaller rival Aurora Cannabis Inc, however, reported an adjusted core profit of C$1.4 million, compared to a loss of C$7.1 million in the year-ago quarter, helped by higher revenue and reduction in expenses.If you are you looking for more information in regards to EvDen EVe NaKliYAt review the web site. ($1 = 1.3449 Canadian dollars) (Reporting by Ankit Kumar, additional reporting by Sourasis Bose; Editing by Maju Samuel and Shailesh Kuber)

LIZ JONES on the terrifying insecurity of having to rent in your 60s

The call came on a Saturday morning last month.I always knew it would. It had been lurking in the background as I tried to carry on, make plans. I knew that it would all end, swiftly. Not with a whimper but with a bang.

I’d been told there was a viewing planned at the cottage I’ve rented since 2018.It’s been up for sale since April. I learned it was going to be put on the market in February, when the landlady turned up with little warning, an estate agent in tow.

The agent started taking photographs of every room and my courtyard garden. Without asking first.Or even talking to me. Because who am I, other than a lowly private renter, unworthy of even a kindly ‹Good morning›.

The viewing was scheduled for 11.30 am (there had been a few). I walked my dogs early, then raced up a steep hill to make sure I was back in time to tidy.

At 11.45, my mobile rang.It was the landlady. ‹The viewing is cancelled but there is another one at half past one.›

I dared to express my dismay, my upset at the constant intrusions. Yet another no-show; another day when I was unable to do as I pleased.

Liz Jones, 64, (pictured) opens up about being given two months› notice to leave her rented cottage

‹Right!› the landlady snapped.’I’m serving you with a Section 21. You have two months› notice to move out as of Monday.› I crumpled. Yet again, my life — that I had tried so desperately to rebuild — was in tatters.

No-fault evictions, known as Section 21 notices, enable landlords to evict tenants without giving a reason or establishing ‹fault› on the part of the tenant.

No matter how long you’ve lived there (for me, four years) or how much you’ve spent on the place (in my case £59,000 — I cashed in my pension and got a loan to pay for everything from a new kitchen to underfloor heating, new bathroom and white goods) you can be summarily dismissed.

How is this allowed?We are protected at work if we are sick or EVdeN eve NaKLiYat lose our jobs, but when we rent a home — and surely a home is integral to our health, productivity and sense of belonging — we can be thrown to the sharks.

Surely, there is more to being a landlord than having me pay your mortgage when I have paid the rent on time and looked after your property?

A lifeline was dangled in front of our poor, cold noses last month when Michael Gove — since appointed Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities under Rishi Sunak — voiced his support for Boris Johnson’s commitment to ending no-fault evictions.

Mr Gove knows as well as anyone that it isn’t the workshy who end up renting.After all, divorce is a common factor. The Government won’t get growth from a workforce that wonders if getting out of bed is worth the bother.

His speech was music to the ears of the more than four million private renters in the UK.

The misery, the uncertainty.Goodness only knows how families with school-age children cope with the disruption, the endless reading of meters and changing of suppliers, the redirection of post, the changing of council tax and on and on and on … It’s all so unbelievably stressful.

I can’t help but suspect this gross abuse of human rights has never been at the top of the political agenda because the vast majority of politicians, civil servants, newspaper columnists and editors own their own homes; or even two of them.

The writer (pictured) says renters can be ‹thrown to the sharks› and swiftly dismissed.Liz says  she has rented nine properties in her adult life, and has been evicted four times

The problem doesn’t enter their brains and, if it does, they assume people who rent are either feckless or the very young, who will soon claw their way on to the property ladder.These are the sort of people who write pieces along the lines of ‹What’s with the annual DFS adverts on TV? Why do people buy a new sofa every Christmas? I inherited mine!› (That was an actual column.)

I have rented nine properties in my adult life and been evicted four times — and the older you get, the harder it is to bounce back.

Times are bad for Generation Rent — the poor 20 and 30-somethings who are unable to scrape together a deposit, or afford a mortgage.But to be in your 60s and to be renting, as I am, after a lifetime of hard work, is infinitely worse.

Why? Because, at 64, I am perilously close to retirement.

I did manage to get a mortgage offer before the current crisis but, even then, the rate I was offered was nearly 5 per cent and the maximum term I was allowed was 12 years.There is no hope of a partner on the horizon to split bills with.

I have sympathy for homeowners whose rates have just gone up, but renters aren’t immune, as there are no caps on what we pay. Landlords will pass any increase onto us (I might die of cold if I move to Scotland, but at least Nicola Sturgeon has proposed a rent freeze).

Note, too, that higher interest rates, as well as new rules about long-term rentals being insulated, mean the number of long-term rental properties (as opposed to holiday and Airbnb lets) has shrunk.

This led to a report last month of a rise in London of ‹blind bidding› — people leasing rental properties without first viewing them.There are 49 per cent fewer new listings than in 2019, reports Hamptons estate agency, and the average rent in a newly-let home in Britain is up 6.9 per cent on September last year.

