NOTICE of CONFIRMATION of an EXTINGUISHMENT ORDER (Other Than an Acquisition Extinguishment Order)

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

NOTICE of CONFIRMATION of an EXTINGUISHMENT ORDER (Other Than an Acquisition Extinguishment Order) NOTICE OF CONFIRMATION OF AN EXTINGUISHMENT ORDER (other than an Acquisition Extinguishment Order) HIGHWAYS ACT 1980, SECTION 118 HERTFORDSHIRE COUNTY COUNCIL HERTFORDSHIRE COUNTY COUNCIL (TRING RURAL FOOTPATH 11, 12 & 13) EXTINGUISHMENT ORDER 2019 On 30th June 2020, Hertfordshire County Council confirmed the above Order made under section 118 of the Highways Act 1980. The effect of the Order as confirmed is to extinguish: • the full width of that part of Tring Rural Footpath 11 commencing from SP 8935 1791 (Point D on the Order Plan) and running in a generally NNE direction for approx 95m to its junction with Tring Rural Footpaths 12 and 13 at SP 8939 1799 (Point B on the Order Plan) • the full width of Tring Rural Footpath 12 commencing from its junction with Tring Rural Footpaths 11 and 13 at SP 8939 1799 (Point B on the Order Plan) and running in a generally ENE direction for approx 710m to the county boundary at SP 8999 1835 (Point E on the Order Plan) • the full width of Tring Rural Footpath 13 commencing from the disused railway at SP 9049 1756 (Point A on the Order Plan) and running in a generally WNW direction for a distance of approx 1180m to its junction with Tring Rural Footpaths 11 and 12 at SP 8939 1799 (Point B on the Order Plan) then continuing in a generally WNW direction for approx 270m to SP 8913 1805 (point C on the Order Plan) as shown on the Order Plan. A copy of the order and the order plan may be seen free of charge at www.hertfordshire.gov.uk/rowapps, front reception of Hertfordshire County Council, County Hall, Hertford, from 9.00 am to 4.00 pm on Monday to Friday and on Dacorum Borough Council’s website at http://www.dacorum.gov.uk/home/do-it-online/consultation- feedback/current-consultation Copies of the order and plan may be bought from Hertfordshire County Council at the price of £5. The Order comes into force as from 9th September 2020, but if any person aggrieved by the Order wants to question its validity, or that of any provision contained in it, on the grounds that it is not within the powers of the Highways Act 1980, as amended, or on the grounds that any requirement of the Act, as amended, or of any regulation made under the Act has not been complied with in relation to the Order, he or she may, under paragraph 2 of Schedule 2 to the Act as applied by paragraph 5 of Schedule 6 to the Act, within 6 weeks from 9th September 2020, make an application to the High Court. Dated: 9th September 2020 PUBLIC PATH EXTINGUISHMENT ORDER HIGHWAYS ACT 1980 HERTFORDSHIRE COUNTY COUNCIL Hertfordshire County Council (Tri ng Rural Footpath 11, 12 & 13) Extinguishment Order 2019 This Order is made by Hertfordshire County Council ('the authority') under section 118 of the Highways Act 1980 ("the 1980 Act") because it appears to the authority that the footpaths described in paragraph 1 below are not needed for public use. Dacorum Borough Council has been consulted as required by section 120(2) of the 1980 Act. BY THIS ORDER: 1. The public rights of way over the land situate at Long Marston and shown by a continuous bold line on the plan contained in this Order ("the Order Plan") and described in the Schedule to this Order shall be extinguished 90 days from the date of confirmation of this Order. IN WITNESS whereof the COMMON SEAL of HERTFORDSHIRE COUNTY COUNCIL was hereunto affixed this \ 2 \:-\.. day of \)eec=..-~r 2019 l W--7C-f lt ~ The Common Seal of ) HERTFORDSHIRE COUNTY COUNCIL) was hereunto affixed ~ . ) in the presence of:- aya \__'t7- ) oamian Ogbo~n. · ) Principal Sohc\tor The foregoing Order is . :e~eby confirm~d ~ Chief Le~al O#iocr Gh1ef Legal 0#1cer pt',.,_ c:pct( ~l' cjkr Dated ........3oh­........~~ :l-:-.9.?P ' ,~' -~\. ' ~.--..'. \\ .