Wednesday 17 July 2013

Traveller threatens Telegraph workers - Lincolnshire

From the Grimsby Telegraph

After readers told the Telegraph they had arrived, a reporter and photographer drove to the field, took a picture of the site, and went onto the field to talk to the group.


They were met by two bare-chested men, one of whom asked: "did you get a good photo?"

The Traveller then said: "Why are you taking pictures of us every day? We don't like it."

After the reporter explained it was because they were on the land illegally, the man got more heated.

He then said: "I'll smash that f***ing camera over your head if you come here again."

Luckily, by chance, Humberside Police arrived at the very moment the threat was made.

The Traveller asked the police to tell The Telegraph not to take photos, but the officer refused, explaining that they were on the land illegally.

The man then repeated the threat to the two officers, adding, "if they come here again, I'll put a fu**ing brick through the window."

One officer replied: "Well if you do that, you'll get locked up."

The Traveller said: "I don't care about that."

Some of the people in the group were among the first to come to the area when they broke their way onto the former Lindsey School field off Taylor's Avenue, Cleethorpes.

Another caravan – and a van – has settled on farmland next to Morrisons, owned by M F Strawson Ltd.

Staff were sent to the field on Monday to make sure the gate was secure and yesterday morning, a large boulder had been placed in front of the gate.

The other Laceby site has no gate and it is believed to be owned by the church.

North East Lincolnshire Council has spent weeks evicting Travellers from land through the courts, but is not involved in the current situation as the land is privately owned

Traveller site costs set for approval - Derbyshire

From the Matlock Mercury

Work could soon be starting on a Rowsley Traveller site as Derbyshire Dales District Council look set to release £7,425 of funding for the project.

At a meeting tonight (Thursday), councillors will vote on whether to approve the revised cost of building the site, which had originally been estimated at £5,250.

As planning permission for the site was granted in March, once the costs have been approved work will commence almost immediately.

Planning permission allows four caravans to park at land in Old Station Close for a period of nine months. The time limit starts from the date the family move on to the land.

Derbyshire Dales District Council have a legal duty to find the Traveller family a home, who have previously refused a bricks and mortar option because of their heritage.

Traders and residents in Rowsley have been adamantly opposed to the Traveller site from the very beginning. See the letters page for their response.

Derbyshire Dales District Council is also set to seek an independent valuation of a potential permanent site for the Travellers at Homesford.

A special meeting of the Corporate Committee will hear next Tuesday (July 23) the results of a detailed community consultation on the Homesford site, which remains the only feasible permanent solution so far identified by the Derbyshire Gypsy Liaison Group (DGLG).

Applying for planning permission is not likely to be recommended next week, and any future planning application would in any case require further public consultation.

Potential Hambleton Traveller sites to be assessed - Yorkshire

From the Northern Echo

A SURVEY of four potential Traveller sites across Hambleton is to get underway to test suitability in an effort to meet growing needs.


At a Hambleton District Council cabinet meeting today (Tuesday, July 16) members voted in favour of the report’s recommendations to hold pre-planning application discussions for private landowner sites at Bankside Close, Sowerby; Tame Bridge, Stokesley; land adjacent to Ponderosa caravan park, Sutton-on-the-Forest; and World’s End, Sowerby.

In a report to the cabinet councillor Brian Phillips said there were no known vacant plots in the district and no current planning permissions outstanding.

There is also no council or public land available for developing new pitches – which prompted the call for private sites earlier this year.

He said: “We are currently in a position where if Travellers move onto a field we have nowhere for them to be moved to.

“If appeals are then made by them to stay we will be in a very weak position.”

Coun Bridget Fortune said residents of Stokesley and surrounding areas felt they had more than their fair share of Traveller sites.

“When we talk about setting up a residential Traveller site we should remember they are exempt, like the rest of us, from using green belt land,” she said.

“It is unpopular with people who would love to build a cheap chalet in open countryside but are not allowed to.”

Coun Ron Kirk added: “The current site in Stokesley was unauthorised at first but had to be approved. Stokesley seems to be the settlement area for Travellers.”

Leader of Hambleton District Council Mark Robson assured councillors it did not mean sites would definitely be permitted in those areas.

He said: “It may materialise some are not suitable sites but this is just allowing officers to investigate further.”

Gypsy caravan given notice to leave after setting up camp on Hunstanton Green - Norfolk

From Lynn News

A “true” Gypsy who has been visiting Hunstanton for more than a decade was served notice to leave after setting up camp on a garden .


Tom and Sue Savage pulled their traditional horse-drawn caravan onto The Green on Thursday last week after their usual spot had been re-developed into a garden.

Mr Savage was issued with a notice to leave the land by West Norfolk Council and the police later that evening.

The couple have been calling in on Hunstanton during their tour of the Norfolk coast for 15 years and usually spend a few nights on a site near the Tesco store in Southend Road.

But since their last visit the area had been transformed into garden.

Mr Savage said: “Hunstanton has been welcoming me here for 15 years but now they have taken up that space so I can’t move on so I pulled onto The Green.

“ I was there four weeks ago and there wasn’t an issue.

“The public here are really behind me.

“I am very upset about it.”

The couple tour the coastline giving talks and also selling pegs and walking sticks along the way.

Mr Savage, who features on the front cover of the latest Hunstanton Town and Around magazine, said council officials and police spoke to him at 3.40pm on Thursday with a notice being issued at about 8pm.

Mr Savage was determined not to move on from the town until Sunday.

He said: “At the weekend there are a lot of people about and I do speeches for the children about my ancestors.

“I was told that the In Bloom judges were in Hunstanton at 10am on Friday.”

A council spokesman said no further action was being taken against Mr Savage.

In a statement the council says: “As soon as we were made aware of the encampment on The Green in Hunstanton, officers visited the site and undertook a welfare assessment.

“A notice to leave the land was issued giving a reasonable timeframe for the Traveller to move on.

“He failed to comply with the notice, so, following due process, the wheels were set in motion to obtain a court order as the council is unable to tolerate unauthorised encampments on public amenity land such as The Green.

“The Traveller has now moved on, so no further action is required.”

West Norfolk is a popular destination for Travellers.

But in August last year, more than 20 vehicles parked up on Tuesday Market Place forcing police to issue enforcement notices.

Community champion in court over claims she racially abused Travellers

From the Telegraph

Josie Hampson, 77, has previously received a ‘Chorley Smile’ award for her work with parents and children in the town and has run a toyshop there with her family since the 1960s. She said she is “determined” to clear her name over the allegations.


The claims involve a group of Travellers who have been locked in a four year battle with the local community because they want to remain on green belt land near Mrs Hampson’s home.

The grandmother is due in court on Thursday over the allegations, which include causing racially aggravated harassment, alarm or distress by words and using threatening words or behaviour to cause harassment, alarm or distress.

Mrs Hampson said being fingerprinted and having her DNA taken was "humiliating," when she was interviewed by police in April, and the ordeal was making her ill.

“I am not a racist, I never have been a racist, and certainly never will be,” said the former Sunday school teacher and school governor.

"I am a Christian and the words I have been accused of saying would never have even entered my head.

"I am 77 years old and face going to court and standing trial, but I am determined to clear my name. I am struggling to cope and I am feeling unwell with the worry.

"I just can't imagine how it has come to this.

"It's not going to be easy, but I will have to pluck up the courage to stand trial as I am completely innocent."

Mrs Hampson was previously awarded a ‘Chorley Smile’ award by the local council for her services to the town’s parents and children. She is a well known face in the community, having run Hampson’s Toymaster in Chorley, Lancashire, with her family since she set it up with her late husband in the 1960s.

Residents in Chorley have been involved in a four year battle with the group of Travellers who want to remain in their camp on green belt land in Heath Charnock, near Chorley.

After two public inquiries, appeals and legal fees – that residents say have reached £50,000 – the group has been granted a two year stay of execution by Chorley Council while it does a full report into provisions for Travellers in the town. The report is being done as part of the local plan and the Travellers are expected to be allowed temporary use of the site.

Dave Jones, 60, who lives next to the site in Hut Lane, claims the group has made racist claims against the community in the past, which were not upheld.

He said: “It seems bizarre that a 77-year-old woman is being taken to court.

“She’s got her own little business in Chorley and she has lived here for 30 years.”

Mr Jones said people in 23 homes near the site had joined together to fight the Travellers’ case for the last four years, sharing the legal fees between them.

He added: “People are upset about it. As well as the council’s investigations, we’ve had our own legal team which has cost about £50,000.

“We are determined to prove that this is in appropriate development for the green belt.

“It’s law-abiding people that are being affected. I’ve lived here for 13 years. It’s a lovely spot, it’s on the green belt, and most people choose to live here because of its position. ”

He said the number of Travellers at the site had decreased from around 30 to 12 in recent years and said about five caravans remained.

The Linfoot family, who have been living at the site in Hut Lane, were given temporary leave to stay on the land while Chorley Council does a full report into the needs of Travellers in the area as part of the new local plan.

Michael Linfoot said: "We have been calling for a new report into Traveller needs in Chorley all along and we hope it will be thorough.

"It would only be temporary so we'll continue to look for sites in Chorley to move to."