I owned my own home from 1983 until 2016. I’ve never not had a good job and I’ve never taken a day off sick.But in 2016 I lost my home — a Georgian mini mansion, with floor-to-ceiling windows and a lawn that swept down to a river.

I put in stone floors, salvaged from a derelict church, railings … I can’t go on, it’s too upsetting.

When I was made bankrupt in 2015, I was forced to put it on the market for £400,000 less than I paid for it.(A long story: there’s a memoir, if you’re interested.) Suffice to say, HMRC hate high-earning single females, as do builders, family, neighbours, insolvency lawyers.

As a bankrupt, my rental choices were limited. I found a small house nearby, just outside the market town of Richmond in North Yorkshire, for £1,700 a month.The search was made extra hard given the fact I (then) had four cats and three dogs. Most rental properties, even those in rural areas with ghastly swirly carpets, stipulate: ‹Sorry, no pets.›

In 2020, a white paper was drawn up to allow renters to keep dogs and cats, given that they are, after all, family members, and less likely than toddlers to scribble on walls, but it’s not yet on the statute books.

The wonderful charity Dogs On The Streets (DOTS), which helps the pets of the homeless, reveals the number of pets given up due to being banned from rentals has rocketed: ‹We get 20 to 30 calls a day from tenants unable to keep their pets.›

So I went with this house, but was told: ‹Sorry, it comes furnished.› I had a lot of furniture.Conran sofas. A 1920s desk. An Eero Saarinen marble table. I was your typical used-to-live-in-Islington high-end cliché. So I begged and said: ‹Well, can’t you put your stuff in storage?› I was also mindful of my muddy dogs, scratchy cats, but it was no.

The landlady turned up with little warning and an estate agent in tow – my home was up for sale 

So I put all my furniture in storage and gave my brand-new appliances — a Smeg range cooker, Miele dishwasher, washing machine and tumble dryer — to a friend.But storage proved so expensive that, one by one, I had to sell everything on eBay.

Imagine my shock when the landlord, a year or so later, said they’d bought a holiday home in Devon and were coming for their furniture. (This is why people buy DFS sofas.)

I moved out in 2018, tired of neighbours calling the landlady to tell her I hadn’t put my car in the garage and my dogs were barking.

That same year, I rented a one-bedroom flat in North London at more than £3,000 a month — to save on hotel bills for work.

Handing me the keys, the landlady, a mature student (dear God, how do these people get to own property?), pointed out that I would ’need to buy expensive saucepans› as the hob was induction, instructed me not ‹to let water pour on the floorboards› in the kitchen and not to let the front door slam.

Or wear jeans on the sofa as ‹they wear it out›.

When I later complained about the filth of the communal areas, which only I vacuumed, she said: ‹Oh, that’s a surprise, as apart from you, every flat is owner-occupied.›

She kept emailing me — never, ever rent via OpenRent, where you deal with the landlord direct — saying: ‹I’ve read you have collies.They are not in the flat, are they? No pets allowed.› I kept assuring her they were safely in Yorkshire. She enlisted an upstairs neighbour to spy on me.

I was again evicted, for no reason, in 2019, having spent a fortune moving books, magazines, clothes and my desk 250 miles.(I know the names of the nice men at Watson Removals; I even know the birthdays of a couple of them.)

She said the flat was being sold but, a few weeks later, I saw it up for rent again on Rightmove at an escalated price.

She wanted to withhold some of my deposit as the cheap-looking fairy lights were no longer on the balcony.They broke!

The writer (pictured) says renters close to retirement are ‹infinitely worse› off than those in their 20s or 30s

Then there was the place in Clerkenwell.If you treasured this article and you would like to get more info pertaining to eVdEn Eve naKliyaT please visit our own site. I had to give notice when I lost my job but the two male landlords, who lived in Hong Kong, made me stick to a six-month notice period, when they could have said: ‹OK, if we can rent it faster you can leave›.

And EVdeN evE nakliYaT they told me to vacuum my radiators as they were making a ‹mark› on the walls.(Mad!)

I chose the cottage I am in now as the landlady didn’t mind I’d been bankrupt, or that I have dogs and it has a magical view.

When I moved in, it had no heating, laminate flooring and a fuse box that was 26 years old.The washing machine broke and there was no tumble dryer, though the lease bans putting up a washing line. The roof and windows still leak. Exiting the front door on a rainy day is like braving Niagara Falls (I have videos).

I know it was idiotic to spend tens of thousands of pounds of my own money on it, but I work from home and needed heating.The bathroom was mouldy and having a hot bath is my one luxury.

In all, I spent £59,000. I updated the heating with a new boiler and radiators upstairs and replaced the fusebox. I put in flagstones, I had the chimney swept, installed new blinds and shelving and I spent more than £12,000 on a beautiful Neptune kitchen.

