South Wales Echo

Protest placards against next door’s extension ripped down

- CONOR GOGARTY Reporter conor.gogarty@walesonlin­e.co.uk

A CARDIFF man has voiced his anger after placards were ripped from his home in what he called “an overnight job” attacking his campaign against his neighbours’ extension.

Ewen Taylor, of Clare Road in Grangetown, shares a wall with a neighbouri­ng family.

The 87-year-old received a £90 fine for criminal damage last September after drilling holes in the wall, which he claims encroaches on his back garden by a couple of inches.

Following the fine he turned to a new form of protest and began displaying messages outside his house criticisin­g the family, who deny any encroachme­nt.

As reported in the Echo last month, the messages include: “You and your cowboy builder are thiefs [sic]” and “Other councils take down illegle [sic] building work.”

Mr Taylor woke on Friday to find three of the wooden placards – which he had screwed to a wooden frame in his front garden – were gone.

Two had been removed entirely and only a narrow strip of the third remained. A placard attached to his first-floor window was also taken.

“They either used a ladder or they are very tall,” Mr Taylor said. “Very tall indeed.”

It came after a similar incident on July 9 when a few other signs were taken.

Speaking about the latest disappeara­nce Mr Taylor said: “I was popping to the shop in the morning to pick up a paper and I thought: ‘Oh my God, the signs are gone.’ Disconcert­ing is a nice way of putting it... It was a real shock to think that somebody had been out here overnight on my property with a ladder stealing my signs. That’s very annoying. In fact more than annoying.”

The neighbours – a married couple with four children aged eight to 20 – built an extension in 2020 which pushed back their bathroom to create more dining space.

Their builders knocked down the old garden wall and built a replacemen­t which is alleged to intrude on the next-door yard by around two inches.

One of the family members said last month: “I have no idea why he thinks it is in his property. It is distressin­g, especially for my children. They are embarrasse­d to go out when people ask questions about the signs.”

There is no suggestion the family were involved in Mr Taylor’s placards being removed or damaged.

One of the signs – reading “do not like my signs tell the council” – was torn in two and left outside his house.

Mr Taylor has since reattached the ripped board to a post outside his house as well as putting up a new message: “Who used a ladder to steal my sign?”

I was popping to the shop in the morning to pick up a paper and I thought: ‘Oh my God, the signs are gone.’ Disconcert­ing is a nice way of putting it... It was a real shock to think that somebody had been out here overnight on my property with a ladder stealing my signs. That’s very annoying. In fact more than annoying

Ewen Taylor

Mr Taylor, who has lived in his home for 50 years, said: “Who can you blame? Someone might have a grudge against my signs. OK, I can accept that. But as to who and why I cannot help you at all.”

South Wales Police told us there is no “ongoing” investigat­ion but officers will investigat­e if there is new informatio­n.

Mr Taylor said: “When I told the law my signs had been stolen they said I should get security cameras all over the place.

“They said: ‘Mr Taylor, there is nothing we can do. You do not have photograph­ic evidence.’

“I understand everybody wants hardcore evidence they can slap down on the table and say: ‘There’s a picture of you and that’s it.’ But it gets to be a bit annoying.”

When we initially reported on the garden wall row Mr Taylor gave a demonstrat­ion in which he measured the width of an inside section of his house close to the wall.

He then walked out to his yard and measured the distance between the garden wall and a line running parallel to the edge of the same inside section.

Mr Taylor said the second distance was about two inches shorter – which he claims shows there is an encroachme­nt on his property.

Asked if the removal of his placards has put him off his campaign, he said: “Oh definitely not. Oh no. I want my property back... All it needs is somebody to prove to me that it is mine.

“My signs will stay out there irrespecti­ve of what happens and how often I have to replace them.

“Am I optimistic my campaign will make a difference? Eventually yes.

“Only when somebody in authority stops saying: ‘It’s nothing to do with me.’”

Our previous report on the protest sparked a wave of stories in the national media but Mr Taylor has not seen any of the coverage.

“My son and daughter have,” he said. “I seem to be notorious.”

The mum living next door said last month: “Since we moved in 20 years ago [Mr Taylor] hasn’t talked to us. We hadn’t had an argument or anything.

“[The protest] is the first time there’s been any confrontat­ion.

“Cardiff council says there’s no need for a planning applicatio­n for extensions of six metres and this was within six metres.

“Then after the work was finished [Mr Taylor] drilled straight through.”

Mr Taylor accepts he used a drill

and hammer to make holes in the wall over a period of around five months.

He also peeled off a strip of stucco from the building extension.

Four circles in the garden wall show where the family have sealed up damage.

Police handed Mr Taylor a £90 fine last September for criminal damage.

The mum said last month: “The police took away his drill. That’s when he started with the signs... [The police] said they can’t do anything because it’s in his private property.

“They said it is like a protest sign even though it’s got our house number and he’s calling us thieves. How can that not be offensive?”

The pensioner felt he was left with “no other choice” but to drill holes after the council refused to intervene.

One council officer wrote to Mr Taylor that the extension did not need planning permission and that boundary disputes are not planning matters.

Mr Taylor responded with eight letters, mostly written in black felt-tip and in large capital letters.

One reads: “Two years [council officer’s name], two years of being ignored by you. Why?”

Speaking about the disappeara­nce of Mr Taylor’s placards, a police spokeswoma­n said: “South Wales Police received a report of signs being removed outside an address in Clare Road, Grangetown, on July 9.

“Officers attended the location to speak to the reporting person. There is no ongoing police investigat­ion in relation to this matter.

“As always we will respond to any new informatio­n and investigat­e. The victim has been updated.”

The neighbouri­ng family said last month that police advised them they could launch civil proceeding­s over the display but they decided against it to avoid legal costs.

A police spokeswoma­n told us at the time: “This is a civil dispute between neighbours in relation to building work and there is no current criminal investigat­ion.”

A council spokesman also said it was a civil matter.

Anyone with informatio­n about the removal of Mr Taylor’s signs can contact police via this link or Crimestopp­ers on 0800 555 111 quoting occurrence 2200228991.

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 ?? ?? Ewen Taylor claims placards were ripped from his Cardiff home in an overnight attack on his campaign against his neighbours’ extension
Ewen Taylor claims placards were ripped from his Cardiff home in an overnight attack on his campaign against his neighbours’ extension
 ?? ?? The bare window where a placard was ripped off
The bare window where a placard was ripped off

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