
Hertfordshire
Use attributes for filter ! | |
County council | Hertfordshire County Council |
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Population (mid-2017 est.) | 1,180,900 |
Points of interest | Warner Bros. Studio Tour London |
Colleges and universities | University of Hertfordshire - de Havilland Campus |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 940587 |
About Hertfordshire
Hertfordshire is one of the home counties in southern England. It is bordered by Bedfordshire and Cambridgeshire to the north, Essex to the east, Greater London to the south, and Buckinghamshire to the west. For government statistical purposes, it is placed in the East of England region.
Rapper Nines charged with drug offences after Heathrow Airport arrest

... The 33-year-old of Bushey, Hertfordshire - whose real name is Courtney Freckleton - is also charged with three counts of the breach of an existing Serious Crime Prevention Order...
Which schools have shut buildings or moved over aerated concrete?

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Inside the UK's Mormon missionary boot camp

... " For about a year, Rebekah - from Tring, Hertfordshire - went through different types of treatment and says she struggled with her faith...
New Year Honours 2023: Pat Jennings, Dara McAnulty and John Bennett on NI list

... " Full list of Northern Ireland recipients of New Year HonoursCommanders of the Order of the British Empire (CBE)Dr Graham Harold Gudgin, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire - for services to economic development in Northern IrelandMaria Teresa Jennings, Castlewellan, County Down, director, regulatory compliance, people and Northern Ireland, Food Standards Agency - for services to public healthPatrick Anthony Jennings OBE, Brickendon, Hertfordshire - for services to association football and to charity in Northern IrelandSamuel David Pollock OBE, Antrim, County Antrim - for public service in Northern IrelandOfficers of the Order of the British Empire (OBE)Dr John Edmund Stannard, Belfast, legal academic, Queen s University Belfast - for services to legal educationNicola Louise Bailey, London - for services to healthcare in Northern IrelandBrian Baird, Newtownards, County Down, lately board member of Invest NI - for services to economic development in Northern IrelandMichael Thomas Bell, Holywood, County Down, executive director, Northern Ireland Food and Drink Association Ltd - for services to the food and drink industry and to the economy in Northern IrelandJoseph Patrick Breen, Ballycastle, County Antrim, lately senior scientific officer, Department for Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs - for services to marine science and to environmental protectionProf Francis Casey, Carryduff, County Down, consultant paediatric cardiologist - for services to healthcare in Northern IrelandVictor James Boyd Chestnutt, Bushmills, County Antrim, lately president, Ulster Farmers Union - for services to agricultureDr Jennifer Elliott, Londonderry - for services to the arts in Northern IrelandSteven McCourt, Larne, County Antrim, head of reducing reoffending, resettlement and rehabilitation, Department of Justice - for public serviceJohn Gordon Miligan, Newtownards, County Down - for services to business and human resource management in Northern IrelandTrevor Dale Robinson, Portadown, County Armagh, lately principal, Lurgan College, County Armagh - for services to educationDeborah Elizabeth Watters, Belfast, co-director, Northern Ireland Alternative - for public serviceMembers of the Order of the British Empire (MBE)Dr Roy Robert Anderson, Belfast - for services to science and natureSandra Hazel Bailie, County Down - for services to bowlsWilliam John Gaston Bennett, Belfast - for services to radio and television broadcasting in Northern IrelandSandra Best, Lisburn, County Down, volunteer and trustee, Royal Ulster Constabulary George Cross Foundation - for voluntary serviceStephen John Bleakley, Fivemiletown, County Tyrone - for services to libraries and to the community in Fermanagh, Omagh and FivemiletownKenneth Sydney Brundle, Killinchy, County Down - for services to business, to economic development and to the charitable sector in Northern IrelandGeorge Crawford Bell, Carryduff, County Down - for services to the music industry in Northern IrelandDr Anne Campbell, Belfast, reader, Queen s University Belfast - for services to drug policy and practiceSusan Shirley Cunningham, Belfast, lately president, North of Ireland Veterinary Association - for services to the veterinary profession in Northern IrelandJacqueline Dixon, Ballyrobert, County Antrim, chief executive, Antrim and Newtownabbey Council - for services to local government and to the community in Northern IrelandEileen Lilian Mary Donnelly, Dungannon, County Tyrone, board of governors, the Integrated College, Dungannon - for services to education in Northern IrelandLorraine Foster, Lisburn, County Antrim - for services to people with learning disabilities in LisburnBrian Jozef Grzymek, Holywood, County