Council vows to take action at travellers' site

The field that became an unauthorised travellers' site in a weekend

A council said it would serve enforcement documents after it was alerted to unauthorised works taking place to expand a travellers' site.

Central Bedfordshire Council said it was made aware of the work taking place in Tilsworth, near Leighton Buzzard, on Friday.

A spokesperson said a retrospective planning application was submitted on Friday but had not been received until Monday and had not yet been validated.

There is already a large site of caravan pitches on the edge of the village, but a traveller who lives in the area said those behind the recent development felt the existing plot was overcrowded.

News imageAnt Saddington/BBC An aerial view of lots of caravans and static homes on brownfield land, surrounded by green fields.Ant Saddington/BBC
Central Bedfordshire Council said enforcement documents had been drafted up as a result of the new development (pictured top-left)

A spokesperson for the council said it understood "the concern this is causing locally".

Its officers visited on Monday to "establish the facts and the nature and extent of the works", they said.

"Evidence was collected during this visit and provided to our legal services team for review," the spokesperson said.

"Based on the evidence gathered, enforcement documents have been drafted with a view to serving these later today."

The council was treating the issue as a "matter of urgency" and its officers would "take appropriate action where we have the legal basis and evidence to do so".

When a similar encampment appeared at nearby Flamstead in Hertfordshire, Dacorum Borough Council issued a stop notice and took legal action.

Residents told the BBC that machinery was used to create the new strip of land on Friday, and they had since counted about eight caravans parked there.

News imageAnt Saddington/BBC A man with short grey hair, wearing a beige top with a collar. He looks at the camera as he sits outside on a sunny day. He is slightly frowning. Behind him is a garden, enclosed by trees.Ant Saddington/BBC
Craig Smith, a traveller from the area, said the community's families were expanding and therefore needed more space

Travellers at the site told the BBC they did not intend to cause problems and they would meet with the settled residents to provide answers to any concerns.

Craig Smith, a traveller living in the area, said people at the site felt they had "overgrown" the plot.

"We have to try and buy farmers' fields if we can, disguise ourselves so that they don't recognise us as travelling people... then we have to go through the planning channels and they always say no," he explained.

"We don't want to upset anybody in the settled community, but we've got to live somewhere and our families are expanding at the same rate as everyone else's."

News imageAnt Saddington/BBC Aerial view of caravans and newly developed plots at a traveller site near open countryside, with nearby homes and a larger established site in the distance.Ant Saddington/BBC
The new development is between an existing traveller encampment and the village itself

Sherrie Smith, chief executive of the Gypsies and Travellers Essex group, said disputes such as this were a result of a failing planning system.

"Priority number one solution is that borough councils meet their housing requirements for culturally appropriate accommodation," she said.

"All [travellers] want to do is be part of that community they move to and raise their families, educate them and get better health.

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