\ ~o SCHEDULE The full width of that part of Tring Rural Footpath 11 commencing from SP 8935 1791 (Point D on the Order Plan) and running in a generally north north­ easterly direction for approximately 95 metres to its junction with Tring Rural Footpaths 12 and 13 at SP 8939 1799 (Point Bon the Order Plan). The full width of Tring Rural Footpath 12 commencing from its junction with Tring Rural Footpaths 11 and 13 at SP 8939 1799 (Point Bon the Order Plan) and running in a generally east north easterly direction for approximately 710 metres to the county boundary at SP 8999 1835 (Point E on the Order Plan). The full width of Tring Rural Footpath 13 commencing from the disused railway at SP 9049 1756 (Point A on the Order Plan) and running in a generally west north westerly direction for a distance of approximately 1180 metres to its junction with Tring Rural Footpaths 11 and 12 at SP 8939 1799 (Point B on the Order Plan) then continuing in a generally west north westerly direction for approximately 270 metres to SP 8913 1805 (point Con the Order Plan). SOD 90000 90200 90400 \ '3.Cln\ 0 ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ \ \ This Plan Forms Part of the '\ Hertfordshire County Council 0 (Tring Rural 11, 12 & 13) ~i Extinguishment Order 2019 ,Yr\ Footpath to be extinguished \JY- , Existing footpath I I I I I I County Boundary Appears on DM sheet Nos. 36 & 37 ~A I '\,/ I ' \ < I I ~ \ - \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ 0 ----hf+------+-------- -----------+---------- - - -----------t----------- -----t- i 1---------- - \ '' \ /:;:,13 0 ----------------t-p..i --------j--------- ------------------t-'!>- 1------------ - -"""llla-.=----- ------,f------ - -',,----- ---,,'-------------,,,,_ ~ Scale 1:2500 D 37.5 75 150 225 300 l ~ ~ - Metres ~\ , ~~ J~ . I~ e Crown copyright and database rights 2019 Ordna=cervey 100019~6.Use of this data [ \~I Is subject to terms and conditions,Y ou are not permi to copy, sub-I' nee, distribute or • sen any of this data to third pa rtiee in any !Orm. (TI1 · estrlctlon may not pply to HCC and its liceneed con!ractora agents and partners.) """ ~Mf-.rl'!-0.i fl:lfl~-f H~ E!:!iRl!'JPi,q, V ------- --+---- ----- - - --;,,L...-----j-----c\~----------- - ----+-- - --- --tl-\---- ---# -----;------------------ --t-~~----'-w_ -rg g~-g; 0 0 ------- r--------- ---- 7-- - - --t-- - -----r; --- -----+-------------------+- ------- - -------\\------l----- - ----- ,\-\-\-- 0 ! :4---------- -+-------~ c------- ---+------------ - --- - -71 ~- - --- ~ J-----\--- - --- -+-----"1 ----- -•----+-------- : 00 ~----- oooa, .
Recommended publications
  • Admission Rules for Community and Voluntary-Controlled Co-Educational
    The Highfield School Admission arrangements for 2020/21 The school will have a published admission number of 180 Section 324 of the Education Act 1996 requires the governing bodies of all maintained schools to admit a child with a statement of special educational needs that names their school. All schools must also admit children with an Education, Health and Care Plan (EHCP) that names the school. Rule 1 Children looked after and children who were previously looked after, but ceased to be so because they were adopted (or became subject to a child arrangement order or a special guardianship order). Rule 2 Medical or Social: Children for whom it can be demonstrated that they have a particular medical or social need to go to the school. A panel of HCC officers will determine whether the evidence provided is sufficiently compelling to meet the requirements for this rule. The evidence must relate specifically to the school applied for under Rule 2 and must clearly demonstrate why it is the only school that can meet the child’s needs. Rule 3 Sibling: Children who have a sibling at the school at the time of application, unless the sibling is in the last year of the normal age-range of the school. Note: the ‘normal age range’ is the designated range for which the school provides, for example Years 7 to 11 in a 11-16 secondary school, Years 7 to 13 in a 11-18 school. Rule 4 Children for whom The Highfield School is their nearest school. Rule 5 Children who live in the priority area for whom it is their nearest Hertfordshire maintained school or academy that is non-faith, co-educational and non-partially selective.
