Tag Archives: differential licence

March on CRT’s offices! Stop the surcharge!

Canal and River Trust (CRT) which manages most of inland waterways in England and Wales are marginalising travelling boat dwellers by planning to levy a ‘surcharge’ to boaters for not having a home mooring. CRT are trying to destroy our nomadic way of life. Let’s come together to oppose the surcharge on our community.

National protest to march on CRT’s boss Richard Parry’s offices in Central Birmingham on Saturday 25 November at 12 noon! Fight CRT’s divisive licence fee hikes!

Get ready to march in protest!

Join us on the march, meet at City Centre Gardens in Birmingham

If you can, bring boats and moor them outside their offices.
Let us know if you want to be involved:

 stopboatlicencediscrimination@gmail.com

The facebook event for the march:

Protest against surcharges for itinerant boaters | Facebook

It follows a massive campaign meeting on 8th October where approx 300 attendees throughout the meeting.

This is showing a strong opposition to CRTs Licensing boats without home mooring surcharge, and lots of productive discussion and ideas.

Download leaflet for protest here:

Transport to the protest

Car share whatsapp group

Here is a group for discussing and organising car shares to the Birmingham protest:

https://chat.whatsapp.com/ILqAoOiuJEw2VvqxpMUeNQ

If you don’t have whatsapp, email us on stopboatlicencediscrimination@gmail.com

Coach from London

Please get a ticket for a coach to Birmingham from Hackney here:

https://buytickets.at/nbtaprotestsurcharge/1048376

Next general campaign meeting

Next general campaign meeting is on the Monday 20 November at 7pm

The online meeting can be accessed online via:

https://8×8.vc/nbta/nbta

Alternatively, you can use these dial in details:

+44 330 808 1706

PIN: 45925961#

Get involved in the campaign working groups

If you want be added the licencecampaign@lists.riseup.net campaign email list or be added to the campaign WhatsApp groups, ask us to add you by emailing: stopboatlicencediscrimination@gmail.com


NBTA London needs your support to carry on our work. Please get in touch here if you would like to volunteer with us. Alternatively your donations are vital to us supporting boaters with their legal case work, campaign banners and other printed material as well as events. You can help us with your donations online here


LICENCE DISCRIMINATION: The Canal & River Trust’s plan to eradicate a whole way of life!

Itinerant boaters have yet again become moving targets for CRT, this time with the excuse being financial – the weight of their budget shortfall is to be somehow paid for by surcharging the licence of boaters without home moorings an escalating amount over 5 years. With only 2% of CRT income coming from boaters without permanent moorings, the new surcharge is relatively inconsequential for them, but potentially life-changing for a largely marginal community of itinerant boaters, some of whom face being priced off the waterways they call home. Dividing boaters into multiple sub-groups, and setting us against each other regarding who should subsidise the other, doesn’t raise finance, but rather helps them rid the waterways of the undesirable, financially insecure travelling boaters they resent having to accommodate. Boaters are coming together, resolved to defend our way of life and demand the continuation of one licence for all.

It’s not about the money.

Are CRT serious about their finances, or the canals, at all? It is simply not feasible, or financially sound, for boaters without home moorings to subsidise canal use for those who can afford home moorings. To illustrate the short-sightedness and imbalance of this proposal, an alternative annual 1% increase above inflation across all boat licences would generate more income – AND without heartlessly and knowingly driving many pensioners and low-income earners who live on boats without home moorings into hardship and poverty. An increase of 2% across all licence holders would raise double the revenue!

In fact, it’s more likely that this initiative will lose money on balance – unaffordable licence costs lead to more defaulting and unlicensed boats – criminalising their inhabitants and costly Section 8 1983 British Waterways Act  ‘canal eviction’ proceedings – at £10,000.00 each by latest estimates.

We believe this is discrimination.

A brief look at the past suggests this is part of a longer history of discrimination. For decades, waterways management have been trying to rid the navigation of  itinerant boaters:

  • In the Bill which became the British Waterways Act 1995, British Waterways (the state-owned predecessor of CRT) wanted it to be a criminal offence to keep a boat on the waterways without a home mooring. 
  • In 2002 in an attempt to encourage itinerant boaters onto moorings, they proposed a licence for boats without home moorings at 2.5 times the normal licence price. 
  • Enforcement strategies to make boaters travel 120 different lock-miles every 3 months without turning back were entertained in 2003
  • In 2005 the proposed increase for boats without a home mooring was 147%. 
  • In 2008, proposals to increase the tariff by £150 were again successfully challenged.
  • Rather than implement an increase in 2017 which would be “fairer and less complicated” in charging us more, they halved the early payment discount, put a surcharge on wider boats and have been replacing miles of moorable towpath into chargeable moorings and introducing over-zealous ‘safety zones’ ever since. 

