PONTYATES: “Our community has been heard” — campaigners celebrate as Meddygfa’r Sarn is saved from closure

The community group that led the fight to save Meddygfa’r Sarn has called it “a hugely important and emotional day” after the surgery was pulled back from the brink of closure.

Hywel Dda University Health Board agreed on Thursday to set aside its original proposal to disperse the Pontyates surgery’s patients, and instead begin a procurement process to appoint a new GP partnership to take it on.

For the Save Sarn Surgery Community Working Group, which has campaigned against the closure since January, the decision was the result they had fought months for.

Clare Treharne, of the Save Sarn Surgery Community Working Group, said the community was “absolutely delighted.”

“We are absolutely delighted that the Hywel Dda University Health Board has approved the decision to set aside the original dispersal proposal for Meddygfa’r Sarn and instead begin a procurement process to appoint a new GP partnership to run the surgery,” she said.

“This means that Sarn Surgery will now remain open.”

The board’s own decision was more measured. It agreed to explore whether a new or existing provider could take on the practice through a GMS contract, with any arrangement subject to a formal procurement process and “careful consideration of financial and operational viability.”

But campaigners said the board had also given a longer-term assurance about the village.

Treharne said the board had “confirmed its commitment to maintaining a long-term primary healthcare presence in Pontyates” — something she described as “extremely welcome news for local residents and families who rely on these vital services.”

She said the outcome had only been possible because the community refused to give up.

“This result has only been possible because our community came together with determination, dignity and a shared belief that local healthcare matters,” she said.

“From petitions and meetings to public support and attendance at today’s Board meeting, every single voice made a difference.”

The campaign drew in hundreds of residents over four months, taking in a human chain around the building, a petition to the Senedd topping 1,000 signatures, and a formal complaint over how the closure process was handled.

Treharne thanked everyone who had backed the campaign, singling out those who travelled to the board meeting to stand with the group.

“Your commitment, passion and solidarity have been extraordinary,” she said.

“A special thank you must also go to all those who attended the Board meeting today and stood with us throughout this campaign. We are proud that our community has been heard.”

She acknowledged the fight was not entirely over, with the procurement process still to run its course.

“While there is still work ahead as the procurement process moves forward, today’s decision is a major victory for Pontyates and the surrounding area, and a powerful reminder of what communities can achieve when they stand together,” she said.

She ended her statement with the words “Diolch o galon i bawb” — heartfelt thanks to everyone.

The board has said the surgery will continue to run as a managed practice while it assesses whether a long-term solution can be found, and that registered patients should continue to access GP services as they do now.

Related stories from Swansea Bay News

PONTYATES: Health board agrees to explore independent GPs for Meddygfa’r Sarn in major U-turn
The full detail of the board’s decision to set aside closure and pursue a new GP partnership for the surgery.

PONTYATES: The four-month fight to save Meddygfa’r Sarn — and the questions Hywel Dda still hasn’t answered
How the campaign to save the surgery unfolded over four months ahead of the vote.

PONTYATES: FOI reveals no specific recruitment attempts for Sarn surgery GP in 9 years
Freedom of Information documents revealed Hywel Dda made no targeted recruitment attempts for a salaried GP at Meddygfa’r Sarn in nine years.

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Hundreds of residents attended events opposing the proposed closure, culminating in a human chain around the building.

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PONTYATES: Health board agrees to explore independent GPs for Meddygfa’r Sarn in major U-turn — as campaigners say closure should never have been on the table

The campaign to save Meddygfa’r Sarn has won its biggest victory yet.

At its meeting on Thursday, Hywel Dda University Health Board agreed to explore whether a new or existing GP provider could take over the running of the Pontyates surgery — rather than closing it and dispersing patients to neighbouring practices.

It is a major shift from the position the board took in January, when closure was put forward as the recommended way forward.

The board said it had listened to the strength of feeling during an eight-week engagement period, and acknowledged how important local access to GP services was to the community.

It also confirmed that “a small number of informal expressions of interest” had been received from potential providers interested in running the practice during the engagement period.

Meddygfa’r Sarn will continue to operate as a managed practice while the board explores those opportunities, with registered patients told to access GP services as they currently do.

Andrew Carruthers, director of operations at Hywel Dda, said the board had listened carefully to what people had told them.

“We heard clearly how much Meddygfa’r Sarn means to the local community,” he said.

“That has emphasised how important it is that we take the time to fully explore the viability of the informal interest that has come forward around the future running of the practice.”

He said the move allowed the board to respond directly to community feedback and consider whether a sustainable solution could keep services running from the practice.

The board will now assess the level of commercial interest and decide whether a viable long-term solution can be found through a formal commissioning process, carried out under national Provider Selection Regime rules.

Local Plaid Cymru county councillors Tyssul Evans, Meinir James and Alex Evans welcomed the decision — but said the work should have been done long before closure was ever recommended.

“This is a major step forward for patients and our communities who depend on Meddygfa’r Sarn,” they said.

“Over recent months, local people have made their feelings overwhelmingly clear. The unanimous opposition expressed during the engagement process demonstrated just how strongly residents felt about retaining local GP services in Pontyates.”

The councillors said one of the main reasons given for the proposed closure was a supposed lack of interest in running the surgery independently, which the board said had left it reliant on costly locum cover.

But they pointed out that multiple expressions of interest had been submitted since the January board meeting where closure was first recommended.

“This raises serious questions about whether enough was done to secure the future of the surgery before any closure proposals were put forward,” they said.

