World’s Longest Treesit Campaign, Update from Bilston Glen

Yes­ter­day, peo­ple involved in the cam­paign to save Bil­ston Glen sent an update stat­ing, “We have new infor­ma­tion from the Mid­loth­i­an Coun­cil and it would seem like­ly that the road is being redi­rect­ed along a dif­fer­ent route, one that does not go through Bil­ston Glen.

Yes­ter­day, peo­ple involved in the cam­paign to save Bil­ston Glen sent an update stat­ing, “We have new infor­ma­tion from the Mid­loth­i­an Coun­cil and it would seem like­ly that the road is being redi­rect­ed along a dif­fer­ent route, one that does not go through Bil­ston Glen. We have a map of the alter­na­tive route and it makes a lot more sense than any of the plans that we had seen before. We will not know until the spring what plan has been final­ized for the road. They are also plan­ning a lot of oth­er devel­op­ment in the area so it is pos­si­ble that the glen might still be under threat even if the pro­posed devel­op­ment is not the road.

We should have a lot more infor­ma­tion in the spring. They are also con­sid­er­ing build­ing a new open cast coal mine some­where near Rosewell, so depend­ing on what is going on we may be join­ing in with that cam­paign as well. Keep in touch and we’ll let every­one know what is going on.”

The tree vil­lage is open for vis­it­ing and stay­ing. Help is always need­ed in a vari­ety of ways, from donat­ing funds and sup­plies to attend­ing Sun­day Free Cafes in the glen and par­tic­i­pat­ing in the pub­lic out­reach, edu­ca­tion and demon­stra­tions against the devel­op­ment in Mid­loth­i­an Scot­land.

Campaign History

Since June 2002 Bil­ston Glen, locat­ed near Penicuik, Scot­land about eight miles from the city of Edin­burgh,  has been occu­pied and for­ti­fied by an ever-expand­ing group of multi­na­tion­al envi­ron­men­tal activists. The Bil­ston Glen Anti-Bypass Protest Site began when a pro­pos­al to build a road through the glen was put on the table by biotech giant Bay­er. At the time, Bay­er was build­ing big dreams around com­mer­cial farm­ing of genet­i­cal­ly mod­i­fied foods (GMOs) in the UK. While Bay­er was dream­ing, we were schem­ing. A strong anti-GMO move­ment in the UK attacked the biotech indus­try from every angle – slash­ing crop fields and test sights, protest­ing uni­ver­si­ties fund­ing the research for fur­ther devel­op­ment, stag­ing large pub­lic demon­stra­tions out­side gro­cery stores demand­ing the label­ing of GMOs on con­sumer prod­ucts, and last but not least – attack­ing the infra­struc­ture of indus­tri­al devel­op­ment – the roads that would lead to com­mer­cial farm lands.

So far the activism expos­ing GMOs for the evils they are has worked in many parts of the world. To this day, com­mer­cial farm­ing of GMOs is ille­gal in the UK, and by Euro­pean law, food prod­ucts con­tain­ing more than .9% of a GM or GE ingre­di­ent must be labeled as con­tain­ing GMOs. How­ev­er, these vic­to­ries did not get the pro­pos­al for the road off the Mid­loth­i­an coun­cil agen­da. After Bay­er was no longer fund­ing the road, a large “indus­tri­al estate” near to the glen where Ikea and oth­er large “box” stores and pack­ag­ing facil­i­ties reside took up the bid to fund the road. The new investors meet uproars from the com­mu­ni­ty, who for many rea­sons feel that the road is need­less and are opposed to indus­tri­al devel­op­ment through the ancient wood­land. Bil­ston Glen is not only a des­ig­nat­ed “Sight of Sci­en­tif­ic Spe­cial Inter­est” (SSSI) – a con­ser­va­tion des­ig­na­tion denot­ing a pro­tect­ed area in the UK – it is also apart of the Green Belt. The Green Belt was des­ig­nat­ed as a coori­dor for wildlife in the Mid­loth­i­an area of Scot­land, it’s pur­pose is to pre­vent devel­op­ment along the belt line. With bla­tent dis­re­gard to these already pro­tect­ed areas, the local coun­cil itself became the face of the road expan­sion.

Luck­i­ly, Earth war­riors, for­est squat­ters, world trav­el­ers, Earth First!ers and the like have done an amaz­ing job at pre­vent­ing road expan­sion through Bil­ston Glen for over 10 years! The tree-sit is the one of the longest stand­ing peace and sol­i­dar­i­ty projects in the world, along side The Fasland Peace Camp, which is also locat­ed in Scot­land. Intent on block­ing any attempts to build a road through Bil­ston Glen, res­i­dents are also doing a alter­na­tive lifestyle project. Liv­ing and work­ing togeth­er, organ­is­ing our­selves and co-oper­a­tive­ly help­ing each oth­er.