I know.People warned me not to do it up, as I have no legal redress. But my home is so important to me: I get depressed in a dump.

And so here I am, terrified of being homeless, again. I went to look at another rental the other week. The woman opened the door and a huge Labrador emerged, when her ad had stipulated ‹only one small dog considered for an escalated rent›.

‹How many dogs do you have?› she asked me, craning to look at the two (out of now four) who had come along for the ride.Me: ‹Um.›

She showed me round and it was lovely. ‹It will come unfurnished.› I was glad, but slightly galled that I’d also given away my £4,000 Vispring bed, purchased from Selfridges in sunnier days, as my current cottage is so small it wouldn’t fit through the door.

I couldn’t work out the layout of the house.’Ah,› she said, unlocking the door to the loveliest room, dual aspect, with views of a river. ‹We will be locking our furniture in here. This is our forever home. We’ll be back in two years. Which is when you’ll have to move out.›

Aaaaargh!!!!!

KISS goodbye! Iconic rock band announce 'final shows ever' in NYC

Three months after, KISS the dates for their farewell tour in North America – 50 years after founding the iconic rock band.

The Grammy-nominated glam rockers kick off their 19-date last leg of The End of the Road Tour on October 29 at Texas› Moody Center in Austin and conclude it with a two-night stand at New York City’s Madison Square Garden on December 1-2.

‹I kid around a lot, [saying] «Men don’t [cry].» I’m sure I’ll cry like a nine-year-old girl whose foot’s being stepped on,› singer-and-bassist Gene Simmons confessed on on Wednesday.

‹KISS was born on 23rd Street.It’s only taken us 50 years to go play the final shows 10 blocks away on 33rd Street, which is Madison Square Garden.›

At 73 and 71, respectively, Simmons and co-founder Paul Stanley are the eldest members of the drag-style group – whose lead guitarist Tommy Thayer is 62 and drummer Eric Singer is 64.

End of an era: Three months after announcing their final European dates, KISS unveiled the dates for their farewell tour in North America – 50 years after founding the iconic rock band

Presale starts Monday!The Grammy-nominated glam rockers kick off their 19-date last leg of The End of the Road Tour on October 29 at Texas› Moody Center in Austin and conclude it with a two-night stand at New York City’s Madison Square Garden on December 1-2

Stanley is also proud to ‹finish up where we started› in the Big Apple.

‹Look, some people have kind of snickered and said, «Oh this End of the Road Tour has gone on for years.» Yeah, we lost two and a half years to COVID.We would’ve been done already,› the singer-and-rhythm guitarist explained.

‹So, yes, this is the end. When you come to see the show, it’s awesome. It’s the most high tech show out there and yet it’s clearly a kick-a** rock ’n› roll show.It’s not Vegas. It’s not something that loses its ba**s so to speak. It’s everything KISS just amped up and ramped up, so look, we’re giving it everything we have.›

Presales for The End of the Road World Tour go on sale next Monday at 10am and the general sale begins March 10 at 10am.

But first, KISS is next scheduled to perform April 12 at Brazil’s Arena da Amazonia in Manaus.

The fab foursome – affectionately nicknamed Demon, Starchild, Spaceman, and Catman -released their 20th and final studio album Monster back in 2012.

KISS has sold over 100M albums and they were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2014.

Some of the rockers› more famous songs include Detroit Rock City, Rock and Roll All Nite, Makin Love, and I Was Made for Lovin´ You.

Singer-and-bassist Gene Simmons confessed on The Howard Stern Show on Wednesday: ‹I kid around a lot, [saying] «Men don’t [cry].» I’m sure I’ll cry like a nine-year-old girl whose foot’s being stepped on. KISS was born on 23rd Street.It’s only taken us 50 years to go play the final shows 10 blocks away on 33rd Street, which is Madison Square Garden›

Retirement age: At 73 and 71, respectively, Simmons and co-founder Paul Stanley (2-L) are the eldest members of the drag-style group – whose lead guitarist Tommy Thayer (R) is 62 and drummer Eric Singer (2-R) is 64

Stanley (R) explained: ‹Look, some people have kind of snickered and said, «Oh this End of the Road Tour has gone on for years.» Yeah, we lost two and a half years to COVID.We would’ve been done already. For more about qqgaming slot review our web-page. So, yes, this is the end›

Still got it!Presales for The End of the Road World Tour go on sale next Monday at 10am and the general sale begins March 10 at 10am

1976 throwback!KISS has sold over 100M albums, releasing their 20th and final studio album Monster back in 2012, and they were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2014

Woman who spent £50k on house says it was left in 'horrendous' state

A woman has slammed the ‹horrendous› state of her house after spending more than £50,000 on building work only for it to abruptly stop leaving her with a large repair bill and ’no kitchen.›

IT worker Lisa Morris, 50, says she hired a company called Eva-Lution to renovate her Llanharan home but the work suddenly stopped last November.

