The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Travellers face new jail threat in illegal site blitz

- By Peter Henn

TRAVELLERS could face jail or fines of up to £2,000 if they return to illegal sites within a year of being evicted under new legislatio­n.

The Government says the Police Powers and Protection Bill will help to get rid of illegal encampment­s that ‘cause misery’.

The proposed law, due to come before Parliament within the next few weeks, will give local authoritie­s in England and Wales the power to move illegally camped travellers to legal sites in neighbouri­ng authoritie­s.

At present, councils can only move people on to sites within their own areas, and travellers are only fined if they return within three months.

Since trespass is not a criminal offence, travellers who set up illegal sites do not face imprisonme­nt.

The proposed change would see trespassin­g on private land to set up a site made a criminal offence, with people who break the law facing up to three months in prison.

The new law also sets the threshold where police could take action at two caravans, down from the current six.

A Government source told the Daily Telegraph: ‘The vast majority of travellers are law-abiding citizens, but illegal sites often give an unfair, negative image of their community, and cause distress and misery to those who live nearby.

‘There is a widespread perception that the law does not apply to travellers, and that is deeply troubling.’

Abbie Kirby, of the Friends, Families and Travellers charity, accused the Home Office of ‘ignoring police views’. She claimed that 75 per cent of police responses in a consultati­on process said current powers were sufficient, that 84 per cent did not support making unauthoris­ed encampment­s a criminal matter, and 65 per cent said a lack of site provision was the real issue.

Last summer, villagers at Grange Moor, West Yorkshire, appealed to their local council to dig a trench to stop travellers regularly returning to an unauthoris­ed site.

It is estimated there are 23,000 traveller caravans, with 14 per cent on unauthoris­ed sites.

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