CPRE - The Campaign to Protect Rural England
Formerly the Council for the Protection of Rural England

CPRE 2010 Photography Competition - Deadline Approaching!

C'mon folks - time's running out! Get your cameras and get out into the countryside and let's see what you can do! Have you checked out the wonderful prizes offered for the winning entries? Here's a shot to get you going, taken at random from the road at Cropston Reservoir on a wet August Saturday afternoon walk.

View details of how to enter the competition.

CPRE 2010 Photography Competition

Leicestershire CPRE, in partnership with East Midlands Landscape Partnership, Leicestershire County Council and Leicester Shire Promotions, is pleased to announce the launch of the 2010 Leicestershire Landscapes Matter Photography Competition.

The following documents outline the categories for which entries will be accepted:

Volunteer Opportunities at CPRE Leicestershire

There are a variety of opportunities with CPRE Leics to help us continue and expand our activities:

Fundraiser

We're aiming to raise funds to enable us to run more projects to protect the Leicestershire Countryside. Duties include:
1. Co-ordinate fundraising activities – working with other volunteers
2. Investigate sources of funding and find appropriate local contacts
3. Draft grant applications
4. Find sponsorship
5. Write to donors
We’d like someone with experience of fundraising.

Sponsor Leicestershire CPRE

As a registered charities we are increasingly finding ourselves in a position where it is difficult to undertake tasks to conserve the countryside, even though our planning volunteers are unpaid, working on an expenses-only basis. Even then, some volunteers forego claiming some expenses. However, this is not a position we can sustain for very much longer.

Pylons, masts, antennae and other not-so-tall structures in the countryside

 In 2004 CPRE launched a campaign to oppose inappropriately sited telecommunications masts. The problem was, and still is, that just about everyone wants a mobile phone and expects it to work anywhere they go. Where a mast and its antennae present a serious impact on amenity, any such application will be subject to a local authority's Development Control. The details are set out in the Government document Planning Policy Guidance 8.

Opencast coal-mining in north-west Leicestershire

In September 2008 a request was lodged with Leicestershire County Council for a Scoping Opinion on behalf of Coal UK.  The proposal in question was for what is euphemistically termed a ‘surface mining and restoration scheme’. That’s opencast coal mining to you and me.  The details of the request can be seen here.

Wind turbines in Leicestershire

Electrical power, like so much of everything else we consume, is often used without a thought of where it comes from. Folks complain if a 'mobile' phone mast is erected in their neighbourhood and yet they are happy to own one or more mobile phones per household; people complain about the loss of greenfield sites to new development - yet we all live on what was once a greenfield site!

New Quarry at Bardon

A new quarry is being planned immediately to the south-east of Bardon Hill. It is described as a quarry extension as it will link to the existing crushing and screening plant, etc. by conveyor. The immediate reaction to this might be one of total opposition. Realistically, attempting to prevent this development could well result in failure since the likelihood of proving overriding economic need by the applicant is a strong argument in its favour. Leicestershire's 'problem' is that we are the first port of call for hard rock by markets to the south and east.

Renewable energy resources... what are the alternatives?

We have to admit that this is causing us headaches at our Branch Headquarters! Being in the middle of the country and with no large torrents or cascades of water tumbling from high ground we're naturally focusing largely on wind-power as a renewable energy resource, which of course means wind turbines. Since CPRE is perhaps the only significant Third Sector NGO campaigning to maintain a high quality of landscape appearance we face quite a dilemma.

Allotments

The importance of growing at least some of the food we consume on our own ground or a rented allotment is being thrown into sharp focus by the needs to address harmful climate change and to survive the economic downturn, though not necessarily in that order. The reduced ability to take holidays abroad, pay for energy bills or run private motorised vehicles is making trawling second-hand bookshops and charity shops a popular pastime these days!

Syndicate content