Mrs Hampson’s court summons at Preston Magistrates’ Court comes after a cricket club about ten miles away formed a human barricade to protect their pitch from Travellers invading earlier this week.

Players from Hoghton Cricket Club and volunteers formed an overnight barricade around their pitch on Monday night after four caravans entered the site.

They took turns to man the perimeter overnight and managed to evict the first gipsies within 24 hours and hold back any more from getting onto the land.

Two Traveller groups pitch camp at Turlin Moor - Dorset

From the Daily Echo

TWO groups of Travellers in more than 30 vans have taken up residence on a well-used open space in Poole.


Police say the first arrived at Turlin Moor Recreation Ground in Hamworthy overnight on Sunday and the second on Tuesday night. They are spread across both ends of the recreation ground, which contains a children's playground and the sports pavilion used by Poole Rugby Club.

The Borough of Poole has yet to make an official comment.

Former Turlin Moor councillor Lou Knight said: “We had travellers last year. It's a regular occurrence that they come. We have to put up with quad bikes, motorbikes, and cars being driven up and down the field by kids. They're a nuisance when you live right opposite.”

Horsdean Travellers’ site about to reopen amid growing tensions - Sussex

From the Argus

A transit site for Travellers could be up and running by the end of the week after being closed for more than three months.

The closure of Horsdean, the only transit site in the city, has been blamed on a series of unauthorised encampments in recent months.

It is hoped its reopening will ease tensions between Travellers and residents which have threatened to erupt several times in the last week.

But with the 23-pitch site due to open in phases, and at least 30 live-in vans in the city, concerns have been raised that Horsdean cannot solve the ongoing problems completely.

In the past week a game of cat and mouse has been played out between Travellers and the council, culminating in two evictions in one day.

There are also doubts whether the Travellers will take up the pitches at Horsdean.

One member of the group, speaking at Woodingdean, said: “The council know they haven’t created enough sites for us.

“Horsdean is good in the winter with the showers but we like it here in the summer.”

Police had to attend several court-ordered evictions amid heated exchanges on Friday, when residents blocked Travellers as they tried to set up camp on Saltdean Oval.

Simon Kirby, MP for Brighton Kemptownand Peacehaven, said: “The events of last Friday clearly demonstrate the current situation of cat and mouse has to change.”

Horsdean is also Brighton and Hove City Council’s preferred location for a permanent site, with a £1.7 million Government grant going towards its redevelopment.

Up to 23 families and Travellers living there will pay rent and council tax.

A council spokeswoman said: “The works on the transit site at Horsdean are in the final stages of completion and the site will be reopened as soon as possible.

“Unfortunately while we want to reopen Horsdean as soon as we can, we are not able to do so until the end of this week at the earliest.

CAT AND MOUSE: THE LATEST

One group of Travellers, made up of 23 vans, has been to five sites in five days and has been officially evicted three times.

WEDNESDAY, JULY 10 – group evicted from Carden Park under Section 61 following reports of antisocial behaviour and nursery break-in 2PM, FRIDAY, JULY 12 – group evicted from fields off Bexhill Road, Woodingdean, after more reports of anti-social behaviour.

5PM, FRIDAY, JULY 12 – group evicted from cricket pitch at East Brighton Park due to likelihood of “increased community tension” and to allow cricket fixtures to go ahead.

6PM, FRIDAY, JULY 12 – stand-off with residents as Travellers try to set up on Saltdean Oval, due to be used for a Lions event the next day.

8PM, FRIDAY, JULY 12 – Travellers arrive at Wild Park, with the council now seeking a possession order in the county court.

HORSDEAN: ENVIRONMENTAL CONCERNS

The Horsdean site is in a sensitive location with concerns over flooding and waste water getting into the city’s drinking supply.

The council is working with the Environment Agency to resolve these issues before it submits planning permission for a permanent site.

A council spokesperson said: “We are very aware of the sensitivity of the Horsdean location in ground water terms and have been in contact with the Environment Agency from very early on in the site selection process.”

Outraged residents force Travellers out of Beach Park - Ayrshire

From the Irvine Times

A GROUP of Travellers have been forced to move their makeshift campsite from an Irvine beauty sport following complaints from outraged residents.

A number of caravans popped up in Irvine Beach Park last week much to the dismay of locals who use the beauty spot to walk their dogs and enjoy the picturesque surroundings.

But the Travellers were forced to move on this week following a wealth of complaints to North Ayrshire Council about noise and rubbish being strewn around the boating pond, where the camp had been set up.

The Beach Park is a listed green belt area and arguably the towns most beautiful spot, attracting hundreds of people every week to enjoy its picnic spots, sandy

dunes and views of Arran and Ailsa Craig.

PC Jason Peter from Irvine Police office said they had received 'a number of complaints' passed on from North Ayrshire Council bosses and were working through the week to move the Travellers on.

Opposition growing against Tytherington Road Travellers' site plans - Gloucestershire

From the Gazette

OPPOSITION is growing against plans for a Travellers' site in Thornbury with a national firm joining scores of residents and two councils in their campaign to have them thrown out for good.

Hanson Aggregates, the owner of the quarry by Tytherington Road nursery, which the 25 members of the Fry family are hoping to turn into eight gypsy caravan pitches, has formally rejected the proposal.

The company, which mothballed the quarry last year, said allowing the Frys' 13 children to live next to the industrial site would be extremely unsafe.

John Bown, of Hanson Aggregates, said: "Although the quarry is currently non-operational due to economic conditions, the site contains a significant mineral reserve, which has an extant planning permission.

"There are currently no proposals to restart quarrying activities but the site remains an active industrial site."

He added the danger would increase once the quarry resumed activity.

"It is likely that the families at the site will include children and although the site has good security, it is possible that an adventurous child could break into the site with obvious safety concerns associated with the quarry.

"Consequently the company is of the opinion that the proposal is an unsuitable location."

These concerns were also listed by Thornbury Town Council last month as one of its reasons for refusing the plans for six caravan pitches and two transit pitches, six day rooms, two toilet blocks and a horticultural shed.

The council also cited the drop in market value of nearby properties and the fact that the four-acre site was outside the town's settlement boundary.

Tytherington Parish Council also refused to back the plans last week, arguing that the mobile homes would be out character with the surrounding properties and expressed concerns over drainage.

These fears were voiced by nearby residents in the 65 letters of opposition sent to South Gloucestershire Council since the plans were submitted to the local authority for approval last month.

One family, even claimed they had already born the brunt of the plans before they had even been set in motion, when buyers withdrew their offer their home on the edge of Tytherington Road nursery four days after the proposal was put forward.

Sally Woodbury, the agent to the Fry family, however told the Gazette when the application was lodged that safety would not be an issue for the children living on the site any more than for those already living near the quarry.

She also referred to a study commissioned by Parliament which found no link between the creation of Travellers' sites and a drop in property value.

South Gloucestershire Council's development west committee will inspect the Tytherington Road nursery site tomorrow, Friday, at 10.30am.

Travellers set up illegal camp at Hull nature reserve - Yorkshire

From the Hull Daily Mail

Travellers have set up home on a nature reserve in Kingswood.


The travellers have set up camp on an area called Wilberforce Wood, formerly known as Midmeredales.

The land is a designated dog walking area.

A Hull City Council spokesman said: "We are aware travellers have set up an illegal encampment.

"We are currently working with our multi-agency partners, following our procedures and will start legal proceedings as necessary.

"We will continue to monitor this area."

Travellers move on - London

From Merton Council

Travellers moved out of Merton last night following two encampments this week.We will be looking at how we can make our green spaces more secure for the future, while maintaining them as beautiful open green spaces for our residents to enjoy. When travellers illegally occupied Cannon Hill Common and King George’s Playing Fields most recently, effective partnership working between the council and the police ensured the travellers were moved from the area after all the proper assessments were made. We appreciate that travellers on public green spaces was a concern for many residents and, with the police, we moved to resolve the situation as quickly as possible.

Watermoor Primary School in Cirencester to close early today due to large numbers of Travellers expected to attend funeral at Holy Trinity Church - Gloucestershire

From the Wilts and Gloucestershire Standard

WATERMOOR Primary School will be closing early today in anticipation of a funeral at nearby Holy Trinity Church that will be attended by a large number of Travellers.


The school will be closing at 12.15pm in order for children to leave the school grounds safely before the funeral in the afternoon.

Alison Pine, chairman of governors at Watermoor Primary School, explained that the school wasn’t closing early because of the presence of Travellers.

She said: “We are expecting a large volume of traffic on the roads and are closing the school early for the children’s own safety.

“A funeral is an extremely sad affair and we offer our condolences to all attending.”

As reported by the Standard yesterday, a large number of Travellers moved onto a piece of land at the Kingshill Sports Complex in Cirencester.

There is thought to be around 70 Travellers on the land with up to 15 caravans on site.

The Travellers, who are from North Yorkshire, are expected to have left the site by the weekend. Deryck Nash, a councillor with Cirencester Town Council, said: “I have spoken with Andrew Tubb and we have given them permission to stay on the land until Saturday, although I have been told they’ll be gone before then.

"We have asked them to keep clear of the football pitches and they have agreed to that.

CTC has also said that the Travellers will not interfere with the development of a skate park that is due to be built on the land.

