Right-to-roam maps published
1 November 2001
Right-to-roam maps published
By Isabel Davies
LANDOWNERS will get a chance this month to check whether officials have correctly identified land affected by right-to-roam legislation.
The first draft maps of open access land in south-east and north-west England will be published on 12 November, said the Countryside Agency.
The documents show what mapping consultants believe should be classified as open country and registered common land and therefore open to walkers.
The maps are being released a month later than planned because the agency had to wait for new laws to allow the maps to be put into the public domain.
Their release signals the start of a three-month consultation period.
William Tew, director of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors rural faculty, urged farmers not to overlook the issue.
Farmers should examine the maps so they could appeal if they disagreed with the way land was classified, he said.
Other interested parties are well prepared.
The Ramblers Association web-site says: “These three months will be the only chance that walkers and others will be able to put forward their views.”
Mr Tew said landowners and land occupiers would get another chance to appeal when provisional maps were published next year.
“It is vital the Countryside Agency, the body responsible for mapping land for access, gets representations on the maps at the earliest opportunity.”
This would ensure they received a balanced picture and could make sensible judgements about any amendments.
That would avoid the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs being inundated with appeals next summer.
“If this were to happen there could be significant delays in the process which would work to the disadvantage of all involved,” said Mr Tew.
Maps will be available in local authority offices, Countryside Agency regional offices and selected libraries.
They will also be displayed at roadshows organised in both regions. The Countryside Agencys deadline for responses is 11 February, 2002.
- Agency delays right-to-roam maps, FWi, 20 September 2001
- Government consults on roam rules, FWi, 31 July, 2001
- Right-to-roam maps will be fair, FWi, 11 January, 2001
- Countryside Agency (external site)
- Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (external site)
- Ramblers Association(external site)