Council builds gate to stop gypsies getting in - then opens it for safety reasons

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
49,906
1,905
113
A council spent thousands of taxpayers' money building a gate to stop gippos getting into a park - then opened it for Health and Safety reasons, allowing the gippos to enter, because they were concerned that the gippos would injure themselves when attempting to get through illegally. It therefore defeated the whole purpose of building the gate in the first place.

Brighton and Hove City Council installed the barrier with a padlock across the entrance to Wild Park after removing a group of travellers at the start of the summer.

But the visitors kept driving over pavements and artificial mounds in a bid to gain access.


Open season: The gate which was erected to keep travellers out has now been opened amid health and safety fears



Setting up camp: Scores of caravans are now settled across Wild Park near Brighton


Advice: Police had warned the council that it was not safe for travellers to keep trying to access the site around the barrier

After advice from Sussex Police, the authority said it was going to open the gate 'to reduce the risk to road users'.

By opening the gates and letting them in means police have lost all powers to evict the group straight away.

The council must now go through a lengthy and costly court process in order to kick the travellers off the public land.

Conservative councillor Dawn Barnett said the decision to open the gate was 'madness'.

She said: 'All the council is doing is encouraging unauthorised encampments. I think it’s not only health and safety gone mad, I think the council is mad for doing it.

'These travellers have been wandering around all summer. They were at Wild Park in May and now they’re back.

'I think it’s an absolute disgrace. The council paid to have a gate installed to keep the travellers out, and then they went right ahead and let them back in.


Delighted: Travellers have set up camp at Wild Park, Brighton, after being let into the site by council officials


Crazy: Critics have described the decision to open the gate and let travellers in as 'madness'

'When the gate was locked, they were just driving around it or going over the hills - but it was stopping a lot of caravans from getting there.

'Now the council have opened the flood gates, and as ever, honest, hard-working taxpayers have been left to foot the bill.'

More than 20 vehicles are already camped on the land, but more are expected over the weekend.

Mrs Barnett said: 'We had 70-odd caravans in a field somewhere else earlier this year.

'I wouldn’t be surprised if all of them and more showed up at Wild Park. The little kiddies that live nearby can’t play in the park anymore because it’s not safe.'

Colin Bradford, who runs the annual Wild Park Family Fun Day, said: 'It’s not acceptable. It’s a public park and people want to use it. It’s supposed to be there for everybody.'

The group arrived at the site last Friday evening.

Details of the gate being opened were discovered in a leaked email sent by the local authority to councillors.

He said: 'After the initial trespass was reported, Sussex Police highlighted the dangerous nature with which the group were accessing the field, as the main access gate was locked following previous enforcement action.'