Nobody from the group of Travellers was willing to comment.

Tuesday 16 July 2013

Travellers cut lock to get on Odsal rugby club's pitches - Yorkshire

From the Telegraph and Argus

Bradford Council has been urged to take swift action after a group of Travellers descended on a rugby club and set up camp after cutting through locks to gain access.

The Travellers’ vehicles are at Odsal Sedbergh Rugby Club in Huddersfield Road after arriving on Monday afternoon, having probably been the same ones moved on from Moorend Recreation Ground in Cleckheaton earlier in the day.

And the Travellers’ arrival could end up scuppering the club’s junior players from practice sessions before an important match against rivals Sherburn Bears on Sunday morning.

Glenn Burness, of Cleckheaton Road, said he had picked his grandchildren up from school yesterday afternoon and got home to find the Travellers looking to access the site. He tried to manoeuvre his car in front of them to stop them getting through the bolted gate, as did a van driver, but they were blocked by the Travellers who stood in front of their vehicles.

Mr Burness told the Telegraph & Argus today that when he told the Travellers to move on he was pulled away by one of the female Travellers but she swiftly let go when he threatened to tell police he had been assaulted.

In the meantime, big tailbacks built up along Cleckheaton Road before six police vehicles arrived to ease the situation.

According to Mr Burness, the junior rugby teams who play there have been told by police to take away all their equipment as well items from the changing rooms and cafe.

Mr Burness, a caravan owner himself, said: “What I can’t understand is if I failed to pay when away with my caravan, or was late leaving a site, I would be fined or the police would be called to move me on.

“I’m led to believe it will take seven days before the Council can move them on.”

He said this is the fourth time it has happened.

Gates had been installed but a man cut through the lock with a pair of yellow bolt cutters – a description of the man was given to police but they have not returned to take a statement from Mr Burness and his wife.

Police confirmed they were called at 3.43pm to a group of Travellers who had cut through a lock at the rugby club. At the time there were five caravans and six vehicles.

Carol Regan, of the club, said: “If I was to park up in front of the town hall I’d be moved on within half an hour. They must be made to abide by the same rules and regulations as the rest of us.

“This really is not fair on the kids. They were supposed to have training tonight and on Thursday night on those fields and have a match on Sunday.”

Today, a Council spokesman said it hoped to serve the Travellers with a court order today to vacate the area.

Group of travellers set up camp at park in Ipswich - Suffolk

From the Ipswich Star

A group of Travellers have set up camp at a park in Ipswich.


The group was spotted moving on to the park at the end of Bramford Lane yesterday morning.

The borough council was informed and police also attended the scene when it was reported.

An Ipswich Star reader, who spotted the group, said: “It would be nice if the Travellers took care of this nice area and people where kind to them whilst they are there.”

A group of around 70 Travellers have set up camp at the Kingshill Sports Complex in Cirencester - Gloucestershire

From the Wilts and Gloucestershire Standard

A LARGE group of Travellers have moved into Cirencester and set up a makeshift colony on land at the Kingshill Sports Complex.

The Travellers moved their 15 caravans onto the land, which is located next to Cirencester Kingshill School, at around 3pm today.

It is thought that up to 70 Travellers from North Yorkshire have settled in Cirencester while on their way to a Christian convention in Weston-super-Mare.

Deryck Nash, a councillor with Cirencester Town Council, said: "I have spoken about the matter with Andrew Tubb and we have given them permission to stay on the land until Saturday although I have been told they'll be gone before then.

"We have asked them to keep clear of the football pitches and they have agreed to that.

"We have also provided them with bags for their litter."

CTC has also said that the Travellers will not interfere with the development of a skate park that is due to be built on the land.

Nobody from the group of Travellers was willing to comment.

Travellers moved off Cannon Hill Common set up at King George's playing field in Morden - London

From This Is Local London

A group of Travellers moved on from Cannon Hill Common this morning have now set up camp at another playing field in Morden.


A convoy of around 10 vehicles moved onto King George’s Playing field in Morden earlier today.

On angry resident said: “Travellers have moved into King Georges Playing field - private land with a children’s nursery in the pavilion!

“Council paid out thousands to make park secure for residents but failed to keep park gates locked!”

Another resident who frequently takes his young children to the park said he would not feel comfortable taking them there again until the group had left.

Merton Council have said they are aware of the situation and have asked the police to move them on.

Travellers set up camp - Sussex

From the Worthing Herald

Travellers have entered land to the north of West Parade, Worthing.


The council has directed the Travellers to leave, and visited the site today to assess the situation and ascertain the Travellers’ needs, the environmental impact of their presence and the loss of public amenity.

The Police will regularly visit the site.

A resident of Anscombe Road, who did not want to be named, said: “They have taken over and it is not nice for residents.”

The resident said there were currently around eight caravans at the site.

Gypsy site 'would fit in with countryside location' - Hampshire

From Get Hampshire

New plans for a Gypsy pitch in a peaceful hamlet have again angered residents.


A bid to build a pitch on the flood-prone field in Taplins Farm Lane, Winchfield, was thrown out last year.

But applicant Henry Giles has now lodged new plans, which include additional hardstanding and a utility/dayroom on the seven-acre site.

More than 40 residents have already fired off objection letters to Hart District Council. Among them is David Bates of Station Road in Winchfield, who said the permanent facilities in the proposal suggested a larger number of units would be accommodated on the site.

Mr Bates warned the area was liable to flooding and pointed out that more than half of the total number of Gypsy sites in Hampshire were in Hart.

“There are several of these sites within a five-mile radius of Winchfield, the last unspoilt Doomsday Book village in the region,” said Mr Bates.

The planning application comes soon after a public inquiry into plans for a two-pitch Gypsy site at nearby Oaktree Paddock in Potbridge Road, Odiham.

Tenny and Elaine Turner were appealing against the council’s decision to refuse permission last August after ruling the detrimental impact the proposal would have on the designated Site of Special Scientific Interest outweighed the need for traveller provision.

A four-day public inquiry was held and now both sides are waiting for the ruling of planning inspector Douglas Morden.

Hartley Wintney Parish Council has also objected to the Winchfield application, warning the site access is on a blind, hazardous bend in the road, which is used by heavy farm machinery and car transporters.

“Changing the access to the site would involve ripping out a large length of ancient mixed hedgerow,” warned the parish council. “Hart has previously refused such permission on a far less significant hedgerow in Winchfield.”

Green Planning Solutions, the Shrewsbury-based firm acting as agents for Mr Giles, said the pitch and utility/dayroom were needed “to meet a recognised need for such facilities in the area to facilitate a Gypsy lifestyle”.

It added that the nearest bus stop was 800 metres away and provided a regular service to surrounding towns and villages.

“The materials, overall scale and form of the utility/dayroom building are appropriate to a countryside location with features typical of the tradition of agricultural buildings of this scale in the countryside,” said the firm.

“Existing hedgerows, bunds and areas of substantial vegetation will be retained and augmented wherever possible and no existing trees will be affected by the proposals.

“Additional native hedgerow and tree planting is indicated on the plan to supplement what exists on the site and where any hedgerow is removed this will be replaced with new native species planting."

Hart planning officers are considering the scheme.

Angry resident’s letter to minister about plans for permanent Gypsy and Traveller site in Hartlepool

From the Hartlepool Mail

A CONCERNED Hartlepool resident has written to Government Minister Eric Pickles outlining his concerns about plans for a permanent Gypsy and Traveller site in town.


Shane Moore has written to Mr Pickles, Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government, to appeal to him to scrap legislation which forces local authorities to make provision for sites.

A public consultation into 16 sites around Hartlepool has recently come to an end with further reports on the sites set to go before councillors.

The consultation followed the formal examination earlier this year of Hartlepool Borough Council’s proposed new Local Plan by a Government planning inspector, which was suspended after he called on officers to carry out further work to find an appropriate site in Hartlepool.

Mr Moore, 30, is from the West View area of town and is a forge worker at Clydesdale Forge.

In the letter to Mr Pickles, the married dad-of-one, said: “I write on behalf of the residents of Hartlepool who are currently being subjected to the anxiety and stress of having Gypsy and Traveller sites potentially built at the end of their streets.

“Responding to the planning commissioner’s decision, Hartlepool Borough Council produced a shortlist of potential sites which, as far as I and 99.9 per cent of the town believe, are wholly unacceptable and an insult to the hard-working families who have invested time and money into making their houses homes only to have the value of them reduced and the desirability of that area nose dive through absolutely no fault of their own.”

Mr Moore, a member of Hartlepool Conservatives, added: “If members of the Gypsy and Traveller community would like to settle in our great town then I have no doubt that they would be welcomed, but they must be prepared to do what I or any other resident would do and that is to purchase land or property to settle on.

“I trust you will do the right thing and help not only the people of Hartlepool, but the people and communities up and down the country who are also facing the same problem.”

The 13 original sites were land at West View Road, Throston Grange Lane, two areas in Burbank Street, Catcote Road/Macaulay Road, Wiltshire Way, Old Cemetery Road, Lennox Walk/Owton Manor Lane, Masefield Road/Gulliver Road, Hart smallholdings east and west, near Hart village, and Summerhill, off Catcote Road.