The point echoes one of the central findings of the campaign. Freedom of Information documents obtained by the Save Sarn Surgery Working Group revealed that no targeted recruitment had been carried out at the surgery in nine years — despite a lack of interest being cited as a reason for closure.

The councillors said the change of direction followed months of sustained pressure from patients, residents, campaigners and councillors who refused to accept that closure was the only option. They also thanked Cefin Campbell MS and Adam Price MS for their support.

“While there are still important steps ahead, today’s decision represents a significant and welcome change in direction, but the uncertainty and anxiety patients have experienced over recent months was completely avoidable,” they said.

They added that residents would expect the procurement process to be pursued “seriously, transparently and in good faith.”

The fight to save the surgery has run since January, taking in a cross-party motion by Carmarthenshire County Council, a human chain around the building, a petition to the Senedd topping 1,000 signatures, and a formal complaint over how the closure process was handled.

The councillors thanked everyone who had fought to save the surgery and highlighted concerns over poor public transport links, travel times and capacity pressures at neighbouring practices.

Related stories from Swansea Bay News

PONTYATES: The four-month fight to save Meddygfa’r Sarn — and the questions Hywel Dda still hasn’t answered
How the campaign to save the surgery unfolded over four months, and the questions the health board had yet to answer ahead of the vote.

PONTYATES: FOI reveals no specific recruitment attempts for Sarn surgery GP in 9 years
Freedom of Information documents revealed Hywel Dda made no targeted recruitment attempts for a salaried GP at Meddygfa’r Sarn in nine years.

Hundreds protest to save Pontyates GP surgery as council demands action
Hundreds of residents attended events opposing the proposed closure, culminating in a human chain around the building.

Council demands action on Pontyates surgery closure as councillors warn of predetermined outcome
Carmarthenshire Council passed a cross-party motion demanding urgent action to prevent the closure of Meddygfa’r Sarn.

#GPSurgeryClosure #HywelDdaUniversityHealthBoard #MeddygfaRSarn #Pontyates

PONTYATES: The four-month fight to save Meddygfa’r Sarn — and the questions Hywel Dda still hasn’t answered as the board prepares to vote

When members of Hywel Dda University Health Board gather at Yr Egin in Carmarthen at 9.30am on Thursday 28 May, they will not be asked to do what they were asked to do in January.

The Vacant Practice Panel’s original recommendation — that all 4,350 patients of Meddygfa’r Sarn in Pontyates be dispersed across neighbouring practices and the surgery closed — still exists. It has not been withdrawn. But thanks to four months of sustained campaign pressure and a string of damaging disclosures about the evidence base, the board will instead be asked to begin a procurement process to test whether an independent contractor will take on the GP contract.

It is a significant shift. But it is not a reprieve. If procurement fails to find a viable bidder, the original closure recommendation is still in the room.

Front view of Meddygfa’r Sarn in Pontyates, the GP surgery at the centre of proposals to disperse its patient list. Image: Google Maps.

The story that almost happened in silence

When Swansea Bay News first reported on 22 January that the future of Meddygfa’r Sarn was in doubt, the proposal to close the surgery had attracted no significant public attention. Most of the surgery’s patients had no idea their GP service was about to be dispersed.

Jane Nicholas, speaking on behalf of the Save Meddygfa’r Sarn Working Group, reflected this week that the closure could have gone ahead largely unnoticed had it not been for that initial report.

What followed has been one of the most sustained and detailed community campaigns this part of west Wales has seen in years. Patients launched petitions. Councillors demanded action. The board agreed an eight-week consultation. Lee Waters, then Llanelli MS, raised the alarm over fears the surgery was being wound down. The campaign petition to the Senedd passed 1,000 signatures in under three weeks — and patients formed a human chain around the surgery building in a ‘Cwtsho’r Sarn’ solidarity event, drawing hundreds of protestors.

Over 100 supporters gathered outside Meddygfa’r Sarn in Pontyates to show their opposition to the proposed closure of the GP surgery on 24th February. Image: Papur y Cwm

What the board was told — and what the evidence showed

Through it all, the working group was doing something else: it was lodging Freedom of Information requests. And what those requests uncovered became the most uncomfortable part of the entire process for Hywel Dda.

The group’s 12-point analysis, published in May, set out a consistent pattern: a board that had been given a selective and incomplete picture before being asked to approve closure. The issue, the analysis concluded, was not that the information presented was false — it was that key context had been omitted, alternatives had not been explored, and risks had not been fully assessed.

On the building. The board was told the premises were not fit for purpose, citing flood risk and space limitations. The FOI documents showed 82% of the building had been rated satisfactory or better, with a projected lifespan of around 40 years and backlog maintenance costs of approximately £94,000 over ten years. No alternative premises had been explored. No relocation feasibility assessment had been carried out. No comparison had been made between upgrade and closure costs.

On the workforce. The board was told the practice was entirely locum-dependent with no Clinical Lead and no salaried GPs. The FOI documents showed that the same locums had been working at Meddygfa’r Sarn for years, providing what the health board’s own records described as continuity of care. The surgery has been without a salaried GP since February 2025 — but no targeted recruitment campaign had been run for the surgery specifically in nine years. The case was framed around symptoms, not the absence of effort to address them.

On the finances. The board was told closure would cost an estimated £131,000 plus IT and support payments. What it was not told was the cost of any alternative — because none had been calculated. No comparison with other practices. No cost-per-patient benchmarking. No financial modelling of a merger, a refurbishment, or sustained recruitment.

