green space – Hinterland https://hinterland.org.uk Rural News Fri, 15 Nov 2019 06:09:53 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 RURAL SERVICES NETWORK CONFERENCE RENEWS CALLS FOR A RURAL STRATEGY https://hinterland.org.uk/rural-services-network-conference-renews-calls-for-a-rural-strategy/ Mon, 09 Sep 2019 05:18:14 +0000 http://www.hinterland.org.uk/?p=5912 We had perhaps the best of the 6 annual conferences since the RSN picked up the baton from the LGA when the Rural Commission was discontinued. Numbers were up, sponsors were up and the debate was rich, varied and uplifting. This press release issued by the RSN after the conference captures the essence of the discussions. It tells us

The Rural Services Network Annual National Rural Conference, comprising over 120 representatives of rural local authorities and other rural service providers and countryside groups voted unanimously at its meeting today to strengthen calls for a rural strategy.

Encouraged by Key Note Speaker and Chair of the Lords Select Committee on the Rural Economy Lord Don Foster – who suggested that the government had a blind spot as far as rural areas were concerned, conference delegates came out 100% in favour of asking Government to think again about its reticence over taking action on behalf of rural communities.

At the heart of the discussions was a shared conviction that “No-one should be disadvantaged by where they live.”

Rural disadvantage comes in many forms and delegates heard:

Northern Ireland has a bigger adjustment in cash terms to cover the additional rural costs of providing health services than England as whole.

A typical rural affordable housing scheme in Cornwall had some 27 applicants for every available unit.

Public transport is on its knees with services virtually non-existent in many deep rural areas.

Protected landscapes are increasingly becoming places to visit with little thought in public policy about the challenges of living and working in them.

An uneven pattern of economic development has left broad swathes of rural England with no prospect of providing work or house ownership options for the young.

Loneliness and its corrosive effects in terms of health and well-being is one increasing symptom of this cocktail of factors mitigating against the sustainability of many rural communities.

Delegates also heard about positive options going forward based on a 10-year vision for the future arising from the thinking of key speakers such as Professor Janet Dwyer from University of Gloucestershire and Dr Gary Bosworth from the University of Lincoln. The increasing use of digital and wider technological solutions underpins much of the positive future for rural communities – ranging from health to public transport.

It is clear however that the antidote to many of the issues discussed will only work if individual policy strands are joined up around a cohesive pattern of coordinated actions. The glue that offers to bind this together is a rural strategy.

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Anger over joint BEIS and Ordnance Survey mapping project https://hinterland.org.uk/4590/ Wed, 12 Jul 2017 20:03:22 +0000 http://www.hinterland.org.uk/?p=4590 Cant help wondering if those complaining in this story below might have a powerful point….

A Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy-funded project to map the nation’s green spaces on a freely-accessible database has been criticised by campaigners for failing to distinguish between genuinely open land and fenced-off private property.

The greenspace mapping project, delivered by Ordnance Survey, was launched this week by universities and science minister Jo Johnson and OS strategic development director Philip Wyndham.

BEIS described the database as a “rich source of information on the location and extent of greenspaces up and down the country” that would “help tackle health and environmental issues”.

But the Open Spaces Society said the database failed to deliver on the Conservative Party’s 2015 election manifesto pledge to “‘make it easier to access our beautiful landscapes, by providing free, comprehensive maps of all open-access green space”.

The group, which campaigns to protect common land, village greens, open spaces and public paths, said the database did not discriminate between public open spaces and land used exclusively for private recreation.

It said public and private golf courses were both shown as accessible greenspace, as were allotments, private school recreation grounds and private sports facilities such as bowling greens.

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