Former OGC Nice manager Adrian Ursea has offered an insight into INEOS' ownership of a football club, explaining that impending Manchester United investor Sir Jim Ratcliffe is unlikely to get in the way of manager Erik ten Hag.
31.10.2023 - 05:17 / dailyrecord.co.uk
Furious traders operating in the shadow of the fire-ravaged Station Hotel – have blasted council chiefs over a lack of support as their businesses ‘struggle to survive’.
Shops, restaurants, pubs, cafes and takeaways have stood together after being plunged into crisis in the wake of the fallout over a huge inferno at the historic hotel.
An award-winning dessert parlour and sit-in diner say they have lost thousands in earnings after they were forced to axe their delivery service.
Owners of Nanny Mary’s have spoken on behalf of fellow Smith Street and Burns Statue Square traders who say the situation is ‘diabolical’.
It comes more than a month after a huge inferno ripped through the iconic Station Hotel – forcing entire businesses to shut completely for almost one week.
But since reopening, they have noticed an extreme dip in sales and footfall with people now avoiding the area that has been transformed into a construction site – as painstaking safety works are carried out.
And traders have been dealt another miserable blow after it was revealed by South Ayrshire Council that those works could last 9 weeks – leaving them staring at a bleak future.
Alana Harte, 51, who helps run family business Nanny Mary’s says the future is looking bleak for fellow traders.
Alana told Ayrshire Live: “The situation is diabolical for businesses. It’s not just affecting us (Smith Street), it’s all the way down to Ayr Central and right round Burns Statue Square.
“We’ve spoken to other businesses. We’ve all had enough of this.
“We’ve all gotten together to send a clear message that we need urgent help. We’re all struggling to survive.
“There is literally no footfall now, it’s gone. Our trade came from the train station and then passing trade, we have
Former OGC Nice manager Adrian Ursea has offered an insight into INEOS' ownership of a football club, explaining that impending Manchester United investor Sir Jim Ratcliffe is unlikely to get in the way of manager Erik ten Hag.
A mum was found dead in her home just months after her partner died in the same house.
A Scots police officer who died after raising thousands of pounds for charity is to be honoured at a policing national awards ceremony.
Thousands of pro-Palestine protestors gathered in Glasgow today to call for an urgent ceasefire in Gaza.
A devastated Scots dog owner has spoken out after her beloved dog died while running away from fireworks.
Police have closed off a busy Edinburgh road due to an ongoing incident, with motorists advised to avoid the area.
First Minister Humza Yousaf has announced that his parents-in-law have arrived in Scotland safely after fleeing the conflict in the Gaza Strip. Mr Yousaf shared a family photo on X, formerly Twitter, which included his wife Nadia, and her parents, Elizabeth and Maged El-Nakla.
A Scots man has died following a crash on the M8. The 59-year-old man was rushed to hospital after a van crashed on the motorway on Saturday, November 4 at around 5.10pm, reports Edinburgh Live.
Hamburg airport was closed to passengers and flights were axed after a car broke through security and entered the premises, German news agency dpa has reported.
A pensioner has died following a horror quad bike incident on the Shetland Islands.
Seven Scots children have been charged after the attempted murder of a schoolboy in a Glasgow park.
Firefighters have warned about dangerous and unacceptable behaviour after being “bombarded” with fireworks, bricks and bottles in lead up to Bonfire Night.
A man has been arrested after a major crash on a busy Edinburgh road.
A bride waded into a brawl on her big day after a fight broke out in a hotel car park. Footage has emerged online of the rammy outside the Holiday Inn in Kenilworth, Warwickshire, on Sunday afternoon.
Former soldier Billy Kerr’s life went into a downward spiral after his flat was destroyed in a fire nine years ago.
A mum who struggled to get into a dodgem car shed more than 100lb after doctors warned her that she was too fat. Stella Houliotis had struggled with her weight for years and her 12-year-old son Krish had never seen her slim.
A man has been rushed to hospital after being knocked down by a car on a busy Edinburgh.
A unique house is up for grabs on a remote Scottish island - complete with its own private cinema.
A gun nut who trawled the internet for information on the Dunblane massacre has been jailed for buying a gun from the dark web. James Maxwell was locked up for five years after also ordering ammunition.
Mark Schilling Japan Correspondent Boys’ Love, or ‘BL’ as it is also known, was once a minor and lightly regarded type of Japanese manga catering mainly to female fans, delivering stories of handsome young guys falling in love with each other. Now its popularity has spread beyond Japan to much of East Asia and beyond, while metamorphozing into a film, TV and online genre with millions of fans. Just how big BL has become was evident in a Wednesday TIFFCOM seminar on the BL phenomenon in Thailand: Beyond Borders: Exploring the Global Appeal and Diversity of Thailand’s Boys’ Love Contents. The eleven speakers, including an official from the Office of Commercial Affairs, Royal Thai Embassy in Japan, vigorously pitched partnerships with Japanese content companies, which seemed to be a classic case of selling ice to Alaska’s indigenous inhabitants. Members of the packed seminar room might beg to differ, however.