Why have their efforts always failed? Because, aside from being  discriminatory, impractical and unpopular, they are also unlawful. Section 17(3)(c)(ii) of the British Waterways Act 1995 enshrines in law  “the right of all licence holders to use and live on a boat without a home mooring”. The licence comes first, not the circumstance in which you use it. 

They’ve had more than enough time, and knowledge to prepare for this.

They’ve always known government funding was going to end, and they’ve had much longer than planned – and more funding – to transition to a self-sustaining model. Instead of using the time to make best use of their sizeable endowment from the state, they have mismanaged and wasted their resources, outsourcing key functions at massive cost, asset-stripping and prioritising ostensibly charitable initiatives that don’t make financial sense, such as public volunteering and failed fund-raising. Using the upcoming reduction in funding and their inability to respond ethically to rising boat numbers on the canals, they’re disingenuously playing the victim, and using it as pretext to turn on their old punch bag yet again – itinerant boaters.

CRT is making unsubstantiated claims about the impact of our way of life.

Claims regarding itinerant boaters enjoying “greater utility in use of the network” and “greater impact on ageing infrastructure” are not backed up by any evidence and do not reflect real experiences of the waterways – demonstrating further CRT’S disconnection from the realities of the public infrastructure they are responsible for.

There is no proof itinerant liveaboard boaters put more strain on the network’s facilities than other boaters. In fact, seasonal and leisure boaters with home moorings – and to a greater degree holiday hire boaters – are likely to have an equal or heavier toll on facilities and infrastructure, as they lack experience and treat the waterways as someone else’s problem when things aren’t looked after. Many also travel further, and with more people on board, which also takes its toll..

In addition – due to inconsistent availability and frequent malfunctioning of CRT facilities – we often use private facilities for water, waste disposal and rubbish. We are not enjoying the services we already pay for, and are aware of proposals to reduce services further.

We’re an asset to the waterways in ways that CRT refuse to acknowledge.

Evidence and simple logic suggest facilities are better off with us using them year-round – (such as preventing the wood in lock gates drying out and cracking and steel mechanisms rusting during winter) and regularly reporting wear and tear, and often even doing maintenance ourselves (removing fallen trees or cutting back foliage in under-maintained areas).

Looking further back, much of the waterways network was un-navigable in the 70s and 80s – it was predominantly itinerant boaters who opened it up and now keep it moving. We bring safety and community to previously no-go areas of cities and the countryside. We’re a unique

feature of canals across the UK, and a part of the ecosystem, keeping the canals alive – without us they would be desolate and falling into disrepair.

CRT hide behind public misunderstanding of their ‘charitable’ status, and manipulated data from a flawed public survey. 

Data from CRT’s own ‘consultation’ survey which they used to justify this licence surcharge showed that – despite the biased and misleading way questions were phrased – still a majority of 60% of boaters chose options which did NOT include charging boats without home moorings more – they have manipulated the results to make a case for a discriminatory tariff on our way of life.

What do they really want?

CRT (and BW before them) seem to wish to socially cleanse and curate the waterways for luxury, leisure, affluent mooring cost premiums, especially in urban areas, turning them into un-navigable leisure resorts for walkers and cyclists only. This in the context of wider social dispossession, underfunding of public services, and widening inequality – with the poor and marginalised subsidising the rich and secure.

What do we want?

We’d like recognition of the value itinerant boaters contribute to the waterways, decent services for the money we already pay, and one set of increases applied equally and fairly to all. 

Generating finance fairly ought to be within the remit of a charitable trust. The proposed surcharge and its rationale are insincere political manoeuvres designed to segregate and marginalise travelling boaters, with no serious concern for canal management finances at all.

NBTA FIGHT BACK AGAINST LICENCE FEE CONSULTATION

In February earlier this year, the Canal and River Trust (CRT) sent out an email announcing their upcoming “Consultation on future boat licence pricing”. The preliminary email stated that the purpose of the consultation was “to gather feedback on boat licence pricing over the next ten years to help support the long-term future of the 2,000 miles of waterways”. Three weeks later, boaters started to receive the invitation to the consultation from a company called DJS Research, who CRT had employed to undertake the process. In our invitation, we were told in no uncertain terms that CRT will be raising the boat licence fee “by more than the rate of inflation for the foreseeable future” and what CRT supposedly wanted from us was to help them find the “fairest way to apply these increases”. 

