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Monday, November 02, 2020

Losing your right of way

 More than 49,000 miles of public footpaths are missing from modern maps in England and Wales and risk being lost for ever, according to a “citizen mapping” effort led by the Ramblers, the walking charity. The government has set a cutoff date of January 2026, after which it will no longer be possible to reclaim and safeguard lost rights of way.

More than a fifth of the lost paths – 9,000 miles – are in south-west England, and Devon tops the list of counties with the most missing rights of way, with enough lost paths (2,949 miles) to take someone from Plymouth to beyond the north pole. The West Midlands has the highest density of lost paths to be potentially added to official maps.

Miles of lost footpaths

England – 41,628

Wales – 7,468

By English region:

South-west England – 9,210

Eastern England – 6,505

West Midlands – 6,291

South-east England – 6,221

Yorkshire and Humber – 4,524

East Midlands – 3,889

North-west England – 2,508

North-east England – 2,011

Top counties:

Devon – 2,949

North Yorkshire – 2,651

Herefordshire – 2,253

Lincolnshire – 1,934

Suffolk – 1,918

https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2020/nov/02/more-than-49000-miles-paths-lost-maps-england-wales

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