Business Opportunity
Click to create a profitable internet business creating websites and selling online advertising.
Chippenham, Wiltshire
Local Info & Events
Find your 2day site!
Enter your village or town
before 2day.uk
Find out about 2day
- Your own community portal
- local and national advertising. Click

Local BBC news for Wiltshire

Cyclist seriously injured in hit and runCyclist seriously injured in hit and run

The man in his 50s is being treated for fractures to his neck and back.

Track opens for cyclists and skateboardersTrack opens for cyclists and skateboarders

Wiltshire Council says the floodlit track is suitable for riders of all ages and abilities.

Flags to honour aviation engineer Sir George DowtyFlags to honour aviation engineer Sir George Dowty

Sir George is remembered for his contribution to the industry including undercarriage units.

'New Santa experience' and 'first padel championships''New Santa experience' and 'first padel championships'

A round-up of photographs from across the West this week.

BBC Front Page News

Zelensky due at Downing Street for high-level Ukraine talksZelensky due at Downing Street for high-level Ukraine talks

Sir Keir Starmer will also welcome the leaders of France and Germany as Europe looks to respond to a US-led push for a peace deal.

Being together brings us closer to our girls, say Southport familiesBeing together brings us closer to our girls, say Southport families

Parents of Alice, Bebe and Elsie tell BBC documentary they have supported each other through grief.

How Norris achieved his lifetime's ambition by 'winning it my way'How Norris achieved his lifetime's ambition by 'winning it my way'

There were bumps in the road but Lando Norris has secured his first F1 drivers' title and says he is proud "because I feel like I made a lot of other people happy".

Child among those treated after pepper spray used in Heathrow robberyChild among those treated after pepper spray used in Heathrow robbery

Police say the substance was sprayed as a group of four men robbed a woman in an airport car park lift.

BBC NewsBBC SportChippenham on TwitteriPlayerDir EnqsMapsTrainsTVTraffic ChippenhamWeatherFinancial Markets
The Your Local Information Microportal not only gives you instant access to live national and local news but local information, services and reviews around Your Local. There is also everything 'you didn't know you didn't know'!

Tip! - Try entering your own postcode into the Your Location box (top right) and all the local links currently set for SN15 1AA will relocate for you anywhere in the UK. This can be especially useful for when you are travelling or on holiday! Crucially, although you are on the NEWS profile at the moment, you could also use the white buttons above to choose another profile like Your Local Area or Sport or Shopping or Faith ...... Whatever you choose homepage 2day will look different and current every day!

AskTen - Nine things you may not have noticed last week

1. How to make meetings work. Meetings should be engines for progress, yet for many organisations they’ve become the place where energy, momentum and good intentions go to die. Most people don’t complain about having too much to do - they complain about having too many meetings that don’t achieve anything. As leaders, we set the tone. If we allow meetings to sprawl, people assume our thinking does too. If we run them tightly, people rise to our level. READ MORE

2. When work pays less. Last week’s Budget triggered a striking headline: workers squeezed, while some large families on benefits gain significantly. The truth is more nuanced. Freezing income-tax thresholds will reduce take-home pay for many employees over the next few years, particularly those on mid-incomes. Meanwhile, abolishing the two-child limit on Universal Credit from April 2026 will boost support for larger families. Some broadcasters illustrated this with dramatic examples - a worker on £35,000 losing around £1,400, while a benefits family with five or more children gains £10,000–£14,000. These figures are scenarios, not standard outcomes, but the direction of travel is clear: work is being quietly penalised while welfare expands. Leadership lesson: incentives matter. What you reward, you ultimately grow.

3. A refit for leadership. I spent 30 years in the Royal Navy, rising from junior rating to Chief Petty Officer to commissioned navigator on the fleet flagship. So when the First Sea Lord said our leadership-selection system is too subjective, he’s right. Promotion still depends too much on who writes your report and too little on who actually serves under you. Online officer selection hasn’t helped, and the pyramid structure rewards rank over vocation. Most naval leaders are good, some exceptional, but the wrong person in command can be devastating. The solution isn’t radical: introduce honest upward feedback, apply psychological assessment earlier, and fix the flawed Officer Joint Appraisal Report [OJAR]. Good leadership keeps ships afloat; bad leadership sinks them long before the enemy appears.