On performance. The board heard about governance concerns and prescribing risks. It did not hear that patient satisfaction stood at 8.02 out of 10, that 74% of patients were satisfied with access, that staff appraisal compliance was 100% and core training compliance 95.3%.

On patient impact. The board was not given a travel time analysis. No equality impact assessment. No rural deprivation analysis. No safeguarding plan for vulnerable patients. The full Equality Impact Assessment was only completed in April 2026, three months after the original recommendation — and only after patients at the Pontyberem drop-in event in March explicitly demanded one.

On clinical risk. The Clinical Assurance Framework inspection — the formal governance review — had not been completed at the time the closure recommendation was made.

On strategy. While the board was being asked to close Meddygfa’r Sarn, Hywel Dda’s own new strategy, “A Healthier Mid and West Wales”, was telling patients it would deliver “more care closer to where you live by providing services in the community first” and that where services changed location, the board would “make sure they remain safe, sustainable and based on clinical standards.”

On alternatives. Hybrid models — retaining Meddygfa’r Sarn with a shared workforce. Targeted investment. Phased improvement. Enhanced recruitment. Community-based redesign. None of these had been meaningfully explored in the case presented to the board in January.

Hywel Dda’s own April 2026 Equality Impact Assessment — produced after the FOI material had become public — scored the impact of dispersal on older people, disabled patients and those facing socio-economic deprivation at -9 out of a possible -25. That is a moderate negative impact, rated as likely to occur.

Residents packed into a public meeting to discuss the future of Meddygfa’r Sarn GP surgery. (Credit: Papur y Cwm)

The six questions Hywel Dda has not answered

On 12 May, Swansea Bay News put six detailed questions to the health board based on the FOI analysis. The questions asked whether the correct process had been followed, whether equality assessments and travel time modelling had been completed before January’s meeting, and whether the board had a full and balanced picture of the evidence before it.

The health board asked for an extension until its board paper was published on 21 May. The response, when it arrived this afternoon, pointed us to the published board paper and to a corporate press release in which Chief Operating Officer Andrew Carruthers thanked everyone who had shared their views during the engagement period.

None of our six questions were answered directly.

957 voices

The engagement period that followed the board’s January decision was extensive. By the time it closed on 6 April, 957 patients had completed the questionnaire — supplemented by six emails, four telephone calls and three letters. More than 350 people attended three public drop-in events held in Pontyates, Pontyberem and Carway.

The feedback was overwhelmingly negative. Transport was the dominant concern at every event. Of those who responded to the questionnaire, 21% currently walk to Meddygfa’r Sarn. Around one in three respondents identified as disabled. A return taxi from Pontyates to Pontyberem was quoted at around £15. Some patients described bus journeys that would require travelling first into Carmarthen and then back out — a process that could mean waits of up to 90 minutes at the bus stop.

The Pontyates event, on 24 February, attracted 215 people. Carway, added only after councillors pushed for a third event, drew 89.

The health board has costed a community transport service through Dolen Teifi at between £19,000 and £85,000 a year, depending on hours and vehicle type. What it has not costed, despite repeated campaign requests, is the alternative — investment in the existing surgery and a sustained recruitment campaign for a salaried GP.

Independent Senedd Candidate, Carl Peters-Bond with Meddygfa’r Sarn campaign organiser Clare Treharne

The campaigners’ view

Clare Treharne, who leads the working group, said this week that the FOI evidence raised serious concerns about whether the original closure recommendation was fair, balanced, or fully informed. The case for closing the surgery, she said, was built on selective information with key evidence missing or incomplete.

The working group has submitted a 52-page report and a separate sustainability document to the health board ahead of Thursday’s meeting. A clinical team — understood to comprise a GP and a pharmacist — has separately submitted a bid to take over the running of the surgery.

The group’s other prominent spokesperson, retired nurse Janet Knott, served the NHS for 52 years, much of it in the Gwendraeth valley. She has warned that the dispersal plan would place enormous strain on receiving practices that are already overstretched.

Staff from Meddygfa’r Sarn surgery in Pontyates show their support for the campaign to keep the practice open. Image: Papur y Cwm

The political dimension

The story has crossed every party line. Independent Senedd candidate Carl Peters-Bond joined the campaign in April. In May, the independent candidate and surgery patient called on Hywel Dda to scrap the closure plan following the FOI revelations. The Green Party candidate called for an independent review of the process, citing the missing equality assessment.

Local councillors have issued a joint statement calling for any decision to be postponed, saying that, as local representatives, they have no confidence in the process Hywel Dda has conducted. They have called on the board to put patients before savings.

Campaigners have also written to the six newly elected Senedd Members for the Caerfyrddin constituency, requesting a meeting to put last-minute pressure on the board. First Minister Rhun ap Iorwerth, interviewed on the BBC the day after being sworn in, pledged that his government would prioritise primary care and redress the funding imbalance that has grown in recent years.

Plaid Cymru Senedd Members Adam Price and Cefin Campbell join campaigners from the Save Our Surgery group in Pontyates (Credit: Papur y Cwm)

What the board will be asked to do on Thursday

If members agree to the procurement route, a new Vacant Practice Panel will eventually be convened to consider the outcome of that process and make a fresh recommendation. The board paper proposes skipping reconvening a Vacant Practice Panel before procurement begins, in the interests of expediency.

