How dramatic!  The Prime Minister kills off his own policy in a brutal and public manner (BBC, Guardian, Independent). 

The RSPB is quoted as follows in the Independent: "If the Government abandons the policy, that is fine by us. This whole debate has shown the public care about forests and how we are going to have better ones in the future.".

The consultation on the future of forests will be scrapped (does that mean government is not interested in our views on the subject any more?), some of the clauses from the Public Bodies Bill will be removed (but it remains an awful Bill) and a panel of experts will be set up to look at access and biodiversity issues within publicly owned woodland (and presumably non-woodland areas owned or managed by the Forestry Commission).

This story has a long way to go.  After such a public outcry the status quo is no longer an option, but government no longer wants to know what you think on the subject.  Hmmm.

This is a defeat for Big Society as an idea - isn't that the Prime Minister's big idea?  If a forest sell-off is no longer going to happen then the State is going to remain as a major player in the business of growing commercial timber crops.  What happened to Small Government and what are the implications for all other aspects of the Government's Small Government/Big Society programme?

The Public Bodies Bill will be amended - but remains a fundamentally awful Bill which would allow any future government huge powers to abolish, merge or amend public bodies, many of them Defra bodies, into the future.  At least Defra was consulting on its radical Big Society plans for forests - the Public Bodies Bill would allow many equally dramatic and controversial measures to be made without public consultation.

Are forestry sales now halted?  I'm not sure we know. Will those sales that were put on-hold be allowed to proceed now?  They were put on hold because it was thought foolish to go ahead with sales when government was consulting on the added safeguards that were thought to be needed to protect their wildlife, and access to those woods.  Government is no longer consulting on that issue.  So...?

And what does this mean for Defra's budget?  Were the projected income figures from forest sales built into Defra's CSR settlement with the Treasury?  I suspect they were.  So is there now a hole in Defra's budget?  I suspect there is.  What will be the knock-on environmental impacts of that budgetary shift?

And the status quo is rarely good enough.  The mixing up of making a buck and delivering a public service that is the current Forestry Commission is too peculiar to last.  We welcome the setting up of an expert panel, and the RSPB would be keen to play a part in its work, but we will have to see what is its remit.  It should be allowed to look at the role of the Forestry Commission and see whether its current remit is well-suited to the delivery of public access and a richer wildlife in our publicly owned forests, heaths and grasslands.

And what does this mean for National Nature Reserves?  What is their future now?

As I say, this issue has a long way to go.  How many people will stick with it for the long run?  The RSPB will.

 

A love of the natural world demonstrates that a person is a cultured inhabitant of planet Earth.

  • Now that the U-turn has been confirmed by Caroline Spelman in the House of Commons I think it is timely to express our gratitude to the people of this country for fighting so hard to protect our public forest estate. There is no doubt that without this well executed campaign of protest we would have been watching the sell-off of our lands. This panel of experts idea worries me though. How do we know that these experts will listen to and reflect the views of the ordinary people of the land and not merely advocate their own self-interest. There has to be room for the public at large to continue to help shape the future of our woodland and heathlands.

  • Miles says 'We should collectively push for the FC land, plus other big State land holdings, like Defence Estates (the latest victim of slash and burn announced yesterday)'

    I didn't know of that one.  So much is going on I think I have lost the plot.  Or is it someone else.  All we can now hope is that the end result is that between the Govt, NGOs and other interested bodies an outcome emerges that gives us (and most importantly future generations) a well protected and accessible environment.

  • Miles,

             This is a great victory (in particular for the people of the Forest of Dean and HOOF; the Dean's Speech House again gets a relevance for this generation). It is a visible fact that people love publicly owned space over private space; we get a sense of freedom and liberty from it; these are our modern Commons and invaluable because of that.

             I very much hope that RSPB and the Wildlife Alliance takes note that "publicly owned land" is important to people; it is has nt been at all strong on this principle and has not come out well from this. The principle of public commons needs to be taken forward so that no government can ever again try and enclose them. It seems to me that this is more important than the niceties of wildlife management which posters to this forum, myself included, may find more important.

            I like the idea that Miles and Nightjar have posted above re the great expanses of "unimproved" MOD land and feel that along with the Forest and Wildlife Service it is an  idea that has legs; it has to include our National Parks and AONB's as well as Cannock Chase, New Forest and Forest of Dean etc etc but public including the idea of common land and rights, including perhaps fuel rights in return for woodland management. This will be important in the years to come.

           Above all this is a victory for our commons which is as ancient in our culture as Boadicea and King Alfred and all outlined in William the Conqueror's Domesday Book; it rewrites the Big Society, if it is to have any potential at all, with a more traditional Tory theme with commons in our countryside.

            Well done, the mob !

    Peter Plover 

  • Understanding “The Big Society”  

    Just to help you a little - The Big Society is an attempt by DC (with Steve Hilton’s help) to encapsulate a Tory philosophy.  It’s nothing new – it happens now – and the RSPB is (already) a (significant) part of it!  

    David Cameron could have said -

    “Ask not what your country can do for you - ask what you can do for your country?”

    as JFK said as part of his Inaugural Address on January 20, 1961 - after Gen Omar Bradley used in his "The New Frontier". BUT as you know – it’s been said before - The real original comes from Marcus Tullius Cicero.

    Warren Gamaliel Harding (who?) [1865-1923] said , "In the great fulfillment we must have a citizenship less concerned about what the government can do for it and more anxious about what it can do for the nation."

    The alternative and still current socialist doctrine is that the individual is an incompetent ward taken care of by the 'super-competent' State. (LOL)

    Since the advent of socialism, government has had an increasing grasp on everyday life.  It has to stop!

    So Mark let’s not have any more misleading political point-scoring from the RSPB please.

  • Mark - I hadnt seen your update this morning so have just written my own piece http://wp.me/p17KDu-1M.

    I think this FC climbdown is a great opportunity to re-cast the role of the State as landowner. With the White Paper, nu England Biodiversity Strategy and the Government's response to Lawton coming up, now is the time for a radical rethink. We should collectively push for the FC land, plus other big State land holdings, like Defence Estates (the latest victim of slash and burn announced yesterday) to be at the heart of Lawton's proposals for Landscape-Scale action. These are the places which have almost entirely escaped the chemical revolution in farming, so they still have the wildlife habitats, and even under conifers, they still have the greatest potential for restoration to bog, heathland and grassland (thanks Mark!) as well as restoring ancient woodlands. Let's campaign to rename the FC as the landscape restoration commission!