Daily Mail

Tree vigilante who wanted to halt chainsaws must pay £16k

- By Chris Brooke

A CAMPAIGNER battling to stop a council felling hundreds of trees left court with a £16,000 bill yesterday and a warning that protesters flouting the law will be jailed.

Calvin Payne, 45, was found to be in contempt of court for twice breaching a High Court injunction banning campaigner­s from going within safety barriers around trees and for encouragin­g others to do the same on Facebook.

One of a small group of protesters stop-

‘You regard yourself above the law’

ping workmen in Sheffield from chopping down trees under a controvers­ial road maintenanc­e contract, he was given a three-month prison term suspended for 12 months and ordered to pay £16,000 of the council’s costs.

He said he did not know how the bill would be paid but a crowdfundi­ng site may be set up to help him. He vowed to do whatever he can ‘legally’ to stop the ‘destructio­n of Sheffield’s heritage’.

Payne, who was made redundant from his social care job three years ago, spends all his time campaignin­g to save trees including elms, oaks, sycamores and limes.

Passing sentence at Sheffield Crown Court, which was packed with fellow protesters, Mr Justice Males implied future breaches would lead to a custodial term. He said Payne ‘could have no com- plaint’ if he had been jailed, although he was being given a ‘final chance’ because he was ‘a law-abiding and decent man of good character’.

But he added: ‘Lest anyone be under the impression that breaches of the injunction do not matter or will be treated lightly, let me make it clear that the time will come – and in my judgment has come – when deliberate and repeated breaches must be punished.’

He told Payne: ‘You have made it clear you regard yourself above the law. Your conduct in breaching the injunction was intended to and has prevented Sheffield City Council from carrying out

work which has been held to be lawful.’ The judge noted that the council’s work was controvers­ial but said public defiance in breaking the court injunction was ‘damaging to the rule of law’.

Payne said outside court he was ‘obviously slightly relieved’ not to have been jailed. He added: ‘This will all continue in one form or another. I felt what I did was necessary and although it was illegal, it was also peaceful and justified and I believe Sheffield is a better place for it.

‘I have no contempt for the judge or the court, but I do have contempt for the council’s policy we are fighting.’ So far 5,500 trees have been felled under a £2.2billion 25year PFI deal with contractor­s Amey and another 500 are due to be chopped down before the end of the year. The authority insists contractor­s are removing only dead, dying, diseased, damaged or dangerous trees as part of the deal signed with the Labour-run council. But residents have been incensed by the loss of trees, many of which they claim were healthy and had stood for decades.

A spokesman for the council said: ‘We hope people will now protest peacefully outside safety zones without breaching the injunction.’

 ??  ?? Axed: A road in Sheffield where all the large trees have been felled and replaced with saplings. Inset: Calvin Payne yesterday BEFORE AFTER
Axed: A road in Sheffield where all the large trees have been felled and replaced with saplings. Inset: Calvin Payne yesterday BEFORE AFTER

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