Wall-to-wall sunshine. No rain. The fire at Wareham Forest remains out and my deep gratitude to all the firefighters who tackled the fire for days. Apart from many constituency duties, I had two interesting conference calls. The first was with a company that's involved in tidal power, the second was with tourism minister Nigel Huddleston. So far as the first is concerned, the proposal is confidential for business reasons, but I can say the idea is innovative and ticks the green energy box. Mr Huddleston took questions from about 30 of my colleagues, including me, with most of them aimed at opening hospitality businesses as soon as possible. Of course, Swanage, Weymouth and Portland all rely heavily on tourism, a vital contributor to our economy and of course jobs. Mr Huddleston certainly understood our concerns and was doing all he could with Government to help. Meanwhile, the Prime Minister said that a massive system to find people who come into close contact with those infected with coronavirus will start in England on Thursday. Mr Johnson added that it "will change people's lives". The aim of the test and trace system is to help the country out of lock-down, but scientists warned it was not a "magic bullet" and might prevent between 5 and 15 per cent of infections. As the row over Mr Cummings continued, the PM said it was time to "move on". Over in the US, there were violent clashes between police and protesters in the city of Minneapolis following the death of an unarmed black man in police custody. Police fired tear gas and protesters threw rocks and sprayed graffiti on police cars. A video of the death showed George Floyd, 46, groaning, "I can't breathe," as a policeman knelt on his neck.