4. The migration mirage. Net migration fell to 204,000 this year - the lowest since 2021 - and politicians on all sides rushed to claim victory. But look past the headlines and the picture is far less triumphant. The biggest driver wasn’t fewer arrivals; it was a record 693,000 people leaving the UK, the highest proportion since 1923. Crucially, most of those leaving were young, working-age Britons, heading abroad for better prospects. Meanwhile asylum claims hit a record 110,051, meaning irregular migration now makes up over half of net migration. Hardly a solved problem. Leadership lesson: Headlines aren’t strategy. Before setting “targets”, we need to fix the fundamentals - housing, skills, productivity and competitiveness - otherwise we’re just measuring symptoms, not solutions.

5. Labour’s leadership lottery. Speculation is swirling about who might replace Keir Starmer, a man who’s somehow both prime minister and permanently in trouble. Labour hasn’t ousted a sitting leader in office before, but there’s a first time for everything, especially when polling numbers look like a cliff face. Andy Burnham would run if he weren’t busy being King of Manchester. Wes Streeting is touted as “Starmer, but with charisma”, though apparently too right-wing for half the party. Angela Rayner is the Left’s choice and would sell herself as the “clean break” candidate (stamp-duty hiccup notwithstanding). Shabana Mahmood has shown actual leadership, which in Labour can be a mixed blessing. And Ed Miliband is apparently “on manoeuvres” again, proving nostalgia truly is irrational. Leadership lesson: Be careful, your successor is always watching. Who would make the strongest replacement for Keir Starmer? Please share your views in our latest poll.  VOTE HERE

 

6. Adolescence lasts until 32. New research from the University of Cambridge suggests adolescence doesn’t end at 18 or even 25, but at 32. Using MRI scans from more than 3,800 people, scientists found that the human brain moves through five distinct “epochs,” with a major turning point at 32 - the moment when communication between brain regions stabilises and peak cognitive performance kicks in. So if your twenty-somethings occasionally behave like overgrown teenagers, science says they technically are. And if you finally felt like you “grew up” in your early thirties, congratulations, you’re normal. Leadership lesson: People mature at different speeds, and it’s rarely linear. Good leaders allow room for development, patience and second chances - because the brain is still wiring itself well into the decade most of us pretend we’ve already sorted out.

7. A digital detox works. A new study shows that young adults can significantly improve their mental health by cutting social media for just one week. The results were striking: a 24% drop in depression symptoms and a 16% fall in anxiety among 18–24-year-olds. Those already struggling with anxiety, insomnia or low mood saw the biggest lift. It didn’t fix loneliness - apparently swapping TikTok for silence doesn’t automatically produce new friends - but the mental-health gains were real and measurable. EU lawmakers now even want under-16s kept off social media without parental consent. Leadership lesson: When life feels crowded, the simplest reset is often subtraction, not addition. Sometimes the most productive thing you can do is put the phone down and give your mind room to breathe.

8. You’ve been fired. Remember Labour’s flagship pledge to give every worker day-one protection from unfair dismissal? It has now been politely escorted off the premises. After months of business groups warning that it would unleash a tsunami of grievances (“I’ve been here four hours and demand justice”), the government has quietly replaced it with six-month qualifying period. Ministers insist this isn’t a U-turn, merely “getting it right”. Unite called it a “shell of its former self”, while left-wing MPs are wondering what other bits of the manifesto might mysteriously evaporate when someone important frowns at them. Leadership lesson: Bold promises are easy. Delivering them without breaking the system - or the economy - is where the real work begins. And sometimes, reality wins.

9. A seasonal public service. I can’t claim to have sampled every mince pie on the market - though Saturday’s Mr Kipling at Doubles & Bubbles, our monthly tennis-and-champagne social, tasted exceedingly good - but the annual mince-pie rankings are in, and they make fascinating reading. Waitrose No.1’s brown-butter cognac version is the critics’ darling for the second year running. Iceland’s “yuzu-spiked” offering apparently delivers unexpected brilliance, while M&S wins plaudits for fruity richness and admirable sustainability. Sainsbury’s all-butter classics round out the front-runners with consistently high praise. What this really shows is that there’s no such thing as the best mince pie, only the one that makes you smile when you bite it. Leadership lesson: Excellence comes in many flavours; your backhand improves when you stop slicing everything in sight.

10. The bottom line. Eighty-three per cent of Black Friday “deals” weren’t deals at all, just products sold cheaper (or the same price) at other times of the year. Which? checked 175 items and confirmed what we all suspected: Black Friday is mostly marketing, not magic.