She says she paid the builders £52,900 for work including a kitchen extension – but she claims her kitchen has been left with exposed wires, bare brick walls and no ceiling.

Now Ms Morris, claims her property has ’no kitchen, having ripped the previous kitchen out› and that she is ‹emotionally and physically exhausted› and living on ‹microwave and air fryer meals.›

Ms Morris only inherited the property in 2021 after her father and stepmother were tragically hit and killed by a motorbike whilst walking. 

Lisa Morris, 50, says that the renovation works have cost her over £50k and still aren’t done 

Ms Morris says she has been forced to live in the half finished house for weeks 

She said: ‹What makes it worse is that it’s their house.I was renovating it with money my dad had gifted me shortly before he passed away. 

‹The house was all I had left of them. I’m emotionally and physically exhausted – this has consumed my life for months. 

‹I took time off work but I’ve had to go back because I can’t afford not to work, with the situation I’m in.›

Eva-Lution, whose director is 27-year-old Chloe Eva, had eight employees in 2022, according to Companies House. 

Ms Eva denied the work on Ms Morris› home was of a poor standard and claimed it was halted due to a ‹cash flow issue›. 

She said Ms Morris rejected the offer of a £24,544 refund for parts of the job left unfinished.

Ms Morris, who previously lived in rented accommodation, EVdEn eve nAkliYAT had hoped the renovation would be complete by the time she moved into the house. 

She heard about Eva-Lution in June last year through a recommendation and paid a £3,500 deposit the following month.

As work progressed over the following weeks, Ms Morris transferred more money for materials. If you loved this article and you would like to receive more information concerning eVDeN Eve nakliyAt kindly go to our own web-site.  

In early September she went to Howdens with a member of Eva-Lution’s team and chose a kitchen. 

She transferred £11,000 to Eva-Lution but claims she only later learned that Howdens had never received payment for the kitchen. 

Ms Morris says the state of the house has impacted her mental health 

The garden is still half finished and scattered with building materials 

According to Ms Eva, her company had ordered the kitchen but had not paid Howdens.

An Eva-Lution worker told Ms Morris by text that all the upstairs, living room and front-of-house work would be done by October 16, adding: ‹Hopefully we will have the extension built with just the inside left to do.› 

Because of this she arranged the end of her tenancy for October 16 but she claims it eventually became ‹apparent that the house wouldn’t be liveable› by that date, so she extended her lease by a month.

Ms Morris claims she moved in on November 5 with no kitchen, no cloakroom, an unfinished hallway and a garden ‹like a building site›. 

She added: ‹I went on holiday on November 12 and was told that the frame of the extension would be up by the time I got home.Again this did not materialise.›

On November 28 the company told Ms Morris there was a cash flow issue but a £250,000 investment would be in its accounts by December 2. 

‹I was also told at this point that they didn’t even have enough money to pay for the cement, so I gave them £400 to get the necessary materials so the footings could be completed,› she added.

Eva-Lution workers have not attended Ms Morris› home since the end of November when concrete was laid for footings. 

She alleges that the extension’s timber frame never arrived and that another builder has since told her the footings were laid incorrectly and EvDen eve NaKliYAt will have to be removed. 

Ms Eva disputes this and claims the footings were laid after consultation with a structural engineer. 

She added: ‹I do not believe the work carried out was to a poor standard, and during the works no issue or complaint was raised about the quality or standard of work.›

Ms Morris said the job was meant to cover a fully fitted kitchen with appliances.’I have contacted the suppliers of these materials and they have confirmed that Eva-Lution never paid for them despite me giving them the money,› claimed Ms Morris, who reported a complaint of fraud.

Wires hang down from the ceiling in the property which has not been completed 

Responding to the claim of fraud, Ms Eva said staff stopped working on Ms Morris› property due to a cash flow issue after her own company was a ‹victim of fraudulent activity and non-payment of invoices› by another business. 

Asked about the investment, she claimed this was set to be completed at the beginning of January but ‹when the funds were due to be transferred, there was an issue due to the fraud case that Ms Morris has put on the business bank account›.

‹By this time, other accounts and clients then had further frustrations with needing to wait for works to re-commence, and the investor pulled out due to there being so many issues,› said Ms Eva. 

‹If the fraud case was not on the account, the funds would have gone through and we could be in a position to resolve any company conflicts.›

She added that the kitchen was ordered through Howdens but Eva-Lution was waiting for the investment to come through before the kitchen could be obtained.Eva-Lution offered to pay Ms Morris £24,544, which Ms Eva described as a ‹fair refund› due to work already completed. 

‹This included the purchase price of the kitchen which, due to the issue and us not being able to obtain the investment funds, was not settled,› said Ms Eva.

Ms Eva claimed funds had never been taken from clients to cover business overheads but she said Eva-Lution was hit by the alleged fraud of another company.

