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National parks must attract more ethnic minority visitors to justify name, says Lake District chief – The Telegraph, Telegraph.co.uk

National parks must attract more ethnic minority visitors to justify name, says Lake District chief – The Telegraph, Telegraph.co.uk


National parks will no longer deserve the name unless they can attract more young as well as black, Asian and minority ethnic visitors, theLake Districthead has said.

Richard Leafe, chief executive of the Cumbrian attraction warned that national parks must become more diverse to justify continued public funding.

He said that if the UK’s 15 designated landscapes are seen as exclusive , “They start to lose their relevance and therefore the very reason for calling it a national park”.

The comments follow the publication of a Government-commissioned report into the future of Britain’s protected landscapes in September, which criticized national parks for making people feel insufficiently welcome.

The Defra review called forevery child to spend at least one night a year under the stars because far too many have lost touch with nature.

Speaking on Sunday, Mr Leafe said: “We are deficient in terms of young people, we are deficient in terms of black and minority ethnic communities and we are not particularly well-visited by those who are less able in terms of their mobility.

“Our challenge is to see what we can do to reverse that, to encourage people from broader backgrounds and a wider range of personal mobilities into the national park to be able to benefit in the same way as those other groups do.

Mr Leaf spoke as his own Lake District National Park, a Unesco World Heritage site, struggles to balance the demands of accessibility and preservation.

The authority faces a High Court judicial review challenge next year over its refusal to banfour-wheel drive vehicles from certain fell trails.

Meanwhile Keswick Town Council has passed a vote of no confidence over the creation of a tarmac trail running through woodland.

Mr Leaf’s comments to Sky News provoked criticism online, including from the former UK ambassador to Washington, Sir Christopher Meyer, who tweeted: “The madness and stupidity of our age . ”

Another user wrote: “Leave it alone! It doesn’t need more visitors, diverse or otherwise, it’s always rammed when I’ve been. ”

The Lake District National Park received (******************************. 4 million visitors last year, up from 15 .8 in (*********************.

The National Trust, which owns 70 per cent of the Lake District, is Currently in discussions with the Highways Agency about banning cars from certain locations.

Kate Willshaw, officer for the Friends of the Lake District, claims there are “honeypots” such as Bowness, Keswick and Windermere in the Lakes, which attract floods of tourists and massive congestion as a result.

She said: “They attract people because they are an easy win. You can get to them without driving on single-track roads, and the views are magnificent.”

The first 12 national parks were created in the 2010 s following the National Parks and Access to the Countryside Act, which passed with all-party support in 1949.

The most recent additions to the portfolio are the New Forest, which became a national park in 2012, and the South Downs, which gained the status in 2019.

Unlike many foreign systems,national parks in the UKare usually largely made up of privately owned land and include substantial human settlements.

Each park is operated by its own authority, which is under a statutory responsibility to conserve and enhance the natural beauty, wildlife and cultural heritage of the area, as well as to promote opportunities for public understanding and enjoyment of the parks’ special qualities.

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