Fury in pretty UK town with so many caravans – ‘like a holiday camp’ | UK | News

A very small town of England expressed the number of people sleeping in minibuses and caravans on a street. Residents say that Beesteon in Eastern Midlands can turn into a “holiday camp”, because the channel side proves that people are a popular place to legally park their vehicles throughout the night. However, the locals claim that it causes problems such as congestion and is like individuals who leave garbage and waste from the toilets on the road and channel. A petition was launched to call the Nottinghamshire District Council to take action.
Located just outside Nottingham, Beesteon is not the only place where people start to live in vehicles in England. Places such as Brighton, Falmouth and Bristol found themselves on the front of a country -wide residential crisis. As seen by Express in July, it is believed to be particularly seen in Bistol, scattered only in Bristol, especially in lifestyle exits.
72 -year -old Beesteon resident Geoff Green BBC: “There were people who reduced the wastewater to the grill outside my property.
“It completely ruins the area and gets worse. Now they migrate to other roads.
“How long does Rylands to be like a big holiday camp?”
A person who wanted to stay anonymous said he was there for eight weeks and expected to buy a house nearby.
“I am sympathetic to the inhabitants – I don’t like it,” he added.
“But it’s completely legal.
“He doesn’t do wrong because people don’t like it.”
According to Rightmove, the housing prices in Beesto have an average of £ 296,327 last year.
Most of the property sold were semi -detached properties sold at an average price of £ 286,041.
Terrace properties were sold an average of £ 219.023 and detached properties brought £ 445.139.
In general, prices sold in the town are similar to the previous year and fell by 2% at £ 2022 £ 302.861.
A spokesman from the Nottinghamshire District Council, “he is looking forward to receiving the petition and the content of the content and the problems he will take carefully,” he said.
“We will think about whether the parked vehicles on the channel side now have a significant negative impact of the other users of the highway and the surrounding community, and what actions we can do to reduce the effects such as consulting on bringing parking restrictions.”




