Residents on the north Brent borders with Harrow will not be surprised that another dispute has broken out with Harrow School wanting to close a footpath used by the public on grounds of anti-social behaviour. This is the latest enclosure move by the private school.
A discussion is underway on the website Next Door LINK. This is a quote from the initial post:
To summarise: there is a path going through one of Harrow School's many fields, just off the West St in Harrow. It leads through a road between two of the John Lyon's buildings and then comes up towards the Byron Hill Road. This path is taken every day, pretty much exclusively by the students of the local Roxeth Primary School and their parents. Not once did I see any of the children or their parents damage property or behave in a disruptive manner.
After speaking to some local people, it turns out this path had been in use by the public for over 25 years. It's the shortest way up the hill, and in a borough where most of the green spaces seem to be fenced off by the Harrow School, it's a pleasant walk, much more so than walking around on some of the extremely narrow paths up the hill. However, Harrow School informed me that it's private property and in a couple weeks they will be installing a coded gate between the cricket field and the road passing through John Lyon's so that parents like me will no longer be able to walk through.
Considering Harrow School (and John Lyon) both enjoy the financial benefits of being registered charities, it seems obscene to block people's right of way in such a manner, for reasons which on inspection appear both flimsy and petty.
Gareth Thomas MP has got involved and has organised a zoom meeting for Tuesday at noon LINK
Speaking on behalf of Harrow Green Party, Emma Wallace said:
It is concerning to hear of Harrow Schools latest plans to block a footpath that has been in use by the public for decades. There appears to be little to no evidence of anti-social behaviour along this path, with pupils & parents of Roxeth Primary School using it on a daily basis to get to and from school. The path provides them with the shortest route up the hill and ensures children don't have to walk along the extremely narrow footpaths and roads that can be found going up the hill. This seems to be more about the school blocking a historic right of way for the local community use, rather than about safety concerns for their students.
This situation is not without precedent - in 2017, footpath campaigners won a 14 year victory against Harrow school who had been trying to divert two historic, public rights of way that cross its playing fields LINK.
In 2020, Harrow School appealed and won against Sadiq Khan's refusal of planning permission for a large sports hall to be built on Metropolitan Open Land. The Mayor had cited in 2018 that the proposed sports building was an "inappropriate development within Metropolitan Open Land and causes substantial harm to the openness of the Metropolitan Open Land by reason of its excessive footprint and its location." LINK
And in 2021, John Lyon failed in its latest bid to remove planning restrictions to expand the school LINK.
Harrow School must respect the rights of public access on the Hill, ensuring that the local community can continue to enjoy this historic part of Harrow, rather than just a small, privileged elite.
A clear route out of the problem for a footpath that has been used for more than 20 years is available to campaigners on the Open Spaces Society website HERE
4 comments:
You say "Harrow School informed me that it's private property"
Have Harrow School issued a formal notice of closure? Can you provide me with a copy?
Have Harrow Hill Trust been contacted?
Have you spoken to your councillors?
KP
Hi KP. You will need to use the link in the article above to go to Next Door to speak to the original poster. Lots of further discussion there. Martin
Martin, Thanks for assistance, I have tried what you suggested plus other avenues.
The solution is https://www.oss.org.uk/need-to-know-more/information-hub/rights-of-way-applications-to-record-public-paths-after-twenty-years-use/
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