Hywel Dda’s recommendation is that board members:

— note the feedback from the public engagement period
— note the informal expressions of interest received during the engagement period
— agree that a procurement process should be undertaken to test the feasibility of an independent contractor taking on a GMS or APMS contract for Meddygfa’r Sarn

What the recommendation does not propose is the option many in the community have been asking for from the beginning: a proper, targeted, sustained recruitment campaign for a salaried GP at Meddygfa’r Sarn, supported by investment in the existing building.

The Public Board meeting takes place at Yr Egin, Carmarthen, from 9.30am on Thursday 28 May. It will be broadcast live on Hywel Dda’s YouTube channel. Campaigners are urging supporters to attend in person. Further information is available from the Save Meddygfa’r Sarn Working Group at [email protected].

Related stories from Swansea Bay News

FOI reveals no specific recruitment attempts for Sarn surgery GP in 9 years as decision day looms
The Freedom of Information disclosures that reshaped the campaign — and the questions they raised.

Pontyates residents form human chain around surgery in ‘Cwtsho’r Sarn’ solidarity event
Hundreds turned out to wrap the building in a show of community support.

MS raises alarm over Pontyates GP closure as fears grow surgery is being ‘wound down’
Lee Waters MS wrote to Hywel Dda demanding answers in February.

Future of Pontyates GP surgery in doubt as health board considers dispersing all 4,300 patients
Our original report from 22 January 2026, when the closure threat first emerged.

#featured #GPSurgeryClosure #homepage #HywelDdaUniversityHealthBoard #MeddygfaRSarn #Pontyates #PontyatesDoctorsSurgery

PONTYATES: Green Party candidate calls for independent review of Meddygfa’r Sarn closure process — citing missing equality assessment and lack of pre-consultation engagement

A Green Party candidate has called on Hywel Dda University Health Board to pause its decision on the future of Meddygfa’r Sarn in Pontyates – warning that a full Equality Impact Assessment has not yet been completed, and that no community engagement was undertaken before a preferred option was identified.

Michael Willis, Green Party candidate for Carmarthenshire in Thursday’s Senedd election, made the call following the Freedom of Information disclosure obtained by the Save Meddygfa’r Sarn Working Group and reported by Swansea Bay News, which he says raises serious questions about whether every reasonable option has been exhausted before recommending the closure of the surgery.

The FOI disclosure states that no community engagement was undertaken before managed dispersal was identified as the preferred option. It also confirms that an Equality Impact Assessment – intended to examine the impact on older residents, disabled patients, Welsh-speaking patients and those without access to private transport – will not be completed until the 28 May board meeting itself, rather than having informed the recommendation at an earlier stage.

Willis is calling for a full independent review of GP recruitment efforts at the surgery since Hywel Dda took over its management in 2017, alongside publication of all options considered – including incentives, shared roles, training practice status, alternative premises and branch-service models. He is also calling for a capacity assessment of receiving practices before any patient transfer is approved.

“The people of Pontyates deserve more than a closure proposal dressed up as inevitability,” he said. “If the Health Board is relying on recruitment failure as a central reason for dispersing patients, then residents are entitled to see clear evidence of a sustained, targeted and imaginative recruitment effort for this surgery.”

The FOI disclosure revealed that the health board made no targeted attempts to recruit a salaried GP to the practice in nine years – despite citing a lack of recruitment interest as a key reason for recommending closure. The only recruitment activity recorded was a small number of circular letters sent to locums already working across managed practices in Carmarthenshire.

The campaign to save Meddygfa’r Sarn has been running since January, when Hywel Dda first proposed dispersing all 4,300 patients to other surgeries. Campaigners lodged a formal complaint over the consultation process, submitted a 52-page report and sustainability document to the board, and held a human chain around the surgery. Independent candidate and surgery patient Carl Peters-Bond has also called on the board to scrap the closure proposal, describing the board’s recruitment claims as “duplicitous.”

Willis said the issue went beyond a single surgery. “A GP surgery is not simply a building. It is continuity of care, local trust, access for older people, support for families, and a key part of community infrastructure. Once lost, services like this are rarely restored,” he said.

Hywel Dda University Health Board’s position, as set out in its January report, is that the practice is “entirely locum-dependent” and that there has been “little interest in recruitment to salaried roles” – the characterisation that campaigners and candidates dispute.

The health board began an eight-week engagement period on 9 February, running until 6 April, ahead of a board decision expected at Yr Egin in Carmarthen on 28 May. Under the proposal, patients would be transferred to nearby practices including Coalbrook Surgery in Pontyberem, Meddygfa Minafon in Kidwelly, and some practices in Llanelli.

Willis said managed dispersal should be treated as a last resort rather than a default. “Hywel Dda should pause the process, publish the full evidence base, and work with residents on a credible rescue plan before any irreversible decision is taken,” he said.

The final decision on the future of Meddygfa’r Sarn will be made at the Hywel Dda University Health Board meeting on Wednesday 28 May at Yr Egin in Carmarthen.

Our Meddygfa’r Sarn coverage

FOI reveals no specific recruitment attempts for Sarn surgery GP in 9 years
Our original report on the recruitment revelation.

Independent candidate and surgery patient calls on Hywel Dda to scrap closure
Carl Peters-Bond’s reaction to the FOI revelation.

Residents submit 52-page report as confidence in health board process collapses
How the Save Meddygfa’r Sarn Working Group has fought the closure proposal.