    [Show full text]
  • Hertfordshire. [ Kelly's
    4 HERTFORDSHIRE. [ KELLY'S The New River is an artificial cut, made to convey D'f St. Albans, in the diocese of St. Albans and province water to London; it was begun in r6o8, and runs along of Canterbury, and is divided into the following rural the valley of the Lee, taking its chief supplies from deaneries :-Baldock, Barnet, Bennington, Berkhamsted, Amwell and Chadwell, two springs near Hertford. Bishop Stortford, Buntingford, Hertford, Hitchin, St. The Grand Junction Canal comes into Hertfordshire Albans, Ware, Watford,. and Welwyn. near Tring, and soon enters the valley of the Gade, and St. Albans, which has been erected into a Cathedral City, had a. population in 1891 of 12,898. Hertford is a afterwards that of the Colne, which it follows through • Middlesex to West Drayton, passing by Tring, Berkham­ municipal borough, population 7•548. The other towus sted, Hemel Hempstead, Watford and Rickmansworth, are Baldock, population 2,301; Barnet, 5,496; Berkham­ with branches to .Aylesbury and Wendover. sted, 2,135; Bishop Stortford~ 6,595; Cheshunt, g,63o; Hatfield, 4,693; Hemel Hempstead, 4,336; Hitchin, 8,86o; Four main lines, belonging to as many large com­ Hoddesdon, 3,650; Rickmansworth, 3,730; Royston, panies, pass t'hrough the county from south to north, 3,319; Sawbridgeworth, 2,150; Stevenage, 3,309; Tring, viz., the London and North-Western on the western 4,525; Ware, 5,706; Watford, 16,826; Welwyn, 1,745. border, the Midland through the mid-west portion, the Great NO'rthern through the Centre, and the Great Eastern The Registration Districts are:- along the ~tern border.
    [Show full text]
  • Bedfordshire
    Archaeological Investigations Project 2006 Post-determination and Research East of England Bedfordshire (E.09.2240) TL08501870 {B4A7491A-88E5-4BE1-A620-F38E8C1A0979} Parish: Slip End Postal Code: LU1 4AB OVERHEAD LINE DIVERSIONS AT M1 JUNCTION 10 Overhead Line Diversions At M1 Junction 10, Archaeological Mitigation Preece, T Bedford : Albion Archaeology , 2007, 28pp, colour pls, figs, tabs, refs Work undertaken by: Albion Archaeology As part of the programme to widen the M1 motorway at Junction 10, archaeological observations were made of works relating to overhead power line diversions in the vicinity of the junction. Archaeological Zone 1 (AZ1) covered the western side of the development area within Bedfordshire. Two pylon footings (PBA14 and PBA15) along with an access road and a cable trench were excavated in this zone. No archaeological features were identified within this area. However, modern root disturbance, associated with the present hedgeline, was identified adjacent to Newlands Road. Archaeological Zone 2 (AZ2) covered the eastern side of the development area within Bedfordshire. Two pylons (PBA12A and PBA13) were erected in this zone and a cable trench was excavated. Three ditches [3707], [4002] and [4302] that were likely to be part of a field system were identified. Archaeological Zone 3 (AZ3) covered the southern part of the development area and was split into two areas: the northern area (AZ3N) covering the land within Bedfordshire and the southern area (AZ3S) covering the land within Hertfordshire. In AZ3N, footings for three pylons (PBB93, PBB94 and PBB95) an access road and a cable trench were excavated. The only archaeological feature to be identified was a ditch [4502] that may have been the continuation of one of the ditches located in AZ2.
    [Show full text]
  • 170221 05Dc Appendix A
    Appendix A Hertfordshire County Council’s oversubscription criteria for secondary and upper community coeducational schools for 2018/19 Section 324 of the Education Act 1996 requires the governing bodies of all maintained schools to admit a child with a statement of special educational needs that names their school. Schools must also admit children with an EHC (Education, Health and Care) Plan that names the school. If there are fewer applications than places available at a school all applicants will be admitted. If there are more applications than places available, the criteria outlined below will be used to prioritise applications. Oversubscription criteria Rule 1: Children looked after and children who were previously looked after, but ceased to be so because they were adopted (or became subject to a child arrangements order or a special guardianship order)*. Rule 2: Medical or Social Children for whom it can be demonstrated that they have a particular medical or social need to go to the school*. A panel of officers will determine whether the evidence provided is sufficiently compelling to meet the requirements for this rule. The evidence must relate specifically to the school applied for under Rule 2 and must clearly demonstrate why it is the only school that can meet the child’s needs. Rule 3: Sibling Children who have a sibling at the school at the time of application, unless the sibling is in the last year of the normal age-range of the school*. Note: the ‘normal age range’ is the designated range for which the school provides, for example Years 7 to 11 in an 11-16 secondary school, Years 7 to 13 in an 11-18 school .
