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Campaigners want branchage law to have more "teeth"

Campaigners want branchage law to have more

Wednesday 25 October 2023

Campaigners want branchage law to have more "teeth"

Wednesday 25 October 2023


An environmental pressure group is calling for changes to the island’s ancient branchage law in order to provide better protection for wildlife.

Jersey in Transition has proposed amendments to the Loi sur la Voirie, which was introduced to legislate for branchage work in 1914, in an open email to States Members.

The group says that while it considers the law to have served the Island well, it should be updated to incorporate guidelines that have been issued more recently in a bid to protect wildlife and encourage biodiversity.

A key part of the proposed amendment is to insert a legal minimum length of ten centimetres for vegetation bordering roads after branchage work has been carried out.

The group would also want vegetation on top of banques and verges to be left uncut if it did not overhang a road. In the event that such vegetation did overhang, the same 10cm limit would apply.

Under the proposals, a measuring stick with a 10cm coloured section at one end would be used to measure the residual height of vegetation.

Branchage should also be carried out, Jersey in Transition believes, in accordance with the 2021 Wildlife Law, which covers the conservation and protection of wild animals, birds and plants, as well as promoting biodiversity.

Group Chair Nigel Jones said the guidelines were "excellent", but that more needed to be done.

He said: "The branchage guidelines contain vital and important advice, and they have been widely – but not universally – adopted.

"By making a couple of small changes to the 1914 law, the most important advice within the guidelines can be ‘given teeth'."

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Pictured: Nigel Jones from Jersey In Transition.

Mr Jones added that it was the group's view that while the 1914 law protected road users from the encroachment of the wild banques, it did not protect the wild banques from the encroachment of road users.

"In the 21st Century, in a climate and biodiversity crisis, our proposals bring a little balance into the law, and bring it more up to date for our times," he said.

READ MORE...

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Pictured top: A measuring stick with a coloured tip has been advocated by Jersey in transition as a way of ensuring that vegetation is not cut beneath a 10-centimetre limit.

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