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Recruitment Weston Super Mare
Tel: 01934 61 22 88
office@changerecruitmentservices.co.uk




A local independent recruitment agency providing Permanent and Temporary recruitment services exclusively to the accountancy and finance community in North Somerset, Somerset and Avon.

“We are determined to build our reputation based on the quality of the people we recommend”


We have been established since April 2006 and now operate two distinct business divisions of Accountancy and Business Support. Specialists in finance and accountancy recruitment, we have become one of the few independent recruitment agencies in the South West to be successfully awarded Audited Status by the Recruitment and Employment Confederation (REC).


We aim to become the accountancy and finance agency of choice, for companies and individuals in the North Somerset, Somerset and Avon area.

To see how we can help please contact us on 01934 612288 or email office@changerecruitmentservices.co.uk




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Change Recruitment Services Limited
Maple House,
Winterstoke Road,
Weston-s-Mare, BS23 3YS

Tel: 01934 61 22 88
Fax: 01934 61 26 51
Email: office@changerecruitment services.co.uk

BBC News

 

Soham killer Ian Huntley is to sue the Prison Service for compensation after his throat was slashed in an attack by a fellow inmate.

British forces say they have seized two compounds in a Taliban stronghold at the start of a fresh bid to push insurgents out of Helmand province.

The founder of Wikileaks rejects US claims he has blood on his hands after releasing leaked documents on the Afghan war.

Many more people will face having to pay back some of the money paid to them as tax credits because of Budget changes, experts say.

A report into Australia's worst bushfires recommends sweeping changes to the way the government responds to natural disasters.

A lack of specialist medics to care for rape victims could be hampering conviction rates, doctors believe.

The new identity of Jon Venables must be kept secret because there is "compelling evidence" of a threat to his safety, a judge says.

Many young people working free as interns may legally be entitled to pay, a report says.

Germany prepares for a memorial service one week after a deadly stampede killed 21 people at the Love Parade dance festival.

Counties appear set to be dropped from postal addresses in future years after complaints about out-of-date names.

Sports presenter Clare Balding makes an official complaint to the Press Complaints Commission over an article which mocked her sexuality.

The fossil of a whale is at the centre of a bizarre customs wrangle at Cairo airport, the BBC's Jon Leyne reports.

A 20-year-old Christian mobile phone shop manager in Florida stops a would-be armed robber by preaching to him.

Andy Turner leads Great Britain's medal haul on the fourth day of the European Championships as he takes gold in the 110m hurdles.

Birthday boy James Anderson produces a superb bowling display to put England on top in the first Test against Pakistan at Trent Bridge.

Bristol City sign England goalkeeper David James following his release from Portsmouth.

Red Bull appear to be in control as McLaren struggle during second practice for Sunday's Hungarian Grand Prix.

Pat Richards kicks 10 points as Wigan move one step closer to the Super League leader's shield with victory over defending champions Leeds.

A coroner raises ongoing safety fears as an inquest jury blames a points failure for the 2002 Potters Bar train crash, in which seven died.

A Romanian man and a woman are jailed for 30 months for forcing six children, the youngest aged two, to beg on London's streets.

A toddler drowned after falling into a garden pond during a visit to a house in Edinburgh, it has emerged.

The grounding of flights because of volcanic ash cost an airports operator £45,000 each day air services were disrupted.

The widow of a man believed to have been killed by the IRA in 1981 said she felt sad but relieved that her husband's remains appeared to have been found.

A Catholic bishop calls for an independent inquiry into the deaths of 11 civilians killed by the Army in Ballymurphy in west Belfast in 1971.

A nine-year-old girl from Wales has died in a rafting accident while on holiday in Turkey.

Hundreds of mourners attend the funeral of a "brave, courageous and loyal" soldier killed in Afghanistan.

Three Kenyans are charged with the murders of 76 people killed when bombs exploded as they watched the World Cup on TV in Kampala, Uganda.

A UN panel adds the Florida Everglades and Madagascar's tropical rainforest to a list of world heritage sites at risk.

At least 15 people die at a mine in northern China, as a suspected explosives store blows up.

Search teams in north-east China are still searching for thousands of barrels of toxic chemicals washed into a major river by flooding.

Forest fires kill at least 23 people in central Russia, while a forecast of heavy rain brings relief to Moscow.

Greece will use military vehicles to restore fuel supplies cut by a lorry drivers' strike, the government says.

Colombia's Farc rebel group issues a call for dialogue with the new government after Juan Manuel Santos's election as president.