    [Show full text]
  • Notice of Election
    DACORUM BOROUGH COUNCIL NOTICE OF ELECTION Election of Parish and Town Councillors For the electoral areas listed below:- Number of Number of Councillors Councillors to be to be elected elected ALDBURY EAST WARD SIX KINGS LANGLEY SOUTH WARD SIX ALDBURY WEST WARD TWO LITTLE GADDESDEN SEVEN BERKHAMSTED TOWN CASTLE WARD FIVE MARKYATE TEN BERKHAMSTED TOWN EAST WARD FIVE NASH MILLS EIGHT BERKHAMSTED TOWN WEST WARD FIVE NETTLEDEN WITH POTTEN END EIGHT BOVINGDON TEN NORTHCHURCH EIGHT CHIPPERFIELD EIGHT TRING RURAL EIGHT FLAMSTEAD TEN TRING TOWN BUNSTRUX WARD FIVE FLAUNDEN FIVE TRING TOWN DUNSLEY WARD THREE GREAT GADDESDEN SEVEN TRING TOWN MISWELL WARD FOUR KINGS LANGLEY CENTRAL WARD TWO WIGGINTON SEVEN KINGS LANGLEY NORTH WARD TWO 1. NOMINATION PAPERS Nomination Papers must be delivered to the Returning Officer, Civic Centre, Marlowes, Hemel Hempstead, HP1 1HH on any date after the date of this notice on Monday to Thursday 9am to 5pm and Friday 9am to 4pm (excluding Bank Holidays), but no later than 4PM on THURSDAY 9 APRIL 2015. Nomination Papers may be obtained from the offices of the Returning Officer, Civic Centre, Marlowes, Hemel Hempstead, HP1 1HH during the times stated above. 2. POLL If any election is contested the poll will take place on THURSDAY 7 MAY 2015. 3. REGISTERING TO VOTE Applications to register to vote must reach the Electoral Registration Officer by 12 midnight on MONDAY 20 APRIL 2015. 4. ABSENT VOTES Applications, amendments or cancellations of postal votes must reach the Electoral Registration Officer at Civic Centre, Marlowes, Hemel Hempstead, HP1 1HH by 5pm on TUESDAY 21 APRIL 2015.
    [Show full text]
  • Laureate Academy Admissions Arrangements 2020/2021
    Laureate Academy Admissions Arrangements 2020/2021 Laureate Academy has an annual admission number of 210 pupils. Section 324 of the Education Act 1996 requires the governing bodies of all maintained schools to admit a child with a statement of special educational needs that names their school. Schools must also admit children with an EHC (Education, Health and Care) Plan that names the school. If there are fewer applications than places available at a school all applicants will be admitted. If there are more applications than places available, the criteria outlined below will be used to prioritise applications. Oversubscription criteria Rule 1: Children looked after and children who were looked after, but ceased to be so because they were adopted (or became subject to a child arrangements order or a special guardianship order). Rule 2: Medical or Social Children for whom it can be demonstrated that they have a particular medical or social need to go to the school, which includes children previously from abroad who were cared for by the state because he or she would not otherwise have been cared for adequately and subsequently adopted. A panel of HCC officers will determine whether the evidence provided is sufficiently compelling to meet the requirements for this rule. The evidence must relate specifically to Laureate Academy and must clearly demonstrate why Laureate Academy is the only school that can meet the child’s needs. Rule 3: Sibling Children who have a sibling on the roll of the school or linked school at the time of application*. This applies to Years 7 to 13.
    [Show full text]
  • Laureate Academy Admissions Arrangements 2019/20
    Laureate Academy Admissions Arrangements 2019/20 All admissions to Laureate Academy managed and decided through the Hertfordshire County Council admissions process. If you have any queries concerning this process you should call 0300 1234043 or visit the Hertsdirect website: www.hertsdirect.org/admissions. Date of birth 01/09/2006 – 31/08/2007 School start date September 2018 Application open 1 September 2017 31 October 2017 Closing date for online applications to be submitted to the LA 31 October 2017 Statutory deadline for receipt of paper applications Allocation information despatched to 1 March 2018 parents Date by which parents/carers may 15 March 2018 accept or reject place offered Date by which parents/carers return TBC by letter from HCC appeal forms The school will have a published admission number of 210. Section 324 of the Education Act 1996 requires the governing bodies of all maintained schools to admit a child with a statement of special educational needs that names their school. Schools must also admit children with an EHC (Education, Health and Care) Plan that names the school. If there are fewer applications than places available at a school all applicants will be admitted. If there are more applications than places available, the criteria outlined below will be used to prioritise applications. Oversubscription criteria Rule 1 Children looked after and children who were looked after, but ceased to be so because they were adopted (or became subject to a child arrangement order or a special guardianship order). Rule 2 Medical or Social: Children for whom it can be demonstrated that they have a particular medical or social need to go to the school*.
