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Live Reporting

Chris Brown and Anna Browning

All times stated are UK

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  1. That's all from BBC Local Live for Oxfordshire

    Time to head out and dodge the thunderstorms. We wish you a safe and, hopefully, dry journey home. 

    We'll be back with waterproofs at the ready from 08:00 tomorrow. Join us then.

  2. Latest headlines: Witney woman loses landmark human rights battle against home repossession

    Chris Brown

    BBC News

    Here are your top stories this evening: 

  3. Weather: Scattered, heavy and thundery showers

    BBC Weather

    Scattered thundery showers continuing into the evening, before easing from most places overnight. 

    Some clearer spells developing, allowing a few mist and fog patches to form in places, with light winds. Lows of 11C (52F).

    It'll start mainly dry tomorrow, with further scattered showers developing from mid-morning.

    Oxford weather 15 June 2016
  4. Picture perfect church given £10k for roof repairs

    An Oxfordshire church which features in a set of Victorian stereo photographs celebrated by Brian May is to get £10,000 for urgent roof repairs.

    St Margaret of Antioch in Hinton Waldrist
    Image caption: St Margaret of Antioch in Hinton Waldrist

    St Margaret of Antioch in Hinton Waldrist is one of 29 receiving a payout from the National Churches Trust.

    The Queen guitarist has been closely associated with the village near Kingston Bagpuize thanks to hisresearch of the photographer T R Williams, who immortalised the village as a snapshot of a vanishing way of life in the 1850s.

  5. Lightning knocks out power to more than 300 homes

    Lightning struck an electricity substation transformer, knocking out power to 318 homes in the Kennington area, Southern Electric has told us.

    The power went off at 16:20, it adds, saying the company is working to get the power back on.

  6. Timeline of human rights challenge

    • The parents of Fiona McDonald bought a property on Broadway Close, Witney in May 2005 for their daughter to live in
    • They fell into financial difficulties and were unable to meet the repayments in full, and so receivers were appointed in August 2008
    • A repossession notice was served in January 2012
    • A judge at Oxford County Court ruled in April 2013 that a court should not take into account 'proportionality' of Fiona McDonald's circumstances when considering a repossession order
    • An appeal at the Court of Appeal was later dismissed
    • Final appeal to the Supreme Court, the UK's highest court, was unanimously dismissed by five judges today
  7. Human rights defeat 'welcome news for landlords and lenders alike'

    The failure of a legal challenge by Fiona McDonald to her home being repossessed would be a big relief to "landlords and lenders alike", lawyers have said.

    Had her challenge succeeded it could have allowed human rights law to have expanded into disputes between private individuals - and could have had a profound effect on the property market.

    Mark Routley, head of property litigation at law firm TLT, said that had her case succeeded it would have altered fundamental principles of contract law.

    Quote Message: It would likely have been a deterrent to investment in the buy-to-let mortgage market and in property generally. It could have seen the role of the court significantly extended so as to alter the basic principle of freedom of contract. from Mark Routley
    Mark Routley
  8. BreakingPower cuts in Hinksey and Kennington areas

    Power cuts are being reported south of Oxford as electrical storms pass over the city.

    Scottish and Southern Energy are reporting power outages in 42 postcode areas.

    Meanwhile, the traffic lights are reported to be out at the Hinksey Hill Interchange.

  9. BreakingOxfordshire woman loses landmark human rights battle over home repossession

    An Oxfordshire woman who has suffered from psychiatric problems since childhood has lost a landmark human rights battle to stop her home from being repossessed.

    Fiona McDonald, 45, from Witney, faced being evicted from the home her parents had bought for her when they ran into trouble making mortgage payments.

    Her lawyers argued that this breached her human rights, because it was not a proportionate response to the circumstances she faced.

    But judges unanimously dismissed the claim, saying human rights law does not apply in cases between private parties, such as landlords, lenders, homeowners and tenants.

  10. Social news revolution 'will be down to us'

    Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, from the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism in Oxford, has been telling us how the future of news could look like.

    Video content

    Video caption: Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, from The Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism in Oxford

    As a report from his organisation shows social media, particularly Facebook, is where more and more people are accessing news, he says what news is provided in future will depend on what consumers will want.

  11. Latest headlines: Disabled man in legal challenge to care cuts

    Chris Brown

    BBC News

    Here are your mid-afternoon top stories:

  12. Legionnaires' risk hospital to stay open

    The hospital
    Image caption: An NHS spokeswoman said the site's pipework is old, corroded and hot water circulation is poor

    Wantage Community Hospital was scheduled to shut early in summer after raised levels of legionella bacteria were detected in its hot water system.  

    Legionnaires' risk hospital to stay open

    The hospital

    Plans to close an Oxfordshire hospital because of an increased risk of Legionnaires' disease are shelved after pressure from campaigners.

    Read more
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  13. The last green field between Charlton and Crab Hill will also become a housing estate under new plans

    The Herald

    The last green field separating a quiet neighbourhood from a 1,500-home development in Wantage will become a housing estate, new plans have revealed.

  14. Wantage hospital services to stay open after Legionnaires' disease scare

    A midwife-led unit and a physiotherapy service at Wantage Community Hospital will stay open this summer.

    Wantage Community Hospital

    The whole hospital had been due to close temporarily after legionella bacteria was found in the building's pipes

    Quote Message: The highest risk area was the in-patient beds, and we felt it wouldn't be safe to keep them open in the medium term. But for other patients, provided we have appropriate management plans in place, which we believe we do, the risks are much lower and we can continue to offer safe services. from Dominic Hardisty Chief operating officer, Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust
    Dominic HardistyChief operating officer, Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust