Skip to content
DHWNEWS
Menu
  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
Menu

DRCCT Trustees Report and Accounts 2024/25

Posted on December 2, 2025December 3, 2025 by ecwlarcombe

Just to let you know that the DRCCT Trustees Annual Report and Accounts for the financial year 2024/25 have been submitted to the Charity Commission.  Further information and documents can be found on the DRCCT page of the Charity Commission website here

It should be noted that a serious incident report concerning the DRCCT was sent to the Charity Commission by DPC solicitors.  The report itself is undated but probably compiled late November 2025.  You can read the report here and see that it is very similar to a previous Slough Observer newspaper report dated April 2025 that you can find here.  It appears that after seven months of futile effort – some Datchet Parish Councillors (individually named in their own DPC Public Statement here) continue to spend public money promoting the assertion that they control the DRCCT assets.  Furthermore, surely expecting me to appear in Court as a witness on behalf of Datchet Parish Council while simultaneously complaining about my performance and undermining me as a Charity Trustee is an issue waiting to be addressed.  For the record I was first elected to Datchet Parish Council in 1986.  I wonder how my time served compares against that of the named co-opted Councillors?

END

Recent Posts

  • Recent changes to Partnership Funding Policy
  • River Thames Scheme falling further behind
  • Datchet Parish Council election date 26-2-2026?
  • River Thames Scheme Report (under construction)
  • Wraysbury Drain STILL blocked nearly two years after Council decision

DATCHET

The name "Datchet" is thought to be Celtic in origin, and the last part may be related to cet ("wood"). In the Domesday Book it is called "Daceta".lla. Datchet is first mentioned between 990 and 994, when King Ethelred made small grants of land here.

HORTON

The village name "Horton" is a common one in England. It is Old English in origin and derives from the two words horu 'dirt' and tūn 'settlement, farm, estate', presumably meaning 'farm on muddy soil'.In the Domesday Book of 1086 it was recorded as Hortune.

WRAYSBURY

The village name was traditionally spelt Wyrardisbury; it is Anglo Saxon in origin and means 'Wïgrǣd's fort'. Its name is recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086 as Wirecesberie and as Wiredesbur in 1195. The name is seen again as Wyrardesbury in 1422.

©2026 DHWNEWS | Design: Newspaperly WordPress Theme