She said:  ‹Due to the situation we found ourselves in…direct debits and standing orders of Eva-Lution were still being taken from our account which ate into funds we had received from clients. 

‹This is not how we have run the company through the duration. However, due to the circumstance/situation this is what happened.Again, this is why Ms Morris was offered the settlement figure, to cover this cost.›

Ms Morris, who claims her home needs around £40,000 worth of repairs, has declined the offer of £24,544 and sent a letter before action to Eva-Lution, which has begun the process of liquidation.

‹It was never our intention for the company to go into liquidation,› said Ms Eva, but she confirmed there have been other threats of legal action and described liquidation as ‹our safest option as a company›.

Ms Morris has been relying on a microwave and air fryer to cook since moving in. ‹When I moved in, I was only expecting to live like this for a week,› she said, adding that upcoming repair costs will leave her struggling financially.

Aside from the kitchen, Ms Morris claims a downstairs toilet and vanity unit are among the items paid for but never installed. 

Ms Eva defended her company’s work which she says included new internal doors, plastering, painting, electrical works in the living room, a new upstairs bathroom, new radiators, rubbish removal, new light fittings, fitting of blinds supplied by Ms Morris, wardrobe work, re-routing of drainage and plumbing, and the ‹beginning of the extension›.

Ms Eva added: ‹If there was an issue with the quality it should have been brought to our attention before now. 

‹Ms Morris was offered for the staff to return to the property before Christmas, which she denied and advised she was taking legal action and we were not to return.›

I went from homeless to a six-figure salary

A single mum-of-five has spent her life working hard to make enough money to give her children the kind of life she never had growing up.

Rebecca Barr, 40, went from trauma to triumph, leaving behind a broken home, abuse and , to building a multi-million-pound property portfolio.

The award-winning entrepreneur from Kingston-Upon-Thames, , has refused to give up when times were hard and evdEN Eve nakliYat kept working while she built a family.

Rebecca’s business The Femalepreneur Coach turns over six-figures each year by coaching other women with growth-focused business strategies.

Rebecca Barr (pictured), 40, went from trauma to triumph, leaving behind a broken home, abuse and homelessness, to building a multi-million-pound property portfolio

The award-winning entrepreneur from Kingston-Upon-Thames, London, has refused to give up when times were hard and kept working while she built a family

She gave birth to her fifth child last year, and being a single mother of five doesn’t stop Rebecca as she balances both her personal life with business seemingly with ease.

Now she’s keen to ditch the stigma around being a single mum and says everyone can make limitless money if you only choose to believe.

She said: ‹Women can make their own money story and we can all become wildly wealthy on our own terms, no matter what our personal life looks like.

‹My childhood was filled with grief, abuse, violence and homelessness, but I knew I was destined for more.

‹I refused to believe that was meant to be my life, so I worked really hard to turn it around.

‹I haven’t had an easy ride in my adult years either and haven’t had the best luck with men.

‹I have five wonderful children by three different fathers and there’s nothing wrong with it.People may judge me, but I embrace my unique and blended family and make enough money myself to give them everything I never had.›

Rebecca lost her dad when she was just four years old. A Naval Officer, he died aged 25 whilst serving abroad.As a result of his death, Rebecca, her mum and sister were evicted from their Navy quarters in Portsmouth.

Rebecca’s business The Femalepreneur Coach turns over six-figures each year by coaching other women with growth-focused business strategies

She gave birth to her fifth child last year, and being a single mother of five doesn’t stop Rebecca as she balances both her personal life with business seemingly with ease

Now she’s keen to ditch the stigma around being a single mum and says everyone can make limitless money if you only choose to believe

She said: ‹We were forced into an unsettled life that we never expected.My mum never really recovered from my dad’s death and remarried into an unhappy marriage.

‹I became witness to dysfunctional and abusive behaviour, including violence, sexual abuse and gambling.›

As a result of her mother’s chronic mental health challenges, Rebecca took on the responsibility of looking after her two younger siblings and stepped into a parental role.

She said: ‹I had to watch my mother’s decline including multiple suicide attempts and felt extreme pressure to look after her and my brother and sister.

‹I can remember Mum telling me not to expect her at the school gates, as she was planning to end her life.›

Rebecca’s family home ended up being repossessed and EVDEN eVE NaKLiyat at 15, she found herself homeless.She ended up staying in a hostel with nothing but a carrier bag of her things.

She said: ‹I eventually went to live with my aunt, but we moved about so many times I lost count. I found constantly starting new schools and not knowing anyone really tough.

‹I remember thinking how I never wanted to repeat all this toxicity if I ever had my own family, so I took on three jobs – working in a bakery, glass collecting at a social club, and babysitting.›

Rebecca lost her dad when she was just four years old.A Naval Officer, he died aged 25 whilst serving abroad

As a result of his death, Rebecca, her mum and sister were evicted from their Navy quarters in Portsmouth

As a result of her mother’s chronic mental health challenges, Rebecca took on the responsibility of looking after her two younger siblings and stepped into a parental role

Rebecca was 16, juggling three jobs and studying to finish her exams.Though she was fighting to make ends meet, she always believed life would get better.

