Charter for Trees, Woods and People

The Woodland Trust is leading 70 organisations in the call for a Charter for Trees, Woods and People.

History

The Charter of the Forest was first signed on 6 November 1217 as a sister charter to the Magna Carta from which it had evolved. Some minor changes were made to it, before it was reissued in 1225.[1] It was then joined with Magna Carta in the Confirmation of Charters in 1297. A Charter of the Forest was signed by Henry III to set down rights for people to access the sustainable benefits of the woods, trees and grazing lands of the Royal Forests in England.[2] It provides a window to a period of history when trees and woods were integral to everyday life for firewood, building material and food.

In October 2010, the Government introduced the Public Bodies Bill to The House of Lords,[3] which would have enabled the Secretary of State to sell or lease public forests in England. The Woodland Trust believed that the public outcry that stopped those plans in its tracks revealed the connection people feel to the woods and trees of the UK, a connection that is rarely visible.[4]

The Independent Panel on Forestry wrote in its 2011 Report[5]

A Charter should be created for the English Public Forest Estate, to be renewed every ten years. The Charter should specify the public benefit mission and statutory duties.

The new Charter for Trees, Woods and People will be launched on 6 November 2017[6] on the 800th anniversary of the Charter of the Forest. The Tree Charter will address very different issues to the historic charter because society and priorities have changed so much. However, there has been no comparable statement of rights and responsibilities in the intervening 800 years.[7] The Tree Charter aims to bring this discussion of the importance of woods and trees to people back to the forefront of public consciousness.

Aims

The call to create a Charter for Trees, Woods and People was first launched in January 2016[8] The purpose of the Tree Charter: The charter aims to join the dots between all the different areas of society in which trees give benefits so that it can recognise and protect the true value of trees to society. Organisations involved are from a variety of industries. This includes commercial forestry, health, wildlife conservation and many more.

Creating the Tree Charter: To create this Tree Charter, thousands of tree ‘stories’ were collected from people across the UK about what trees and woods mean to them. A tree story is any expression of what trees and woods mean to people. They can be a sentence or longer phrase, a photo, audio clip or video. The tree stories were collected until the end of February 2017.[9]

These tree stories collected from the UK public, along with specific consultations with forestry[10] and sector professionals, will form the basis for the partner organisations to write the content of the final Tree Charter. The new Tree Charter document will not be legally binding, but more a set of guiding principles, to which politicians, organisations, community groups and individuals can be held to account.

The 10 Tree Charter Principles were announced on the 27th March 2017. From this moment onwards, the public is being asked to sign to show support for the Tree Charter.

Purpose

The Tree Charter will be a document which can be used to hold politicians, community groups and organisations to account, backed up by the body of evidence of over 60,000 public stories. It will be the basis each year of a joint statement from the partner organisations, which will demonstrate whether or not the aims of the Charter have been achieved.[11]

Organisations involved

Partner organisations involved in creating the Tree Charter.[12]

Ahmadiyya Muslim Youth Association UK
Ancient Tree Forum
Bat Conservation Trust
Black Environment Network
Borders Forest Trust
Butterfly Conservation
Campaign for National Parks (CNP)
Centre for Sustainable Healthcare
Coigach Assynt Trust
Confor
Country Land and Business Association CLA
CPRE
Forest School Association (FSA)
Going Wild
GreenBlue Urban
GroundWork Gallery
Grown in Britain
ICF
John Muir Trust
Legal Sustainability Alliance (LSA)
Llais y Goedwig
Mersey Forest
National Association of Local Councils
National Trust
National Union of Students
Natural Resources Wales
NICVA
Northern Ireland Environment Link
Order of Bards, Ovates and Druids
Order of British Druids
Plantlife
Red Rose Forest
Reforesting Scotland
RFS
RHS
RSPB
Small Woods Association
Soil Association
SWOG Small Woodland Owners' Group
Sylva
TDAG
The Conservation Foundation
The Land Trust
The Sherwood Forest Trust
The Tree Council
The Wildlife Trusts
The Windsor Estate
Tir Coed
Trees for Cities
Wild Network
Wildlife & Countryside Link
Woodland Heritage Limited

Woodland Trust

Woodlands.co.uk
WWF-UK
FSC-UK
The Climate Coalition
Caring for God's Acre
The Church of England
MADE
The Landscape Institute
The British Beekeepers Association
Chartered Institute of Ecology and Environmental Management

References

  1. Haw, Kay. "The Ankerwycke Yew". Woodland Matters. Woodland Trust. Retrieved 2 February 2017.
  2. Rothwell, [general editor, David C. Douglas]. [3], 1189-1327 / edited by Harry (1996). English historical documents (Reissued. ed.). London: Routledge. ISBN 9780415143684.
  3. "Public Bodies Bill [HL]". Publications.parliament.uk. 2010-10-29. Retrieved 2017-05-03.
  4. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2016-12-08. Retrieved 2017-01-12.
  5. Government, UK. "Independent Panel on Forestry" (PDF). Gov.uk. Retrieved 2 February 2017.
  6. "The Charter for Trees, Woods and People". Treecharter.uk. Retrieved 2017-05-03.
  7. "The Charter story". Tree Charter. Retrieved 2 February 2017.
  8. Aldred, Jessica. "Campaigners call for new British Charter for Trees". The Guardian. Retrieved 2 February 2017.
  9. "Tree Charter FAQs". Treecharter.uk. Retrieved 2017-05-03.
  10. "Charter for Trees". RFS. RFS. Retrieved 2 February 2017.
  11. "The Charter for Trees, Woods and People". Treecharter.uk. Retrieved 2017-05-03.
  12. "Who's involved - Tree charter". Treecharter.uk. Retrieved 2017-05-03.
  • "The Charter for Trees, Woods and People". Treecharter.uk. Retrieved 2017-05-03.
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