Three other sites were then added including Briarfields, land at Clarence Road and land at Huckelhoven Way/Reed Street. The public consultation finished at the end of June and further reports will go to the council’s finance and policy committee soon.

Perthshire Cant: Secret language of Scottish Travellers

From the BBC

A secret language preserved for hundreds of years and used only by travelling families is on the verge of extinction.


As summer berries ripen in central Scotland migrant workers from Eastern Europe arrive to help with the harvest. But once the fruit pickers were itinerant British families.

For several weeks over the summer months Travellers could catch up with rarely-seen friends and relatives while earning money at the berry fields.

When gathered together the Travellers spoke Cant, a language impenetrable to non-Travellers. The Perthshire Travellers used their own strain of Cant which included words dating from the 12th Century.

It will not be long before those words will never be heard again.

Blairgowrie-born Sheila Stewart is the last in line. A singer, storyteller and author, at 78 she is the sole remaining speaker of Perthshire Cant, though her Traveller family had spoken the language for generations.

"We were called itinerants long ago, but the real name for us was tinkers [tin smiths] because we had a skilled trade," Sheila says.

"Whenever Travellers met they spoke the Cant, especially at the berry picking time. We'd speak it a' the time round the campfire," says Sheila.

Secret code

The Cant words are evocative. Sheila speaks of wammilin coocavies, naismorts and kinchins. But the words aren't purely decorative, they served a purpose.
Sheila Stewart Sheila Stewart is the last in line of the Perthshire Cant speakers

They were code used only by the Travellers.

"It was a secret language," she says. "No one ever knew what we were saying. Because that was the only identity we had to separate us from the local community."

Distrust of Travellers in settled communities played a part in keeping their Cant alive.

"It was a way of survival," Sheila explains. "It was terrible in Blairgowrie. But I take my hat off to the people of Blairgowrie now for persecuting and ridiculing us. Because if they hadn't we would have been blended into society and our culture would have been lost."

"We were kept in a bubble and wir (our) culture was kept intact," says Sheila.

That culture was explored by the Scottish folklorist Hamish Henderson who, when working for the School of Scottish Studies, encouraged the family to sing their traditional songs at folk clubs.

"Hamish Henderson discovered us in 1953 and we were put on the stage [to sing] the ballads that he thought had died out many, many years ago," says Sheila.

"Every place in Scotland's got their different Cant. But Hamish Henderson investigated and he said Cant originated in Perthshire, that's how I've got the old words."
Origins

The late Dr Sheila Douglas, a folklorist with an expertise in the Travellers' language, spoke to BBC Radio Scotland in 2007 about the origins of Perthshire Cant.

Perthshire Cant words

Wammilin coocavie - boiling kettle

Mort - woman

Coul - man

Naismort - mother

Naiskil - father

Kinchins - children

She said, "I think you can judge by the elements that you find in Cant that a lot of it is the Scots of the area where the Travellers belonged. But because their ancestors were Gaelic speakers there's a few words of cant that are derived from Gaelic. The Cant word for bad is 'shan' and that's just like the Gaelic."

Dr Douglas continued, "There are also a number of words that the Travellers think of as Cant that are actually old Scots words that are no longer in use."
Dying language

Cant has been part of Sheila's vocabulary for as long as she can remember. Her parents spoke English, but their speech was peppered with the traditional words.

"I grew up with it," says Sheila. "I've got words in Cant that date back to the 12th century and other Travellers dinnae use them now. I'm the only one in Scotland now that's got the old words. Other Travellers don't know what I'm saying."

Sheila's own children show little interest in speaking Cant, although they do understand it.
Continue reading the main story
The Travelling Stewarts

The Stewart family of Blairgowrie, headed by matriarch Belle, became familiar figures on the folk scene. The 'Travelling Stewarts' were known for their ballad singing. These songs that had been sung around the campfire for pleasure were handed down from generation to generation - with some even dating back as far as the 12th century.


"I speak it to them but they answer me in English," she says. "It annoys me! They say it's easier for them [not to use it]."

Perthshire Cant has gradually fallen out of favour and, unlike the Stewart family who were adamant that they would keep the language alive, other speakers have also let it slip.

The Travellers' way of life has changed and that, too, has contributed to the language's disappearance. Fewer families travel now and many have moved into houses.

"That was a big problem [for Cant]," says Sheila. "Because if they got to stay in their usual places [on the road] they would amalgamate wi' the other travelling folk and the Cant was rife."

"But when they got put into houses they were all separated, some of them was in Perth, some was in Dundee and that kind of faded the Cant."
Travellers' culture

Sheila has spent much of her life travelling around the world lecturing on the oral culture of Travellers. She was awarded the MBE for services to the oral tradition of Scotland's folk music and for travelling people.
A family of Travellers camped near the berry fields of Blairgowrie A family of Travellers camped near the berry fields of Blairgowrie, Perthshire

"When you see films on television it's all about the discrimination of Travellers," says Sheila, "they never bring out the other ways of life of the travelling people - their Cant language, their songs, their ballads, their stories. "

"There's more to Travellers than a dirty layby. We've got a tremendous amount to put into society that society has lost".

While Travellers continue to use their own strains of Cant, Sheila's is the oldest and she is aware that when she passes away, Perthshire Cant and its ties to generations of tinker families will disappear.

But while Sheila has spent much of her life spreading awareness of her language, she is pragmatic about its fate.

"It's dead," she says. "Gone. I'm the last in line."

Travellers leave illegal camp set up in Coventry just hours before council deadline - Warwickshire

From the Coventry Telegraph

A group of Travellers have finally moved off a popular Coventry park – just hours before the bailiffs were due to be called in.


Coventry City Council had given those living on the illegal camp in Longford Park until 5pm on Saturday to leave the site.

They had originally moved on to the north side of the park on Sunday, July 7.

Having failed to heed an initial 24-hour notice period to leave the park, in Oakmoor Road, earlier in the week, city council chiefs had served the travellers with another deadline, which would have seen the authority seek an eviction through the county courts had they remained on the site.

Homesford Traveller site option to be discussed again - Derbyshire

From the Derbyshire Dales District Council

The District Council is set to seek an independent valuation of the potential permanent site for Travellers at Homesford.


Derbyshire Dales District Council logoA special meeting of the District Council's Corporate Committee will hear next Tuesday (23 July) the results of a detailed community consultation on the Homesford site, which remains the only feasible permanent solution so far identified by the Derbyshire Gypsy Liaison Group (DGLG).

The consultation process, which ended in April, included a public meeting at which local residents, businesses and the parish council were invited to have their say. Feedback was also invited by post, via email and online to a series of questions about the woodyard site.

As part of the consultation, local people were asked to suggest suitable alternative sites – but none came forward.

Next week's meeting will be asked to balance the strength and relevance of public opinion against the District Council's duty to find a suitable permanent Traveller site.

Against a backdrop of further local government grant cuts announced in last month's Government spending review, options councillors will consider will include commissioning the District Valuer to provide a valuation of the site, which is privately owned. Full costings for the creation of a permanent site at Homesford could also be requested.

An additional step – applying for planning permission – is not likely to be recommended next week, and any future planning application would in any case require further public consultation.

The District Council has a legal duty to offer suitable accommodation to the Traveller family in question and has to make a suitable offer of accommodation. Ignoring this duty could result in costly legal action that would have to be borne by Derbyshire Dales Council Tax payers - and the duty would still remain.

The woodyard was the only site selected in January this year for further consideration from a list of 11 on an evaluation matrix that took into account many relevant factors, including site size, ownership, availability, proximity to residential properties, vehicular access, bus routes, shops and schools, ground conditions and access to health services.

Meanwhile, planning permission is in place for a temporary Traveller site in Rowsley for a maximum period of nine months from the first day of occupation.

Anger over Travellers camping in Athy estate - Ireland

From the Kildare Nationalist

RESIDENTS in an Athy housing estate are angry at the lack of action by the council and gardaí in moving on Travellers they claim are illegally camped in their estate.


The residents of Dun Brinn asked for their names to be withheld as they feared reprisals for speaking out.

“There have been caravans parked in the estate since the second week in April. We have called the town council, the county council and the guards on an on-going basis, and nobody is helping or giving us solutions,” said one woman. “We have also asked local councillors to help. There have been caravans coming and going since April, some days there are four caravans there, other days there are two and one day there was one caravan. The people in the caravans have been throwing human waste on the green areas and at night time they can be seen going to the toilet in the area,” said the resident.

Another member of the residents’ association said that they had had no response from the council on the issue until last week. “One of us called the council and the council said that they had been in touch with the gardaí who say they are unable to do anything unless the Travellers cause an obstruction. There are powers under law in relation to caravans parked in private property, but this does not apply to Dunn Brinn as it is not a private place under the legislation, despite the fact that the town council has taken over the estate. Last week we received confirmation from Cllr Mark Wall that the council had served notice on the Travellers. But we suspect that the Travellers who the notices were served on are not the Travellers who are there now because of all the coming and going that has been going on. We think that that the council can do more about this problem.”

In a statement Athy Town Council said the council has a number of powers under legislation (housing, sanitary services, planning and roads) and that each incident is considered on a case by case basis, following report from the council’s housing officer. The council said statutory notices (a notice giving those in the caravans 48 hours to leave the area) have been served on the occupants and legal follow-up will be considered, where necessary.

