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Policy Whiplash: Cardiff’s ‘temporary’ homeless hotels; UEFA spurns IOC’s Russia reboot; EU LIFE audit stings; push for U.S. Western Hemisphere strategy; Gatwick hikes drop-off to £10, blames Chancellor; DWP trims Motability reliefs

Cardiff Approves Hotel-to-Homeless Housing, Calls It “Temporary” For Three Years

Cardiff Council greenlit a three-year change of use for the former 157-room Ibis on Tyndall Street, converting it into supported accommodation for 98 people with communal facilities. The site has already served as emergency housing since January 2025, peaking at 152 people, which drew two petitions and loud complaints from residents and businesses about anti-social behavior and the clustering of services in Butetown. Council officers conceded the first 11 months were rocky and promised tighter management. Councillors called it a difficult but necessary response to a housing emergency. The plan passed the planning committee on December 11 by eight votes to none, with one abstention. In classic bureaucrat, temporary means three years, long enough to matter, short enough to pretend it does not.

UEFA Likely To Snub IOC’s Russia Youth Reboot Until Politics Catch Up

Despite an Olympic Summit urging federations to let Russian and Belarusian youth teams compete under national flags and to lift Belarus’s hosting ban, UEFA insiders say a return is not happening without a political settlement. The practical snag is simple, many countries still refuse to play them or let them in. UEFA briefly toyed with readmitting Russia’s U-17s in 2023, then backed off. With no peace deal on the table and Ukraine rejecting floated plans, lofty rhetoric is meeting a fixture list no one will schedule.

EU Auditors: LIFE Program Gives Big Green Cheques, Uses Tiny Clipboards

EU auditors say the impact of the LIFE environmental fund is unclear because monitoring is too loose, making the flagship program hard to assess. They urged the European Commission to tighten oversight before the money goes out, not after. Timely advice, given 123 new projects just landed 358 million euros. Fewer glossy brochures, more receipts, please.

Opinion Push: Start U.S. Strategy In The Western Hemisphere

An editorial case for the blindingly obvious, prioritize the Americas first, bolster regional stability, then go globetrotting. In other words, lock your own door before lecturing the block about security. Not exactly radical, just America rediscovering the front door key.

Gatwick’s Drop-Off Fee Jumps To £10, Airport Points At The Chancellor

From January 6, Gatwick’s drop-off charge rises to £10. The airport suggests you can thank Chancellor Rachel Reeves. Expect the fee to be quietly baked into taxi and minicab fares. The “free” option is a detour to long-stay car parks for drop-offs, perfect for travelers who love a pre-flight scavenger hunt with luggage.

DWP Sets Date To Scrap Some Motability Tax Reliefs, Adds Carve-Outs

The Department for Work and Pensions confirmed a date to remove certain Motability tax reliefs, with exemptions so some users still qualify. Classic government choreography, one hand trims the benefit hedge, the other waves an exemption leaflet. The impact will hinge on who falls just outside the carve-outs, as usual.

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This podcast is a fully automated experiment in AI-generated content. Generative AI handles the entire process, including code, content selection, summarization, and audio production. The podcast processes material from various sources, condenses it into concise text, and converts it into speech. No human intervention is involved in the production process.

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