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Are there too many van dwellers in Glastonbury?
Are there too many van dwellers in Glastonbury?

Yahoo

time17-03-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Are there too many van dwellers in Glastonbury?

There are about 300 people living by the roadside or in unauthorised encampments in and around Glastonbury, according to a Somerset Council report. Only Bristol has more in number, but Glastonbury has the highest density in the UK. The BBC has been speaking to van dwellers about why they live that lifestyle and have been finding out what Somerset Council is doing to create the regulated site it promised as part of the Glastonbury Town Deal. Luke Grossmith and his partner Jess Dane have been living in a van in Glastonbury for 18 months. They said it has enabled them to save the money to set up their own business, a therapy centre at the foot of Glastonbury Tor. Mr Grossmith said: "We are trying to find a way to do the most realistic and responsible means of living off-grid." Jess Dane said a regulated site is a "good idea", but added she does not "have that much confidence the council would take into account exactly what the van dwellers would want from that kind of set up". Deejay McCloud described himself as a "non bricks and mortar dweller" who has been homeless in this area since he was a young teenager. "I feel it's important for us to educate ourselves to know where we stand, regarding so-called illegal encampments, because it's our way forward to having a little bit of safety and security," he said. "The key to being a human being is having a safe, warm place to put your head." Mr McCloud said he would like to live on a regulated site, but first he said barriers need to be broken down between the community, the council and the police, as he feels that non bricks and mortar dwellers are often treated "as obstacles". Anette, 63, describes herself as a horse-drawn traveller and lives in a caravan on what she calls a "tolerated site". She said: "We don't believe in land ownership. [We have a] different mindset all together." Anette has been going to Glastonbury since the 1980s and runs shows with the horses in the Midlands in the summer before spending the winter in Glastonbury. She says she lives this lifestyle because she enjoys "the closeness to nature". "It's freedom fundamentally," she added. While some people live in vans and caravans peacefully, councillor Sue Osborn, who is the leader of the Conservative group, said she gets lots of complaints from tax payers covering issues from anti-social behaviour to concerns about where people go to the toilet. She said "van dwellers are not welcome in Glastonbury" and believes the town "reached saturation point some time ago". "It causes a great deal of problems because we have a lot of people living here who are not contributing" in terms of council tax, she said. "If you've got people taking out of the services without putting in, then you can't budget for it. You can't do anything." Adam Shepherd has been running Sweet Track Fitness on the Morland estate for nine years. "We're surrounded by mess, dumped caravans, vans, piles and piles of rubbish, dogs running around while not on a lead, dog excrement, human excrement and I've had threats as a business owner," he said. "I have no problems with how people want to live – whether it's out of choice or not. We all have hard times. But if that's how you want to live, that's great, but the rest of us have to pay taxes. We have to pay to have our rubbish taken, we don't just dump it to be collected and paid for by someone else." Some of the van dwellers have told the BBC the hostility goes both ways, and many of them are unhappy about the minority of van dwellers who do not manage their own rubbish, or who act in a way that might give all van dwellers a bad name. Artist Ady Szucik lives in a van when he works in Glastonbury. He said: "I've even had eggs thrown at my van. People tend to fear what they don't understand." He is asking people to be more understanding. "Think about why people are living like this. I do understand it. There are anti-social behaviours and there's as many reasons why people live like they do. Some are a bit unfortunate and that can overspill into the community. It's all about having respect to the community. It works both ways." Councillor Osborn has called on Somerset Council to build the regulated site with permanent pitches it first promised as part of the Glastonbury Town Deal in September 2022. The area has been given £1.4m from the government to make this happen on top of another £1.8m from other sources. She claimed Somerset Council is "dragging its feet". "It should be providing a proper site, with proper facilities, charging rent and charging council tax. And that way the problem would just disappear because those people would then become net inputters into the system," she said. Mike Rigby, the council's lead member for planning, economic development and assets, said: "We've tried to bust a gut to get this done. "Glastonbury has seen a huge influx of people living like this and there is a desire to see that formalised in a way that doesn't see people living in hedges and on riverbanks. "Somerset Council and Mendip Council before it have taken huge efforts to try to find space. "I think the problem is everyone in the area thinks there ought to be formal sites for housing these sites and caravans, but just not near them." Somerset Council said it had planned to build almost 40 pitches on land it owned at Porchestall Drove, until it realised the land flooded. Last summer, it bought an old coal yard in Beckery but councillor Rigby said work stalled when people occupied it and, as a result, the council has had to scale back its plans. Mr Rigby said: "It's not going to deal with the problem in its totality, but it will make a big dent in the issue as it exists in Glastonbury today." Somerset Council now has about a year to get the regulated site up and running or it may be asked to return the government money. Follow BBC Somerset on Facebook and X. Send your story ideas to us on email or via WhatsApp on 0800 313 4630. Land for travellers' site could become solar farm Former factory could be sold for traveller use Factory owner fights to keep unofficial residents Somerset Council Glastonbury Town Deal Towns Fund

