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South Bristol Voice Feb 2025

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www.southbristolvoice.co.uk WIDEST CIRCULATION IN SOUTH BRISTOL - 12,000 COPIES OF THIS EDITION FEBRUARY 2025 – Issue 110 FREE EVERY MONTH IN BEDMINSTER, SOUTHVILLE, KNOWLE, TOTTERDOWN, ASHTON, ASHTON VALE & WINDMILL HILL

‘King of Knowle West’ tributes

Tributes paid to ‘king of Knowle West’ Jeff Lovell, former Bristol lord mayor and firefighter COUNCILLORS have paid tribute to the “king of Knowle West” Jeff Lovell at a full council meeting on January 14. The former lord mayor and firefighter died last November aged 72. He served as a Labour councillor for Filwood, and lord mayor of Bristol City Council in 2016. Mr Lovell who began his career at Bedminster Fire Station in 1974, rose through the ranks of Avon Fire Brigade over three decades of service. He retired in 2005 and then sat as a councillor on the Avon Fire Authority for many years. He was first elected as a councillor in 2007, and was also cabinet member for social care during his time at the council, before standing down in 2021. Green Councillor Tony Dyer, leader of the council, said: “He was a fantastic guy, the king of Knowle West. I’m a Hartcliffe boy myself. You can knock on every single door in Knowle West and Hartcliffe and you won’t find someone who has a bad word to say about Jeff Lovell. He was that unique thing: hard-

working, conscientious, honest, transparent and funny. “Nobody described him as a politician, because he wasn’t a politician. He didn’t get involved in party politics stuff. What Jeff wanted to do was serve his community; his devotion to his community stands out. “When I first came into the council, I was very nervous, as a working-class kid with a speech impediment. People like Jeff give encouragement to people like me, Kerry and Kirsty [Bailes and Tait, both councillors for Hartcliffe and Withywood], to put ourselves forward. “Because once you see somebody else doing it, and doing it so well, you start to think ‘maybe my Bristolian accent isn’t that bad; maybe people aren’t going to take the mickey of me and not listen to me’. “I already miss Jeff – he was the epitome of a nice guy, and I’m sure his family misses him so much more than I do.” In his first year as a firefighter, Mr Lovell attended the IRA bombing of Park Street, which he later described as “quite an awakening for a young laddie”. He later worked as an investigative photographer, capturing the aftermath of fires. A

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Food bank support Page 5 Beware fake fuel texts Page 7 Jubilee Pool seeks volunteers Page 19 funeral was held on December 17 at the South Bristol Crematorium, followed by a wake at the Folk House in Whitchurch. Labour Cllr Paul Goggin, another former lord mayor, said: “There’s two words that come to mind when I think of Jeff: love and pride. He was immensely proud of his fire service career, his time as a councillor, and especially his time as lord mayor. In fact, he was buried in his robes, so proud he was that a working class Wester could become Bristol’s first citizen. “Jeff loved the fire service, he loved the Labour Party, he loved his service to the city, he loved

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his fishing, he loved his mates, he loved being lord mayor, he loved his Folk House. But the most important thing to him, always, is his family. “And we were proud and loved him back. His funeral was testament to that: it was standing room only and there was an honour guard from the service. So farewell, Jeff. We’ll miss you mate.” By Alex Seabrook, Local Democracy Reporter


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