Reeling from the shock of being told our licence fees will increase yet again, we cautiously opened the survey only to discover an extremely leading, divisive and biased set of questions, heavily aimed at raising the licence fee for boats without a home mooring specifically. Knowing that this consultation went out to all boaters, those with and without home moorings, the consultation felt very much like it was pitting boater against boater. 

In two out the first three questions, it was suggested that the licence fee for boats without home moorings should rise. A third question focused specifically on whether it is more or less reasonable to charge higher fees for “continuous cruisers”, with no option of saying “not reasonable in the slightest”. The questions in this survey were clearly implying that boats without home moorings should be priced differently to boats with home moorings. CRT may as well have asked: “Should we raise the licence fee for: a) continuous cruisers; b) boats without home moorings; or; c) itinerant boat dwellers?”.

As such, the NBTA saw the potential results of this consultation as a direct threat to our community, so we produced a set of suggested answers to all the questions. Our suggestions aimed to provide answers that would not divide boaters and instead encourage every boater to stand together in the face of rising fees, the opposite to what CRT seemed to be driving at with their questions. Our campaign was nationwide; information leaflets detailing the threat of the consultation were distributed across the CRT network, and we had a huge social media outreach drive. We hope that we managed to reach boaters everywhere, and thwart the very biased views CRT were pushing.

This consultation seemed to be yet another part of CRT’s continued assault on the itinerant boat dweller community and their bid to force us off the waterways. and of course there is their history of attempting to raise licence fees for itinerant boaters specifically (you can read about these in detail here). When the numerous aspects of this sustained effort are considered, it is not hard to see a pattern emerge. CRT have taken away facilities, mooring rings and bollards, and mooring spaces (only to replace them with bookable moorings in some cases), and of course there is their history of attempting to raise licence fees for itinerant boaters specifically (see the history article in this newsletter for more details). Itinerant boat dwellers have been targeted by CRT for decades, and if they get away with pricing boats without home moorings differently to those with home moorings, they will be able to price itinerant boaters out of existence.

The results of the consultation are now due to be published in October 2023. If CRT decide to use their survey to justify a decision that has harmful consequences for our community, we will show them that that would be more trouble than it’s worth.

The NBTA would like to thank everyone who filled in CRT’s leading and divisive survey. Thank you to everyone who helped encourage others to fill it in, to the people who put it on social media, to those who chatted to people, and especially to the people who handed out the ‘Don’t let CRT price us off the water’ leaflet across the CRT network. Together, we are a strong community who will not be bullied off the waterways.


NBTA London needs your support to carry on our work. Please get in touch here if you would like to volunteer with us. Alternatively your donations are vital to us supporting boaters with their legal case work, campaign banners and other printed material as well as events. You can help us with your donations online here


CRT UP TO THEIR OLD TRICKS AGAIN

So this year CRT pulled out of their bag of tricks, one of the favourite waterways authorities questions: ‘Should people without a home mooring pay more than those with?’ And without much warning they actioned this into their new surprise survey. It’s not the first time CRT or their predecessor British Waterways (BW) brought this question out. Within the last 21 years they have bought it out four times.

In the Bill that became the British Waterways Act 1995, BW wanted it to be a criminal offence to keep a boat on BW waterways without a home mooring. However, with an almighty pushback we instead got an Act which gave us the legal right to exist on BW waterways. This was quite a setback for BW, it had for the 20-30 previous years been making life on the water harder. Now it was law that they had to licence our boats as long as we followed three basic criteria. Therefore, BW and following them CRT had to come up with some inventive ideas to deal with their persistent pest – the travelling boater.

They tried a few different tactics in their attempts to eliminate our community from the waterways, from reducing mooring stay times to taking away moorable banks to outlandish enforcement strategies such as 2003’s plan to make our travelling boaters travel 120 different lock-miles every 3 months without turning back. Some plans were beaten back, others weren’t. So far each time BW and CRT have proposed that boats without home moorings should pay more; it has been successfully resisted.

In early 2002, BW stated that they believed the licensing system was “felt by many to be unduly complicated”, in a document entitled ‘A fresh look at BWs craft licensing structure:

Consultation Paper for Boaters May 2002′. They proposed a more complicated tiered licensing system where they would increase the licence fee for a boat without a home mooring to 2.5 times that of the normal licence fee. In their document they even argued, ‘there is a compelling argument for a ‘pay as you go’ system’.