'Huge influx' of van dwellers in Glastonbury leaves town divided
'Huge influx' of van dwellers in Glastonbury leaves town divided

BBC News

time17-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • BBC News

'Huge influx' of van dwellers in Glastonbury leaves town divided

There are about 300 people living by the roadside or in unauthorised encampments in and around Glastonbury, according to a Somerset Council Bristol has more in number, but Glastonbury has the highest density in the BBC has been speaking to van dwellers about why they live that lifestyle and have been finding out what Somerset Council is doing to create the regulated site it promised as part of the Glastonbury Town Deal. The people living in vans Luke Grossmith and his partner Jess Dane have been living in a van in Glastonbury for 18 said it has enabled them to save the money to set up their own business, a therapy centre at the foot of Glastonbury Tor. Mr Grossmith said: "We are trying to find a way to do the most realistic and responsible means of living off-grid."Jess Dane said a regulated site is a "good idea", but added she does not "have that much confidence the council would take into account exactly what the van dwellers would want from that kind of set up". Deejay McCloud described himself as a "non bricks and mortar dweller" who has been homeless in this area since he was a young teenager. "I feel it's important for us to educate ourselves to know where we stand, regarding so-called illegal encampments, because it's our way forward to having a little bit of safety and security," he said."The key to being a human being is having a safe, warm place to put your head."Mr McCloud said he would like to live on a regulated site, but first he said barriers need to be broken down between the community, the council and the police, as he feels that non bricks and mortar dwellers are often treated "as obstacles". Anette, 63, describes herself as a horse-drawn traveller and lives in a caravan on what she calls a "tolerated site". She said: "We don't believe in land ownership. [We have a] different mindset all together." Anette has been going to Glastonbury since the 1980s and runs shows with the horses in the Midlands in the summer before spending the winter in Glastonbury. She says she lives this lifestyle because she enjoys "the closeness to nature". "It's freedom fundamentally," she added. Community tension While some people live in vans and caravans peacefully, councillor Sue Osborn, who is the leader of the Conservative group, said she gets lots of complaints from tax payers covering issues from anti-social behaviour to concerns about where people go to the said "van dwellers are not welcome in Glastonbury" and believes the town "reached saturation point some time ago"."It causes a great deal of problems because we have a lot of people living here who are not contributing" in terms of council tax, she said. "If you've got people taking out of the services without putting in, then you can't budget for it. You can't do anything." Adam Shepherd has been running Sweet Track Fitness on the Morland estate for nine years."We're surrounded by mess, dumped caravans, vans, piles and piles of rubbish, dogs running around while not on a lead, dog excrement, human excrement and I've had threats as a business owner," he said."I have no problems with how people want to live – whether it's out of choice or not. We all have hard times. But if that's how you want to live, that's great, but the rest of us have to pay taxes. We have to pay to have our rubbish taken, we don't just dump it to be collected and paid for by someone else." Some of the van dwellers have told the BBC the hostility goes both ways, and many of them are unhappy about the minority of van dwellers who do not manage their own rubbish, or who act in a way that might give all van dwellers a bad Ady Szucik lives in a van when he works in Glastonbury. He said: "I've even had eggs thrown at my van. People tend to fear what they don't understand." He is asking people to be more understanding. "Think about why people are living like this. I do understand it. There are anti-social behaviours and there's as many reasons why people live like they do. Some are a bit unfortunate and that can overspill into the community. It's all about having respect to the community. It works both ways." Councillor Osborn has called on Somerset Council to build the regulated site with permanent pitches it first promised as part of the Glastonbury Town Deal in September area has been given £1.4m from the government to make this happen on top of another £1.8m from other claimed Somerset Council is "dragging its feet". "It should be providing a proper site, with proper facilities, charging rent and charging council tax. And that way the problem would just disappear because those people would then become net inputters into the system," she said. Mike Rigby, the council's lead member for planning, economic development and assets, said: "We've tried to bust a gut to get this done."Glastonbury has seen a huge influx of people living like this and there is a desire to see that formalised in a way that doesn't see people living in hedges and on riverbanks. "Somerset Council and Mendip Council before it have taken huge efforts to try to find space. "I think the problem is everyone in the area thinks there ought to be formal sites for housing these sites and caravans, but just not near them." Somerset Council said it had planned to build almost 40 pitches on land it owned at Porchestall Drove, until it realised the land summer, it bought an old coal yard in Beckery but councillor Rigby said work stalled when people occupied it and, as a result, the council has had to scale back its plans. Mr Rigby said: "It's not going to deal with the problem in its totality, but it will make a big dent in the issue as it exists in Glastonbury today." Somerset Council now has about a year to get the regulated site up and running or it may be asked to return the government money.

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