#Carmarthenshire #GreenParty #HywelDdaNHS #HywelDdaUniversityHealthBoard #MeddygfaRSarn #PontIets #Pontyates #PontyatesDoctorsSurgery #SeneddElection2026

PONTYATES: Independent candidate and surgery patient calls on Hywel Dda to scrap Meddygfa’r Sarn closure after FOI recruitment revelation

An independent Senedd candidate who is himself a patient at Meddygfa’r Sarn has called on Hywel Dda University Health Board to scrap its recommendation to close the Pontyates surgery – after Freedom of Information documents revealed the board made no targeted attempts to recruit a salaried GP to the practice in nine years.

Carl Peters-Bond, Mayor of Kidwelly and independent candidate for Sir Gaerfyrddin, said the FOI revelation directly contradicted the impression given in the health board’s own January report, which cited a lack of recruitment interest as a key reason for recommending closure.

“This is duplicitous, beyond fairness, and misleading behaviour from Hywel Dda,” he said. “They cited a lack of recruitment interest as justification for closing this surgery – but they never actually tried to recruit anyone. Sending a circular letter to locums already on the books is not a recruitment campaign. Those responsible for presenting this to the board in the way they did need to be held to account.”

The FOI documents, obtained by the Save Meddygfa’r Sarn Working Group and reported by Swansea Bay News last week, show that since Hywel Dda took over management of the practice in 2017, the only recruitment activity undertaken was a small number of circular letters sent to locums already working across managed practices – asking whether any wished to take up salaried roles. No targeted recruitment campaign was ever run specifically for Meddygfa’r Sarn.

Peters-Bond also raised concerns about the consultation process itself, which he said had failed to ask the right question. “The health board’s consultation only asked people about the impact of the closure – not whether the closure should happen at all,” he said. “That is not a fair or genuine consultation. In light of what these FOI documents have revealed, I am calling on health board bosses to scrap the closure proposal entirely and go back to the drawing board.”

The campaign to save Meddygfa’r Sarn has been running since January 2026, when the health board first proposed dispersing all 4,300 patients to other surgeries. Hundreds of residents protested and the council demanded action in February as fears grew the outcome had been predetermined by the health board. Campaigners held a human chain around the surgery in February and lodged a formal complaint over the consultation process in March.

The working group subsequently submitted a 52-page report and sustainability document to the board alongside a new clinical proposal for the surgery’s future. A temporary lifeline was granted when the board delayed its final decision in January – but that decision is now due on 28 May.

Hywel Dda University Health Board’s January report stated that the practice was “entirely locum-dependent” and that there had been “little interest in recruitment to salaried roles” – the characterisation that Peters-Bond disputes.

The final decision on the future of Meddygfa’r Sarn will be made at the Hywel Dda University Health Board meeting on Wednesday 28 May at Yr Egin in Carmarthen.

Our Meddygfa’r Sarn coverage

PONTYATES: FOI reveals no specific recruitment attempts for Sarn surgery GP in 9 years
Our original report on the FOI revelation that prompted this reaction.

Senedd candidate joins campaign to save Meddygfa’r Sarn as pressure on health board mounts
Our previous coverage of Carl Peters-Bond’s involvement in the campaign.

Future of Pontyates GP surgery in doubt as health board considers dispersing all 4,300 patients
Our original report when the closure threat first emerged.

#CarlPetersBond #HywelDdaNHS #MeddygfaRSarn #PontIets #Pontyates #PontyatesDoctorsSurgery #SeneddElection2026

PONTYATES: FOI reveals no specific recruitment attempts for Sarn surgery GP in 9 years as decision day looms

The campaign to save a rural GP surgery in Carmarthenshire has uncovered what campaigners say is a damning revelation – that the health board managing Meddygfa’r Sarn in Pontyates made no specific attempts to recruit a salaried GP to the practice for nine years, despite citing a lack of interest as a key reason for its closure recommendation.

Freedom of Information documents obtained by the Save Meddygfa’r Sarn Working Group reveal that since Hywel Dda University Health Board took over management of the practice in 2017, the only recruitment efforts made were circular letters sent to locums already working across managed practices in 2021, 2023 and 2024 – asking whether any wished to take up salaried roles. The surgery has been without a salaried GP since February 2025, and apart from one GP recruited in 2021 who left the same year, no targeted recruitment campaign has ever been run for Meddygfa’r Sarn specifically.

Campaigners say this directly contradicts an impression given in the health board’s own January report on the surgery, which stated: “The Practice is entirely locum-dependent currently and there has been little interest in recruitment to salaried roles.” The FOI documents suggest that limited interest may have been a consequence of limited effort.

Jane Nicholas, speaking on behalf of the working group, said the health board’s approach showed a lack of vision. “Despite not having any salaried GPs at present, we do feel well supported by the surgery,” she said. “We have continuity of care as many of the locums have worked at Meddygfa’r Sarn for years. It’s a great team and we really value being able to access care locally and get an appointment when needed. Being seen promptly at the local surgery keeps patients away from A&E which is a cost saving in the long run. The Health Board’s recommendation shows a lack of vision and forward planning.”

The FOI documents also reveal that Meddygfa’r Sarn is far from alone in its reliance on locums. Minafon surgery in Kidwelly – which would receive approximately 1,000 extra patients under the proposed dispersal plan – is itself 83% reliant on locum staff. Other managed practices are between 29% and 77% reliant on locums, raising serious questions about the capacity of receiving surgeries to absorb thousands of displaced patients overnight.

