General Farm Management

Documents

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Access Assessment Process: Detailed Assessment (TIN075)
This Detailed Assessment guidance has been written to help advisers assess new access routes, in particular coastal access routes. It is one of a series of three information notes that demonstrate good practice for integrating access, biodiversity and landscape objectives. Together these notes provide detailed guidance on how to adopt a consistent approach to implementing new access projects that meets the legal requirements to assess the implications of a proposed access project for nature conservation. The purpose of this paper is to provide a structure when exercising judgement under various statutory obligations. It is intended to assist and provide an aide-memoir when exercising judgement, and should not be interpreted as formulaic or prescriptive. It may be tailored to fit the circumstances prevailing. Natural England, TIN075, 19 July 2010.
Access Assessment Process: Initial Review (TIN074)
This guidance on the Initial Review has been written to help advisers assess new access routes, in particular coastal access routes. It is one of a series of three information notes that demonstrate good practice for integrating access, biodiversity and landscape objectives. Together these notes provide detailed guidance on how to adopt a consistent approach to implementing new access projects that meets legal requirements to assess the implications of proposed access projects for nature conservation. This note provides guidance on undertaking an Initial Review which is the first stage of the Access Assessment Process. This is a screening stage, equivalent to the Likely Significant Effect (LSE) test under Regulation 61 of The Conservation of Habitats and Species Regulations 2010. The purpose of this note is to provide a structure when exercising judgement under various statutory obligations. It is intended to assist and provide an aide-memoir when exercising judgement, and should not be interpreted as formulaic or prescriptive. Natural England, TIN074, 19 July 2010.
Access Assessment Process: Procedure Overview (TIN073)
This overview has been written to help advisers assess new access routes, in particular coastal access routes. It is one of a series of three information notes that demonstrate good practice for integrating access, biodiversity and landscape objectives. Together these notes provide detailed guidance on how to adopt a consistent approach to implementing new access projects that meets the legal requirements to assess the implications of a proposed access project for nature conservation. A range of sites and factors can be assessed as part of this process. However, the process has been specifically designed to include an assessment of any likely effects on Natura 2000 (N2K) sites so that the assessment and decision-making process can meet the requirements of Regulation 61 of The Conservation of Habitats and Species Regulations 2010 (the Habitats Regulations). Natural England, TIN073, 19 July 2010.
Access Rights - Managing Public Access to Land
The new access rights will be introduced on a regional basis, starting in the south east and the lower north west of England, where the rights will come into force on 19 September 2004. This collection of documents published by the Countryside Agency provide detailed guidance for land managers. February 2004
Access: Changes to Agri-environment Access Options concerning eligibility and special projects
Natural England has agreed with Defra that eligibility for access payments in Environmental Stewardship be extended to cover all voluntary bodies (including the National Trust, RSPB and the Wildlife Trusts) and Local Authorities. This document outlines these changes. Natural England, 2010.
British Standards Relevant to Agriculture
This resource lists British Standards relevant to agriculture and provides summaries to many. These summaries do not replace the full published standards but should be used for general information only. ADLib document March 2005.
Climate change farm resilience planning (NECR120)
Farm Resilience Plans are a concept initially developed by Natural England as a way of raising awareness among the farming population of climate change threats and opportunities for their faming and land management systems. The aim of this pilot project was to consider whether a planning approach can be developed that uses the best available evidence, integrates the natural environment and agricultural systems, recommends adaptive actions and is a practical training tool for farm managers planning the future management of their holdings. Natural England, NECR120, 9 September 2013.
Coastal Access Plans in England (TIN096)
Under the provisions of section 51 of the National Parks and Access to the Countryside Act 1949 (as amended by Part 8 of the Marine and Coastal Access Act 2009) a Coastal Access Report must be submitted to the Secretary of State for each ‘stretch’ of English coastline. This report is prepared by, or on behalf of, Natural England within the Coastal Access Implementation Process described in Natural England’s Coastal Access Scheme. The purpose of this note is to explain to Natural England staff and others preparing reports what needs to be done to meet the requirements of the SEA Directive and Habitats Regulations and how these fit into the Coastal Access Implementation Process. Natural England, TIN096, 10 June 2011.
Code of Good Farming Practice (Wales)
This document suite covers the Code of Good Farming Practice Wales. The summary leaflet is available as HTML and pdf. The full Code which was part of the RDP Wales 2000-2006 is available as pdf.
Colorado Beetle - Keep it out of Britain
The Colorado beetle is not established in the UK and is a notifiable quarantine pest, whose introduction is prohibited under the EC Single Market Protected zone arrangements for Plant Health. This Defra leaflet will aid identification & explains what needs to be done if the beetle is discovered in the UK. October 2001. This link also provides access to a photo gallery for the Colorado Beetle.
Common Land Toolkit (NE285)
These documents provide practical guidance for those involved with common land which remains under practical agricultural management by farmers and commoners. They can be used by practitioners seeking the sustainable management of commons to provide the widest possible range of public benefits. The documents provide background information on commons, technical and legal aspects relating to commons and defining or constraining their management, and help for those involved with management. Natural England, NE285, 2010.
Commons Act 2006 Guidance
A collection document providing guidance about the Commons Act 2006, including details on commons councils and guidance od severance. Defra, 2006 onwards.
Consignment Notes: Standard Procedure. A guide to the Hazardous Waste Regulations (Environment Agency)
If you are a producer, consignor or holder (see the next page) and you want to have the hazardous waste on your site removed, you need a consignment note to move that waste. This guide tells you when you might not need consignment notes; where to get consignment notes; how to fill in consignment notes; all about consignment note codes; who fills in the different parts of the note; and why there are three sheets to each standard consignment note and who has each copy. This guide gives details of the standard consignment procedures for hazardous waste moved within England and Wales. Environment Agency, HWR03A Version 4.0, January 2010.
Countryside Access: A guide to definitive maps and changes to public rights of way (NE112)
A guide about definitive maps - the legal record of public rights of way - and the ways in which both those maps and individual rights of way can be changed. Countryside Agency, NE112, November 2008.
Countryside Code 2004
This is an updated version of the Countrysdie Code published by the Countryside Agency (2004). This is the first update to the guidance note for 50 years.
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