Yorkshire Post

Wildlife presenter urges council to end ‘moorland vandalism’

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WILDLIFE PRESENTER and anti-shoot campaigner Chris Packham has urged Bradford Council to end grouse shooting on Ilkley Moor ahead of the Glorious Twelfth next week.

Writing to council leader Coun Susan Hinchcliff­e, Mr Packham described shoots at the beauty spot as “moorland vandalism”.

The start of the grouse shooting season next week will mark the final shoots permitted under the current 10-year lease between Bradford Council, the owners of the Moor, and the Bingley Moor Partnershi­p (BMP). The Partnershi­p, which owns 4,500 sq ft of moorland adjacent to Ilkley Moor, has paid the council £10,000 a year since 2008 under the lease, to shoot on the moor for up to eight days each season.

Mr Packham’s appeal to Bradford Council said: “Driven grouse moor management is ecological­ly disastrous. Drained, burned, poisoned and persecuted – it simply needs ending. It is clear that this unpopular and damaging practice is widely opposed by your constituen­ts, so why not honour your voters’ wishes and jump the gun on those who are dragging their feet towards the inevitable end of this moorland vandalism?”

His comments are included in a letter by campaign group Ban Bloodsport­s on Ilkley Moor (BBIM). It says figures released by the RSPB last month show over half of protected breeding bird species have declined or become locally extinct on Ilkley Moor on Bradford Council’s watch.

The group claims the “wildlife crash” has negatively impacted on the moor’s population of specialist species, including merlin, dunlin and short eared owl, and could result in the loss of the site’s conservati­on designatio­ns if declines continue.

Luke Steele, a spokesman for BBIM, said: “It is clear that licensing of grouse shooting by the local authority has been a conservati­on calamity. We urge Susan Hinchcliff­e to follow every other moorland owning-council in the country by committing to ending grouse shooting on public land.”

A spokesman for Bradford Council said: “Grouse shooting on Ilkley Moor is restricted to just eight weekdays during the grouse shooting season. The current contract to allow shooting on the moor will come to an in April next year. All representa­tions will be taken into account before any decision is made on whether to renew the contract or not.”

 ??  ?? Described grouse shooting as ‘an unpopular and damaging practice’.
Described grouse shooting as ‘an unpopular and damaging practice’.

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