Retired nurse Janet Knott, who served the NHS for 52 years including many years in the Gwendraeth area, warned that the proposed mass dispersal of patients would place enormous strain on receiving surgeries and their staff. “The Health Board’s plans would see thousands of patients transferred overnight. That is very worrying for patients but also for the staff at the other surgeries, particularly the reception staff, who would have to field calls from many more anxious patients,” she said. She added that the people of the Gwendraeth valley felt “let down and discriminated against” by the proposals.

Janet and Jane spoke to Dylan Ebenezer on Radio Cymru’s Dros Frecwast programme on 23 April – the same day the S4C party leaders debate took place at Yr Egin in Carmarthen, with health and NHS spending taking centre stage. Following the interview, Janet surprised Dylan by revealing a personal connection – she had supported his mother-in-law during her time in Glangwili’s maternity unit after giving birth to his wife, and Dylan had long heard stories of a nurse named Janet who had been particularly supportive. He insisted on a photograph to share with his wife.

The working group has submitted a 52-page report and separate sustainability document to the health board, alongside a new proposal from a clinical team to provide services at Meddygfa’r Sarn. Hundreds of patients attended three public engagement events or responded in writing during the consultation process.

Campaigners are concerned that the FOI documents – which arrived too late to inform their formal submission – may contain further significant revelations. They are continuing to work through the material.

The surgery serves patients across the Gwendraeth valley, and campaigners say its closure would leave a vulnerable rural community without accessible local primary care, pushing patients towards already-stretched services in Llanelli and Carmarthen.

Hywel Dda University Health Board has been approached for comment.

A final decision on the future of Meddygfa’r Sarn will be made at the Hywel Dda University Health Board meeting on Wednesday 28 May at Yr Egin, Carmarthen. Campaigners will be attending in person, and the proceedings can be followed online – details will be published on the Hywel Dda website.

Our Meddygfa’r Sarn coverage

Senedd candidate joins campaign to save Meddygfa’r Sarn as pressure on health board mounts
Political pressure grows as the Senedd election campaign focuses attention on the surgery’s future.

Campaigners lodge formal complaint over Pontyates GP surgery closure plans
The working group escalates its challenge to the health board’s process.

Hundreds protest to save Pontyates GP surgery as council demands action
Community anger spills over as councillors demand the health board think again.

Residents step up fight to save Pontyates GP surgery as confidence in health board process collapses
The campaign intensifies as trust in the consultation process breaks down.

Pontyates surgery gets temporary lifeline as health board delays final decision
A stay of execution – but the final decision is now set for 28 May.

Future of Pontyates GP surgery in doubt as health board considers dispersing all 4,300 patients
Our original report when the closure threat first emerged.

#GPRecruitment #HywelDdaNHS #HywelDdaUniversityHealthBoard #MeddygfaRSarn #Pontyates #PontyatesDoctorsSurgery

PONTYATES SURGERY: Senedd candidate Carl Peters-Bond joins campaign to save Meddygfa’r Sarn as pressure on health board mounts

Independent Senedd candidate and Kidwelly Town Mayor Carl Peters-Bond has publicly backed the campaign to save Meddygfa’r Sarn in Pontyates, joining a growing list of political figures demanding that Hywel Dda University Health Board halt its closure plans.

Peters-Bond, who is standing as the Sir Gaerfyrddin and Kidwelly constituency candidate at the upcoming Senedd election, is himself a patient at the surgery. He met with campaign co-ordinator Clare Treharne outside the practice to hear residents’ concerns and discuss the growing frustration with the process being led by the health board.

He said the surgery was far more than a building to the people who relied on it. “Pontyates Surgery is not just a building — it is a lifeline. For many residents, especially older people and those without transport, losing this surgery would mean losing access to basic healthcare. That is simply unacceptable,” he said.

Peters-Bond said he had been struck by the strength of feeling among patients and campaigners. “I’ve spoken to patients, campaigners and local councillors. The message is the same every time: people feel ignored, sidelined and worn down by a process that seems designed to reach a predetermined outcome. This community deserves better,” he said.

Independent Senedd Candidate, Carl Peters-Bond with Meddygfa’r Sarn campaign organiser Clare Treharne

The campaign to save Meddygfa’r Sarn has gathered considerable momentum in recent months. Hundreds of residents have attended protest events, a petition has passed 1,000 signatures, a human chain was formed around the building, and campaigners have lodged a formal complaint about the way the consultation process has been handled. Local councillors have repeatedly said they have lost confidence in the health board’s approach.

Peters-Bond warned that closure would have knock-on consequences across the wider rural healthcare system. Patients dispersed to other practices would pile pressure onto already overstretched surgeries, travel times for appointments would increase sharply for those without cars, and vulnerable residents would face new barriers to accessing even routine care.

He said the pattern of rural communities losing services first was one that had to end. “Rural communities like Pontyates are always the first to lose services and the last to see investment. This pattern has to end. Healthcare should be based on need, not postcode,” he said.

He is calling on Hywel Dda University Health Board to halt the closure process, publish transparent evidence for any proposed changes, engage meaningfully with residents and campaigners, and commit to maintaining GP provision in Pontyates.

Carl Peters-Bond speaking with Meddygfa’r Sarn campaign organiser Clare Treharne

“People have lost trust in this process — and with good reason. The health board must reset its approach, listen to the community and guarantee that GP services will remain in Pontyates,” Peters-Bond said.