The statement also acknowledged the ongoing assistance of the Traveller Accommodation Section (Kildare Co Council- who have county wide remit for the provision of Traveller accommodation) and Athy gardaí.

Travellers return to Cannon Hill Common - London

From the Wimbledon Guardian

A convoy of Travellers set up camp on Cannon Hill Common last weekend after removing logs placed to deter them.


A group of 10 to 12 caravans moved onto the common overnight on Friday, July 12, by moving a log which Merton Council placed in late 2012 in an effort to prevent Travellers moving onto the site.

The Travellers were expected to be evicted yesterday, but it is understood they left this morning.

Councillors and residents are now calling on the council to do more to secure the site which has seen groups repeatedly set up there.

Councillor Debbie Shears, who represents Cannon Hill ward, said: "The encampments are getting bigger every time they come.

"They were here on the hottest weekend of the year taking up a large area of the common.

"We are calling on the council to do a really good job of securing the site.

She added: "No disrespect to Travellers but there are dedicated sites that they should be travelling to.

"They come on the common and generally go on to Merton Park somewhere.

"We have to make it clear that we are a borough that will not tolerate Travellers coming in.

"The council needs to spend money and make it secure because it’s just not good enough."

Exeter playing field Travellers set to stay until late next week - Devon

The Express and Echo

It could be late next week before a group of Travellers have to quit Cowick Barton Playing Fields in St Thomas.


Two caravans have been parked up at the Wellington Road end of the playing fields since Sunday.

Today the city council which owns the land were putting the finishing touches to papers requesting a possession order which will go to court tomorrow.

However it might be as late as Monday before the case is heard and it could be another five days before any order is executed.

Alphington city councillor Rod Ruffle said: “It’s a bit concerning but let’s let the local authority get on with dealing with it and see how it goes.”

The chain and padlock on the Wellington Road park gates have been removed and no steps are being taken to lock the Travellers in.

The two caravans, car and Range Rover are tucked away in the lee of a hedge near Wellington Road and park users are reported to be unaffected by their presence.

Travellers set up camp in Shaw Cross - Yorkshire

From the Dewsbury Reporter

Travellers have moved on to playing fields used for junior rugby league games in Shaw Cross.


The group set up camp last night (Monday) on the Leeds Road site, which is used regularly by Shaw Cross Sharks.

A Kirklees Council spokeswoman said: “A group of Travellers who have recently moved off the land at Sands Lane following legal action are understood to have moved onto playing fields at Leeds Road.

“The land is owned by the council and legal proceedings will begin today.”

The council won a possession order for its Sands Lane site in Dewsbury during a hearing at Huddersfield County Court today (Tuesday).

It meant the Travellers would have been evicted if they had not already moved on.

Legal action starts against a group of Travellers in Port Talbot - Neath Port Talbot

From the South Wales Evening Post

COUNCIL bosses have started legal processes against a group of Travellers in Port Talbot.


Around 15 caravans have parked up on land owned by Neath Port Talbot Council near Dock Road behind the old Magistrates Court.

Head of property and regeneration Gareth Nutt said they were dealing with the situation.

"Council officers have visited the site and started legal processes," he said.

One local businessman, who did not want to be named, said they were not happy with their sudden arrival yesterday afternoon.

"People are worried about it," he said. "They have only been here an hour and everyone is panicking."

Travellers still remain on the site of the new Swansea University campus off Fabian Way where there are around 15 caravans.

A group of Travellers have left the seafront cinema car park in Port Talbot where they had been staying.

Lynn Lewis, general manager of Reel Cinema — formerly known as Apollo Cinema — said a lot of rubbish was left behind when the Travellers left their car parked at 2pm on Sunday.

He said there were a total of 32 black bins bags which he filled up and collected from the area.

"I don't understand how someone could leave that mess," he said.

"I did not want my staff cleaning it so I came into work early and did it. I wore gloves.

"It was disgusting. It took me two hours to clean it up.

"The car park is sparkling now. Touch wood it will be back to normal now."

The caravans appeared on Swansea University land, which is the work entrance to the £250 million planned campus, last week.

On Friday a university spokeswoman said its construction partners, St Modwen and Vinci were managing the situation and liaising with local police.

They had hoped that the Travellers would be gone by the end of the weekend.

The spokeswoman added: "Security on the site will be reviewed in light of this incident."

Coedffranc West councillor Harry Bebell said he was crossing his fingers that the Travellers would be leaving soon.

He added that he had noticed litter at the site.

"There is just general un-tidiness and litter blowing around the place," he said.

Current Traveller updates - Sussex

From Worthing and Adur Council

Southwick Recreation Ground, Croft Avenue, Southwick


Wednesday 29th May, 2013 - PM: Brighton County Court today made an order for possession of the land in favour of Adur District Council. Travellers remain on the site and a Process Server will notify the Travellers this afternoon of the court order. A warrant for possession of the land has been issued and the Court Bailiffs are instructed to carry evict the Travellers should they continue unlawful occupation of the site.

Friday 24th May, 2013 - PM: Brighton County Court have fixed a hearing for Wednesday 29th May at 10:30am. The Travellers will be served papers this afternoon. The court's power to grant a possession order is discretionary, so provided this is obtained on Wednesday, the Travellers will be notified to leave. If the Travellers remain thereafter, Legal Services will obtain a warrant for possession of the land, with the Court's bailiffs carrying out the eviction. The next update will be Wednesday afternoon to confirm the outcome of the court hearing.

Friday 24th May, 2013 - AM: Travellers remain on site today despite being directed to leave by 6pm yesterday evening. A process server carried out a welfare audit and a decision has been taken today not to tolerate the trespass. The Council is commencing legal action to secure a possession order with a view to evicting the Travellers from the land.

Wednesday 22nd May, 2013: We are directing the Travellers to leave and the council are attending the site today to assess the situation and ascertain the Travellers' needs, the environmental impact of their presence and the loss of public amenity. The Police are aware.

Council start eviction process after Travellers gain access to Pope's Meadow, Luton - Bedfordshire

From Bedford On Sunday

THE authority has begun proceedings to remove a Traveller encampment from Pope's Meadow in Luton.


It is believed that the group of around 15 caravans got on to the site on Thursday evening.

A resident who lives nearby said to us: "It has been a lovely weekend and we would have liked to have gone over to Pope's Meadow but we feel a bit intimidated.

"I don't know how they managed to get on to the green space as there are barriers."

A spokesman from the council said: "We immediately started the eviction process after we were informed of the encampments.

"We have already received the relevant clearances and are hopeful of achieving eviction by the end of the week."

We'll make sure Travellers don't return after "invasion", say residents - Dorset

From the Daily Echo

RESIDENTS of an East Dorset village left reeling after an “invasion” of Travellers set up camp on the recreation ground have put together a plan for the future.


Around 11 vehicles were parked at West Parley’s Recreation Ground from July 2 to Friday, July 12.

Parish council chair John Cullen said measures are now being taken to ensure the Travellers are not able to return.

“We understand that they came to us because other sites have been made more secure, so that is exactly what we are now doing.

“We have been very lucky. We have had support from the county council and the police tried to patrol once every hour, which I think was important as it discourages any crime or anti-social behaviour.

“There was some damage, and lots of litter, including human waste, but nothing that cannot be fixed.”

He said the council is now putting together a document featuring useful information for any further visits.

“It hit us between the eyes,” he said.

“We found it was difficult to find out who was responsible for what, and so we are making sure there is proper guidance with relevant phone numbers and information about what to do issued.

“We have learned from this, and we will be ready next time.”

Parish councillor Richard Heaslip, who also sits on the West Parley Residents’ Association, said the situation got “actively worse” as locals became frustrated with the situation.

“The residents have been left very disturbed A particular feature of this invasion is that the Travellers set up next to a children’s playground.”

A spokesman for Dorset County Council said: “The Travellers at Parley Close were camping there illegally, and so we assisted West Parley Parish Council in issuing a notice to quit the site.”

see also The Blackmore Vale Magazine - Parley residents clear up after Travellers

More Travellers arrive in Laceby - Lincolnshire

From the Grimsby Telegraph

TRAVELLERS have settled on a plot of land in Laceby.

Between five and ten vehicles are back in North East Lincolnshire after it was thought they had left the area over the weekend.

This morning, it emerged that one group of Travellers - the first to come to the area - has set up in a field off Butt Lane. Police went to the site today to see what their intentions are.

It follows news that, yesterday, one caravan and a van settled on a field next to Morrisons, just up the road.

Travellers ordered to leave Hoghton Cricket Club - Lancashire

From the Lancashire Telegraph

TRAVELLERS have been ordered to move after setting up an illegal encampment at a cricket club.

Three caravans and a motorhome arrived at Hoghton Cricket Club on Monday afternoon, and were served with a notice to move by noon today.

Police were at the Hoghton Lane club on Monday night speaking with the Travellers and returned this morning. Cricket club members and members of the community were at the site overnight.

The club’s supporters helped form a barricade to prevent further access over fears more caravans could arrive.