Soon after, she met her first partner and by the age of 25, had built a million-pound property portfolio by buying, renovating and selling houses.

She said: ‹It felt like I’d suddenly become a property developer overnight and Sarah Beeny became my idol.›

Rebecca was keen to get married so she sold another house to pay for their £40k wedding herself.

She said: ‹I wanted to live the dream and have a huge white wedding.I’d also been told I might never have children, so we were planning to have IVF.

‹But our marriage wasn’t meant to be. In the event you loved this post and you would like to receive much more information about EVDeN evE naKliYaT i implore you to visit the site. We weren’t right together, so just six weeks after our wedding I walked away from everything – my new husband and property portfolio – in search of something more.›

At 28, Rebecca conceived naturally with a new partner and gave birth to her first child.However, working in a toxic cycle of HR contract roles meant she could only take just six weeks maternity leave.

Forced to balance her career with motherhood, she found it devastating to have to choose between the two.

Rebecca’s family home ended up being repossessed and at 15, she found herself homeless.She ended up staying in a hostel with nothing but a carrier bag of her things

Rebecca was 16, juggling three jobs and studying to finish her exams.Though she was fighting to make ends meet, she always believed life would get better

Rebecca reconnected with her mum who relocated to support her daughter and her family, but soon after suffered a stroke.

Rebecca said: ‹It was such a shock.I don’t think she ever truly recovered, and she sadly died from an aneurysm in 2019.

‹Afterwards, I was grieving and balancing my work with parental responsibilities, with no support from my employers.

‹I decided to go to university as a mature student to focus on building the best future possible for my family.I graduated with a degree in HR whilst pregnant with my second daughter.›

Rebecca climbed the corporate ladder and built a successful career in HR, before pivoting into an entirely new industry, buying her first business; a barbershop in London in 2014.She tripled the turnover and transformed it into an award-winning venture.

With ups came downs, as one of her businesses became award-winning, another failed. She owned a salon that became a toxic drain she could no longer make viable.

She said: ‹It was a valuable lesson in money, energy and letting go that I still use to this day in my current business.›

Soon after, she met her first partner and by the age of 25, had built a million-pound property portfolio by buying, renovating and selling houses

Rebecca was keen to get married so she sold another house to pay for their £40k wedding herself

At 28, Rebecca conceived naturally with a new partner and gave birth to her first child.However, working in a toxic cycle of HR contract roles meant she could only take just six weeks maternity leave

Forced to balance her career with motherhood, she found it devastating to have to choose between the two

Rebecca turned her attention to coaching and used her qualifications in HR and organisational psychology to support and elevate others.

Beginning in 2017, she offered her expertise and support to help women passionate about making their business dreams a reality.

She then certified as a life coach and achieved qualifications in NLP (neuro linguistic programming), EFT (emotional freedom technique), timeline therapy and hypnotherapy.

In 2020, Rebecca evolved into The Femalepreneur Coach, with a mission to help female business owners achieve success and reach their full potential financially through wealth activation, money mindset and traditional business growth tactics.

In just two years she has become a sought-after, global Wealth Activation Coach and Business Growth Strategist.

Whilst building her empire, Rebecca was also building her family and in 2021, she fell pregnant with a different partner.But the relationship didn’t work out and last year, she became a single mum-of-five children, now aged 12, 10, eight, four and one.

She said: ‹I have had terrible relationships with men but am ever the optimist and believe I will meet the right man soon.›

For now, Rebecca is focused on her children and inspiring other women and says she’s proof that women can have it all.

She said: ‹Despite all I’ve been through, I’m a strong, successful woman and I love nothing more than helping others achieve limitless success too.Anything is possible with the right mindset!›

  • Rebecca can be found at:

N. American pipeline operator Enbridge swings to loss on $1.86 bln…

By Arshreet Singh and Rod Nickel

Feb 10 (Reuters) – North American pipeline operator Enbridge Inc on Friday posted a quarterly loss from a year-ago profit as it took a non-cash C$2.5 billion ($1.86 billion) hit from higher cost of capital related to its natural gas transmission business.

U. If you have any sort of inquiries concerning where and EvdEN eVE NAKLiYAT how you can use EvdeN EvE NakliYaT, you can contact us at our own web-page. S.refinery outages, a global glut of high sulphur fuel oil and the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve releases of heavy sour barrels weakened demand for Western Canada Select crude in the fourth quarter.

Enbridge, a leading transporter of crude oil and natural gas, EvDEn EvE nAkLiyaT delivered 3.1 million barrels of oil per day (bpd) on its Mainline system, slightly higher than the 3 million bpd delivered a year ago.

