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Big Venture Centre stepping in where ‘everyone is struggling’

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Josh Sandiford

BBC News, Wolverhampton

BBC Jane Platt in a bright pink polo shirt. It says Big Venture Centre. Her lanyard says the same. She has glasses and is smiling. There are lots of clothes on a big rack behind her. BBC

Jane Platt is a volunteer helping others even though she is struggling herself

Jane Platt’s bright pink polo shirt marks her out as a volunteer at the Big Venture Centre.

The community shop provides discounted items and other help to people living in some of the most deprived areas of Wolverhampton.

Places like Bushbury, Heath Town and Low Hill, where Ms Platt believes “everyone is struggling”, including herself.

The local council insists it is there for those who need support, but some living in the areas say they feel forgotten.

“My baby won’t play out in the streets,” explained Ms Platt, who lives near the Scotlands Estate.

The Big Venture Centre is a single-storey yellow building. Some of the paint has chipped away. One of its white doors also looks like a little old and tired. The sign says: Big Venture Centre. Community Shop Inside.

The Big Venture Centre helps people with discounted items and other support

The 45-year-old has been volunteering at the centre for years and said it helped her gain skills and look after her own mental health.

But she claimed it was also one of the only places she felt safe in the area.

“You can’t look at people when you [are out],” Ms Platt said.

“I try and look the opposite way because you just don’t know what they’re going to say.”

Tracey Walters smiling for the camera. There is a grassy area behind her with daffodils. She is wearing a nike jacket and a grey t-shirt underneath. She is wearing her hair as a bun on top of her head.

Tracey Walters likes living in the area but said there was scope for improvement

Tracey Walters, a resident being supported by the Big Venture Centre, was born in the area.

The 61-year-old said she liked living there but felt it had been “forgotten” about.

She demanded more activities for younger children on the estate, and was also concerned about rubbish.

“I don’t think Wolverhampton Council care about this area,” she said.

The council said there was more than £121,000 in funding for children in the Scotlands during the school holidays, adding it received regular litter picks and sweeps.

A woman holding a shopping trolley. It is grey. We can see her hands gripping on and her veins. There is a concrete floor in the background.

One woman asked not be named but said the area was “scruffy”

The local authority also insisted 112 jobs involving roads and street lighting had been carried out.

But another centre user, who asked not to be named, said it looked “scruffy”.

The woman, who has lived in the area all her life, said drugs and other forms of anti-social behaviour were a big problem, often because young people did not have anything to do.

“It used be nice area at one time but there’s nothing left,” she claimed.

“It’s just empty houses that get smashed up. You find needles on the floor [and] nobody cares.”

A sign for the Big Venture Centre. There is a grassy area behind with daffodils. We can also see a residential road with some houses in the background.

The council said it was working to make sure no residents were left behind

Despite the issues, volunteer director David Chadwick insisted the Scotlands was a place where “everybody will help everybody”.

“Without us a lot of families would suffer and that’s why we’re here,” he said.

City of Wolverhampton Council said it was working with police and other organisations to make sure the area was safe and nobody was “left behind”.

“The council has awarded millions of pounds in regeneration grants in the area and created The Big Venture centre by a community asset transfer,” a spokesperson said.

“We hold regular community resident meeting where people can talk directly to the council.”

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Jaguar Land Rover to cut up to 500 UK management jobs

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Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) is to cut up to 500 management jobs in the UK, as the carmaker faces pressure on sales and profits from US trade tariffs.

JLR said it would launch a voluntary redundancy scheme, and that the cuts were not expected to exceed 1.5% of its British workforce. The firm described the move as “normal business practice”.

Last week, the carmaker revealed a drop in sales in the three months to June caused partly by it pausing exports to the US because of tariffs and also due to the planned wind-down of older Jaguar models.

The company warned last month that US President Donald Trump’s decision to impose a 10% tariff on British cars exported to the US would hit its profits.

JLR said it “regularly offers eligible employees voluntary redundancy” and said the current programme was based on “the business’s current and future needs”.

It added that the UK-US trade deal on car imports gives it “confidence to invest £3.5bn” per year.

Car industry expert Professor David Bailey of the Birmingham Business School said the tariffs “play a big role” in the job cuts.

“It wasn’t that long ago that JLR was reporting bumper profits – £2.5bn profit to the year ending in March – which was its best results in a decade,” he told the BBC’s Wake Up to Money programme.

The firm has also been taking on workers in preparation for producing more electric cars so the tariffs “have definitely had an impact”, he said.

As part of a wave of tariff announcements made by Trump earlier this year, UK exports of UK cars and automotive parts faced an extra 25% tax, on top of an existing 2.5% levy. This led to JLR pausing shipments of its vehicles to the US.

However, the UK-US deal saw the tariff cut to 10% for a maximum of 100,000 UK cars, which matches the number of these vehicles that the UK exported last year.

