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Campaigners seek right to roam on edges of private farmland in England, Wales

by admineconai December 27, 2024
written by admineconai December 27, 2024
388

Campaigners seeking to open up more paths in the countryside in England and Wales have asked for people to be given the right to walk around the edges of privately owned fields.

Slow Ways, a group that is said to be advocating for more access to the countryside, said people in rural areas often have to walk on roads that do not have pavements, which can be extremely dangerous.

The British public appears to agree. A poll by YouGov found seven out of 10 adults (71%) thought people should be allowed to walk along the edge of fields that were privately owned, as long as they were respectful and responsible, and if the only other option was to walk down a narrow or busy road with no pavement or legal footpath.

Two-fifths of respondents said they were likely to walk more if such a walking network existed.

Read also: Report: UK public electric car chargers rose to more than 70,000 in 2024

In England, only 8% of the countryside is designated as open access for walking, picnicking and other outdoor activities. This includes mountains, moors, heaths and downs. In Scotland, all of the countryside is open for access as long as guidelines are followed such as leaving no trace and not harming farmland.

There has been a recent groundswell of public campaigns involving mass trespasses, which have sometimes attracted thousands of people, asking for a general right to walk across the English countryside.

“Going for a walk in the countryside can mean risking narrow lanes, blind bends and fast vehicles,” said Dan Raven-Ellison, the founder and chief executive of Slow Ways.

“According to the Department for Transport, two pedestrians die and 34 are seriously injured by vehicles on rural roads each week. The government can save thousands of lives and bring millions of people so much joy by ensuring there is always a safe way to walk.”

Slow Ways is calling on the government to develop an inclusive, extensive and easy-to-follow national walking network, including this proposal.

Raven-Ellison said: “While hikers would benefit from improved access, the people who would benefit most of all would be the 10 million people who live in the countryside and feel these issues day in, day out. Many people who live in rural areas are surrounded by fields, but effectively live on islands that they can only venture in or out of by car.”

The Labour government has now announced it will repeal a 2031 cut-off date for recording historical rights of way, which was set by the Conservatives.

Story was adapted from the Guardian.

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