Down, lately deputy director, Department of Justice - for public and voluntary service in Northern IrelandKathleen Margaret Joy Guthrie, Hillsborough, County Down - for services to the Reserve Forces and to the veteran community in Northern IrelandThe Reverend Matthew Henry Hagan, Coalisland, County Tyrone, chaplain, Southern Area Hospice and Rector of Tynan, Aghavilly and Middletown parishes, County Armagh - for services to hospice healthcare and to the community in Northern IrelandProfessor Anne Heaslett, Limavady, County Londonderry, lately principal, Stranmillis University College - for services to educationPeter Desmond Jack, Limavady, County Londonderry - for services to endurance sport and charity in Northern IrelandRabbi David Michael Kale, Belfast, faith leader, Belfast Synagogue - for services to the Jewish community in Northern IrelandSamuel James Kee, Bready, County Tyrone, community development worker - for services to the community in County LondonderryGavin Joseph Killeen DL Londonderry, managing director, Nuprint Technologies Ltd - for services to further education in Northern IrelandRobert Leckey, County Armagh - for services to education in County DownDr Alison Florence Livingstone, Randalstown, County Antrim, paediatrician, Northern Health and Social Care Trust - for services to safeguarding children in Northern IrelandPeter Anthony McBride, Omagh, County Tyrone - for services to the economy and to the community in County TyroneKatrina McDonnell, Belfast, founder, Homeless Period Belfast - for services to women s healthPatrick Joseph McGurn, Enniskillen, County Fermanagh - for services to the community in County Fermanagh and TyroneProf Sonja Jayne McIlfatrick, Carrickfergus, County Antrim, dean of the Ulster Doctoral College and professor of nursing and palliative care, Ulster University - for services to higher education and public healthWilliam Oliver, Castlerock, County Londonderry - for services to education, to business and to charities in County LondonderryGail Redmond, Carrickfergus, County Antrim - for services to association football in Northern IrelandAndrew Peter Saunders, Dromore, County Down, lately chair, Southern Regional College, County Armagh and County Down - for services to the further education sector in Northern IrelandProf Michael Gordon Scott, Ballymena, County Antrim, director, Medicines Optimisation Innovation Centre - for services to pharmacy in Northern IrelandJohn Stewart, Katesbridge, County Down, district chairman, Royal British Legion Northern Ireland - for services to veteransProf Ursula Margaret Waite, County Armagh - for services to the agri-food industry and to the economy in Northern IrelandJoseph Norman Wilson, Cookstown, County Tyrone - for services to business and to the community in Northern IrelandSamuel Godfrey Young, Omagh, County Tyrone - for services to social work and to educationMedallists of the Order of the British Empire (BEM)Stephen Burns, Ballymena, County Antrim, road sweeper, Mid and East Antrim Borough Council - for services to the community in PortglenoneChristopher Robert David Cuddy, Dungannon, County Tyrone - for voluntary service to the community in Northern IrelandPeter Anthony Dolan, Omagh, County Tyrone, founder, Enda Dolan Foundation - for services to justice and to young people in Northern IrelandJahswill Rohi Alexander Emmanuel, Belfast, founder, Multi-Ethnic Sports and Cultures Northern Ireland - for services to the community in Northern IrelandJulie Gough, Bangor, County Down - for services to midwifery in Northern IrelandLynn Green, Seaforde, County Down - for services to emergency nursing in Northern IrelandRaye Elizabeth Greenaway, Portadown, County Armagh - for services to young people in Northern Ireland through the Boys BrigadeDerek Richard Greenaway, Portadown, County Armagh - for services to young people in Northern Ireland through the Boys BrigadeWilliam John Hutchinson, Newtownabbey, County Antrim, volunteer driver, Belfast City Hospital - for services to Healthcare in Northern IrelandCatherine Georgina Johnston - for services to Save The Children and to the community in BelfastWilliam Iain Kennedy, Enniskillen, County Fermanagh, director, Aisling Counselling Centre, and coach, Enniskillen Royal Boat Club - for voluntary service to the community in County FermanaghDara Seamus McAnulty, Annalong, County Down - for services to the environment and to people with autism spectrum disorderWinifred McConnell, Crumlin, County Antrim, registrar, Belfast City Council - for services to local overnmentgPatrick Joseph McTeague, Magherafelt, County Londonderry, food technology technician, Department for Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs - for public and voluntary serviceJames McVicar Morrison, Ballymena, County Antrim - for services to Agriculture in Northern IrelandAnthony Oliver Morrison, Ballymoney, County Antrim - for voluntary services to the community in Northern IrelandMichelle Veronica Mullan, Antrim, County Antrim...
World's largest Pokémon collection could sell for £300k