    [Show full text]
  • List of Licensed Organisations PDF Created: 29 09 2021
    PAF Licensing Centre PAF® Public Sector Licensees: List of licensed organisations PDF created: 29 09 2021 Licence no. Organisation names Application Confirmed PSL 05710 (Bucks) Nash Parish Council 22 | 10 | 2019 PSL 05419 (Shrop) Nash Parish Council 12 | 11 | 2019 PSL 05407 Ab Kettleby Parish Council 15 | 02 | 2018 PSL 05474 Abberley Parish Council 06 | 08 | 2018 PSL 01030 Abbey Hill Parish Council 02 | 04 | 2014 PSL 01031 Abbeydore & Bacton Group Parish Council 02 | 04 | 2014 PSL 01032 Abbots Langley Parish Council 02 | 04 | 2014 PSL 01033 Abbots Leigh Parish Council 02 | 04 | 2014 PSL 03449 Abbotskerswell Parish Council 23 | 04 | 2014 PSL 06255 Abbotts Ann Parish Council 06 | 07 | 2021 PSL 01034 Abdon & Heath Parish Council 02 | 04 | 2014 PSL 00040 Aberdeen City Council 03 | 04 | 2014 PSL 00029 Aberdeenshire Council 31 | 03 | 2014 PSL 01035 Aberford & District Parish Council 02 | 04 | 2014 PSL 01036 Abergele Town Council 17 | 10 | 2016 PSL 04909 Aberlemno Community Council 25 | 10 | 2016 PSL 04892 Abermule with llandyssil Community Council 11 | 10 | 2016 PSL 04315 Abertawe Bro Morgannwg University Health Board 24 | 02 | 2016 PSL 01037 Aberystwyth Town Council 17 | 10 | 2016 PSL 01038 Abingdon Town Council 17 | 10 | 2016 PSL 03548 Above Derwent Parish Council 20 | 03 | 2015 PSL 05197 Acaster Malbis Parish Council 23 | 10 | 2017 PSL 04423 Ackworth Parish Council 21 | 10 | 2015 PSL 01039 Acle Parish Council 02 | 04 | 2014 PSL 05515 Active Dorset 08 | 10 | 2018 PSL 05067 Active Essex 12 | 05 | 2017 PSL 05071 Active Lincolnshire 12 | 05
    [Show full text]
  • Section 5: Admission Rules for Community and Voluntary-Controlled
    The Astley Cooper School Admission arrangements for 2016/17 The school will have a published admission number of 180. Section 324 of the Education Act 1996 requires the governing bodies of all maintained schools to admit a child with a statement of special educational needs that names their school. All schools must also admit children with an Education, Health and Care Plan (EHCP) that names the school. Rule 1 Children looked after and children who were previously looked after, but ceased to be so because they were adopted (or became subject to a child arrangement order or a special guardianship order). Rule 2 Medical or Social: Children for whom it can be demonstrated that they have a particular medical or social need to go to the school. Governors will determine whether the evidence provided is sufficiently compelling to meet the requirements for this rule. The evidence must relate specifically to the school applied for under Rule 2 and must clearly demonstrate why it is the only school that can meet the child’s needs. Rule 3 Sibling: Children who have a sibling at the school at the time of application, unless the sibling is in the last year of the normal age-range of the school. Note: the ‘normal age range’ is the designated range for which the school provides, for example Years 7 to 11 in a 11-16 secondary school, Years 7 to 13 in a 11-18 school. Rule 4 Children who live in the priority area for whom it is their nearest Hertfordshire maintained school or academy that is non-faith, co-educational and non-partially selective.
