COCKETT: Women’s centre forced through against 215 objections still not open four years on — and ministers still won’t confirm if it ever will

A women’s centre that Cockett residents fought hard to stop — and lost — still has not opened four years after it was announced, and MPs now say ministers cannot even confirm whether it ever will.

The Swansea Residential Women’s Centre, planned for the Trehafod building in Cockett, was meant to open its doors in 2024.

Today it stands empty, its £10m funding pulled, while a cross-party committee of MPs brands the delays “unacceptable.”

The verdict comes in Jagged Justice, a report on prisons and rehabilitation in Wales published this month by the House of Commons Welsh Affairs Committee.

It is a striking turn in a saga that pitched the Ministry of Justice against the very community now left with a stalled site on its doorstep.

When the plans first emerged in May 2022, they met fierce local resistance.

The proposal — to convert and extend the Trehafod building, in the grounds of the former Cefn Coed Hospital, into a 12-bed centre for around 50 local women a year — drew 215 letters of objection.

In September 2022, Swansea Council‘s planning committee refused the scheme, going against the advice of its own officers.

But the Ministry of Justice appealed, and in August 2023 a Welsh Government-appointed planning inspector overturned the refusal and granted consent.

The inspector attached a condition barring the site from ever being used as secure accommodation such as a detention centre or prison.

At the time, Cockett councillor Mike Durke said residents were “hugely disappointed” and felt their concerns had been ignored, though he noted they took some reassurance from that condition.

The centre was designed as an alternative to short prison sentences, allowing women to serve community sentences of up to 12 weeks close to their families.

Only women from the local area would have been admitted, and the site would not have been secure, meaning residents could come and go during the day.

It was meant to be the first of its kind in England and Wales — a pilot the previous UK government described as “ground-breaking.”

Then, in March 2025, the Ministry of Justice told the committee the funding had been “reallocated by the previous government during the protracted planning process for the site.”

In other words, the money was moved during the very planning fight the centre had to win.

The current government has not restored it. Ministers told the committee the project was “paused” while they awaited the findings of a Women’s Justice Board and the outcome of a spending review.

In December 2025, prisons minister Lord Timpson said he hoped to be “in a position where we can make a decision” on the Swansea centre in January 2026.

The committee says it has received no further update since.

Its conclusion is blunt. The centre “was due to open its doors two years ago,” the report says, but the funding was reallocated and MPs are “still waiting on the current UK Government to decide whether the project will be going ahead at all.”

“These delays are unacceptable,” the committee found, pointing also to a lack of clarity over how the centre would actually operate and who it would admit.

The MPs were also clear about what the centre must not become. Drawing on evidence from the charities Clinks and Women in Prison, the report warns it should be a genuine alternative to custody and “not just become a prison in all but name.”

The committee has called on the Ministry of Justice to confirm “as soon as possible” whether the site will open and, if so, when — and to set out its admissions criteria.

The wider context is stark. Wales has no women’s prison, so Welsh women given custodial sentences are held in England — 77% of them at HMP Eastwood Park or HMP Styal, often far from home and family.

The report notes that 78% of women given immediate custody in Wales in 2024 were sentenced to 12 months or less — short terms that MPs heard were “long enough to lose your home and children” but did little to address the causes of offending.

Supporters argue centres like the one earmarked for Cockett are a cheaper and more effective way of breaking that cycle than a short spell behind bars.

For now, though, the Trehafod building remains shut — a scheme the community tried to stop, the courts allowed, and the government has yet to deliver.

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Cockett mum crowned International Ms Wales after losing 7 stone

35-year-old Kirstie Logan has undergone a remarkable transformation. After the sudden death of her father left her battling PTSD and weight gain, Kirstie’s health spiralled. At her heaviest, she tipped the scales at nearly 18 stone, suffered from hypertension, high cholesterol, and joint pain, and was bordering on diabetes.

Her turning point came in 2021 after being admitted to hospital with COVID-19, where a doctor told her that her obesity was a major contributing factor to her condition. That stark warning sparked a complete lifestyle overhaul.

“I knew I had to get my life back,” says Kirstie. “So I started walking – up and down the Swansea hills, along the Gower, every chance I got. I radically changed my habits and lost 7 stone, and in doing so, reversed all of my health issues.”

