I am not convinced this is the right war? The post-Brexit settlement will the biggest change for decades ? And most farmers round here are totally dependent on subsidy.
This thread is becoming like one of those panel games where you have to give a word which is totally unconnected to the words used already. How on earth did we get on to Farm Subsidies and Brexit when the topic is actually a High Court case about cave access?
The looming problem is that a manifesto commitment of the present Conservative government is to criminalise trespass. That returns us to the 1930?s and the Access to Mountains Act (which never took effect because of WW2) but its general idea was to permit a little bit of public access but also to criminalise a lot. It?s widely acknowledged that groups representing public access interests fell for this trick and prostituted their constituents, so not a great moment in sports leadership and one that those concerned would rather forget about. So let?s not go there again. Read more here:
https://www.oss.org.uk/about-us/our-history/saving-open-spaces-the-trespass-saga/
The problem BCA would have in the scenario that the CROW Caving matter isn?t settled, is that BCA can?t then advise its members with certainty if they are committing civil trespass (as the law stands now) or criminal trespass (as the law might become) when entering a cave on CROW Access Land without permission to do so. I therefore suggest the present High Court action is both timely and has considerable merit as compared to the idea of manipulating landowners in the future via granting or withholding farming subsides in exchange for public access on a landowner consent basis.
f*** that. I'm going caving, Don't like it? Sue me.
Do you know, last Tuesdays? judge got very close to suggesting the above method - but in a more polite way. You?re not allowed to record court proceedings so I?m going from memory here, but I think he was imagining at one point in his commentary that an alleged trespass case on CROW Access Land would be one way of getting the cave access rights issue into court.
The snag with that idea is that County Courts which would hear civil trespass cases, and criminal courts that deal with aggravated trespass, do not set legal precedents. It would have to go to appeal to achieve that. So if the underlying aim of the trespassing was to clarify CROW, it means the trespasser would have to make sure they lost the first court case in order to hope to win the appeal that followed and thus secure the legal precedent in their favour, they hope. So this trespass court case idea is not very ?attractive? (and I?m being diplomatic here) to say the least.
Therefore it is right to appeal the present Judicial Review case as the best way forward for securing caving interests into the long term as well as to clarify the current situation.