Yorkshire Post

Agent ‘Stakeknife’ released on bail

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YORKSHIRE DALES officials have hit back at campaigner­s for using the name of famed vet Alf Wight to further their position in a row over council tax hikes for secondhome owners.

The debate in recent weeks has centred on original proposals from the Yorkshire Dales National Park Authority which would see a Band D property land an annual council tax of £8,500.

The authority, however, is now asking the eight tax-setting local authoritie­s within the park to strike an accord to open talks with the Government to explore what options are available for raising the tax on second homes within the park’s boundaries.

As a staunch opponent of the proposal, the Dales Home Owners Action Group, says it is “an affront to the legacy of the Dales’ most famous second home owner” But the authority has hit back, saying Mr Wight, who was responsibl­e for the world-famous James Herriot books, was inspired by the “strength and distinctiv­eness” of the community life it is seeking to protect.

“Many of our towns and villages already have too many second homes, and the number is increasing,” a spokesman said.

“The effects on community life are clear for all to see. We have to take responsibi­lity for the future – and try to attract families and retain more.

“We are not entirely comfortabl­e with the second home owners’ action group using Alf Wight’s name to further their own position. But since they have, it might be pointed out to them that this literary giant was inspired by the strength and distinctiv­eness of community life in the Dales.”

The Dales Home Owners Action Group has written to Environmen­t Secretary Michael Gove urging him to consider whether the authority has oversteppe­d its statutory remit by promoting a tax rise. The group has accused the park authority of “allowing prejudice to cloud their judgement in protecting the economy of an area massively dependent on tourism”. In their attacks on the plan, the group said it was “an affront to the legacy of the Dales’ most famous secondhome owner, Mr Wight, aka James Herriot, who was responsibl­e for injecting millions into the Dales”. Mr Wight, whose main home was in Thirsk, bought a second home at West Scrafton, Coverdale, in 1978 with proceeds from sales of his famous Herriot tales of veterinary life and the subsequent television series

The action group said: “Anyone following his lead by investing in or inheriting another home in the park is now being rewarded with the threat of punitive council tax hikes originally suggested as five times that of other residents.”

Mr Wight’s son, Jim, said the current arguments about whether there should be a tax rise on second homes has nothing to do with his father, but that he did not mind the group mentioning him.

“He was a second home owner and he did a huge amount for the Dales,” said Mr Wight, who inherited his father’s second home, as he went on to explain how he viewed the initial proposed tax rise of “at least five times”.

“It’s a phenomenal rise,” Mr Wight said. “Personally speaking instead of £2,000 a year I would have to pay £12,000 a year. If council tax was put up by 50 per cent across the country, there would be riots but it has been suggested that we may have to suffer a 500 per cent rise.”

The park authority has suggested that a large tax increase on the 1,500 or so second homes in the Dales, could bring more homes back into full-time occupancy and would help address a lack of affordable housing. Mr Wight said he understood why the authority had suggested the move, but that he believes there must be other options to a “punitive” tax rise.

“I see where they are coming from. There may be too many second homes in the Dales but I don’t think this is the way to address it. They could possibly be phased out instead and sold to local people. There will be a lot of people who have had these homes handed down through inheritanc­e.”

A man widely named as the Army’s notorious IRA agent Stakeknife has been released on bail.

Detectives have been questionin­g Freddie Scappaticc­i from West Belfast about offences including murder and abduction since Tuesday. Mr Scappaticc­i has always denied claims that he is Stakeknife, a military mole who reputedly led the republican organisati­on’s internal security unit.

 ??  ?? Alf Wight, aka James Herriot, owned a second home in the Yorkshire Dales, which is now owned by his son, Jim Wight, inset.
Alf Wight, aka James Herriot, owned a second home in the Yorkshire Dales, which is now owned by his son, Jim Wight, inset.
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