Now, the mum-of-one is no longer hiding behind baggy clothes and cropped photos. Six weeks ago, Kirstie was crowned International Ms Wales 2025, a prestigious pageant celebrating women over 30. She will go on to represent Wales at the International Ms competition in New York City this October, competing against entrants from more than 50 countries.

But before she takes to the world stage, Kirstie has another goal: running the Swansea Half Marathon this June in support of Morgan’s Army, a Swansea-based charity supporting families affected by childhood cancer.

“Morgan’s Army became my chosen charity during my reign as Ms Wales,” Kirstie explains. “I was already on my weight loss journey when I started following Morgan Riddler’s story and his parents’ incredible strength. Their resilience gave me the perspective I needed to keep going, and now it’s my turn to give something back.”

Kirstie Logan. (Image: Jennifer Ann Photography)

Training for the half marathon hasn’t been easy, especially after such a physically demanding transformation.

“It’s been blood, sweat, tears – and a lot of self-doubt,” Kirstie admits. “But I remind myself that pushing through 13 miles is tough, yes – but it’s nothing compared to what a family goes through when facing a cancer diagnosis. I want to do this not just for Morgan’s Army, but for my daughter. I want her to be proud of my resilience and to know that anything is possible with enough determination.”

Kirstie is hoping to inspire others who may be struggling with their weight, health, or mental wellbeing. “If I can do it – someone who avoided every camera and was virtually invisible – then so can anyone else. You just have to take that first step, however small it might be.”

She is now encouraging the public to support her fundraising efforts through her JustGiving page.

You can follow Kirstie’s journey and training progress on Instagram: @kirstie_internationalmswales25

#beauty #Cockett #InternationalMsWales #lifestyle #Swansea

Three Swansea drug dealers jailed for dealing cocaine

South Wales Police say 34-year-old Rhys Higgins, from Portmead, 28-year-old Liam McCabe, from Blaenymaes, and 50-year-old Dennis McCabe, from Cockett were subject of warrants at their home addresses on October 17 last year.

Significant sums of cash were found at each of the addresses, totalling over £137,000. Two of the addresses contained five mobile phones each, while the third contained 93 wraps of crack cocaine and electronic scales.

Evidence was also uncovered tying the three men to the purchase of multi-kilo quantities of cocaine.

Evidence discovered at the three mens’ homes
(Image: South Wales Police)

They have been sentenced to ten years (Rhys Higgins), seven years and six months (Liam McCabe) and three years (Dennis McCabe) in prison respectively.

Detective Sergeant Luke Tucker from South Wales Police said: “Rhys Higgins, Liam McCabe and Dennis McCabe are just the latest examples of drug supply criminals being brought to justice in our force area.

“All had significant quantities of cash in their home addresses, which highlights that their illegal activities were purely for financial gain, and they did not care at all for the welfare of those who purchased the drugs that they supplied.

“Each is now, rightly, beginning a lengthy spell in prison. Drug crime does not pay – as with so many others, our officers will identify you, and you will be brought to justice.”

(Lead image: South Wales Police)

#BlaenYMaes #cocaine #Cockett #drugs #Portmead #SouthWalesPolice #Swansea

Two Swansea drug dealers jailed after being spotted topping up drugs hotline mobile

28-year-old Luke Williams, from Strand in the city centre, and 20-year-old Leon Beynon, from Cockett, have been sentenced to 48 months and 32 months respectively.

Williams was arrested on December 23 having earlier been observed topping up a mobile phone from which messages were sent to drug users. Following this, a warrant was conducted at Beynon’s home address.

The mobile phone topped up by Williams was found in Beynon’s address. It contained communications between Beynon and Williams regarding the sourcing and distribution of heroin and crack cocaine.

Quantities of cannabis and cash were also seized from both men’s addresses.

Detective Sergeant Luke Tucker from South Wales Police said:“This is just the latest of example of the work that we do to disrupt the activity of those in the illegal drug trade.

“Class A drugs, such as the heroin and crack cocaine that Luke Williams and Leon Beynon were working to distribute into the local community, destroy lives. They destroy not only the lives of those who purchase them, but those of their family and friends too.

“South Wales Police will always work to bring those involved in this illegal activity to justice.”

(Lead image: South Wales Police)

#cocaine #Cockett #drugs #heroin #SouthWalesPolice #Swansea