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Please note that as part of the recent CLA restructuring the counties of the East Midlands region have been divided between the new CLA East region and the new Midlands region. Consequently, existing news releases from the East Midlands are now only available on this website as archived articles. Members based in Lincolnshire, Northamptonshire and Nottinghamshire are now part of CLA East and should go to CLA East News for releases in their region. And members in Derbyshire, Leicestershire and Rutland are now part of the Midlands and should go to Midlands News for releases in their region. Statement by CLA East Midlands on the CRC's ‘The State of the Countryside Report’ CLA East Midlands director Helen Woolley said: "The State of the Countryside Report may show the dynamism and resilience of the rural economy compared with other sectors, but that is no excuse for government indifference.
"As the report notes, the countryside is about farming and the environment. The landscape and wildlife depend on the way in which land is managed. We therefore need policies in place that recognise this connection and promote both farming and the environment. "We need policies that will provide enough food and provide farmers with a secure and stable income. This will require greater investment in new technologies and development and in training. "However, none of this can be at the expense of the environment. Water pollution and air pollution need to be cut. Soil fertility needs to be improved, and we must reduce the general deterioration in the natural environment. Most of these issues are dealt with at EU, rather than national, level. We therefore need a government which recognises that one of the biggest challenges it faces is to make the case in Europe for sufficient funding," said Helen. CLA regional surveyor, Andrew Shirley, added: "The countryside is not just about farming. It hosts a whole range of small businesses and many, if not most, farmers now do more than just farm. We therefore need a planning system that will facilitate a certain amount of small-scale development. Unfortunately, we are a long way from this. "The planning system is both cumbersome and expensive. It inhibits enterprise to such an extent that even the most innocuous and beneficial proposals are turned down." The Ashbourne based surveyor continued: "The planning system must be reformed so it is positive, flexible, transparent and efficient and recognises the need to work with the grain of rural businesses and rural communities. It must also accept the demands of land use changes." "Finally, as many, if not all, rural businesses compete with urban businesses, it is vital that rural businesses have access to effective and affordable broadband if the digital divide is not to grow even wider." |
Contact Andrew Shirley MRICS
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