Los Angeles Times

Bucolic towns find they’re on the Brexit border

In a county that voted for Britain’s departure from the EU, new constructi­on makes it a concrete reality.

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

SEVINGTON, England — Four years after Britain voted to leave the European Union, Brexit can still seem abstract. But in the county known as the Garden of England, it is literally taking concrete form.

Just beyond the ancient oaks and yews that surround medieval St. Mary’s Church in the village of Sevington, bulldozers, dump trucks and cement mixers swarm noisily over a field. They are chewing up land to create part of Britain’s new border with the European Union — a customs-clearance depot with room for up to 2,000 trucks.

No one asked local people for permission, and even in this Brexit-backing area, the disruption is straining support for Britain’s divorce from the EU.

“The first anyone knew about it was when a sign went up saying the footpaths had been closed,” said Sharon Swandale, whose home in the village of Mersham used to be a 20-minute walk from Sevington. Closure of the path for constructi­on work means it’s now an almost four-mile drive.

This county, Kent, voted by 60% to 40% to leave the EU in Britain’s 2016 referendum, but Swandale said visions of truck stops and customs depots were not uppermost in residents’ minds.

“That was never part of the actual selling and the marketing for Brexit,” she said.

The two prosperous villages of Sevington and Mersham are 15 miles from the Channel Tunnel to France and 20 miles from Britain’s biggest ferry port at Dover. Between them, the two routes carry 4 million trucks a year, filled with food and all manner of other essential items.

Those goods moved back and forth freely while Britain was part of the EU’s single market and customs union. Britain left the bloc’s political structures in January and will make an economic break when a transition period ends Dec. 31. That means Britain must erect a customs border with the 27nation EU, its biggest trading partner.

Opponents of Brexit say it is a waste of money and effort that will hurt businesses on both sides. For supporters, it’s part of taking back control of the country’s borders and trade.

Everyone agrees it means new red tape, with the need for customs declaratio­ns and inspection­s. If Britain and the EU fail to strike a free-trade deal before the end of the year, tariffs will be slapped on many goods, bringing more disruption, bureaucrac­y and expense.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s Conservati­ve government has been reluctant to disclose details of its border plans. But last month it acknowledg­ed that its “reasonable worst-case scenario” involved “7,000 portbound trucks in Kent and associated maximum delays of up to two days.”

The government’s plans for limiting the disruption include converting parts of a highway into a temporary parking lot for trucks and imposing a “Kent access pass” — essentiall­y a passport that truckers heading for the EU must have to enter Kent from other parts of Britain.

The Sevington site is intended for customs checks and could also be a “temporary traffic-management facility” — in other words, a parking lot — for trucks if there are border delays, the government says.

The 27-acre field is one of 10 sites around the country earmarked for potential border infrastruc­ture, under powers that the government has given itself to buy and build without consulting local authoritie­s or residents first.

“Up to now no local resident has seen the plans,” said Rick Martin, chairman of Sevington parish council, adding that residents are worried about gridlock and the effect that the site will have on property prices.

“People are quite perplexed at the moment about what it’s going to look like when there’s 1,000 lorries parked across the road,” he said.

Sevington and Mersham are ancient settlement­s, mentioned in the 1086 census known as the Domesday Book, but the residents can’t be said to reject modern life. They already live with the hum of traffic on the M20 highway, which cuts through the area, and the sound of trains whooshing by at 185 mph toward the Channel Tunnel.

That makes them even more determined to preserve the remaining rural character of their communitie­s.

With the support of local politician­s, villagers are trying to limit the damage by saving an adjoining field, also bought by the government but not yet slated for developmen­t. It’s the last green space between them and the sprawling town of Ashford nearby.

“It would be the perfect place to save as a green buffer between all the developmen­t here and the village,” said Swandale, a member of the Village Alliance, a local campaignin­g group.

Constructi­on has already chased off the skylarks that used to inhabit the future customs site. Swandale says preserving the other field could save great crested newts and dormice and the paths used by walkers, cyclists and horse riders.

“It’s taking back control,” she said, echoing the Brexit campaign’s slogan. “It’s having this for the local people, it’s using it, it’s planting trees to reduce carbon, it’s increasing its biodiversi­ty .... It would go a long way to mitigate this developmen­t.”

Britons still don’t know whether New Year’s Day 2021 will bring the government’s worst-case scenario or a smoother exit from the EU.

Talks on a trade deal are deadlocked over fishing rights and fair-competitio­n rules. At a summit this week, EU leaders will assess whether a breakthrou­gh is possible. There are only weeks left to seal a deal if it is to be ratified before the end of the year.

 ?? Matt Dunham Associated Press ?? NEW CONSTRUCTI­ON for customs facilities came as a surprise to residents of nearby villages in Kent County, who voted by wide margins to approve Brexit.
Matt Dunham Associated Press NEW CONSTRUCTI­ON for customs facilities came as a surprise to residents of nearby villages in Kent County, who voted by wide margins to approve Brexit.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States