Later that year, after doing a bit a consultation they published ‘A fresh look at BW’s craft licensing structure: Consultation update’. Here BW put boats without home moorings into four categories: genuine continuous cruisers, bridge-hoppers or short range cruisers, static “live aboard” boats and boats awaiting a mooring. Just for clarification, BW considered bridge-hoppers or short range cruisers were people who “moved less than 50 km in any three month period”. They were concerned that if they charged boats without home moorings more then they would harm the “genuine continuous cruisers” as well as the other types of categories they’d coined without home moorings. Therefore, they proposed that boats without home moorings who moved within a range in one region “pay a district mooring fee equivalent to the lowest priced BW permanent mooring in the area where your craft is normally kept or used”. Under pressure, this idea was also discarded.

In a 2005 document entitled ‘Licence Fee Consultation June 2005’ BW proposed to increase the licence fee for boats without a home mooring by 147%. It was identified in a report by BW entitled ‘Fee Structures for Boat Licences in England and Wales White Paper’ in the same year, that if implemented it would have raised £1million from only 1,360 boat licence holders.

A group called the Continuous Cruiser Action Group was set up to coordinate boaters responses to the consultation.

A section of boaters organised themselves against it and set up a campaign mobile phone group. Some of the organised boaters travelled across the nation and painted the phone number on locks asking people to get involved. The phoneline became inundated with texts of people wanting to do something. If BW didn’t back down the plan was to send text messages for people to meet at a list of different lock pinch points and do a go slow flotilla to cause disruption. BW backed down so the resistance plan didn’t need to implemented. At the time in 2006, the Continuous Cruiser Action Group made a statement saying, “just because all has gone quiet, it isn’t over”. They weren’t wrong.

In early 2008, hire boat company Wyvern Shipping circulated a petition calling on BW to make continuous cruisers pay a higher licence fee. In January 2008, Sally Ash BW’s then Head of Boating had received a letter from the Association of Pleasure Craft Operators (APCO), the hire boat companies’ trade body, threatening a drop in BW’s licence income if BW increased the cost of hire boat licences.

In September 2008, BW issued a consultation document to the User Groups entitled ‘Boat Licence Fees – For information and comment on by Waterway User Groups’. This document included a proposal to increase the licence fee for boats without home moorings by £150 in comparison to the published tariff. BW also proposed to introduce higher licence fees for widebeam boats. However, once again boaters organised and beat these plans back.

Then in 2017, CRT announced that the licence fees system was “outdated” with the ridiculous lie that licence fees have never been reviewed. They argued that licence fees were “complex”, “unfair”, “outdated” and that their consultation into the fees would be “cost neutral”. This so called cost neutral consultation had three stages and had to change research company for the third stage.

We in the NBTA were involved in each part of the consultation. All the way through this process, CRT attempted to divide boaters, putting forward the question again about charging boats without home moorings more than those with. Therefore, we spent this time preparing to be ready to ballot our members for a licence fee strike if we had to. We weren’t going to let CRT price us off the water!

Again, it didn’t come to that. CRT decided not to take us on at that time. So they decided to halve the early payment discount, pick on wider boats and further made a statement saying they would think about how to deal with the London waterways problem; separately. This thinking has led CRT to plan to implement chargeable moorings on 1.1km of London’s regular towpath. In a meeting between NBTA and CRT this year, CRT revealed that they still haven’t implemented this plan because they haven’t been able to hire someone suitable to manage the project. While that plan is still apparently to be implemented, CRT has reached back into the bag of tricks and found the same old question, once again hoping for different reply.

As in the past, we must show the waterways authorities we aren’t a community that they can push around and do whatever they want with. We aren’t a social problem that needs culling, our way of life is worth defending and together we can beat them back! Please get involved. If you think the lifestyle of travelling without a fixed address should continue to be defended, then join us here: https://nbtalondon.co.uk/about/welcome-to-the-nbta/ or email nbtalondon@gmail.com.

Featured image by David Mould on Flickr


NBTA London needs your support to carry on our work. Please get in touch here if you would like to volunteer with us. Alternatively your donations are vital to us supporting boaters with their legal case work, campaign banners and other printed material as well as events. You can help us with your donations online here


March Against Surcharge – Organised Transport Info

Car share whatsapp group

Here is a group for discussing and organising car shares to the Birmingham protest:

https://chat.whatsapp.com/ILqAoOiuJEw2VvqxpMUeNQ

If you don’t have whatsapp, email us on stopboatlicencediscrimination@gmail.com

Coach from London

Please get a ticket for a coach to Birmingham from Hackney here:

https://buytickets.at/nbtaprotestsurcharge/1048376

Transport from Pewsey and Bradford On Avon (K&A)

Protest bus from Pewsey and Bradford On Avon (K&A)

Here is where you can get tickets for the bus:
https://buytickets.at/nbtaprotestsurcharge/1053926

More info about this march can be found here