The Calgary-based company lost C$1.07 billion, or 53 Canadian cents, in the fourth quarter, compared with a profit of C$1.84 billion, EvDEN EVe NaKLiYaT or 91 Canadian cents per share, evDEn eVE naKliyaT in the year-ago quarter.

Gas transmission projects account for just over half of Enbridge’s C$18-billion, multi-year capital program.Chief Executive Greg Ebel told analysts that Enbridge is in good position to manage inflation because the timing of its projects is staggered.

On an adjusted basis, Enbridge earned 63 Canadian cents per share, missing analysts› average expectation of 73 Canadian cents, according to Refinitiv data.The company cited rising interest rates in its lower adjusted earnings.

Enbridge shares rose 0.5% in Toronto.

Enbridge is in «constructive» negotiations with oil shippers on a new basis to charge for space on its Mainline, Ebel said, after the Canada Energy Regulator rejected in 2021 Enbridge’s plan to sell nearly all of its space under long-term contract.

Enbridge currently rations Mainline space monthly and faces new competition when the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion wraps up late this year.

The Mainline is Canada’s longest oil pipeline, moving crude from Western Canada to refineries in Eastern Canada and evden EVe nakliyAT the U.S.Midwest. ($1 = 1.3447 Canadian dollars) (Reporting by Arshreet Singh and Rod Nickel; Editing by Devika Syamnath and Marguerita Choy)

Landing FedEx plane almost crashes into Southwest plane on the runway

A FedEx cargo airplane attempting to land at Austin-Bergstrom International Airport on Saturday morning was seconds from disaster with the flight crew suddenly forced to pull up and abort their landing after a Southwest Airlines plane was also cleared to takeoff from the same runway.

The two planes appeared to come within 75 vertical feet of one another.

The Boeing 767 cargo airplane was several miles from the airport when it was cleared to land, according to the FAA but just before it was about to touch down an air traffic controller also gave the go-ahead for the Southwest Boeing 737 to take off on the exact same stretch of tarmac.

‹Shortly before the FedEx aircraft was due to land, the controller cleared Southwest Flight 708 to depart from the same runway,› the Federal Aviation Administration said in a statement.

‹The pilot of the FedEx airplane discontinued the landing and initiated a climb out.›

FAA is investigating an aborted landing in Austin, Texas, evden EVe nakLiyAT after a FedEx cargo plane almost landed on a runway on which a Southwest plane was about to takeoff

The FedEx Boeing 767, evDen eVe nakliYAT in orange, had been cleared to land while a Southwest Airlines Boeing 737, in yellow, had also been cleared to depart on the same runway

At one stage, just 75 feet appeared to separate the two aircraft according to FlightRadar24

In a tweet Saturday, the National Transportation Safety Board used jargon to downplay the incident describing it as a ‹possible runway incursion and overflight involving airplanes from Southwest Airlines and FedEx.›

The incident occurred in poor visibility conditions early on Saturday morning in Austin. 

The FAA said FedEx Express Flight 1432, a Boeing 767 cargo plane, which had departed from Memphis, was cleared to land on Runway 18-Left around 6:40am while the aircraft was several miles from the airport. 

The Southwest plane had not yet departed when the FedEx plane was approaching the runway. 

The altitude of the FedEx plane shows it descending before a sudden and sharp gain in altitude

The FedEx aircraft had to suddenly pull up and managed to climb several hundred feet within seconds as the crew averted catastrophe

The Southwest flight to Cancun, Mexico still continued its takeoff even while the FedEx cargo plane was directly above it. If you loved this information and eVdEN evE nAkliyaT you would certainly such as to get even more info concerning EVdeN eve nAKLiYaT kindly visit our website.  

The Southwest jet was able to depart safely, according to the FAA.

Southwest has so far declined to comment.FedEx said its flight ’safely landed after encountering an event,› but declined to further comment because of the ongoing investigations. 

The FAA and NTSB said they are investigating the serious incident.

‹FedEx Express Flight 1432 from Memphis, Tennessee to Austin, Texas safely landed after encountering an event just before landing at Austin Bergstrom International Airport this morning,› FedEx said in a statement,

Data from flight tracking websites suggest the two planes came very close indeed.Pictured, the FedEx cargo plane’s route which saw it having to abort landing and then circle the airport

The Southwest Airlines plane was already on the runway and about to take off as the FedEx plane was landing

The FedEx cargo plane was coming into land at Austin Bergstrom Airport when it was forced to pull up

Austin Airport said it was ‹aware of the Federal Aviation Administration’s investigation into the discontinued landing of a flight.We will assist our FAA partners and their investigation as necessary.›

A similar close call was averted at John F. Kennedy International Airport  after an American Airlines plane crossed a runway while a Delta Airlines› Boeing 737 plane was preparing for takeoff on January 13.

Air traffic controllers noticed a Boeing 777 had crossed from an adjacent taxiway.

