Teen workers at Jeremy Clarkson’s Diddly Squat farm shop have to wear bodycams to record abuse they get from angry locals, council is told as supporters say site is farming ‘crown jewel’ and should get expanded car park
- Staff at Clarkson’s farm wear bodycams after abuse, planning meeting told
- READ MORE: Death threats after opposing the expansion of Diddly Squat farm
Teenage workers at Jeremy Clarkson’s farm have to wear bodycams to record abuse directed at them from angry locals over the influx of visitors the motoring journalist brings, a council planning hearing heard.
But villagers who support Diddly Squat farm have described it as the ‘crown jewel’ of sustainable living as they pleaded with their local council to allow expansion plans.
A two-day Planning Inspectorate meeting continued today to consider proposals by the 62-year-old former Top Gear presenter to extend the car park on his Oxfordshire farm plot to accommodate 70 vehicles.
The plans are opposed by West Oxfordshire District Council (WODC) on the grounds that it would encourage more visitors to Diddly Squat farm – which sits between Chadlington and Chipping Norton – adding to traffic problems.
WODC has also said allowing more vehicles would further disturb the tranquility of the Cotswolds Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.
Teenage workers at Jeremy Clarkson’s (pictured with girlfriend Lisa Hogan at the F1 Grand Prix at Bahrain non March 5) farm have to wear bodycams to record abuse directed at them from angry locals
Rows of cars queuing to get to the farm shop at Diddly Squat farm in Oxfordshire as a bus tries to get past
Annabel Gray, 32, who works on a catering trailer at Clarkson’s farm, today said that workers as young as 16 on the farm have had to ‘wear body cameras’ as a precaution following ‘abuse’ directed at them by villagers.
She also responded to a complaint made in yesterday’s meeting by Chadlington resident Hilary Moore who described tourists attracted to the farm as ‘motorheads’ who drive slowly on surrounding roads to ‘show off their cars’.
READ MORE: Councillor and member of the public receive death threats after opposing the expansion of Clarkson’s Diddly Squat farm
But Ms Gray said this description was ‘unfair’, and that she had ‘witnessed local people’ adding to traffic issues by driving slowly too.
Ms Gray, who is also a farmer’s daughter, said the farm shop provides an ‘important’ education for visitors, some of whom do not realise that ‘beef burgers come from a cow’.
She told the hearing: ‘Diddly Squat has an important opportunity to educate people about local farming and I find it really frustrating that the council is overlooking that.
‘There are few places about where you can experience where we get food from.
‘Jeremy’s following do not have that great a knowledge about farming – I have had to explain to people that beef burgers come from a cow – and they travel long distances with the hope they might see him, but also to experience farming they have seen on TV.
‘They buy something that’s being produced by the local farming community and they are wowed by it and then they go and seek it out in their local communities.
‘This is a massive, massive opportunity for WODC. I am begging you that this is something that can be improved on rather than turn your back on.’
Local butcher and Diddly Squat supplier Henry Lawrence, 33, said the shop could be ‘the crown jewel’ of sustainable farming and that his business has grown ‘dramatically’ since trading with it.
Mr Lawrence, who owns Hook Norton Butchers, said: ‘I would like to see a car park granted of the correct capacity, not only for the success of the farm shop, but for the success of local businesses too.
‘Diddly Squat farm could be the crown jewel in the local sustainable farming movement.’
Chadlington Parish Council chairman Andrew Hutchings, 56, emphasised that there was ‘a range of opinions’ on the farm in the village, but most agreed that it had ‘clearly outgrown what it was built for’.
He said: ‘We have reached a tipping point between a farm shop and a tourist type attraction for people who want to see the celebrity as well as the farm.
‘The problem comes when you have too many visitors … the traffic is a major issue to the community at large.
‘When you have a site which has significant traffic problems and cannot deal with the number of visitors, should we be adding more services and features that enable more people to spend longer on the premises?
‘It’s very hard to see the proposed car park dealing with that at peak times.’
WODC has argued that the car park expansion indicates a change in the use of his land from being for the shop, to being for ‘leisure activities’, which would require different planning considerations.
Visitors to Clarkson’s farm queueing up outside the shop
Local butcher and Diddly Squat supplier Henry Lawrence, 33, said the shop could be ‘the crown jewel’ of sustainable farming
Clarkson’s legal representative Richard Kimblin KC contested this, saying the extra parking space reflects increasing demand for the shop alone due to its ‘remarkable success in selling farm goods’.
The council’s lawyer said that if Clarkson’s business were operating as a farm shop only, visitors would stay only for ‘around five minutes’ to buy their goods, so a space for up to 70 vehicles is ‘too big’.
It was previously heard that visitors stay longer to ‘take selfies’, meet Clarkson, and have a day out at the site.
WODC previously shut down a restaurant which Clarkson had opened last year – allegedly without planning permission – and the TV presenter has subsequently said he no longer wishes to reopen it.
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