Published Date:
22 April 2009
THE backlash to the arrival of gypsies on a site near Princes Risborough is 'nothing new,' the secretary of The Gypsy Council has said.
Joseph Jones, who runs the floating support service for the gypsy and traveller community in Bucks, and who has visited the family at Hemley Hill, said: "There's bound to be people who are concerned, it is fear of the unknown and it is the bad press which the gypsy-traveller community always gets."
He blamed local councils in Buckinghamshire for not doing enough to identify sites where gypsies and travellers could settle, adding that he expected any planning application to go to appeal, where 'two out three cases are successful'.
A local resident who spoke to The Bucks Herald, who asked not to be identified, said locals feared an increase in crime and anti-social behaviour, which Mr Jones denied would be the case.
"There is crime and there are criminals but there is no such thing as gypsy crime," he said. "Criminals come from any community."
Speaking at the site, gypsy Eileen Cash said she was positive about the welcome they had received from nearby residents.
"So far the people have been very nice from what we know of them but we don't know what they're saying behind our backs," she said.
She said the nine families who will live on nine pitches were all extended family.
They include a 22-year-old blind woman who needs a permament home in order to be able to get a guide dog, and an 'old lady who is very very ill' who also needs a permament base for medical reasons.
"We will keep ourselves to ourselves, no noise and we wont bother anybody," she said. "Residents would not bother us so we wont bother them.
She said that they want to tidy up the site, install a play area for children and exchange caravans on the site for mobile homes. "It will be nice and respectable, a very pemament site. I want to spend the rest of my life here," she said.
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Last Updated:
27 April 2009 9:55 AM
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Source:
n/a
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Location:
Aylesbury