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  • 3 February 2012, 17:57

Dale Farm Eviction 'Has Created Health Hazard'

The eviction of Dale Farm last year has resulted in travellers squeezing onto an adjacent site and living in squalor.

The neighbouring site has become a "health hazard" because of overcrowding, Basildon Council has said.

Half the pitches at the Oak Lane site now exceed the number of units stated in their planning regulations.

The road leading up to Dale Farm is also filled with illegally parked caravans.

At the last count, there were 16 crowding a lane.

Some came from the original illegal settlement but, the council says, there are also "new faces" on the scene.

"Our concern about this overcrowding is two-fold," council leader Tony Ball said.

"It is in breach of planning conditions but, more worryingly, it is dangerous for all concerned.

"The overcrowded conditions which the travellers have created are both becoming increasingly insanitary and are a clear and present fire risk.

"Again we have made these concerns clear to the travellers and urged them to move away. They have refused to co-operate."

Mary-Anne Sheridan, a former Dale Farm resident now living on the road leading to the old site said: "We're living in misery with no proper water, toilets or electric. But we've nowhere else to go."

The council also revealed that provisional costs for the operation to clear Dale Farm have come in under budget.

The budget for both the police and council was estimated at £18m but the total cost to the council has now been calculated at approximately £4.8m.

This included an additional £1.6m which the council had to spend between September and October in legal costs at the High Court defending against last-minute injunctions and judicial reviews.

The police costs have been calculated at £2.4m compared with the £10m that was originally budgeted in the event of a worst-case scenario.

Leader of the Council Tony Ball says he is pleased the costs were kept down but he is "... annoyed that £1.6m was added to our final bill by the delay and legal costs incurred between September and October when the travellers launched their last-minute legal challenge against the Council's right to clear Dale Farm".

He added: "The ongoing saga around Dale Farm continues to sadden and annoy me in equal measure. In the long term it serves nobody's ends. This is a difficult challenge for any council but we are duty bound to see the law is upheld and that is what we will continue to do, for however long it takes."

Since the travellers left Dale Farm in late October, the council has removed all fixed structures and dug up the roads, pavements and pitches.

what do you think?

first 20 comments

Name witheld

3:04pm on 3/2/2012

This comment has been removed for violations of our Terms and Conditions.

Score: 8

Lin Cooper

3:17pm on 3/2/2012

good for basildon council !!!!!

Score: 8

iain

3:24pm on 3/2/2012

A situation of the Council's own making, but of course it won't explain it that way.

Score: 11
1 reply

Jim England

6:29pm on 3/2/2012

The Council didn't make it - the ironically-titled "travellers" did.

Score: 4

Name witheld

3:26pm on 3/2/2012

This comment has been removed for violations of our Terms and Conditions.

Score: 5
1 reply

Sarah Meredith

3:51pm on 3/2/2012

It is not illegal to come here from Ireland - you don't even need a passport!!! Hope you anti-immigration people would welcome all the Brits back from their homes abroad too?

Score: 1

Name witheld

3:32pm on 3/2/2012

This comment has been removed for violations of our Terms and Conditions.

Score: 1

peter

3:34pm on 3/2/2012

These people are used to living like this .Sorry, but I have no sympathy for them. They are just opportunist "scroungers". Many of these people have property in other places, Encourage them to leave and give the true and honest people of this (once fine) country a break. GO AWAY. Peter.Holmfirth.

Score: 13
3 replies

Sarah Meredith

3:53pm on 3/2/2012

Ever read about the history of Ireland - I think the English made themselves a lot more unwelcome!

Score: 7

Jim England

6:32pm on 3/2/2012

Sarah, history is exactly that - in the past. We need to concentrate on the here and now. These so called "travellers" don't travel anywhere, they just take whatever they like, flout our planning laws and dodge tax, whilst raking in benefits - anyone who dares to challenge them is faced with physical violence and/or the full wrath of the EU human rights act.

Score: 4

NEV C

6:43pm on 3/2/2012

Sarah, you obviously havent delved further back in time, as you'll find it was William the Conquerer, that gave away dukedoms in Ireland as reward for favours given by his Norman cronies, and as far as I remember he was French.

Score: 2

Davefly Theuniuonflagbrown

3:36pm on 3/2/2012

This comment has been removed for violations of our Terms and Conditions.

Alan Pollard

3:48pm on 3/2/2012

I know that it's an insult to everyone that's decent, but wouldn't it be cost effective to give them council flats to live in, and get them to sell their caravans to holidayers.

Score: 8
4 replies

TheKarmacanic

4:07pm on 3/2/2012

I know that sounds like a good idea, but apparently a lot of them don't want to live in bricks & mortar. They say they'd rather be in caravan homes, so if they want they can move to another location. The irony is they don't want to move to another location... go figure!

