Newbury Weekly News

Parkrun return is still limbering up

Discussion­s are ongoing, but no timeframe is yet in sight

- By JOHN HERRING john.herring@newburynew­s.co.uk @newsdesk_nwn

EFFORTS to start up Newbury Parkrun again are ongoing, but there is no timeframe as to when the popular event will return.

Parkrun events across the country returned last month following the lifting of lockdown restrictio­ns, but as the Newbury Weekly News reported in June, Newbury’s event at Greenham Common has some obstacles to overcome.

The common is managed by Berkshire, Buckingham­shire, and Oxfordshir­e Wildlife Trust (BBOWT) on behalf of West Berkshire Council.

It is a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI), the largest continuous tract of open heath in Berkshire and home to protected species of ground nesting birds, and the Greenham and Crookham Commons Commission oversees its management.

The commission decided not to give Newbury Parkrun permission to return when it met last month, as it felt the applicatio­n lacked detail.

Commission vice chairman Chris Austin said he could see no reason why Parkrun could not return to the common, which was establishe­d to promote fresh air and exercise.

Mr Austin said that BBOWT had some reservatio­ns and the commission would write to Parkrun asking it for various assurances.

He said: “Personally I think it should be allowed to go ahead and I think we ought to remember why the common is there.

“I’m afraid at the moment the running of the common is schewing a little bit towards nature conservati­on and not towards the public right to air and exercise.

“You only need to look at the common throughout lockdown to see how vastly important it is.

“Their impact in terms of nature conservati­on is about zero, so I think it should definitely be allowed to go ahead.

“I think recreation­al use and nature conservati­on can go hand in hand and we ought to do whatever it takes to get Parkrun up and running.

“I think BBOWT are being a bit dog in the manger. If they were running across the open common that might be different, but congregati­ng on a concrete track and running on gravel paths I can’t see that does any damage at all.”

West Berkshire Council’s head of countrysid­e Paul Hendry said the commission was supportive of Parkrun returning, but it needed more informatio­n and reassuranc­es over its impact on ecology.

He said: “We now find between 550 and 700 runners on the common – that’s bigger than some half marathons – every weekend.

“If you’re a bird trying to find a nesting site, all you see on the horizon and the noise associated with it is a predator. It doesn’t take much to spook these birds.

“How are Parkrun going to manage the numbers of people who come to the common and its potential impact on the habitats and the species that exist there?

“Parkrun in itself is not responsibl­e for a reduction in these species, there are other things like uncontroll­ed dogs and the sheer number of people on the common having a negative impact.

“The concerns are, in a town that continues to grow, at what point does the number of people become unsustaina­ble?”

Mr Hendry said that discussion­s over alternativ­e venues and a children’s Parkrun were being looked at, but the discussion needed to be led by Parkrun.

He said that Parkrun had looked at an alternativ­e site, but “the door closed on that for a number of reasons”.

 ?? ?? Newbury Parkrun was a popular event
Newbury Parkrun was a popular event

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