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Coastal Access Consultation Launched

'Get orf my cliff!' could be yesterday's cry if access proposals go through as envisaged.


Posted: 19 June 2007
by Jon

The Government is today launching a consultation process on plans to open up the entire English coastline to walkers with four possible options available.

Currently around 30 per-cent of the coast isn't accessible, with a third of that being owned by the military. Under proposed plans a 'coastal corridor' would be created that would allow the public to walk all the way - or as close as possible to it - round the coast.

It's a logical extension of the Right to Roam, with access to Scotland's coast already enshrined in law north of the border, but predictably reaction has been mixed.

What They Say... Ramblers

The Ramblers' Association welcomes the proposals and is urging Gordon Brown to make coastal access his 'first gift to the nation'.

Kate Ashbrook, chairman of the RA, said: "We are an island nation yet access to the coast is poor in many places. There is no right to walk on the foreshore between mean and high tide, so even a child building a sandcastle may technically be trespassing."

She added: "This is a once in a lifetime opportunity to change dramatically the type of access we have to the coast. It is currently impossible to walk from one end of the coast to the other. The public finally have an opportunity to change that."

What They Say... Climbers and Walkers

The British Mountaineering Council supports an open access approach and will be responding to the consultation and organising a variety of public events to highlight the importance of coastal areas.

It says it supports 'a permanent right of access to a 'coastal corridor', which should extend from the mean low water mark to a point inland, and include areas such as beaches, foreshore and cliffs'. That's option 4 on the consultation document by the way, see below.

What They Say... Government

The Government's David Milliband is quoted as saying that the coast is everybody's 'birthright':

"I want families to have safe and secure access to walk, climb, rock scramble, paddle and play all along our coastline."

What They Say... Landowners

The Country Land and Business Association seems mostly concerned with compensation for land owners.

"We want more people to enjoy our coast but we fear that this consultation will end up being about taking rights without compensation and nothing more," said David Fursdon, President of the Country Land and Business Association (CLA).

The CLA argues that 70 per-cent of the coast is already accessible to the public and that the proposed measures - in particular the lack of compensation - are a sledgehammer to crack a nut and could create a precedent of land seizure in the name of the public good.

They favour local access solutions to local access problems.

The Consultation Process

There are full details of the Consultation Process at the defra web site complete with downloadable documents and a response template which you can fill in and return.

The process ends on Tuesday, 11 September.


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