Score: 2

Sandra Hamilton

4:34pm on 3/2/2012

Why should they be given council flats when there are so many people who have been on waiting lists for years?

Score: 3

Martin Anderson

4:47pm on 3/2/2012

Thats a fair solution, but then what about 'ordinary' citizens who are on the housing list and have very little chance of getting a home of their own? Sorry, but i don't sympathise with Travellers or law breakers...the way many of them treat society its no wonder nobody likes and respects them....

Score: 4

Jim England

6:33pm on 3/2/2012

Alan, they would just sub-let the council accommodation and stay in their caravans. These people are both cunning and greedy.

Score: 6

Bill Fleming

3:59pm on 3/2/2012

Why do "Travellers" always want to stay in 1 place? Usually illegally with total disregard for the planning rules and laws by which the rest of us abide by? Secondly, theirs is a lifestyle choice, local councils offer them homes which they refuse, so no-one should take responsibility except the travellers themselves!

Score: 9

Oliver McEvoy

4:14pm on 3/2/2012

Another total disaster by Basildon Council and patricularly Mr Ball so much money wasted which could have been used with spectacular results on new pitches and encouraging the travellers to be part of the overall community, instead we now have an environmental, community and public relations debacle which will take years to re-address if only Basildon Council would see sense and have a radical re think on their policy regarding ehtnic minorities perhaps even Mr B would be able to salvage something from this disaster for future generations.

Score: 8
2 replies

Sandra Hamilton

4:36pm on 3/2/2012

They are not an ethnic minority, they are Irish people who have chosen to live in caravans. And they chose to build their homes illegally so Basildon Council had every right to evict them. This mess is all of the "travellers" making.

Score: 7

David Wragg

6:24pm on 3/2/2012

I agree with Sandra. The so-called 'travellers' didn't do much travelling, did they? We can't allow them to build homes illegally when the rest of us are subject to planning laws.

Score: 5

Ron Cheetham

4:33pm on 3/2/2012

theres an access row up the road from here , and the developer has put a crowd of em into a barn to occupy the lane ,more squalor

Score: 3

Stuart Harley

4:54pm on 3/2/2012

GET A GRIP !!! GET THEM OUT......CHASE THEM OUT...... THEY HAVE NO REGARD FOR PLANNING LAWS.... HUMAN RIGHTS...BLAH...BLAH

Score: 7

ABritMum

5:36pm on 3/2/2012

And this is what we call progress??

Score: 6

David Wragg

6:22pm on 3/2/2012

If the caravans are blocking a lane, prosecute and move them. This lot should be sent back to Ireland - even before the wretched EU sabotaged our border controls, the Southern Irish were alllowed to come and go as they please, even though supposedly independent.

Score: 7

Jim England

6:36pm on 3/2/2012

If it wasn't for the EU lefties meddling in our business, we would have dealt with these "travellers" properly once and for all. The council, police and judges all have their hands tied firmly behind their backs by the EU Human Rights Act.

Score: 9

Ann Renton Morrison

6:36pm on 3/2/2012

Overcrowding and squalor are shocking when they are the result of corrupt governments and poverty. In this case, the government are far from corrupt - if anything they are too forgiving. Any overcrowding and squalour in this situation are a direct result of the travelling communities resistance to change and progress. It is their choice to defecate outdoors instead of using toilets inside their caravans, it is their choice to squeeze out as many children as possible and overcrowd caravans, it is their choice to not 'settle down' in homes which are legal and available to them. They live scotfree in a society where hard working people are paying tax and also holding down honest jobs to pay rent and mortgages. I would say build a big wall around them and leave them to it!

Score: 10
1 reply

Jim England

6:50pm on 3/2/2012

Spot-on, Ann! Your statement sums up perfectly what the majority of decent, working and law-abiding citizens in this land think of these freeloading, aggressive and disrespectful people.

Score: 5

sunshine

6:58pm on 3/2/2012

Why do these people think they are above the law. Let them live in squalor until they learn to respect the rest of society. I am sick of these peope and how they behave.

Score: 6

Davefly Theuniuonflagbrown

7:08pm on 3/2/2012

This comment has been removed for violations of our Terms and Conditions.

gypsy56

7:13pm on 3/2/2012

Should have ploughed them under last time. The overcrowding and squalor is down to the travellers NOT the ccouncil. Look at any place they have encamped - they leave squaler behind them for the taxpayer to clear up. I have been homeless and known travellers the majority re their own worst enemies!

Score: 5

Rhys Sage

7:27pm on 3/2/2012

I don't quite see what's going on here. Wouldn't it be more cost effective to spend a couple of million buying some land for them rather than evicting them and cleaning up the mess?

Score: 5
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