Bristol Post

Campaigner­s call over fence round playing fields

- Adam POSTANS Local Democracy Reporter adam.postans@reachplc.com

CAMPAIGNER­S prevented from delivering a petition to Bristol City Council opposing a milelong, 6ft metal fence around Stoke Lodge playing fields have demanded to see the lawyers’ advice that “gagged” them.

The authority’s monitoring officer ruled that the petition, which has more than 4,000 signatures, enough to trigger a special debate at full council, could not be heard because of threatened legal action by We Love Stoke Lodge protest group.

Residents have been locked in a dispute for eight years with Cotham School, which the council decided in 2018 could erect a fence around the 22-acre site, in Westbury-on-Trym , under permitted developmen­t rules.

Work began in January but was halted because of interventi­on from neighbours, although it was completed earlier this month.

Speaking from the public gallery at a full council meeting Susan Mayer said Stoke Lodge had been “violated just to satisfy a spurious health and safety claim” on fields used by pupils for PE lessons.

She said: “If this petition is to be prohibited, show us the evidence that forbids its airing in public.”

Another resident, Emma Burgess, said: “I’m just one of thousands of Britolians your monitoring officer has silenced this evening by refusing to let us show you our petition video.

“We expected our council to listen to us, so why bother asking for views on the new green space strategy if you won’t listen to a community that is today locked out of our only local green space?

“Go there now and you will see a

once beautiful and unique place that you designated as important open space, and it is empty.

“It is surrounded by a mile-long, 2m high fence and its gates are locked.

“So please help us get our claim to public rights of way heard in the next few months, not years.”

Campaigner Helen Powell told Bristol mayor Marvin Rees: “The lease between Cotham School and the council prohibits the erection of any buildings or any other structures at Stoke Lodge.

“Does it surprise you that your officers apparently think a 1.5km-long, 2m high metal fence concreted into the ground is not a structure?”

Mr Rees replied: “The team has taken legal advice and it has been deemed not to be a structure. I do actually have no power over this.

“The secure fencing was installed over permitted developmen­t rights rather than a planning applicatio­n, which means responsibi­lity rests with the public rights of way and greens committee.

“They advise an investigat­ion into a Stoke Lodge playing fields rights of way applicatio­n will commence late 2020.

“You need to pursue it through the correct committee, but I’ve always said I will come out to meet you and I hope all sides in this dispute can sit around a table and find some way of crafting a way forward.”

“I’ve seen people come together over bigger divides in the world.”

Tory councillor for Stoke Bishop, Peter Abraham, said: “Why am I being denied confidenti­ally to see that council’s advice? As a ward councillor, I have written and said I promise to sign a form that I will keep it totally confidenti­al but I have still been denied it.

“You are gagging us,” he added.

 ??  ?? Work under way on the fence at Stoke Lodge playing fields
Work under way on the fence at Stoke Lodge playing fields

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom