A row has blown up after a council used money intended to help jobs blackspots to fund a horse show.
Blyth Valley Labour MP Ronnie Campbell (pictured) branded the summer event 'a weekend out for toffs'.
He strongly criticised Northumberland County Council - which is in the midst of making budget cuts totalling £40m over two years - for earmarking £80,000 to stage the high-profile equestrian event.
Parking fees levied on drivers visiting Northumberland towns has emerged as the hottest topic in the initial stages of a major review aimed at developing a county-wide parking strategy.
A progress report on the review reveals hundreds of people have made their views known on whether parking fees should be imposed across the whole county - rather than just in selected towns.
More than 560 people have signed three separate petitions calling for an equal policy across the board, with charges being made in all principal towns.
Families in Northumberland have been spared a 25% increase in the cost of having their garden waste collected this year following a revolt by opposition county councillors.
It was planned to put up the annual charge for the service from £20 to £25 in March - to bring in an extra £60,000 and help the county council achieve tough budget savings.
Now the saving will have to be found elsewhere after Conservative and Labour councillors joined forces to defeat the move at a meeting in County Hall on Wednesday.
There's something, ahem, fishy going on along the North East coast.
Scores of these ferocious- looking fish have been found flapping around on the region's beaches with no apparent explanation.

Fishermen have been left puzzled, schoolchildren think they're finding piranhas and experts in marine life are fascinated.
People living in Seaton Valley will be funding allotments and lighting, through their council tax this year.
Seaton Valley Council has increased its precept after setting its budget for 2010-11 at £79,422.
It means a slight increase in what the council is asking for as its share of council tax, compared to the current year. However, it will mean that a Band A property will still only pay approximately £11 during 2010-11.
A project has been launched to find out if the waters off the Northumberland coast are a secret dolphin stronghold.
The white-beaked dolphin is a little studied species which occurs around the coast of the UK and is vulnerable to the effects of global warming.

It lives in the cold waters of the northern Atlantic and its available habitat is thought to be shrinking.
A cut-price travel scheme for elderly and disabled people who are too frail to use buses looks set to become a victim of tough council budget cuts in Northumberland.
More than 800 vulnerable pensioners across the county use the scheme, which allows them concessionary travel in taxis because they are unable to use other forms of public transport.

They use council-issued vouchers, tokens or passes to pay for taxi trips to the shops, GP and hospital appointments or to visit relatives and friends.
Northumberland Trading Standards is urging people in the county to fight back against the fraudsters this February by taking part in a major campaign.
The Scamnesty 2010 campaign runs from February 1 to 26 and will involve people dropping mail scams they receive through their letterbox into designated Scamnesty boxes which will be placed across Northumberland.
Online scams can also be reported via the virtual Scamnesty bin at www.consumerdirect.gov.uk/scamnesty.
A new £18.4m package of budget cuts is being proposed by council leaders in Northumberland, as they await a crucial Government decision which could potentially leave them having to save a further £10m.
The Liberal Democrat administration at County Hall has drawn up the revised savings for 2010/11 after carrying out public consultations on initial £16m proposals published in November.

They will be discussed by the executive next week - and are based on the assumption the Government will allow the council to capitalise its £10m redundancy costs this year, cushioning the impact on the revenue budget.
A Labour MP is calling for more action to tackle the minority whose anti-social behaviour makes lives a misery for others in Northumberland.
Blyth Valley's Ronnie Campbell is seeking information from Government ministers on the measures available to local councils, the police and law-abiding citizens to address the problems of trouble, nuisance and disorder.
He said: "Despite all the legislation which the Government has put through, and the way official police figures show a big drop in the numbers of actual crimes being committed, I still have a large number of people who tell me that law and order is the biggest problem we all face.






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