    [Show full text]
  • The Impact of Agricultural Depression and Land
    THE IMPACT OF AGRICULTURAL DEPRESSION AND LAND OWNERSHIP CHANGE ON THE COUNTY OF HERTFORDSHIRE, c.1870-1914 Julie Patricia Moore Submitted to the University of Hertfordshire in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the degree of PhD September 2010 2 ABSTRACT The focus of this research has been on how the county of Hertfordshire negotiated the economic, social and political changes of the late nineteenth century. A rural county sitting within just twenty miles of the nation’s capital, Hertfordshire experienced agricultural depression and a falling rural population, whilst at the same time seeing the arrival of growing numbers of wealthy, professional people whose economic focus was on London but who sought their own little patch of the rural experience. The question of just what constituted that rural experience was played out in the local newspapers and these give a valuable insight into how the farmers of the county sought to establish their own claim to be at the heart of the rural, in the face of an alternative interpretation which was grounded in urban assumptions of the social value of the countryside as the stable heart of the nation. The widening of the franchise, increased levels of food imports and fears over the depopulation of the villages reduced the influence of farmers in directing the debate over the future of the countryside. This study is unusual in that it builds a comprehensive picture of how agricultural depression was experienced in one farming community, before considering how farmers’ attempts to claim ownership of the ‘special’ place of the rural were unsuccessful economically, socially and politically.
    [Show full text]
  • Draft Recommendations on the Future Electoral Arrangements for Dacorum in Hertfordshire
    Draft recommendations on the future electoral arrangements for Dacorum in Hertfordshire Further electoral review November 2005 1 1 Translations and other formats For information on obtaining this publication in another language or in a large-print or Braille version please contact The Boundary Committee for England: Tel: 020 7271 0500 Email: [email protected] The mapping in this report is reproduced from OS mapping by The Electoral Commission with the permission of the Controller of Her Majesty’s Stationery Office, © Crown Copyright. Unauthorised reproduction infringes Crown Copyright and may lead to prosecution or civil proceedings. Licence Number: GD 03114G 2 Contents Page What is The Boundary Committee for England? 5 Executive summary 7 1 Introduction 15 2 Current electoral arrangements 19 3 Submissions received 23 4 Analysis and draft recommendations 25 Electorate figures 26 Council size 26 Electoral equality 29 General analysis 29 Warding arrangements 30 a Grove Hill and Woodhall wards 31 b Adeyfield East, Adeyfield West, Highfield & St Pauls and 32 Hemel Hempstead Central wards c Boxmoor, Chaulden & Shrubhill, Gadebridge and Warners 34 End wards d Apsley, Bennetts End, Corner Hall, Leverstock Green and 36 Nash Mills wards e Berkhamsted Castle, Berkhamsted East and Berkhamsted 39 West wards f Tring Central, Tring East, Tring West and Aldbury & Wigginton 40 wards g Ashridge, Bovingdon, Flaunden & Chipperfield, Kings Langley, 42 Northchurch and Watling wards Conclusions 43 Parish electoral arrangements 44 5 What happens next? 49 6 Mapping 51 Appendices A Glossary and abbreviations 53 B Code of practice on written consultation 57 3 4 What is The Boundary Committee for England? The Boundary Committee for England is a committee of The Electoral Commission, an independent body set up by Parliament under the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000.
    [Show full text]
  • 6302 the London Gazette, 20 November, 1953
    6302 THE LONDON GAZETTE, 20 NOVEMBER, 1953 NATIONAL PARKS AND ACCESS TO THE COUNTRYSIDE ACT, 1949 HERTFORDSHIRE COUNTY COUNCIL Public Rights of Way NOTICE is hereby given that the County Council of the Administrative County of Hertford, in accordance with the provisions of Part IV of the National Parks and Access to the Countryside Act, 1949, have prepared a draft map and statement showing the public paths and roads used as public paths within that part of the said County which is comprised in the undermentioned county districts. A copy of the draft map and statement may be inspected at the office of the County Surveyor at County Hall, Hertford, during the usual office hours and copies of so much thereof as relates to each of the undermentioned county districts and parishes may also be inspected during the usual office hours at the places mentioned below. Representations or objections with respect to the draft map and statement may be sent in writing to the Clerk of the County Council at County Hall, Hertford, within four months of the date of the publication of this notice. Any such representation or objection should state the grounds on which it is made. Names of County Districts Places where appropriate extracts from the draft map and Parishes and statement may be inspected. Hemel Hempstead Borough Town Hall, Hemel Hempstead. City of St. Albans 38, St. Peters Street, St. Albans. Watford Borough Town Hall, Watford. Berkhamsted Urban District Civic Centre, Berkhamsted. Tring Urban District Council Offices, Tring. Harpenden Urban District Council Offices, Harpenden Hall. Chorleywood Urban District Chorleywood House.
    [Show full text]