Club chairman Neil Eccles said he stayed at the ground the entire night. He said Travellers had caused damage to the cricket ground when they arrived and had yesterday morning been spreading rubbish in the area.

He said: “It’s been very disruptive to the whole community because we have events planned that can’t go ahead. We've had lots of support, with people coming over to help us out. We drew up a rota so there would be a group of use here throughout the night. We also blocked off access to prevent any more vehicles coming in. We’re working with the police and hopefully they will move on when they are told to.”

A spokesman for Lancashire Police confirmed a Section 61 notice had ben served on Travellers and they had been told to move by noon yesterday.

see also The Telegraph - Village cricket team form human barricade to deter Travellers

The Daily Mail - Villagers form barricade to stop convoy of Travellers from setting up camp on cricket field after mobile home parks on the pitch

Sports North West - Travellers moved on from Hoghton cricket ground after damaging square


lep.co.uk - Travellers hit for six by angry cricket club fans

The Lancashire Telegraph - Travellers leave 'appalling' mess at Hoghton Cricket Club

New plan could see Queensferry Traveller site extended - Flintshire

From News North Wales

A TRAVELLER site could be extended under a council housing strategy plan.


A small extension adding more pitches to the Riverside site in Queensferry is a possibility as part of Flintshire Council’s housing service plan for 2013/14.

Members ran the rule over the document in a housing overview and scrutiny committee meeting. As well as the plans to potentially extend existing Traveller sites, a transit site for Travellers could also be created, which would allow for the authority to move Travellers to an area for up to three months should they attempt to situate themselves on land that is not suitable.

Currently, Flintshire provides for 58 per cent of all Traveller provisions across Wales, which includes 20 council owned pitches and two privately owned sites in Sandycroft and Gwespyr.

Mr Humphreys also told councillors that the permanent role of Gypsy Traveller Liason Officer is being created. The role, which has previously been delegated to members of council staff, has now become a set role in which an officer will work with the Gypsy and Traveller communities to liase with Flintshire County Council, ensuring services and responses can be provided correctly.


Monday 15 July 2013

Newport council is holding a meeting where people who couldn't get into the meeting in Duffryn can listen to plans

From the South Wales Argus

NEWPORT council will host an additional presentation on the revised deposit Local Development Plan (LDP), including controversial proposed Gypsy sites, after a previous meeting was filled to capacity.

Thirteen community or ward-based meetings have been held since June 4 where council officers have given details of the plan which will shape planning policy until 2026.

A heated meeting last week, organised by Coedkernew community council, was full meaning some people were unable to attend.

Tensions ran high at the meeting, held in Duffryn community centre, and a police officer had to call for calm after members of the public shouted during a presentation.

The extra presentation, which will take place at the Civic Centre at 6pm on Wednesday will provide those residents with another opportunity.

The council is considering three possible Gypsy sites for its LDP - an area on Hartridge Farm Road, Ringland, as a residential area for three families, land on Celtic Way near Duffryn as a transit site for groups passing through and former allotments at Ringland as a contingency.

A six-week consultation period on the deposit LDP is currently underway and the public can make a comment, support or object to any part of the plan by 5pm on July 26.

The council will consider all the comments received and will make changes if necessary which will then be subject to a further round of consultation later this year.

Following approval by the full council, the LDP will be sent to the Welsh Government. A planning inspector will then be appointed to hold a public examination and determine whether the plan is a sound document.

To have your say on the future development of the city use the forms available on www.newport.gov.uk/planningpolicy

Gypsy wins appeal to keep mobile home at Birdham - Sussex

From the Chichester Observer

AN enforcement notice to remove a mobile home from land in Birdham was quashed at appeal.

Chris Milford initially sought retrospective planning permission for the siting of one mobile home and an outbuilding for Gypsy use, on the land at Cowdray Nursery.

But in April 2012, Chichester District Council, refused the plans, and ordered him to remove the mobile home, stop using the land for storage, and to demolish a utility block on the land.

Part of the reason behind the council’s decision was it did not define Mr Milford as a Gypsy or Traveller.

But at appeal, the planning inspector Richard Perrins concluded ‘the appellant is a Gypsy by definition’. This meant policy related to Gypsies and Travellers must be taken into account at appeal.

The fact there are very few Travellers sites in the district, and ‘the current development plan is silent on the provision of Gypsy and Traveller sites’, weighed heavily in the favour of the appellant.

“It was accepted by the council that there are no alternative sites,” said 
Mr Perrins. “The council’s witness accepted it may be another four or five years before any site provision comes forward.”

Despite local opposition and the site having a ‘detrimental impact’ on the appearance of the area, the planning inspector granted the appeal, and said it would go towards the council’s quota for Traveller sites in the area.

The planning inspector quashed the enforcement notice from the district council, and granted planning permission to Mr Milford to station the mobile home and outbuilding on the land.

Mr Milford also applied for costs against the council, but this was refused.

'Prejudiced' TV shows are turning people against Travellers

From Public Service Europe

Channel 4's Big Fat Gypsy Wedding and other shows are car-crash television that nod to the death of the idea of multiculturalism in Europe – says the Irish Traveller Movement in Britain


There is a scene that is a repeat motif in Big Fat Gypsy Wedding - the hit British 'observational documentary' featuring Irish Travellers, Romany Gypsies and English Travellers - that broke the ratings records and is fast becoming a pan-European export for Channel 4. The scene comprises of a young Irish Traveller woman dressed in high-fashion catwalk heels, a diamante low-cut top, bare skin uniformly tanned, hair sculpted and heavily made up - wordlessly tottering around the interior of a caravan, mopping, dusting and polishing already immaculate surfaces.

The scene taps seamlessly into some of the truisms and assumptions about Irish Travellers – and by extension; the United Kingdom's Romany Gypsies and English Travellers - that most non-Travellers uncritically hold. These are that the 'Traveller community' subjugates its women and that the culture is debased and a ludicrous pastiche of celebrity magazines and soap opera galas.

Let us go back to the scene with the young Traveller woman and try a more critical approach. As the day of the shoot drew nearer, the excitement would have been building on the site. Try to put yourself in that young woman's shoes. What would you have worn? Some BFGW 'characters' have gone onto Z-list celebrity fame and their own spin-off shows. Vox pops and interviews would have been recorded, opinions prompted and recorded and background footage shot. Only a fraction of what was taken would have been used. What has been used so far has dismayed many Gypsies, Travellers and the related campaign organisations.

Jake Bowers, Romany Gypsy and former editor of the Traveller's Times, said that BFGW portrayed Gypsies and Travellers as 'buffoons'. Jennifer Corcoran, a young Irish Traveller woman who interns at our organisation simply puts her head in her hands and mumbles 'shocking' whenever BFGW is mentioned. Margaret Doran, an Irish Traveller community leader, says that the series has put the fight for Traveller rights and recognition back 20 years.

It is obvious why BFGW is so popular. It is car-crash television that feeds into - and inflames - the extremely visible political and social conflict around Gypsy and Traveller site provision in the UK and nods towards themes of dysfunctional absolute otherness versus assimilation that are playing out amidst the crackdown on the Roma in Europe; and the death of the idea of multiculturalism. It is big, brash, snobby, snide, deadpan, knowing and presented in the patronising style of You've been Framed.

It uses sleight of hand to allow the viewer to laugh at cartoonish and seemingly racist representations of some of the most marginalised and persecuted ethnic minorities. Implicitly, explicitly and by juxtaposition - the prejudiced tropes fly thick and fast. Travellers don't pay tax, they are parasites, the women are downtrodden brood mares, Traveller men are brutal and criminal. Travellers steal, they are insular. They deny their children an education and their children are feral. And all this is put down to Traveller culture, the people themselves and their Quixotic clinging onto an archaic fixed identity - they are to blame, we are told.

Of course - the producers leaven this with sympathetic characters, scenes that seem to contradict the stereotypes but the strong narrative thrusts win out and the message is loud and clear: 'They' need to be more like 'us' for their own good and it is their own fault if they are not. In Orwellian fashion, Channel 4 stonewalls complaints by pointing out that Gypsies and Travellers must like it because they are on it.

The broadcaster also say that it just films what is in front of the crew; with the implication that if you do not like it then it is because you do not like Travellers. The channel has also publicly apologised to 'some of the community' when billboards advertising the second series splashed the tag-line 'Bigger, Fatter Gypsier' over the face of an aggressive looking child – and media regulator the Advertising Standards Authority was finally forced to act.

Yet, do not be fooled by the apology. It does not digress from Channel 4's insistence that most Gypsies and Travellers like the show. In fact, some must like it. Some have vested interests in BFGW and some teenage Travellers are drawn to the razzmatazz and the false promise of celebrity. Yet regardless of its alleged popularity amongst Travellers themselves, we tend look at the same thing in different ways.

Context is everything and there are exponentially more non-Travellers watching BFGW than there are Travellers and the message to them is unequivocally negative. So BFGW is worrying. It reflects the current political climate in much of Europe. It celebrates homogeneity by emphasising the difference and deviance of an easily delineated and - in this case - racialised 'other' who are represented in ways that define the narrowing limits of what is normal, sociable, acceptable and – increasingly – legal. It is worrying because we have been here before.

