URGENT Tree Protest Weymouth ‑Aroooga — updated

Update, Mon­day 15th:
anoth­er per­son has climbed up into the same tree; coun­cil want to fin­ish work before Christ­mas; local res­i­dents send­ing hot water bot­tles up tree. Get down there to help — con­tact num­bers below.

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Sun­day, 14.12.2008:

Update, Mon­day 15th:
anoth­er per­son has climbed up into the same tree; coun­cil want to fin­ish work before Christ­mas; local res­i­dents send­ing hot water bot­tles up tree. Get down there to help — con­tact num­bers below.

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Sun­day, 14.12.2008:
One pro­tes­tor still in trees, with the oth­ers com­ing down on Fri­day and Sat­ur­day — chop­ping down of trees clear­ance work con­tin­u­ing all week­end. “They’re already over half way through cut­ting them and they’re work­ing today and have been work­ing over the week­end.”
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11.12.2008
Action in the trees now get there.

Urgent many trees being cut down some over 400 years old. For anoth­er unneed­ed road. There was a camp at the site 12 years ago with some of the Fair­mile posse there. Which won and camp dis­man­tled ..now road­builders , the coun­cil and home­grown Tim­ber com­pa­ny are at it again.
The site is …Two Mile Cop­pice next to the rail­way line Wey­mouth..
3 activists cur­rent­ly in trees with secu­ri­ty around.… any old tree pro­test­ers dust off your har­ness­es and get there. Or any new recruits next gen­er­a­tion wel­come.
On site mobiles ( bat­ter­ies get­ting low) 07792717821 / 07807952822
Just get in da van and get there now.

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Ancient tree sit-in against road

12th Decem­ber 2008
Two pro­test­ers are sit­ting in trees in ancient Dorset wood­land to try to stop clear­ance work tak­ing place ahead of the build­ing of a new £84m relief road.

Work to clear part of Two Mile Cop­pice restart­ed on Thurs­day after a legal bid by the Wood­land Trust tem­porar­i­ly sus­pend­ed work on Tues­day.

The Wey­mouth relief road aims to ease traf­fic around Wey­mouth and Port­land, which are host­ing the Olympic sail­ing.

Dorset Coun­ty Coun­cil said work would con­tin­ue despite the pro­test­ers.

A spokesman said trees would be cut down around the demon­stra­tors and that the coun­cil hoped to com­plete the work by Christ­mas.

“The coun­cil is now dis­cussing how the pro­test­ers can be safe­ly and legal­ly removed,” he added.

One pro­test­er, 35-year-old Nicky Baines, came down from the trees on Fri­day.

He told the BBC the two remain­ing men, Nick Pep­per, 41, and a man known as Nod­dy, had both lived in Wey­mouth in the past.

He said they did not rep­re­sent any par­tic­u­lar group but the idea was to “stick it out as long as pos­si­ble”.

“We’ve been hav­ing a bit of trou­ble with the amount of equip­ment — food, water and stay­ing warm.

“But at least one per­son has got a lot of stuff they can keep going with.”

Work restart­ed

Trees and oth­er veg­e­ta­tion were being removed from 1.5 acres of wood­land on the west­ern edge of Two Mile Cop­pice, when Tues­day’s legal chal­lenge halt­ed work.

The Wood­land Trust, which owns the land, said the coun­ty coun­cil had failed to pro­vide a Notice to Enter doc­u­ment.

The cop­pice is among land in an Area of Out­stand­ing Nat­ur­al Beau­ty (AONB) that Dorset Coun­ty Coun­cil was giv­en per­mis­sion to buy, using com­pul­so­ry pur­chase orders, in Sep­tem­ber.

But until the orders are processed, the land still belongs to the trust. The cor­rect doc­u­men­ta­tion was lat­er pro­vid­ed and work was allowed to restart.

Steve Marsh, of the Wood­land Trust, said the legal chal­lenge was start­ed to make sure the coun­cil was fol­low­ing the cor­rect pro­ce­dures.

“We did­n’t think we’d ever be able to stop the work in the long term,” he said, adding that the trust was against the road.

“This is the last remain­ing ancient wood­land in the Wey­mouth and Port­land area. It’s a very much-used wood and a much-loved wood.

“Once it’s gone, it’s gone for­ev­er, it can’t be recre­at­ed because the cli­mate was dif­fer­ent 400 years ago.

“Ancient wood­land is the rich­est habi­tat we’ve got in Britain — it’s our equiv­a­lent of the rain­for­est.

“We feel the road is a near act of van­dal­ism on the envi­ron­ment, all to help cut peo­ple’s jour­ney times by five min­utes.”

Envi­ron­men­tal groups, includ­ing the Cam­paign to Pro­tect Rur­al Eng­land (CPRE), lost a High Court legal bid to stop the road in 2007.

A pub­lic inquiry fol­lowed, which end­ed in March 2008, but many res­i­dents and busi­ness­es said they sup­port­ed the plan for the road.

Work is due to start in spring 2009, if the Depart­ment for Trans­port (DfT) gives the fund­ing.

Work”>http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/dorset/7772693.stm”>Work restarts back­ground

Just to let those wish­ing to help know that there is a local cam­paign group — Bypass the Bypass and they have a web­site: http://www.bypassthebypass.org/

Also, the Wood­land Trust have been fight­ing this road for years (they own Two Mile Cop­pice) and have held it up for years through var­i­ous means. You can view info on the Wey­mouth Road on their web­site here

Pre­vi­ous protest camp back­ground