... A woman from Hertfordshire - who wishes to remain anonymous - has accumulated a world record number of items, with more than 20,000 set to be auctioned...
What was behind Rishi Sunak's mini Budget?

... When I met the Chancellor Rishi Sunak, in the click and collect zone of a DIY shop in Watford in Hertfordshire - he was there to do a question and answer session with staff - he told me " categorically" the package of measures had not been rushed out to bump all those Partygate headlines off the front pages...
The tiny Hertfordshire primary school too small to survive

... He knows full well that with just 19 pupils, his school - Wareside Primary in Hertfordshire - is very small...
Coronavirus: Trump ' s disinfectant and sunlight claims actually reviewed

... The bleach or disinfectant, the dose required to neutralize viruses, which would in the circulating blood to says likely to have significant, irreversible damage and probably a very unpleasant death , Rob Chilcott, a professor of toxicology at the University of Hertfordshire...
What was behind Rishi Sunak's mini Budget?
This Was a mini Budget, in all but name.
Why? Because budgets Are about taxes. And there was a big new one of those.
Budgets Are about spending. And there was an even bigger amount of that.
And sometimes they're about borrowing. There was that too.
If you allowed yourself to think just for a moment that there might have been a bit of cheap politicking going on with it all being set out just After All those bumpy headlines about wines and fines, parties and pizza, well, yes, there was an element of news management going on.
When I met the Chancellor Rishi Sunak , in The Click and collect zone of a DIY shop in Watford in Hertfordshire - he was there to do A Question and answer session with Staff - he told me " categorically" The Package of measures had not been rushed out to bump all those Partygate headlines off the Front Pages .
And let's be clear, in money terms there was nothing cheap about this intervention. This Was significant and This Was expensive.
So much so that it has some Conservatives non-plussed and uncomfortable. One called it " tripe, " another " Red Meat for socialists".
Tory sceptics see this as un-Conservative.
WindfallA big spending, big taxing chancellor by any modern standards was saying he would do more of both, with a big dollop of extra borrowing on the side too.
Opposition parties have been calling for a windfall tax on the oil and gas companies for yonks.
For weeks, Conservative ministers have been falling over themselves to say it was a bad Idea - and even today having introduced one, Rishi Sunak couldn't quite bring himself to call a tax on a windfall a windfall tax.
Instead, he insisted to me, it was an " Energy Profits Levy. "
It was, though, he argued, " pragmatic, " given the scale of The Challenge so many people Are facing at The Moment with prices shooting up - and it helps pay for the measures he announced.
Most of the rest of the cost is being paid for by borrowing, which is then added to The National debt. And the interest payments on that debt Are rising as interest rates go up.
Brutal TruthA couple of other things Are worth a mention: In our interview, Mr Sunak acknowledged that what he is doing will contribute to pushing up prices.
Because some of The Help is universal, some of The People who get it might not really need it - and that could be inflationary, nudging up prices.
In other words, this could add to the very problem he is attempting to remedy. But, Mr Sunak insisted, the inflationary impact would be " minimal. "
The opposition parties Can - and Are - claiming that the government is tin-eared and slow and should have done all this sooner.
The Challenge they all now face, the perennial challenge for opposition parties who get their ideas nicked, is working out what they say next, having had their big plan lifted.
There Are no easy answers for them, or for ministers here.
Because the Brutal Truth is this intervention won't make anyone feel better off. Just a little less worse off.
Source of news: bbc.com