Bath Chronicle

Terror advice ‘given five or six years ago’

- Adam Postans Local democracy reporter adam.postans@reachplc.com

A row broke out as Bath & North East Somerset Council’s top officer revealed the city’s so-called ring of steel is the result of security advice dating back five or six years.

Conservati­ve group leader Councillor Vic Pritchard was criticisin­g the Lib Dem administra­tion’s controvers­ial £2.7 million anti-terrorism measures approved in July which he said treated disabled people with “contempt” and would do little to stop an attack.

Cllr Pritchard told a meeting of the council’s cabinet on September 9 there was no need for the proposals, which include a 24/7 ban on food and parcel deliveries into a secure zone.

He said: “You don’t have to put the ring of steel in. You are doing it under the pretence that there is going to be a terrorist attack.

“If a terrorist is intent on attacking this city, there are a number of ways they can do it without the encumbranc­e of a ring of steel.”

He said the decision made disabled people feel “invisible and forgotten”.

“We recognise that changes have been incorporat­ed into the plans to allow a degree of access for blue badge holders but it is not good enough that our disabled residents are still being treated with contempt,” he said.

B&NES Council deputy leader Councillor Richard Samuel asked if chief executive Will Godfrey could share the advice the authority received from the police and security services which “Cllr Pritchard seems determined to ignore”.

Mr Godfrey told members: “The trigger for the original conversati­ons was a nationwide review of city centres in terms of counterter­rorism. Bath was one of the places to review city centre security. That intelligen­ce was not shared as I understand it with council officers because that gets shared with the chief constable and then there were conversati­ons with the police about the most appropriat­e and proportion­ate response to that examinatio­n of the anti-terrorism issue that had been raised through that evaluation.

“From memory this goes back to 2016 or 2015 and obviously we have now got to the point where, based on that evidence and based on conversati­ons with the police, proposals have been brought forward.”

Cllr Pritchard told cabinet members: “What I’m interested in is the statement I’ve just heard from the chief executive that five or six years ago there was a directive that you have chosen – it wasn’t in your manifesto but you have chosen to implement these measures.

“Are similar schemes being introduced in Manchester, Birmingham, London that have been subject to terrorist atrocities? Are there rings of steel that deny access in those cities?”

Council leader Councillor Kevin Guy replied: “The short answer is yes, of course those cities have implemente­d security measures. There is no such thing as a ring of steel around Bath. It’s a stupid statement made up by yourself.”

Earlier this month Cllr Pritchard appealed to Transport Secretary Grant Shapps to stop the “senseless and destructiv­e policy” that he said would lock disabled people out of the city centre and further the administra­tion’s “anti-motoring agenda”.

The measures will require residents to apply for permits for larger deliveries or scaffoldin­g, and tradespeop­le will be forced to park outside the secure zone and wheel their kit in on trolleys.

Following changes, core streets around the abbey will be open to traffic between 6pm and 10am daily, with York Street not reopening until 10pm.

Residents will be able to comment when the traffic regulation orders are published this month.

It is not good enough that our disabled residents are still being treated with contempt Councillor Vic Pritchard

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