Winchester News Online
‘Everything Takes Time’: One family’s experience of SEND delays
Across Hampshire, families of children with Special Educational Needs and Disabilities are experiencing long waiting times for assessments and uncertainty around school placements.
Demand for SEND support has increased, placing pressure on services across health and education.
For one parent, Nicole, these challenges have shaped much of her daughter Bonnie’s early life.
From infancy, Bonnie’s mother raised concerns about her development.
Her cleft palate was not diagnosed for eight months, and despite ongoing developmental delays, her concerns were initially reassured rather than escalated.
Bonnie has since received a confirmed MED13L genetic diagnosis, alongside severe developmental delays, no speech, sensory needs, repetitive behaviours and feeding difficulties.
Her mother says accessing appropriate support has remained complex.
“From the beginning, it’s been difficult to get concerns fully addressed,” she says. “Every referral and assessment has taken time.”
Difficulties have also arisen within education. Bonnie attended a mainstream school, but the setting later confirmed it was unable to meet her needs.
She was subsequently removed from the placement and currently has no school provision in place.
Her mother has been informed that a confirmed placement may not be available until September 2026, unless an appeal at a tribunal hearing scheduled for November is successful.
The school being appealed for is located close to the family home and has indicated it could support Bonnie’s needs.
As a single parent, she describes the practical impact of navigating the system as significant. With no school placement, Bonnie is not currently accessing the structured support often used to develop communication, sensory regulation and social skills.
Day to day life, she says, involves frequent communication with services, completing paperwork and waiting for decisions.
“Everything takes time,” she explains. “Assessments, referrals and outcomes don’t happen quickly.”
While she acknowledges that individual professionals have offered support, she feels that overall coordination between services could be improved.
“A child with complex needs ideally needs consistent provision,” she says. “At the moment, there are gaps.”
Looking ahead, she believes improvements could include shorter waiting times, earlier intervention, greater awareness of rare genetic conditions and clearer pathways to suitable school placements.
She also suggests that disputes over placements could be resolved earlier, without the need for formal tribunal proceedings where appropriate provision is already identified.
For families like Bonnie’s, delays do not simply affect processes but have a direct impact on her education and development.
Winchester News Online
Hampshire Harriers mid season review:
The first half of the season has been a good combination of good showing that is close. The Harriers are doing well, but they realize they have to do better going forward to get further up the track. And with a handful of key games in the pipeline, the second half of the season will be the deciding factor in whether they can convert effort into yet another win.
On the sidelines, the club is readying for changes. After ten seasons at Oasis Academy, the Hampshire Harriers will shift to Apple More Health and Leisure in Dibden to play games as funding for the team increases and costs climb.
The squad remains focused on performance despite difficulties they may face on the court or off it. “We’ve played really well, even in the matches we lost this season,” said club representative David Morgan. “We have produced good numbers and we have that to give us hope. Some days, we’ve just been getting close (tied up) and things haven’t gone our way. We also will be moving to Apple More Health and Leisure in Dibden, which we will have to get used to. The biggest thing is that we keep our heads, we stay together, and we go through it as a team. If we work hard and remain unified the results will come.”
The venue at Oasis Academy has been a significant contributor to the Harriers’ growth over the last 10 years. It’s also given them stability and a good local presence. While this is the close of a lengthy chapter the club will continue its quest for further progression and play both on and off the playing floor.
The Harriers expect a good run into the next half of the season as they near critical moments. As that stage of the season comes in, they want the season to continue on well. And whatever obstacles lie in the way they just want to end their fight and finish up the campaign well powered through.
Winchester News Online
Bishop’s Waltham Photography Society Exhibition
What do fireworks and iguanas from Costa Rica have in common?
Within the cork-bored walls of a Church hosted an Iris tucked delicately next to a divine landmark of Winchester.
Or maybe you might prefer the TV display with an elderly man thinking whether ‘to smile or not to smile’, or the Sandhurst Passing Out Parade.
With a white dahlia and friendly faces that were willing to greet you at the door.
From DSLRs to the cameras we keep in our pockets, this was the magic that was The Bishops Waltham Photography Society’s annual exhibition.
Boasting around 55 members, from ‘seasoned amateurs’ to those with newly bought cameras, the showcase has been running for 13 years, and is consistently held in the United Church.
The society, starting in 2008, was created by a small group of people who wished to share their passion for the life behind the lens with those in the local area.
For those under 16, do not fret, as the society also hosts a Junior Competition for those living within the local parishes. Those who were placed received a certificate from the Mayor of Winchester.
If you enjoyed a particular photograph, for example, the macro shots of black and white beauty which hosted a trio of unforgettable sights, you may liaise with the creator to buy the print. There were also cards for sale, with a portion of the proceeds going back to the Hampshire and Isle of Wight Air Ambulance.
So whether your fancy is taken by the Northern Lights or a red-eyed tree frog, the Bishop’s Watlham Photographic Society Annual exhibition is one to keep on your to-do list.
Winchester News Online
The Cathedral is welcoming a new dynamic
ITS TIME!!
The festive period is truly upon us.
The Cathedral is the home of Christmas in Winchester, and this year they are branching out their events.
They are no stranger to a Christmas concert, but this year they have arranged their first ever interactive concert.
A Christmas cracker concert – a celebration of music, traditional literature and community, personifying the meaning of Christmas.
Lay Clerk Simon Irwin worked with Reverend Canon Andrew Micklefield worked together to create a night of entertainment, they hosted the event as a duo, creating a new dynamic for the cathedral.
The Christmas Cracker Concert bought a new audience in, people of all ages and faiths, coming together in a moment of reflection in a different perspective to usual.
Many people see the cathedral as simply a home for those who follow the Christian faith, but the cathedral are wanting to welcome more people in to see the beauty within, the Christmas cracker concert steered away from the typical sermon.
With iconic Christmas songs, from Mariah Carey’s ‘All I Want for Christmas is You’ to ‘O Come All Ye Faithful’ and a combined effort to fill the cathedral with a loud rendition of the 12 days of Christmas.
It wasn’t just Christmas songs being bought to life but a reading from Charles Dickens’ ‘A Christmas Carol’, the Lay Clerks bought to life the Christmas classic.
They were joined also by the Girl Choristers for some more traditional songs, the audience were wowed by the raw talent echoing through the navel of the cathedral.
The evening was a great success with both Simon and Andrew telling me they hoped to host more events like this in the future to welcome in more diverse audiences.

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