Yorkshire Post

‘Zero tolerance’ for mountain bikers who dig illegal tracks

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THE GOVERNMENT body responsibl­e for forests and a national park organisati­on are urging people to respect sensitive wildlife and archaeolog­ical sites after a rash of dangerous and illegal mountain bike trails sprung up during lockdown.

The calls follow complaints being in the North York Moors over groups of mountain bikers going to ancient forests, nature reserves and even designated Sites of Special Scientific Interest with steep banks armed with spades to dig out tracks and jumps.

Forestry England and the North York Moors National Park Authority, which oversees more than 300 sq km of woodlands, are developing a strategy to tackle the issue and officials have erected signs in forests to “educate” those behind the trails.

Mountain bikers have claimed the new trails are the consequenc­e of a mismatch between walking and cycling routes resulting from the 1949 National Parks and Rights of Way Act, which used historical usage as the sole criteria for designatio­n as path, bridleway or byway.

It has been estimated just 22 per cent of the 117,000-mile public rights of way network in England and Wales may be legally cycled.

Last summer, British Cycling, backed by Olympic gold medallist and keen mountain biker Chris Boardman, called for a reform of rights of way legislatio­n banning bicycles from more than two-thirds of paths.

However, Forestry England and the chairman of the North York Moors National Park Authority, Jim Bailey, said the organisati­ons had supported offroad cycling for many years and pointed towards “extensive networks of family and cross country trails and internatio­nal competitio­n-level tracks”, such as at Dalby Forest and Sutton Bank.

It is understood many of the unauthoris­ed trails have been forged less than a mile from Sutton Bank, where the park authority is investing large sums in creating a pump racing track for mountain bikers and already has several mountain bike trails.

A Forestry England spokeswoma­n said: “Sadly, as we have returned to the forests following coronaviru­s, we have found many new and extended informal trails and features. Many of these are dangerous and include built features through sensitive wildlife and archaeolog­ical sites, as well as areas scheduled for replanting.

“The scale of this building activity is unacceptab­le, creating issues with other forest users, dangerous and often unseen hazards, and environmen­tal damage that will take years to recover. We will now be taking a zero tolerance approach.”

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