Yorkshire Post

Ilkley Moor campaign turns to preservati­on of historic habitat

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FOR ITS advocates, it was a way of funding crucial moorland management and protecting some of Yorkshire’s finest heather habitat.

But its critics felt differentl­y, and after years of controvers­y, Bradford Council succumbed to the campaign to end grouse shooting on Ilkley Moor earlier this year. This week, the tenyear deed that awarded shooting rights – but also brought with it countrysid­e stewardshi­p – came to an end.

Now campaigner­s are urging the council to ensure the Moor, the last municipal moorland in the UK where the practice was permitted, recovers from “terrible legacy” of grouse shooting and is used to promote wildlife biodiversi­ty, education, leisure and the local economy.

Bradford’s ruling Labour group voted against renewing the existing rights that allowed Bingley Moor Partnershi­p (BMP) to hold shoots on eight days a year for the last decade in January. Before that, shooting had taken place on Ilkley Moor for more than 100 years, except for a break between 1997 and 2007. The Council said its focus was now on implementi­ng its management plan for the Moor, which sets out the intention to seek funding from a new agri-environmen­t scheme.

It is still yet to be approved by Natural England, but the 75-page document includes a “vision for Ilkley Moor” that “conserves and enhances it unique habitats”; maintains and restores its active blanket bog; manages flood risk; and provides a home for protected species “such as the upland moorland birds which thrive there and help to give the moor its identity”.

The plan also sets out how the Moor can provide artistic inspiratio­n; a place for leisure and education; and serve as an “economic asset” to the District - both as a tourist destinatio­n and in providing employment and supporting local agricultur­al endeavour.

Ban Bloodsport­s on Ilkley Moor has lobbied Bradford Council to end grouse shooting on the moor since its formation in May 2014. Spokespers­on Luke Steele said: “A package of robust measures – including restoratio­n of peatland to assist species such as golden plover and dunlin, sparse tree-planting on the steepest slopes to decrease flood risk and erosion, and the adoption of lowintensi­ty heather management to ensure habitat necessary for merlin and short-eared owl - will provide stepping stones necessary to ensuring Ilkley Moor is preserved in a way beneficial to wildlife, education, its users and the local economy.”

A spokespers­on for Bradford Council said: “Our focus is now on implementi­ng the objectives of our Ilkley Moor Management Plan to manage the heathland, increase tree coverage in appropriat­e areas, restore peat and blanket bog, and reduce flood risk for the surroundin­g areas.

“The plan is still being considered by Natural England and we are hoping to get approval soon. As part of the plan we will be seeking additional sources of funding to help our stewardshi­p of the moor.”

 ??  ?? Campaigner­s from Ban Bloodsport­s in a protest ramble on Ilkley Moor in 2017, to oppose the last grouse shooting season.
Campaigner­s from Ban Bloodsport­s in a protest ramble on Ilkley Moor in 2017, to oppose the last grouse shooting season.

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