The Grassland Trust no longer exists sadly, but it would be worth letting
Plantlife know (I've cc'd in Trevor Dines). If the perpetrator falls within
the category of a 'public body', they have a responsibility under the 2006
NERC Act:
 
Natural Environment and Rural Communities Act 2006 (NERC Act). Instructs
every public authority (including local authorities and government agencies)
to have regard, so far as is consistent with the proper exercise of their
statutory functions, to the purpose of conserving biodiversity (a
responsibility known as the 'Biodiversity Duty'). 
 
If this has been breached, suggest that you hit them hard and insist on
restoration of the grassland and the cost associated with this. Use the
media. I do not know the site but it is clearly very special botanically and
a further erosion of the meagre remnants of old grassland left in Sussex and
Britain as a whole. Do you have any LBAP or other adopted local environment
policies? My undertanding is that a parish council has the same duty to
abide by these as a larger public body such as a local authority. Those
policies exist to be used and represent the language that many elected
members and council chiefs understand.
 
Good luck,
 
Steven
 
Steven Falk BSc ARCS FRES
Entomologist-Artist-Photographer
www.stevenfalk.co.uk <http://www.stevenfalk.co.uk/> 
mobile: 0781 555 7263
Twitter: @StevenFalk1
 
Field Guide to the Bees of Great Britain and Ireland:
http://bloomsbury.com/uk/field-guide-to-the-bees-of-great-britain-and-irelan
d-9781910389027/
 
Consultancy: http://www.stevenfalk.co.uk/help-our-bees
 
Flickr Image library at:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/63075200@N07/collections/
 
LinkedIn profile: https://www.linkedin.com/in/steven-falk-aa8ba817
 
2012 winner of the Royal Entomological Society Marsh Award for Insect
Conservation
 

  _____  

From: Adastra [mailto:adastra-boun...@lists.sxbrc.org.uk] On Behalf Of
Richard Price
Sent: Tuesday, May 16, 2017 6:15 PM
To: 'Adastra discussion group'
Subject: Re: [Adastra] Henfield Common football pitch project: No
Environmental Impact Assessment was done



I do sometimes get confused between the role of parish council and borough
council. Often the same people sit on both despite this appearing to be a
conflict. Do you have a list of members to write to?

 

It seems almost routine for some developers to clear land (or spray it)
prior to applying for planning permission. Once upon a time planning
departments would have taken a dim view of such practices. These days they
seem to reward them by granting planning permission. I am unsure of how good
Henfield Borough Council (if there is one) or West Sussex County Council are
on such practices.

 

Is it possible to have some photographs of the site before and after? Why do
you need it surveyed? Is it to determine what remains? To determine the
extent of damage? I think that unless you have some previous baseline datum
to work from otherwise a new survey will not determine the extent of the
damage. Can you apply to get the site incorporated within the SNCI? How are
you going to protect it?

 

I think that you have done well to highlight this Dave stay positive you
might succeed in protecting the grassland. I think there is a grasslands
trust that you could also contact.

 

All the best,

Richard.

 

From: Adastra [mailto:adastra-boun...@lists.sxbrc.org.uk] On Behalf Of D
BANGS
Sent: 16 May 2017 14:32
To: Adastra discussion group <adastra@lists.sxbrc.org.uk>
Subject: [Adastra] Henfield Common football pitch project: No Environmental
Impact Assessment was done

 

Adastra readers see below.
Henfield Parish Council did no EIA.
They made no approach to the Sussex Wildlife Trust, despite them being just
down the road.
Natural England were, as usual, toothless,
Dave Bangs
-----------------------------------------------------------

----Original message----
>From : henfiel...@btconnect.com
Date : 16/05/2017 - 12:55 (GMTST)
To : bangs...@btinternet.com
Cc : richardkendall...@icloud.com, garypetti...@hotmail.com,
mikepmor...@btinternet.com, vassossianto...@gmail.com,
malcolmeastwood...@btinternet.com, off...@henfield.gov.uk
Subject : Henfield Common football pitch project: damage to archaic
grassland

Dear Mr Bangs,

 

Further to your earlier email, I can confirm that there was no Environmental
Impact Assessment carried out on the Henfield Memorial Field pitches.

 

For your information Henfield Parish Council did contact 'Natural England,'
'Historic England' and 'The Open Spaces Society,' amongst others, to inform
them of the proposals to carry out the work. Only The Open Spaces Society
responded and gave no objections to the work being carried out.

 

I can confirm that the contract to carry out the renovation work has already
been agreed between Henfield Parish Council and the contractor, and it is
anticipated that the work will commence in the next couple of weeks, subject
to weather conditions being favourable.

 

Kind regards,

Kevin Wright

Clerk - Henfield Parish Council

 

From: D BANGS [mailto:bangs...@btinternet.com] 
Sent: Monday, 15 May, 2017 8:17 PM
To: off...@henfield.gov.uk
Subject: Henfield Common football pitch project: damage to archaic grassland

 

From: David Bangs

Field naturalist and author

bangs...@btinternet.com

T: 01273 620 815

15/05/17

To: Mr Kevin Wright, Henfield Parish Clerk

Dear Mr Wright

Damage to archaic species-rich grassland at Henfield Common

Thank you for speaking to me on the phone today.

I re-visited the Common after our phone chat and was appalled.

The football pitch project area sprayed by herbicide/gramicide takes in well
over half of the area in which Chamomile, Chamaemelum nobile, is present.
This is a rare and steeply declining species and the number of Sussex sites
where it naturally occurs is now very small. 

Its presence in quantity is one of the core nature conservation features of
the Common.

The area sprayed displays (in my short visit today) a number of high nature
value scarce plants, including Chamomile, Heath Spotted Orchis and Southern
Marsh Orchis, Adder's Tongue Fern, Marsh Pennywort, Common Yellow Sedge,
Oval Sedge, Hairy Sedge, Devil's Bit, Tormentil, and Heath Speedwell. 

In a single brief visit to the pitch project area in 2013 I recorded six
significant old meadow fungi species: two Fairy Clubs, a Pinkgill and three
Waxcap fungi. I suspect a properly conducted survey for this group would
record many more.

As I said to you, Henfield Common is largely an SNCI (Site of Nature
Conservation Interest). The area of the cricket pitch and the old ball
pitches (which are the subject of HPC's project) was anomalously excluded
from the designated SNCI only because the appropriate surveys there had not
then been carried out. Subsequently, a survey of the cricket pitch for old
meadow fungi was conducted (about 15 years ago) and the cricket pitch proved
to be the richest site for old meadow fungi on the Common and one of
regional value in nature conservation terms for this assemblage. 

Can you please tell me whether any Environmental Impact Assessment was made
of the football pitch project? If it was, would you be so kind as to forward
it to me?

I understand that drainage works are to undertaken (and ditch 'cleaning' has
recently taken place). Given that the core nature conservation feature of
the Common is its archaic acid marsh vegetation, further drainage could be
very detrimental.  

Furthermore, the highly acidic Folkestone Beds surface geology of the Common
is what gives it its individual character. Semi-natural 'moor' vegetation on
the local Wealden Folkestone Beds is now very rare, and the loss of this
surface geology to new imported soils will thus damage the character and
sense of place of the whole Common. 

I ask you, please, to secure the cessation of all further activity pertinent
to the football pitch project until  these issues of nature conservation
have been addressed. This is a matter of urgency, 

With best wishes

Dave Bangs

 





 

 

 


 
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