A pensioner has been
threatened with prison or a £50,000 fine if he takes windblown sand
back to the beach where it came from.
Arthur
Bulmer’s seafront garden became carpeted after a week of storms
swept tons of sand from the beach across the road.
It seemed like common sense to
shovel it into his wheelbarrow and take it back, load by load, to
its rightful place.
But the
local council did not share Mr Bulmer's idea of logic.
Doing that, they told him, would
class as fly-tipping, for which the maximum penalty is a £50,000
fine or six months in jail. Oh, and
he would also have his wheelbarrow confiscated.
"I've
always had problems with sand blowing into my garden but the gales
this year have made it much worse," Mr Bulmer, 79, a retired bank
manager, said. "I asked the council
if I could shovel it up and take it across the road and put it back
on the beach. They said I could not do that because it constitutes
fly-tipping. "It is crazy. Windblown
sand is of high quality - very fine and very clean and I'm sure my
sand is cleaner than the sand on the beach which gets covered in dog
muck."
The weather
has been so bad over the past few months in St Annes, near
Blackpool, that sand has been displaced right across the seafront.
It has covered roads and footpaths
as well as private gardens. One car park has inherited a 20ft-high
dune. Council workmen have been
slowly hauling it away, but will only do so from public areas,
leaving householders to do their own clearing up. Which
was no easy task in the case of Mr Bulmer. Some seven tons of sand
had blown into the garden of his £450,000 detached bungalow.
A spokesman
for Fylde Borough Council made it clear that householders were
responsible for their own property. "The
sand is actually part of the Queen’s Crown estate, which owns most
of the foreshore around our coasts," he said. "This year has seen an
exceptional problem with wind-blown sand. We have been cleaning up
since Christmas. But the council has no responsibility to clear sand
or any other debris from private land.The owner must do this."
Dumping
"anything" on to the beach from a private garden constituted
flytipping, he said, and was a contravention of the Clean
Neighbourhoods and Environment Act. "It is a case of where do you
draw the line." The maximum penalty
for fly-tipping is a £50,000 fine and six months imprisonment.
Offenders can also have their vehicle - in this case a wheelbarrow -
confiscated.
Mr Bulmer,
a widower with four grandchildren, has now paid £500 for a private
firm to take away the sand. But he is aware that a few nights of
heavy wind would bring it all back. "It took two men seven hours to
clear the sand from my front garden," he said. "The
sand is not my property. It has just invaded my garden. We want the
local authority to show some common sense and help us do something
about this problem. "I can’t
understand their logic. They say I can't return the sand from where
it came from because it is contaminated once it has left the beach.
"But when their own workmen scoop it
off the roads they put it back, contaminated or not. They told me to
take it to the tip, but there was too much of it."
Don Moore,
a campaigner for beach protection, said the council needed to do
more to stop the sand blowing away, instead of threatening residents
for putting it back. "We need strong grass like Marram grass to be
planted to hold back the sand.The council needs to take more steps
with beach management."