Mike Doherty is a communications officer at the Irish Traveller Movement in Britain

£10,000 Leeds Traveller injunctions foiled again - Yorkshire

From the Yorkshire Evening post

An injunction aimed at banning Travellers from nuisance spots in Leeds has again been flaunted by a group from outside the city.


Around half a dozen caravans have been moved on to the site – covered by a permanent banning injunction – next to Radio Aire, off Kirkstall Road, in Burley, over the weekend.

The YEP can reveal that Leeds City Council spent almost £10,000 on two permanent Traveller injunctions, which cover sites in Burley, Kirkstall, Armley and Wortley last year.

The latest camp is the second in just over a month to highlight the fact that the legal bans only apply to two named Leeds families.

Helen Jones, chief executive officer of Leeds Gypsy and Traveller Exchange, said: “We warned that the injunctions would be useless, because all they do is antagonise people and they’re fairly useless for anybody else who’s not named on them in the first place.

“I imagine that Leeds City Council have learned from the experience.”

She said the council should set up more authorised temporary sites such as trialled in Holbeck last year.

Travellers have also set up an unauthorised encampment at the old Burley Sports Bar site across Willow Road, which is currently the subject of an eviction row between the leaseholder and the council.

Aside from the Kirkstall Road encampment, a separate group of Travellers pitched up on West Park Fields, in West Park, over the weekend.

A council spokeswoman said that it is thought that both the Travellers next to Radio Aire and in West Park are from outside of Leeds.

She said that council officers have visited both camps today, ahead of applying to the courts for eviction notices.

Refusal of Moor Lane Gypsy site goes to appeal - Cheshire

From wilmslow.co.uk

An appeal has been lodged against Cheshire East Council's refusal to grant planning permission for the development of a Gypsy site on green belt land to the north west of Moor Lane.

The controversial plans to change the use of the open land for the stationing of caravans for residential purposes for a Gypsy pitch, a utility/day room and additional hard standing were refused for the second time in January 2013.

The Northern Planning Committee refused the application on the grounds that very special circumstances do not exist to justify inappropriate development in the green belt.

An appeal has been made to the Secretary of State by Green Planning Solutions, who are acting on behalf of Mr John Allen. As a result there will be a public enquiry and a site visit by an inspector from the Planning Inspectorate.

The grounds for the appeal are that a single pitch will create limited actual harm to the openness of the green belt which is outweighed by the lack of suitable and affordable sites in the area.

According to the appeal documentation "Green Planning Solutions are of the opinion that there is a significant immediate need in the district. This adds considerable weight in favour of the appeal."

It also states "If necessary personal circumstances will be advanced including the potential site occupants personal need for a site, health and education."

A document submitted with the planning application (reference 12/4247M), which the Council received over 550 letters of objection to, said that Mr Allen's eldest son suffers from glaucoma. Therefore it was necessary to move closer to Manchester Eye Hospital as they need to attend regular appointments and sometimes require emergency specialist treatment. However, it was not clear from the information supplied where the applicant currently lives.

Cllr Gary Barton commented "This appeal and the current situation on the Carnival Field underline how important it is for Cheshire East, Wilmslow Town Council and local residents to remain vigilant in protecting our green spaces.

"The original application was rightly and firmly rejected both by the Town Council and by Cheshire East. Our reasons for refusal were clear and remain valid, this application would be wholly inappropriate development on green belt land. Local residents have made their views clear, and the planning inspectors should respect these views.

"The inspectors should also pay heed to guidance from Communities Minister Eric Pickles that Traveller pitches are not permissible development in the green belt. Wilmslow Town Council has been forthright in its stance in protecting Wilmslow's green belt and will continue to be so. We are always in the lap of the Gods in these situations, but I am confident that the right decision will be made and that this appeal will be refused."

Members of the public are invited to comment on the appeal, by sending letters in triplicate to the Secretary, Planning Inspectorate, Temple Quay House, 2 The Square, Temple Quay, Bristol, BS1 6PN.

Representations must be received by the deadline of 13th August and quote the appeal reference APP/R0660/A/13/2198596.

Further information can be found on the Cheshire East Council website, search using planning reference 12/4247M.

Travellers leave Walton site 'clean and with no issues' - Surrey

From Get Surrey

Travellers who set up around eight caravans on charity-owned land in Walton left the site "clean and with no issues" less than 24 hours after arriving.


The vehicles turned up on the land owned by the Walton Charity, at the junction of Severn Road and Rydens Road in Walton, at around 9.30pm last Thursday (July 11).

The site is next door to Sherwood House care home, also run by the charity, and a spokesman said they left at around 5.30pm the following day.

Nigel Lucas, director of residential services at Walton Charity, said they had been keeping an eye on what was going on and looking at what options were available to them.

Speaking last Friday, he said: "The number of caravans doesn't seem to be growing. They were noticed at about 9.30pm on Thursday by people in the care home.

"The Travellers have been no trouble to us though, there haven't been any difficulties or disturbance."

Mr Lucas later added that the group had co-operated and left the site at around 5.30pm.

Elmbridge Borough Council, which leases the land as public open space, said it had been working with the charity to "repossess the land".

Council to take action over Exeter playing fields Travellers after complaints made - Devon

From the Express and Echo

A SMALL group of Travellers moved onto Exeter’s Cowick Barton Playing Fields yesterday.

Two caravans have been reported at the Wellington Road end of the playing fields – apparently the first time they have been ‘occupied’.

Alphington city councillor Rod Ruffle said: “I have lived here since 1969 and I can’t remember this ever happening before.

“It’s a bit concerning but let’s let the local authority get on with dealing with it and see how it goes.

“In addition I would like the council to look at what can be done to prevent a re -occurence in the future.”

Rob Hannaford, city and county councillor St Thomas, has received three complaints from residents about the Travellers and said: “I think we should lock the gates at the Wellington Road entrance to at least prevent any more getting in and I have also asked the city council how long it will take to have them evicted.”

A spokesman for the city council said: “We have been advised by Community Patrol that a small group of Travellers arrived on site at Cowick Barton Playing Fields yesterday late afternoon.

“We will be visiting the site as soon as the police have confirmed their attendance. We will then follow our protocol for unauthorised encampments.”

Travellers allowed to stay at Aberdeen football pitches - Aberdeenshire

From the Evening Express

A DEAL has been struck to allow Travellers to stay at football pitches at Woodside in Aberdeen until the end of August.

Aberdeen Lads’ Club agreed that as long as caravans were moved off the pitches themselves, they could stay.

Another part of the deal is that Aberdeen City Council will be responsible for any required clean-up at the privately-owned land once the caravans have left. But footballers have said they will not play at the pitches while Travellers remain there.

Britain: land of exaggeration and self-pity

From the Romedia Foundation

When a Member of Parliament refers to plans to provide a tiny number of places for Travellers’ caravans as “the ghettoisation of the countryside”, you have to wonder what lies behind such sensationalist language. Damian Le Bas takes a look at the facts and fictions behind portrayals of Travellers in the UK.

Read more

Travellers moved on from Blackpool field - Lancashire

From the Gazette

A group of Travellers has been moved on after setting up camp on Blackpool’s Lawson Field.


Around half a dozen caravans arrived at the field on East Park Drive on Thursday.

The police and Blackpool Council were in talks with the Travellers, and they moved away from the area on Friday afternoon.

Travellers pledge to leave Cheltenham site - Gloucestershire

From the Gloucestershire Echo

TRAVELLERS who had moved into a play area in Cheltenham are set to leave today.


The family of Travellers from Durham took over the swing area behind Hallmead Close, in Pilgrove Way last Tuesday.

Four cars and caravans were parked in the area.

Cheltenham Borough Council officers were told last week by the Travellers that they planned to move on Monday.

A spokesman for the Borough Council said: "We are monitoring the situation and regularly inspecting the site."

Complaints were lodged with Gloucestershire Police after the move, and officers have been to the site to tell the Travellers to keep it clean.

The Travellers promised to tidy the site before they leave.

Travellers leave town - 'forced out by unfair treatment' - Lincolnshire

From the Grimsby Telegraph

TRAVELLERS have fled North East Lincolnshire – with supporters claiming they were unfairly forced to leave.


Three sets of Travellers have made the borough their home over the last three months, leading to outrage from landowners and residents.

A large family of Travellers left Grimsby's Gilbey Road last Wednesday and groups living on land off Hewitts Avenue, in Cleethorpes, and in Kiln Lane, Stallingborough, left over the weekend – despite pledging to continue their "game of musical fields" with North East Lincolnshire as a protest.

But Shay Clipson, a Romany Gypsy who has lived in Grimsby for 12 years, says their treatment has been unfair.

"I feel like they have been forced to leave the area and have not been offered the support they should have been," she said.

"In other parts of the country there is a lot of support in place for Travellers and Gypsies but that's not the case in North East Lincolnshire.

"I am shocked by some of the excuses made for not providing them with a site to live on."

Shay claims all local authorities are issued with best practice guidelines for dealing with Travellers by central government.

These guidelines categorise all sites that Travellers could occupy illegally according to sensitivity.

For instance, a school playground or cemetery would be classed as Tier 1 and eviction would be recommended immediately.

However, guidelines state they should be able to occupy less controversial sites, such as the former playing fields off Taylors Avenue where the first set of Travellers set up camp in June.