Despite this, Prof Bailey said the new rate is still “a big increase” from the previous tariff of 2.5%, adding that one of its best selling cars, the Defender, is made in Slovakia and that still faces a 27.5% tariff.

Downing Street rejected “absolutely” any suggestion that JLR’s job cuts were a personal embarrassment for Sir Keir Starmer, who visited the company in May and declared it was his intention to protect British jobs in the car industry.

A spokesperson for the PM said the UK-US trade deal was “jobs saved, not job done”, adding that JLR was “responding to challenging global conditions” in making the cuts.

JLR is a large employer in the UK automotive sector with more than 30,000 workers.

It has sites in Solihull, Wolverhampton and Halewood on Merseyside, and builds Range Rover SUV models in the UK.

Speaking before JLR made its announcement about job cuts, Preet Kaur Gill, Labour MP for Edgbaston in Birmingham, said the UK’s recent trade deal with the US had helped to preserve jobs at the company.

“In my region, Jaguar Land Rover is a really important employer. The fact that we’ve managed to save 12,000 jobs, bring tariffs down… this is an ongoing relationship and our commitment is to make sure we continue that,” she said.

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Inflation complicates next month’s rate decision

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While the economy started this year strongly, Wednesday saw another example of a surprise to the markets in the wrong direction.

In May the economy slowed again, and now inflation has quickened faster than expected. It is expected to stay well above the Bank of England’s target level until autumn.

For consumers, still reeling from years of higher prices and a recent pickup in food prices, the new number is less a surprise, more the confirmation of their ordinary day-to-day challenges.

On top of that, and just as important for some people, the bounce in inflation complicates the Bank’s rate cut plan.

Investors have been treating it as pretty much nailed on that rates will come down again in August, from the current 4.25%.

Now there is definitely a sense of renewed caution.

A former rate setter at the Bank, the economist Andrew Sentance, even said it would be “irresponsible” for interest rates to be cut next month.

Expectations remain that the cut in August and another one later in the year will go ahead.

But the Bank will have to explain why it is looking beyond this current rise in inflation, into next year’s expected drop-back to the 2% target.

It will mean the return of old questions around whether the UK is more inflation-prone than other countries, for example because of increasing wage and tax costs being passed on in the form of higher prices.

A weakening jobs market is another part of the deliberations. The latest employment figures will be published on Thursday.

If, as expected, they show a continued fall in vacancies, then that strengthens the argument for going ahead with a cut in rates. Bloomberg is predicting a 4.9% unemployment rate, up from the 4.6% reported last month.

But as always it is important to keep all the figures in perspective.

True, other major economies have not seen a similar bounce in inflation. The eurozone’s latest inflation rate is just 2%. But inflation is nowhere near the highs of the energy crisis, and will come down as energy prices fall in the autumn.

Growth is definitely slowing, but we are not in recession, and the very latest activity figures suggest recovery in some sectors.

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US inflation rises as tariffs drive up prices

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Natalie Sherman

Business reporter, BBC News

Getty Images A hand selects an orange at a grocery storeGetty Images

US inflation jumped last month as President Donald Trump’s tariffs took hold, pushing up prices for items from clothing to coffee.

Consumer prices rose 2.7% in the year to June, up from 2.4% the previous month, with prices rising at the fastest pace since February, the Labor Department said.

Higher energy and housing costs, such as rents, were the major drivers of the increase.

But the data also suggested that consumers are starting to feel the impact of tariffs, as some firms begin to pass along the costs of Trump’s new taxes on imports.

Coffee prices jumped 2.2% from May to June, while prices for citrus fruits climbed 2.3%. Toy prices rose 1.8%, appliance prices increased 1.9%, while clothing prices gained 0.4% – the first increase to hit the sector in months.

But the overall increase remained contained and came in largely within expectations, offset by declines in prices for new and used cars, airfare and hotel bookings.

“There is a trickle of what is likely tariff-induced inflation in some categories, particularly household appliances and furnishings,” said Olu Sonola, head of US economic research at Fitch Ratings.

“This trickle is likely to gain momentum in the coming months.”

The average effective tariff rate in the US has surged this year, as Trump imposed a 10% tax on most goods entering the country, hitting key items, such as steel and car with even higher levies.

Though he suspended some more aggressive plans, in recent weeks, he has said he is planning to raise tariffs on goods from most countries, with duties set to come into effect on 1 August.

The president has claimed that introducing tariffs will protect American businesses from foreign competition and also boost domestic manufacturing and jobs.

The White House has dismissed forecasts that the measures will lead to higher prices for Americans, arguing that companies and foreign exporters will absorb the costs.

That view is at odds with most economic forecasters, who have argued the US economy has been shielded so far because firms stocked up on many goods in advance.

Ryan Sweet, chief US economist at Oxford Economics, said the latest figures were unlikely to settle the debate.

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