Yorkshire Post

‘Challenge’ to improve Dales paths network

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A DRIVE to bring a 2,623km network of footpaths, which includes routes such as the Pennine Way, Coast to Coast and Three Peaks, up to standard is facing a challengin­g year ahead.

Alan Hulme, head of park management for the Yorkshire Dales, said while there appeared to have been “really pleasing progress” during 2019, a combinatio­n of flash floods wiping out paths and bridges, coronaviru­s halting repair work and funding being removed could set the ambition back.

Maintainin­g access to the area’s special qualities, through the rights of way network, is seen as crucial as they help underpin the local tourism economy.

A meeting of the Yorkshire Dales Access Forum heard a survey of five per cent of paths in the National Park – about 137km in length – found the percentage in a good state of repair that were well

signposted had risen from 84 per cent the previous year to 90 per cent, hitting the park’s target for 2023.

The meeting heard the last year saw 1,298 improvemen­ts to rights of way stiles, gates and signposts; 76 river crossings and five sets of stepping stones maintained or replaced; 3km of engineered paths maintained; 1km of new engineered paths created.

Mr Hulme described the £404,322 of external funding that was secured for rights of way projects in the National Park as “an incredible achievemen­t”.

However, he said 43 instances of flood damage had been identified from torrential downpours in Swaledale and Arkengathd­ale on July 30 last year, including 13 severely damaged or destroyed bridges, while 51 path closures had been pushed through.

He said: “We’ve still got significan­t works to do. We have secured £150,000 from North Yorkshire County Council for flood recovery works, which is a great step forward but a lot less than we actually needed.”

Mr Hulme said the coronaviru­s pandemic had seen months of work on paths lost, that £40,000 had been cut from the rights of way budget as a result.

He added: “We are being drawn away from our normal rights of way work into dealing with public issues around the park. That is going to have some impact on what we can do on the rights of way programme.”

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