Teesside and County Durham stories you might have missed

News imageBBC A group of women are dancing in front of trees. They are all wearing headphones.BBC
A silent disco-themed exercise group is going from strength to strength

A couple's 13-year-long battle to tame poisonous weeds along the banks of the River Tees and a woman who quit her career in education to run a silent disco exercise group.

Here are five stories from Teesside and County Durham you might have missed this week.

Councils urged to leave incinerator contract

News imageViridor/Terence O'Rourke An image of what the new facility could look like. It shows several grey blocks with trees and parking outside. Viridor/Terence O'Rourke
Tees Valley Energy Recovery Facility will take waste from seven councils

Durham County Council leader Andrew Husband urged local authorities to exit a contract for a controversial waste incinerator at Teesworks, near Grangetown, Redcar.

He said there was "no appetite" for the Tees Valley Energy Recovery Facility, which once built, is set to burn household waste from seven of north-east England's councils.

Poacher warning

News imageEnvironment Agency Series of cylindrical nets on a pavement. The nets are black and relatively large. There is a yellow bucket in the corner of the photo. Environment Agency
The Environment Agency is asking the public to report anything suspicious in rivers

People were asked to stay on the lookout for poachers after seven crayfish traps were discovered on the River Tees near Barnard Castle.

'Gotta Catch 'Em All'

Exploring the world of Pokémania

Vectis Auctions in Thornaby, Stockton-on-Tees, this year launched a trading card division after a Pokémon card collection sold for £19,000.

Pokémania took the world by storm in the 1990s, and almost three decades later, the fanbase, and the Pokémon Trading Card market, is booming.

Couple praised for battling giant hogweed

News imageTees Rivers Trust A man in his 70s in full protective gear, wearing turquoise gloves, is holding a nozzle spraying a large giant hogweed. The plant has long green leaves. He is wearing a yellow helmet with a visor.Tees Rivers Trust
David Butler got his spraying qualification to battle giant hogweed in 2015

David and Ros Butler, 78 and 76, have spent more than a decade battling giant hogweed on the banks of the Lower Tees.

Poisonous sap from stem hairs can cause severe blistering, which can take months to heal.

Dancing leads to friendship

Woman quits job to run silent disco exercise group

A silent disco-themed exercise group in Hartlepool has proven so popular that its founder left a 26-year-long career in education to run it full-time.

Owner Lyndsay Turner said the friendships formed by the women who attend The Silent Steppers were the "biggest success story" to come from it.

  • The group also has plans to expand, watch them boogie on down here

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