Plymouth woodland will not be sold
An historic Plymouth woodland will not be sold-off the Government has pledged after an expert panel called for the nation’s forests to remain in public ownership.
Environment Secretary Caroline Spelman has promised that “our forests will stay in public hands”, more than a year after she was forced into a U-turn on a bid to privatise England's forests following public outrage.
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Caroline Spelman
This had included the 570 acre Cann Woods, also known locally as Plym Forest. Dating as far back as the 15th century when it was part of the Manor of Boringdon, it is a haven for wildlife and used by both walkers and cyclists.
The Independent Panel on Forestry, set up after the outcry prompted by the bid to dispose of public woodlands to businesses, communities and charities, said the estate should remain in public ownership as land held in trust for the nation.
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The panel said the Government needs to value woodlands for all the benefits they provide for people, nature and the economy and to invest in the public forest estate to avoid having to sell off woods to balance the books.
Responding to the report, Mrs Spelman said: “Our forests will stay in public hands. We will not sell the public forest estate.
“We'll be talking to all those who are passionate about our forests to decide how we will manage our forests for the future.”
Labour MP for Plymouth Moor View Alison Seabeck said: “This is very good news for all those who campaigned so hard to save Cann Woods locally, but also the national campaign which forced a U-Turn on the Government.”
The Department for Environment (Defra) also confirmed that the planned sale of 15 per cent of the public forest estate, the most that can be sold off under existing legislation, would not go ahead.
The sale to raise up to £100 million had been put on hold while the panel conducted its inquiry.
The independent panel said the public forest estate cost around £20 million a year to the taxpayer - around 90p per household in England - but paid back an estimated £400 million in benefits to people, nature and the economy.
The estimate does not include the benefits forests provide such as connecting people with nature and preserving historic customs.
The Government must pioneer a new approach to woodlands which valued and rewarded management, improvement and expansion of woods for all the benefits they provide to people's health, recreation, wildlife and a sustainable economy, the panel said.
The report called on the Government and other landowners to give as many people access to woods as possible by planting trees and woodlands near to where they lived and providing incentives to increase access to existing wooded areas.
Local enterprise partnerships should bid for funding from various sources to invest in the wood industry supply chain and create jobs in rural areas, while local authorities should have a “wood first” policy in their local plans to encourage its use in construction.




Comments
by 9ab3jdr622l
Wednesday, July 04 2012, 9:22PM
“So up yours Ms Spelman,people like you know the price of everything and the value of nothing.”
by Peter20113
Wednesday, July 04 2012, 2:24PM
“A Ha!”
by timplymouth
Wednesday, July 04 2012, 2:13PM
“The H in historic is not silent, so please don't put AN before it.
Silent h:
An heir
An hour
An honour
An honest man
Non-silent h:
A hotel
A historic
not a happy bunny
a hazard”