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£3.4m boost for travellers in Wiltshire

The council has been awarded cash to upgrade sites across the county such as this one at Hay Lane, near Junction 16 of the M4 The council has been awarded cash to upgrade sites across the county such as this one at Hay Lane, near Junction 16 of the M4

Wiltshire has been granted £3.4 million to create and upgrade sites for gypsies and travellers.

The money – awarded to Wiltshire Council by the Government – is the largest allocation in the south west.

Of the amount, £1.15million will be used for 20 new pitches and £2.3million is for improvements to 40 existing pitches.

Wiltshire Council will be putting in £250,000 towards the scheme.

Toby Sturgis, Wiltshire Council Cabinet member for development control, said the council had to provide sites for gypsies and the travelling community by law. It currently has 102 pitches.

He said consultation was ongoing with gypsies and land owners about finding suitable sites for the 20 new pitches which would probably be on three sites.

He said one possible site could be Chelworth Lodge at Cricklade which got planning permission on appeal for a travellers’ site.

Coun Sturgis added it was also possible that a few of the new pitches could be provided at some of the council’s existing gypsy sites.

The improvements to 40 pitches would probably be to some on each of the sites the council owns.

These are Thingley at Chippenham (which has 23 pitches), Fairhaven, Dilton Marsh (seven pitches), Lode Hill, Downton (ten pitches), Dairy House Bridge, Salisbury (18 pitches), Oak Tree Fields, Odstock (32 pitches) and Odstock transit site (12 pitches).

Coun Sturgis said: “Where mobile homes have moved in and out there is a lot of uneven concrete.

“The surfaces are not as good as I would like to see and some of the electrical and water connections are not up to standard because they have been altered a number of times.”

He added: “It’s very good news that the Government is providing the capital money for this as we would have had to spend a large amount of our own capital. We can use that capital for something else.”

Andrew Stunell, Communities Minister, said: “This funding will help provide sites in a way that reflects local need in consultation with the local community.

“It will assist hundreds of traveller families to find sites where they want to live and foster better relations with the existing communities and councils.”

Comments(5)

Don Jones says...
9:10am Fri 20 Jan 12

I'm sure that the taxes that the travellers pay and the benefits that they will bring to the local communities will show this a money well spent.

notscot says...
12:30pm Fri 20 Jan 12

Don Jones wrote:
I'm sure that the taxes that the travellers pay and the benefits that they will bring to the local communities will show this a money well spent.
I don't know - do I laugh or cry?
Or just spit fury?

Don Jones says...
12:57pm Fri 20 Jan 12

Were I an American, I might have written 'NOT!' at the end.

jamesbrown030477 says...
3:47pm Fri 20 Jan 12

So that roughly works out as just under £60,000 per pitch (or £60k per family). Just think of the new play equipment for kids of families who pay taxes or improvements to other local ammenities that money could provide.

It's a joke!!!

Triton says...
5:43pm Fri 20 Jan 12

There's a perfectly good enough pitch for these people already and that's at Compton Bassett right next to the dump. These people are nothing but leaches on society and seeing a story like this really grieves me as I'm about to pay yet another tax bill for my business!

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