A FARMER has appeared in court over work he carried out to the river Lugg and banks in Herefordshire.
Natural England and the Environment Agency launched joint legal action in response to what they said was damage in Kingsland, near Leominster.
John Pudge Price, of Day House Farm, appeared in court on Wednesday as he indicated guilty pleas to all seven charges surrounding work carried out between November 1 and December 3, 2020.
The site is alongside Lugg Green Road in Kingsland, the route between Mortimer Medical Practice and Bicton, and it was said the river had been reprofiled and trees grubbed, and the banks cleared of trees and vegetation.
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The area is protected as a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) due to its importance for nature. Consent is required before any works are carried out within a SSSI to the river which had not been granted.
On Wednesday, Price appeared in court, indicating guilty pleas to charges relating to flood risk activity, discharging silt into the Lugg, failing to take reasonable steps to stop farming pollution and disturbing spawn or spawning fish.
He was also charged with damaging a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) and in December 2021, a year on, he breached stop notice by removing material, desilting and re-profiling the river bank and removing bankside vegetation.
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The case was heard at Kidderminster Magistrates Court, and district judge Ian Strongman adjourned the case until October.
That was so experts can look at the riverbank in Kingsland and prepare a restoration plan.
With Natural England and the Forestry Commission, the Environment Agency announced in December 2020 that it was carrying out a joint investigation into the loss of habitat along the one-mile stretch, which it said could lead to legal action.
In December 2020, Herefordshire Wildlife Trust said all bankside and riverside habitats had been “completely obliterated” after the river and its banks were “bulldozed, straightened and reprofiled into a sterile canal”.
A bulldozer was pictured in the river, believed to have been carrying out the work which outraged naturalists.
It led to agencies launching what they said was an in-depth investigation, with Price, 67, charged more than 15 months later.
In December 2020, Price told the Hereford Times he had looked after the river all his life and was only doing a job he was told to do.
He claimed the work he had done on the riverbanks was legal and was meant to save local homes from flooding.
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