From potholes swallowing tyres to planning promises unravelled – by way of a Cornish forger whose story refuses to stay buried – March’s podcast has a few unexpected turns along the way.
Potholes and the Price of Keeping Dorset Moving
After one of the wettest winters on record, Dorset’s roads are showing the strain – with pothole reports up 92% and thousands of defects logged.
“Nearly 10,000 highways inquiries were logged in three months.”
Despite increased funding and rapid repairs, the bigger question remains: is the system built to cope with a changing climate – or simply patching over the problem?
The Grumbler: Building Homes That Don’t Add Up
This month’s Grumbler lays bare the financial reality facing small developers – where rising costs, new regulations and stagnant house prices leave projects unviable before they’re even finished.
“We will be lucky to make any profit at all.”
From soaring build costs to punitive council tax on unsold homes, it’s a stark account of an industry under pressure – despite government promises to build more.
Promises Made, Promises Lost: Shaftesbury’s Blackmore Down
Chair of Shaftesbury Town Council, Virginia Edwyn-Jones, speaks candidly about a development where the promised green heart has failed to materialise – leaving residents dismayed.
“It was meant to be something really special… and people are heartbroken.”
From stripped topsoil to failed planting and unusable play areas, the conversation exposes a far greater concern than just some missing footpaths: once planning permission is granted, who ensures developers deliver what they promised?
The Dorset Insider: Are Local Voices Being Ignored?
As housing targets rise, this month’s column from our anonymous parish council questions whether neighbourhood plans still carry any real weight.
“At this stage, it feels less like a consultation and more like a done deal.”
With major developments looming and local knowledge entirely overridden, it’s a pointed reflection on who really shapes Dorset’s future.
A Forger, a Hanging and a Family Secret
Writer Rachel Rowe uncovers an extraordinary story buried in her own family history – a press-ganged schoolmaster turned forger, executed in Bodmin in the early 1800s.
“It was just like touching time.”
What begins as a tale of crime becomes something more complex – a story of inequality, bad luck and a system stacked against those with the least power.
Coffee and Craft: Getting the Perfect Brew
And finally, Jenny joins Giles Dick-Read in his Dorset farmhouse kitchen to learn how to make a proper cup of coffee – from grind size to brew ratios.
“You can buy the best coffee in the world and still make a horrible cup of coffee from it.”
A reminder that even the simplest things – done well – are worth the effort.
This episode is based on stories from March’s BV, available to read online here https://bvmag.co.uk/March26 . News, people, place and perspective – all in one place.
The BV – named Best Regional Publication in the UK (ACE Awards) and Regional News Site of the Year (Press Gazette). Always worth your ears.
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