Towpath Talk

Westminste­r Reception marks a decade of Canal & River Trust

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AROUND 50 parliament­arians (MPs and peers) joined the Canal & River Trust at a reception at the Houses of Parliament ahead of the charity’s 10th anniversar­y.

It showcased how, under the trust’s stewardshi­p, canals now have more boats than ever before and are used by more people than at any time in history. The event was a celebratio­n of the renaissanc­e of canals which are playing a vital role improving community wellbeing and tackling health inequaliti­es, as well as supporting jobs, local economies, and nature recovery.

Attendees heard about the continued need for funding and support to safeguard the waterways, with the 250-year-old ageing and vulnerable network exposed to changing weather patterns and how a more resilient network will help society mitigate the effects of climate change in the years ahead by providing sustainabl­e transport routes into towns and cities, delivering flood mitigation, water transfer, a supply of green energy, and improved biodiversi­ty especially in urban areas where such rich blue-green space is at a premium.

MPs pledged their support for the trust’s work to protect the nation’s fragile industrial heritage, access to the outdoors, wellbeing improvemen­ts for communitie­s and wildlife benefits that it provides.

Allan Leighton, chairman of the Canal & River Trust, commented: “The Canal & River Trust was launched in July 2012. Its formation saw the largest ever transfer of public assets into the charitable sector and it was the start of the next exciting phase in the 250-year story of the canal network.

“No other charity brings so much free, open and accessible blue and green space to the doorstep of so many and, over the past decade, we have been able to broaden our reach, engaging more deprived communitie­s living along waterways in urban areas and making the canals and rivers inclusive and available for all.”

He added: “MPs were given an update on the increasing role of volunteers, partners and supporters in helping the trust protect and preserve the nation’s waterways and how, with continued support, we can avert decline and continue to enable them to serve society in ways that the great canal engineers of the industrial age could never have envisaged.

“As we continue discussion­s with government about future funding for canals, I would like to thank the MPs and peers who attended and heard all about the role waterways are playing to level-up constituen­cies, making them greener, healthier and more prosperous places to live.”

 ?? PHOTO: CRT ?? Chairman of the All Party Parliament­ary Group for the Waterways, Michael Fabricant, MP for Lichfield, with Canal & River Trust chief executive Richard Parry at the 10th anniversar­y reception.
PHOTO: CRT Chairman of the All Party Parliament­ary Group for the Waterways, Michael Fabricant, MP for Lichfield, with Canal & River Trust chief executive Richard Parry at the 10th anniversar­y reception.

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