Hywel Dda University Health Board has not yet responded to the latest calls for the process to be paused.

Swansea Bay News coverage of the Pontyates Surgery campaign

Campaigners lodge formal complaint over Pontyates GP surgery closure plans
How residents escalated their concerns after losing confidence in the health board’s process.

Hundreds protest to save Pontyates GP surgery as council demands action
The human chain, the packed public meetings and the growing political pressure.

Health board to hold extra public meeting on Pontyates GP surgery closure plans
How the health board responded to the campaign — and why campaigners remained unconvinced.

Council demands action on Pontyates surgery closure as councillors warn of ‘predetermined outcome’
The full story of the council motion and the accusations against the health board.

#CarlPetersBond #HywelDda #HywelDdaUniversityHealthBoard #Kidwelly #MeddygfaRSarn #Pontyates #PontyatesDoctorsSurgery

Campaigners lodge formal complaint over Pontyates GP surgery closure plans

The move comes as the health board’s eight-week public engagement exercise draws to a close, with the Save Our Surgery group claiming the consultation has been flawed and lacking transparency.

In a letter sent to Hywel Dda’s Chief Executive Philip Kloer, campaigners outlined what they describe as “numerous concerns” about the integrity of the decision-making process. The complaint has also been shared with Welsh Government Health Secretary Jeremy Miles, patient advocacy body Llais, and local elected representatives.

Clare Treharne, who leads the campaign group, said residents had engaged with the consultation despite ongoing concerns.

“Since it was belatedly announced, we have encouraged the community to actively engage in the consultation exercise, but grave concerns remain about the way the Health Board has conducted this process and we felt it was our duty to record those formally.”

Strong turnout at public meetings

The complaint follows two public drop-in sessions held as part of the consultation.

A meeting at Pontyates Welfare Hall saw large crowds attend, with some residents forced to queue outside to voice their concerns. A second session in Pontyberem also drew steady attendance, including patients from Coalbrook Surgery, which could see a significant increase in patients if the closure goes ahead.

Residents raised concerns over whether neighbouring surgeries would be able to cope with an influx of patients, with fears over long waiting times and limited public transport options for those without access to a car.

Residents packed into a public meeting to discuss the future of Meddygfa’r Sarn GP surgery. (Credit: Papur y Cwm)

Jane Nicholas, who attended both sessions, said she remained unconvinced by the health board’s justification for closing the surgery.

“They pointed to the lack of salaried GPs at Meddygfa’r Sarn, but when challenged, they admitted that only one permanent doctor is employed at Minafon surgery in Kidwelly for twice the number of patients.

“They were also unable to reassure us about capacity at Coalbrook… that will not be sufficient to serve 3,000 extra patients transferring all at once.”

Concerns over report accuracy

Other residents have challenged claims made about the condition of the surgery building.

Angharad Rees, who works in Pontyates, questioned suggestions that the site is at risk of flooding.

“The surgery was purposely built on a raised platform to mitigate any risk,” she said, adding that landlords had not been informed of alleged defects mentioned in the report.

She also disputed suggestions that the building’s lease posed an issue, claiming the current owners are willing to renew it on existing terms.

Extra consultation session added

Amid growing concern, an additional drop-in session has now been scheduled at Carway Village Hall on March 31, running from 1pm to 6.30pm.

Campaigners and local councillors are urging residents to attend and complete the official survey before it closes on April 6.

However, the group has criticised the health board’s promotion of the consultation events, claiming they were advertised online only, leaving community volunteers to distribute printed materials locally.

Long-running campaign

The latest developments are the newest chapter in an ongoing row over the future of Meddygfa’r Sarn, which serves around 4,300 patients.

Swansea Bay News has previously reported on widespread community opposition, including protests, a human chain around the surgery, and warnings from councillors that confidence in the process has “collapsed”.

Campaigners say the fight will continue as they push for the surgery to remain open.

Related coverage: Pontyates GP surgery row

Future of Pontyates GP surgery in doubt
Plans to disperse 4,300 patients spark concern across the community.

Community backlash grows over closure fears
Residents warn losing the surgery would be a “massive blow”.

Hundreds protest to save Pontyates surgery
Large crowds gather as pressure mounts on decision-makers.

Councillors lose confidence in process
Local leaders raise serious concerns about how decisions are being made.

Eight-week consultation launched
Residents invited to have their say on the surgery’s future.

#CarmarthenshireNews #communityCampaign #GPSurgeryClosure #HywelDdaHealthBoard #Kidwelly #localHealthcare #MeddygfaRSarn #NHSWales #Pontyates #Pontyberem #PublicConsultation #SaveOurSurgery #WelshHealthNews

RURAL SCHOOLS UNDER THREAT: Carmarthenshire communities face ‘piecemeal closures’ as Council defends tough decisions

The future of education in Carmarthenshire’s villages is hanging in the balance, with parents and residents expressing deep concern over the council’s strategy for its smaller schools.

The latest flashpoint is the closure of Ysgol Llansteffan, a decision made by Carmarthenshire County Council at its meeting on Wednesday, March 4, 2026. The school is set to close its doors on August 31, 2026, with pupils transferring to Ysgol Llangain.

This move has been met with significant local opposition from parents and campaigners who have fought to save the school, which has now seen a statutory closure notice issued by the local authority.

