UK:Dorset Woodland destruction stalled by treesitters
Two protesters are sitting in trees in ancient Dorset woodland to try to stop clearance work taking place ahead of the building of a new £84m relief road. Work to clear part of Two Mile Coppice restarted on Thursday after a legal bid by the Woodland Trust temporarily suspended work on Tuesday. The Weymouth relief road aims to ease traffic around Weymouth and Portland, which are hosting the Olympic sailing. Dorset County Council said work would continue despite the protesters. A spokesman said trees would be cut down around the demonstrators and that the council hoped to complete the work by Christmas. “Once it’s gone, it’s gone forever, it can’t be recreated because the climate was different 400 years ago,” says Steve Marsh Woodland Trust. “The council is now discussing how the protesters can be safely and legally removed,” he added.
One protester, 35-year-old Nicky Baines, came down from the trees on Friday. He told the BBC the two remaining men, Nick Pepper, 41, and a man known as Noddy, had both lived in Weymouth in the past. He said they did not represent any particular group but the idea was to “stick it out as long as possible”. “We’ve been having a bit of trouble with the amount of equipment – food, water and staying warm. “But at least one person has got a lot of stuff they can keep going with.” Work restarted Trees and other vegetation were being removed from 1.5 acres of woodland on the western edge of Two Mile Coppice, when Tuesday’s legal challenge halted work. The Woodland Trust, which owns the land, said the county council had failed to provide a Notice to Enter document. The coppice is among land in an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB) that Dorset County Council was given permission to buy, using compulsory purchase orders, in September. But until the orders are processed, the land still belongs to the trust. The correct documentation was later provided and work was allowed to restart. Steve Marsh, of the Woodland Trust, said the legal challenge was started to make sure the council was following the correct procedures. “We didn’t think we’d ever be able to stop the work in the long term,” he said, adding that the trust was against the road. “This is the last remaining ancient woodland in the Weymouth and Portland area. It’s a very much-used wood and a much-loved wood.
Posted via email from Deane’s posterous