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DETR Proposals




Attention – Off-road Cyclists

Do you think you have nowhere to ride?
Wait until the Department of the
Environment, Transport and the Regions finish stitching us up!







These
proposals affect us all and we ask that everyone reading this release
visit their Member of Parliament. Time is of the essence since we have
heard through the grapevine that the DETR does not intend to wait for the
consultation to finish and want this legislation included in the Queen’s
speech for the upcoming session of Parliament.


These proposals are of benefit to landowners only and will severely
affect what little network available to us. Please download this and send
it to your area’s local newspaper & television.

Above all, please,
if you do nothing else, visit your MP to oppose this. It isn’t much to ask
to safeguard access for all.



For further information contact Lisa Norris

Tel. 01943-435178 or e-mail [email protected]

Please let us know which MP was contacted.


Thanks,

Lisa Norris



Sign our E-petition which will be presented to the government.





National Federation of Bridleway Associations

Press Release



Riders Accuse Government of Sacrificing Rights of Way to
Pacify Landowners for Right to Roam


Last year, the Prime Minister Tony Blair announced the government’s
intention to pass legislation for Right to Roam. He briefly mentioned
improvements for the millions of other recreational access users who are
forced share a scant 10% of the entire rights of way network in the
UK.


In 1998, the Countryside Agency’s issued Rights of Way in the 21st
Century, detailing recommendations needed to succeed where past
legislation failed.The Countryside Agency specifically drew attention to
the lack of facilities for riders & cyclists and the need to rectify
the long-standing problems faced by the UK’s most vulnerable road
users.


The Department of the Environment, Transport and the Regions have
omitted key recommendations which are crucial to improving access for not
only riders and carriage drivers, but all access users. There are to
be:




No funding specifically earmarked for rights of way.
No powers for the Secretary of State to direct councils to carry out statutory duties.
No appointment of a rights of way ombudsman to deals with the overwhelming amount of complaints against local authorities.
No requirement for local authorities to deal with claims to record row within a specified time limit. (N. Yorks CC currently have 40-year backlog (400 claims); Staffordshire CC have 200 unprocessed claims).
No working group of organisations with an interest in vehicular use of rights of way to identify & agree specific proposals to improve the management & recording user rights of byways. (Carriage drivers and other vehicular users have only 2% of the network available to them)



What the DETR propose barely resembles the well-thought-out recommendations made by the Countryside Agency. Rather than defend and extend the public rights, the DETR proposals benefit landowners by:



Making it easier for landowners to extinguish & divert public
rights of ways
Setting a deadline for adding rights of way to the definitive map – meanwhile landowners will have a statutory right to apply to divert & extinguish paths indefinitely resulting in a reduction of rights of way
Giving powers to authorities to close or divert linear rights of way in the name of environment, wildlife and crime – while ignoring the potential negative impact surrounding the right to roam.


Every day in the United Kingdom, almost 100 riders and cyclists are hit
by cars. These proposals fail to address the current situation for
bridleway users while increasing provision for walkers who already enjoy
access to 100% of the UK’s Rights of Way.







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