Carmarthenshire County Council has defended its decision, stating that Ysgol Llansteffan was identified for discontinuation based on criteria within its Modernising Education Programme. The council cited factors such as “extremely low pupil numbers,” “high surplus places,” and a “high number of pupils living within catchment attending other schools” as key reasons for the closure.

Furthermore, the council highlighted that pupil projections suggest there is little likelihood of numbers increasing dramatically over the next few years and pointed to a projected deficit budget at the end of this financial year for Ysgol Llansteffan.

Cllr Glynog Davies, Carmarthenshire County Council’s Cabinet Member for Education, expressed the difficulty of the decision, stating: “The decision to close Ysgol Llansteffan is difficult for everyone involved and it is, with sadness, that this has been agreed.”

He added that following a robust process, the discontinuation of Ysgol Llansteffan will enable the school to combine with Ysgol Llangain to provide safer staffing, the wider sharing of Welsh language among pupils and a more sustainable rural community.

However, this decision has not appeased all parties. The Wales Greens have been vocal in their criticism, warning that dozens of rural schools could be at risk under the council’s current approach. They argue that the council is responding to demographic changes with “piecemeal closures” rather than a coherent, long-term strategy to sustain rural education.

This concern is amplified by the fact that the council has also recently concluded consultations on proposals to shut down Ysgol Y Fro and Ysgol Meidrim, sparking fears among campaigners that even more rural schools could face closure this year.

Indeed, Ysgol Llansteffan now marks the seventh school to close its doors in Carmarthenshire since 2002, a tally accumulated under successive Plaid Cymru and Welsh Labour administrations, according to the Wales Greens.

The issue of rural school closures is far from new in Carmarthenshire, with a history of contentious proposals and strong community resistance. Past plans for Mynyddygarreg School and Pontyates School have faced significant opposition, with some proposals even being put on hold due to public outcry.

Leading the charge for the Greens is Councillor Rob James, who has accused the ruling parties of failing to protect rural education. Councillor James stated: “Since being in power in Carmarthenshire, Plaid Cymru have failed to prevent the steady loss of schools in our rural communities.”

Councillor James’s background adds a unique layer to the debate. He previously served as the leader of the Labour group on Carmarthenshire Council and even stood for the party in the last Senedd election.

His recent defection to the Green Party has seen him transition from leading the official opposition to becoming the first Green county councillor in Carmarthenshire. This shift in perspective comes after years of observing the council’s long-standing policies from within the Labour group.

Councillor James further criticised the council, adding: “This week’s decision to close Ysgol Llansteffan, while continuing consultations on Ysgol Y Fro and Ysgol Meidrim, shows clearly that they do not have a long-term plan to protect rural education in our county.”

The Wales Greens are now formally calling for a comprehensive, long-term rural schools strategy for Carmarthenshire. Their focus is on actively sustaining village schools and providing robust support to communities grappling with demographic shifts, rather than what they perceive as reactive closures.

They contend that the next Welsh Government and Carmarthenshire Council must do more to protect rural schools, warning that without a clear strategy, the fabric of our rural communities will continue to be slowly eroded.

This ongoing debate underscores the tension between the council’s need to manage resources in the face of changing demographics and the deeply held community desire to preserve local educational institutions.

#Carmarthenshire #CarmarthenshireCouncil #CarmarthenshireCountyCouncil #CllrRobJames #education #GreenParty #LocalCouncil #Mynyddygarreg #Pontyates #RobJames #ruralSchools #SchoolClosures #smallSchools #WalesGreens #YsgolLlansteffan #YsgolMeidrim #YsgolYFro

Health board to hold extra public meeting on controversial Pontyates GP surgery closure plans

The health board has confirmed it will hold a drop-in event at Carway Hall on Tuesday 31 March, between 2pm and 6.30pm, for patients and residents to share their views on the proposed closure of Meddygfa’r Sarn.

The announcement comes amid an ongoing eight-week engagement period, which was launched after the health board voted in January to seek feedback on a recommendation to disperse the surgery’s 4,300 patients to neighbouring practices.

That proposal has sparked a furious backlash from the local community, with hundreds of people attending protest meetings and councillors demanding the health board halt the closure plans.

In a statement, the health board said the surgery has faced what it describes as “ongoing and significant staffing challenges” and currently has no permanently employed GPs. The board also claims the building is small and offers limited facilities.

It says that a Vacant Practice Panel reviewed the options and recommended that the most sustainable long-term solution would be for patients to be transferred to their nearest neighbouring practice.

The health board added this may include Coalbrook Surgery in Pontyberem, Meddygfa Minafon in Kidwelly, or, for some patients, practices in Llanelli.

Andrew Carruthers, Chief Operating Officer at Hywel Dda University Health Board, said the extra meeting was a chance for more people to have their say.

“We’re pleased to offer this additional opportunity in Carway to ensure more people, particularly those in surrounding communities, have the chance to speak directly with us and share their views about what the proposal means for them.”

The health board has confirmed the engagement period runs until 6 April.

It said all feedback will be collated and presented to the board ahead of its meeting on 28 May, when a final decision is expected to be made.

The health board also confirmed that Meddygfa’r Sarn will remain open as usual during the engagement period.

Patients can also provide feedback by completing the questionnaire posted to their home address or online at haveyoursay.hduhb.wales.nhs.uk, by calling 0300 303 8322 (option 5), or by emailing [email protected].

#Carway #GP #GPSurgery #GPSurgeryClosure #HywelDdaUniversityHealthBoard #Kidwelly #MeddygfaRSarn #NHS #Pontyates #Pontyberem