Shay added: "If there is no lawless behaviour and they are not causing a threat to national security, then they should be allowed to remain on sites like Taylors Avenue.

"I was down there talking to two of the women a couple of weeks ago and a very well-dressed elderly lady walked past us and started screaming abuse and obscenities.

"Travellers and Gypsies do not want trouble, they want to be left in peace to live their lives."

Shay now says she will be pursuing an investigation into how the Travellers were treated by North East Lincolnshire Council.

However, she claims launching a judicial review will be difficult because, contrary to popular belief, the majority of the Travellers pay too much tax to qualify for Legal Aid and a judicial inquiry is simply unaffordable.

She added: "I feel they have been dealt with unfairly in a number of ways.

"For instance, an eviction notice was issued to a group of Travellers off Taylors Avenue but no number plates were noted down so when the eviction took place, Travellers who had arrived later and who the notice did not relate to, were forced to leave too.

"All they want is to be given a site where they would happily pay rent and council tax.

"Just because they have left for the moment does not mean the issue should be forgotten.

"We must make sure that Travellers and Gypsies are treated fairly, and lawfully, in North East Lincolnshire."

As reported, after Travellers set up camp off Taylors Avenue at the beginning of June, the council quickly moved to evict them, leading to a number of court orders being served.

They later moved to Peaks Top Farm, in New Waltham, before arriving at Cleethorpes Country Park, Wilton Road Industrial Estate, then land off Weelsby Avenue and Gilbey Road.

A family of 17 who set up camp off Hewitts Avenue had stayed in the same locations as the first group, but were forced to separate because there was not enough room at Gilbey Road.

A third group arrived on land next to Pennells Garden Centre, in Cleethorpes – owned by farmer Boo Parkes – last week and then relocated to Stallingborough.

Sunday 14 July 2013

South Warwickshire villagers set for a ‘big fight’ over Gypsy sites

From the Leamingston Spa Courier

People living in Barford are gearing up for a battle to see off Gypsy and Traveller sites in the village area.

Their concerns have been fuelled by reports of Traveller families approaching landowners in the area in a bid to buy up sites.

In a list of 20 possible sites published by Warwick District Council, land at Westham Lane will have 15 pitches.

But land listed for seven pitches (site 16) between Wellesbourne Road and the Barford Bypass is classed as a flood plain for the bypass.

Barford Residents Association said the list of sites puts 11 of them within three miles of the village, including 10 pitches by the M40-A46 junction near the village.

Spokesman Mark Griffin said: “The council will have a big fight on it its hands – there’s going to be huge opposition.”

Around 300 residents attended St Peter’s CE School, where council officials spoke about sites and the Local Plan, which will see Barford allocated between 70 to 90 homes.

Mr Griffin said: “There was no confidence in the accessibility and suitability of the proposed sites – particularly site 16.

“When you talk about a pitch, most people think of room for one caravan, but they are 500 square metres for one permanent caravan, one mobile caravan, one permanent building for lavatory and wash facilities and space for two cars. ”

Mr Griffin said sites should be incorporated within housing proposed for south of Warwick and said they based their opposition on the grounds of green belt intrusion, access problems, traffic and the strain on the village school.

He said the council’s need for sites was based on “flaws” in a university report being studied closely by “professional people” in the village.

John Murphy, chairman of Barford, Sherbourne and Wasperton Joint Parish Council, said: “There’s incredulity about the need to provide so many sites. Can we trust the research done by the University of Salford?”

Saturday 13 July 2013

Travellers camp on Kingstone field - Yorkshire

From the Barnsley Chronicle

A group of Travellers have set up camp on a playing field at Kingstone where youngsters meet to play football every weekend.


They have moved at least 20 caravans on to the recreation ground off Broadway and strung up washing lines between trees.
Advertisement

One woman on Linton Close, who did not want to be named, said: "I saw them at the weekend and thought it must be the Caravan Club. It was only when I saw the washing hung up between the tress I realised it must be Travellers."

Another said she believed they had broken a lock on a gate to the park to gain entry.

She added: "There are kids who play football on there most Sundays, it's not fair. What are they going to do now? I don't agree with them being there, they're always going on land where they shouldn't be."

It is thought the Travellers originally settled on Grange Lane at Cundy Cross earlier this week.

The same group then moved to Penny Pie Park, off Dodworth Road, Barnsley, on Sunday evening.

Coun Jack Carr said the Travellers drove their cars at residents and one waved a car jack at them.

He said the group left the park on Monday after being moved on by the council relatively quickly because there is a helicopter landing pad near to the site.

A spokesman for Barnsley Council said: "This group of Travellers has recently encamped illegally within other areas of Barnsley.

"A legal process has begun, with the final decision on the appropriate legal action to be decided at a case conference, and following an encampment visit by a Barnsley Council officer."

• A separate group of Travellers settled in Birdwell last week. One resident said it was believed they were there for an evangelical mission.

He said residents have been clearing up the litter left by the Travellers on Lynham Avenue, Alverley Way and Chilcombe Place which included cigarette packets, cans, sweet wrappers and cleaning up the human waste.

"The field was a squalid mess. Very few children played out on the estate despite the high temperatures as they felt intimidated. Something must be done to stop this becoming a regular event," he said.



They left the site on Sunday afternoon. The police were unable to comment.

'Appalled' over Gypsy site plans - Carmarthenshire

From the South Wales Evening Post

THE owner of Llanelli crematorium has hit out after adjacent land was named as a potential Traveller site.

Last week, after months of discussions with landowners, developers and other interested parties, Carmarthenshire Council revealed three sites across the town which have been submitted for considering in the authority's local development plan (LDP).

A spokesman for the authority said all three plots were being looked at, with no firm decision made as yet.

Marj Jopling, who owns Llanelli Crematorium, said one of the sites on Penprys Road was not suitable due to its proximity to the memorial site.

She said: "I was appalled the site on Penprys Road could even be considered as a new gypsy and Traveller site. Llanelli Crematorium is positioned on Penprys Road just above the proposed site and since it opened in 2002 has built, with a great deal of hard work, a reputation for peaceful serenity.

"The gardens of remembrance have many memorials which are cared for every day by the bereaved who find some solace in the beauty and calmness of our grounds.

"Over 10,000 families have entrusted their loved ones to our care and we take enormous pride in our professionalism and empathy which can clearly be seen in the way we present our service.

"Although I fully appreciate they must have permanent sites surely they should be in places that do not impact on services and land of a highly sensitive nature."

In a letter to the authority, Mrs Jopling urged the council to remove the site from the LDP immediately.

Concerns have also been raised about the site at Berwick, Bynea — with the Bynea District Forum writing to the authority, Countryside Wales and National Resources Wales about the effect on the vole habitat on an adjoining site.

A Carmarthenshire Council spokesman said the sites had been published to give people a chance to comment, and said there was no commitment to any site.

Travellers move to car dealership in 'protest' over land - Lincolnshire

From the Grimsby Telegraph

DEFIANT Travellers have set up camp in the middle of a Cleethorpes car dealership park.


The family of 17 have described their bold move as a "protest" against North East Lincolnshire Council's refusal to allocate them land to live on.

And they say they will continue their "game of musical fields" with the council for as long as it takes.

Head Traveller Mary Smith, 41, told the Grimsby Telegraph they enjoyed tormenting NELC.

She said: "They will get sick of this a long time before we will. It is fun for us. You've heard of musical chairs, well this is our game of musical fields. We are going to keep on moving, it doesn't bother us."

They parked up their five caravans on a patch of grass in the middle of Vauxhall, Mazda and Stoneacre car dealerships on Altyre Way, near Tesco, at 8.30pm on Thursday night, following their eviction from Taylor's Avenue, Cleethorpes.

Eviction proceedings from their current – privately-owned – location are underway but it's unlikely they will move before next Thursday.

Local businesses are worried by their arrival but did not want to comment.

But Mary said they do not want trouble.

She continued: "We are very happy here, it is a nice spot and we haven't had any trouble so far. We like it in Cleethorpes, it is fresh and clean.

"This is a protest against the treatment of the council against us. If they give us a piece of land, all of this will stop.

"We are not asking for much, we just want a site to live on."

Local authorities can bid for government money to build or refurbish existing Traveller sites, but NELC has no plans to do this.

During Thursday night's stand-off between Travellers, council workers and Humberside Police, officers barricaded off land that Travellers could potentially camp on.

Meanwhile, another group of Travellers in three caravans have pitched up on land off Kiln Lane, Stallingborough.

It is thought they came from Cleethorpes farmer Boo Parkes' land, near Pennells Garden Centre, Humberston Road, following their eviction two days ago.

Owner of nearby trucks and trailer parts business, Black River Limited, Bob Barcroft, claims they have defecated outside his premises.

He said: "Up until now I thought live and let live, but now it could affect my business. I am shocked and appalled."

Councillor Chris Shaw, leader of NELC, said: "We don't treat this as fun, but we are taking action – and supporting other landowners to do the same. We will continue to do this over any unauthorised use, regardless of by who.

"While there is a funding stream to contribute to providing Traveller sites, bidding local authorities must demonstrate a need. Up to this point, we've had very low levels of Travellers in North East Lincolnshire."