A gay couple become the first to marry in Argentina under a new law allowing same-sex unions.

Syria's president and the Saudi king call on Lebanon's rival factions to avoid turning to violence amid mounting political tensions in the country.

Israel launches air strikes into the Gaza Strip, reports say, hours after a Palestinian rocket hit the southern Israeli city of Ashkelon.

Floods caused by heavy monsoon rain kill more than 400 people in Pakistan and Afghanistan, washing away whole villages, roads and bridges.

Five Taliban are removed from a sanctions list by the UN Security Council, a move sought by Kabul to ease rapprochement with insurgents.

US economic growth slowed between April and June, with GDP growing by an annualised rate of 2.4%, the US Commerce Department says.

Former US Vice President Al Gore will not face charges over claims he assaulted a masseuse in an Oregon hotel room in 2006.

BA reveals a steep quarterly loss of £164m after being hit by cabin crew strikes and disruption caused by the volcanic ash cloud.

Northwest Airlines will plead guilty and pay a $38m fine for fixing air-cargo prices, the US justice department says.

Government plans to limit the number of skilled foreign workers allowed into the UK are criticised by the Lord Mayor of London.

The intelligence on Iraq's weapons threat was "not very substantial", former deputy prime minister Lord Prescott says.

Merging all tax credits and benefits into a single payment is one option being considered by Iain Duncan Smith in a "radical" welfare shake-up.

Three ex-Labour MPs and an ex-Tory peer lose appeals over a ruling that they are not protected by parliamentary privilege from prosecution over expenses fraud allegations.

Calcium supplements taken by many older people could be increasing their risk of a heart attack, research shows.

The right of women to choose whether they have home births is being questioned by a leading medical journal.

A father persuades the NHS to give his sick daughter a "miracle" drug he found on the internet.

The Education Secretary insists there no is rush for schools in England to become academies, after criticism over the number of schools coming forward.

Plans to reform A-levels could put students off maths and lead to university department closures, an academic body warns.

More than 150 top schools in England have applied to become academies, government documents show.

Owners of mobile phones are being asked to test the security of their network to see if enough is being done to stop eavesdropping.

Newsbeat's had an exclusive look at new training being given to UK soldiers at the Royal School of Artillery in Wiltshire.

Security researcher Ron Bowes tells BBC News why he collected and published the personal details of 100m Facebook users.

The largest wildlife census of its kind conducted in Chernobyl reveals evidence of mammals declining in the exclusion zone.

Land in the north of Chile is "ready" for another major earthquake, say researchers, adding that authorities did not act on previous warnings.

The incoming BP chief executive has said it is time to scale back some parts of the oil spill clean-up in the Gulf of Mexico.

Comedienne and chat show host Ellen DeGeneres is leaving American Idol after one season on the judging panel.

Ben Shephard bids farewell to GMTV after 10 years telling viewers: "I'm going to miss all of you, every single one of you."

Welsh rock band Bullet For My Valentine scoop two prizes at this year's Kerrang! Awards, including best British group for the third year running.

The Magazine's weekly quiz of the news, 7 days 7 questions - plus the Weekly Bonus Question.

Tug of war, croquet and cricket have all featured at the Olympics. See what else has been in and out over the years.

More women in the developed world are choosing not to have children. So why do others think it's OK to question this decision?

China is struggling with an arduous clean up after the country's worst oil spill, with grim conditions for those involved.

London Mayor Boris Johnson sells the benefits of the London bike hire scheme to the world media.

A Canadian woman has said she played dead in order to escape from a bear during an attack in Montana that left one man dead.

A north London grocery store is committing "wildlife massacre" by selling squirrel meat, an animal welfare group has claimed. Vegetarians International Voice for Animals (Viva) accused a branch of Budgens of supporting a "barbaric and needless cull" of grey squirrels.

More than 400 people have been killed and nearly 400,000 displaced in floods triggered by heavy monsoon rains in northern Pakistan.

Thousands of children in Gaza appear to have broken their own world record for the number of kites flown at the same time, the UN says.

Wild fires have continued to rage in central and western Russia, with more than 20 people now reported to have died.

Hundreds of amateur musicians have set the sights and sounds of Yorkshire to music.

Why Chelsea Clinton continues to fascinate

The sisters who had surgery to combat family cancer threat

Relatives' anger lingers over Potters Bar crash

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Northern Cyprus is a 'haven' for fugitives no longer

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