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This would be a shame!


Steve Bullman
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I haven't read the whole thread, so it may have been said before, but I would guess the only reason the council are enforcing this is because their lawyer told them someone will eventually have to step off the footpath to let someone else past, step onto the road and get run over, break an ankle etc etc, and sue the council for a million. And someone, eventually, will. On purpose, probably. Especially since the hedge and the controversy surrounding it has been bought before the public eye. The council is liable. Always about the bottom line, no?

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I haven't read the whole thread, so it may have been said before, but I would guess the only reason the council are enforcing this is because their lawyer told them someone will eventually have to step off the footpath to let someone else past, step onto the road and get run over, break an ankle etc etc, and sue the council for a million. And someone, eventually, will. On purpose, probably. Especially since the hedge and the controversy surrounding it has been bought before the public eye. The council is liable. Always about the bottom line, no?

 

 

Probably but my take on it is that it's a crime butchering it!!

It's a picture postcard village and it will ruin it for all. Even the moron who has complained👎👎👎

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They'd have been better cutting it right back to the main stem, yew hedges regenerate much better that way.

 

It is a shame really but public footpaths aren't the right place for a hedge even if is a nice one, looks like only just enough room for a double buggy or wheelchair to me even though it's been cut back.

 

Not read whole thread btw 😊

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If the owners house is listed then he needs to check whether the hedge is rooted within the curtiledge of the listed building. If it is then its protected by the listing and will require listed building consent before pruning. In the meantime he needs to get onto English Heritage and see if they will list as an ancient hedgerow.

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If the owners house is listed then he needs to check whether the hedge is rooted within the curtiledge of the listed building. If it is then its protected by the listing and will require listed building consent before pruning. In the meantime he needs to get onto English Heritage and see if they will list as an ancient hedgerow.

 

 

That's interesting the house is an old Manor House it may well be listed . The hedge is rooted behind the wall inside the boundary line.

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