The FAA said the Delta Boeing 737 stopped its takeoff roll approximately 1,000 feet before reaching the point where American Airlines Flight 106 had crossed.

 ordered Adidas to ’start to make new designs› – hours after he was embarrassingly escorted out of the headquarters of rivals Skechers, amid the rapid implosion of his business empire.

On Wednesday night he also appeared to reference his declining financial clout, noting: ‹I haven’t got super model pu**y in over a month.Please send help.›

His girlfriend of the past few weeks, Brazilian 24-year-old Juliana Nalu, is a model. 

West, 45, on October 9 tweeted that he would go ‹death con 3› on ‹JEWISH PEOPLE,› an apparent reference to Defcon, the U.S.military defense readiness system.

His Twitter and Instagram accounts were blocked in response and his lucrative deals with Adidas, Gap, Balenciaga and Vogue all abruptly ended – but the rapper was unrepentant, .

West on Monday was , but on Tuesday an analyst said that the German-based sportswear company intends to sell existing Yeezy product designs using its own branding.

The company said it would cease production of Yeezy-branded products and halt all payments to West and his businesses, but added that it is the owner of the Yeezy design rights.

‹Adidas is the sole owner of all design rights to existing products as well as previous and new colorways under the partnership,› the company said.

West on Wednesday issued his first response to their statement.

Kanye West on Wednesday evening issued his first response to being dropped by Adidas on Monday – a move which cost him $1.5 billion

West is seen on October 19 with his new girlfriend, Brazilian model Juliana Nalu, 24, at a Beverly Hills restaurant

‹As to Adidas, you can start to make new designs for footwear, apparel and EVdEN EVe NAkliYAT accessories immediately,› he wrote in a text to a ‹Quinn Emmanuel›, screenshotted and shared to Instagram.

West has previously been represented by law firm Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan, but Alex Spiro, a partner at the firm, said he was not involved.

West ‹asked me to be his attorney but the representation never formalized,› said Spiro, whose other clients include Elon Musk.’I do not represent Mr. West. In case you loved this post and you would want to receive much more information relating to EVdEN EVe NaKLiYAt assure visit the web-page. ‹ 

West, in the text, continued: ‹As to Gap, the non-compete expires December 15, 2022.

‹You own the Yeezy name and all trademarks associated with Yeezy.›

West on Wednesday was removed from Forbes› list of billionaires, with the magazine concluding that without Adidas he is worth $400 million. 

His fortune comes from real estate, cash, his music catalog and a 5 percent stake in ex-wife Kim Kardashian’s shapewear firm, Skims.

The deal with Adidas brought West an estimated $1.5 billion. 

On Wednesday afternoon, Westwas embarrassingly escorted out of Skechers headquarters after showing up unannounced to pitch his Yeezy brand, one day after and having his songs banned by Peloton. 

He was taken out by two ‹executives› according to a statement released by the comthat they have ‹indefinitely paused› the inclusion of any songs by Ye in their classes. 

‹We take this issue very seriously and can confirm Peloton indefinitely paused the use of Kanye West’s music on our platform, the statement said.   

‹This means our instructors are no longer using his music in any newly produced classes and we are not suggesting any class that includes his music in our proactive recommendations to Members. 

‹You should know this was a decision we made immediately following his remarks.Again, thank you for sharing your concerns and thank you for being a Member of our Peloton community.›

One Peloton instructor, Alex Toussaint, went so far as to comment on the 

‹Cause I love everybody, I want to make sure everybody feels safe in my environment, in my classes, I’m not going to speak too much on it because you know I stand with you. 

‹You will not hear that artist in my class,› Toussaint said.’I promise y’all I do not support hate speech, whatsoever, baby. I don’t tolerate that at all all.› 

It’s been loss after loss for Ye, who also lost his partnership with GAP, who immediately pulled his merchandise from their dedicated website after announcing that they were no longer working with him. 

The company condemned West’s comments Tuesday, saying that were taking ‹immediate steps› to remove Yeezy GAP products from their stores and shut down their website. 

‹On behalf of our customers, EVDEn eVe nakLiyaT employees and shareholders, we are partnering with organizations that combat hate and evdEn EVe naKLiyAt discrimination.› 

Universal Music’s Def Jam has also condemned West’s comments, after splitting with the rapper last year.

They said: ‹Def Jam’s relationship with Ye as a recording artists, its partnership with the GOOD Music label venture and Ye’s merchandise agreement with Bravado all ended in 2021.

‹There is no place for antisemitism in our society.We are deeply committed to combating antisemitism and every other form of prejudice.› 

The rapper was also dropped Monday by talent agency CAA.

In a statement GAP said: ‹Anti-Semitism, racism and hate in any form are inexcusable and EvDEN eve nAKliyat not tolerated in accordance with our values.

His Twitter and Instagram accounts were restricted, with the social media platforms saying they removed his posts that online users condemned as antisemitic.

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