In reply to A Longleat Boulderer:
Further update:
Last night a small group of locals (Cheddar Roadwatch) and myself met with various stakeholders and the MP for Cheddar Tessa Munt. Significant progress was made.
In my experience previous local efforts very quickly got bogged down in the pettiness of problems rather that focussing on wide scale solutions and then working backwards. I'm sure many of us have experienced the same at a parish level.
This newly formed group feels very different and is driven by several young and passionate professionals. A well researched and realistic outline was provided to put an end to the problem of antisocial driving in the Gorge once and for all using the powers that the law has to offer and case studies from elsewhere in the country. Problems of course exist, but each is surmountable. Tessa Munt was very much in favour and stakeholders on all sides were widely in agreement.
We were informed there is also significant buy in at a senior level within the police. But they will need information from the wider community in order to be effective.
Poetically during the meeting the police chose to enact their first Gorge road closure in line with the above mentioned TTRO. The gorge was silent. It was glorious and the perfect time to climb. Unheard of on a late Friday evening in summer at Cheddar.
As climbers we are an important element to the strategy. We are the eyes and ears in the gorge. Our role is to call in via 101 on any and all antisocial driving in the gorge as it happens. Photos and videos must be taken and sent in. We must insist on an incident number before we end the call. Yes, it's tedious and may take a few minutes. But combined with other users and stakeholders maintaining pressure and causing the crime stats in cheddar to reflect the true reality is crucial to the next step.
For the first time in two decades I feel there is a bit of light at the end of the tunnel.