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August 10

      

Sunday 1st August

Scrufts Dog Show

Magic Sunday

Traditional Games Day

Walking the Wildside

Monday 2nd August

Summer Scheme with Games

Tuesday 3rd August

Midsummer Evening Walk at Carnmoney Hill

04
05
06

Saturday 7th August

History of Martello Towers

Young Wildlife Explorers - Rock Pool Discovery

Marine Days

Family Fun Day

Family Fun Day at Cloughey Beach

Wildlife Weekend

Sunday 8th August

French 1760

Country Capers

Mad Hatters Tea Party

Pond Improvement

09

Tuesday 10th August

Pre-Budget Consultation Event

11
12

Friday 13th August

Craft Fest 2010

Saturday 14th August

Victorian Weekend

Seasons End in the Dunes

Sunday 15th August

Leave no Trace

16
17
18

Thursday 19th August

An Evening on the Turf Beds

20

Saturday 21st August

National Heritage Week 2010

Living History at Devenish

Go Batty in Carnfunnock

A Lough Neagh Monster

Irish Walled Towns - A Celebration of Derry's Walls

Sunday 22nd August

Story of a Hill

Irish Walled Town Day

Tree Maintenance

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24
25

Thursday 26th August

Bat Detectives

Friday 27th August

Batty Bonanza

Ballyronan Festival of Lights

Saturday 28th August

Poultry Fair

Guided Woodland Walk

Sunday 29th August

Honey Show and Falconry

Lough Erne Cot Trip

Walled Garden Workshop

Scandals and Stories

Lap the Lough 2010

Monday 30th August

Bank Holiday Hoo-Haa

Antiques and Collectables Fair

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19 February 2010
 
Main Content Line

Belfast Hills savage cuts

"Savage cuts" will “cripple us" Partnership manager warns

The Belfast Hills Partnership has hit out at “crippling” government cuts by the Department of the Environment that have slashed their budget by more than half. Partnership Manager Dr Jim Bradley warned that the Partnership faced closure, job losses and the collapse of vital services. 

“Our funds have been axed by a massive 54 per cent. We are in line for this year's raft of three-yearly core funding and are being expected to carry a particularly savage cut," he said.

The Belfast Hills Partnership seeks to improve and protect the Belfast Hills. It was formed in response to ongoing concerns about the exploitation and degeneration of landscapes and habitats in the Belfast Hills during the 1980s and 1990s.

It currently runs physical and mental health initiatives for people living in some of the most deprived areas in the north and west of the city from its offices in the unemployment blackspot of West Belfast.

The current proposal is to cut £250,000 awarded between 2007 and 2010 to £135,000 in the 2010 to 2013 raft - a whopping 54 per cent slashing of funds.

Read this story in full here: Belfast Hills Partnership 

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