Protest camp set up against Glossop development

Row over George Street Woods rum­bles on
Fri­day 30th June 2017

Envi­ron­men­tal activists have set up a protest camp close to the cen­tre of Glos­sop.

Row over George Street Woods rum­bles on
Fri­day 30th June 2017

Envi­ron­men­tal activists have set up a protest camp close to the cen­tre of Glos­sop.

The trio moved into George Street Woods last Fri­day and say they are plan­ning to claim it ‘for the peo­ple of Glos­sop.’

The move has result­ed in con­fronta­tion after near­by res­i­dent Steve Rim­mer said the land belonged to him.

Mr Rim­mer – who lives oppo­site the site – also accused the group of tres­pass and has tried to legal­ly remove them.

The three say they will block the entrance to the land to pre­vent Mr Rim­mer gain­ing access.

Speak­ing out­side the team’s tent, protest leader Robert Hod­getts-Hay­ley, 22, said: “We intend to occu­py the land for as long as it takes.

“Glos­sop peo­ple are sup­port­ing us with food and drink and even bring­ing take­aways.”

The occu­pa­tion is the lat­est round in the long drawn-out bat­tle to decide ‘own­er­ship’ of the for­mer She­p­ley Mill site.

Stance: Steve Rim­mer claims he is the own­er of the land

Mr Rim­mer says he legal­ly acquired the site by ‘adverse pos­ses­sion’ 10 years ago with its own­er­ship unknown.

He has since put a fence around the land and cleared away much of the stone and glass.

He intends to seek plan­ning per­mis­sion to use the site for vis­it­ing car­a­van­ners.

The Friends of George Street Woods have always opposed any form of devel­op­ment, say­ing the land should be an ameni­ty for Glos­sop peo­ple to walk and have pic­nics.

They are ful­ly sup­port­ing Robert and his co-pro­test­ers Adam Mar­tin, 23, and Jake Park­er, 19, who are also try­ing to secure the land by the same method.

Robert said: “We are going for sec­ondary adverse pos­ses­sion to secure the land for the peo­ple of Glos­sop.

“We want to pro­tect the envi­ron­ment for the greater good of the peo­ple. Almost 1,000 peo­ple have signed a peti­tion sup­port­ing us.”

Protest: Jake Park­er, Robert Hod­getts-Hay­ley and Adam

Mar­tin want to claim the land ‘for the peo­ple of Glos­sop’

The pro­test­ers claim that to claim adverse pos­ses­sion a per­son must have occu­pied the land for 10 years.

They say that Mr Rimmer’s claim is two years short and because their occu­pa­tion has bro­ken the chain, his claim is no longer valid.

They claim tech­ni­cal­ly no one has owned the land since the mill came down and it is not reg­is­tered by the coun­cil.

Speak­ing to the Chron­i­cle, Mr Rim­mer main­tains the land is his and that he has improved it by remov­ing much of the rub­ble.

He says a Lon­don QC, who looked into own­er­ship, said he was in ‘law­ful adverse pos­ses­sion’ and had a right to exclude tres­passers.

Mr Rim­mer said: “High Peak Coun­cil declared it as a local green space, but I am chal­leng­ing that, it is a brown field site.

“I am seek­ing an injunc­tion to stop the tres­pass.”

Robert said bor­ough coun­cil­lors God­frey Claff and Damien Green­hal­gh had vis­it­ed the site to offer sup­port and that the whole issue was to be dis­cussed by the bor­ough coun­cil.

“We are here for as long as it takes,” he added.

Friends of George Street Woods Every­one needs a friend, espe­cial­ly those friends in dan­ger of being lost to us, those that need sup­port and nuture of the com­mu­ni­ty at large. This is the aim of FOGSW — to ensure George Street Woods remains a place for the com­mu­ni­ty to play, relax, research and pass the time in.

George Street Wood diary

A series of films doc­u­ment­ing the life on site at the George Street Wood protest in Glos­sop, Der­byshire.