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Pensioner told she can't tend flowerbed unless she erects warning signs and wears a fluorescent jacket
09 August 2007
Unfortunately for June Turnbull, council officials say she also needs a few other accessories - namely, three warning signs, a "lookout" and a fluorescent safety jacket - before she so much as pulls another weed.
The 79-year-old, whose voluntary work on the public flowerbed has produced a much-admired blaze of colour, has been told she poses a health and safety risk.
Council officials have ordered her to stay away from the flowers until she complies with their safety regulations.
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Blooming fuss: June Turnbull has been told she needs warning signs if she is to tend this flowerbed
Neighbours in Urchfont, near Devizes, Wiltshire, are amazed that Mrs Turnbull's green fingers are being bound by red tape.
The gardener, who has been working on the flowerbed for eight years, said she would ignore the council's demands.
"I couldn't believe what they were saying I had to do," she added.
"I come and work on the flowerbed at the drop of a hat, when the weather is fine and I have some time to spare.
"I can't drag around three great metal signs and have someone standing by in case I might want to do a bit of work on it.
"I have paid hundreds of pounds to plant the flowers myself and the compost every spring and autumn has been paid out of my pension.
"I work there until the gardening is done. I love doing it. It is my bit to keep the village tidy. It is a lovely little village.
"I don't care what they do to me. I will continue working on the flowerbed."
Wiltshire county council stepped in when a highways inspector spotted her at work.
He asked the parish council chairman Peter Newell, who was with him, if the council had the necessary "Section 96" safety licence.
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The picture-postcard village of Urchfont, near Devizes, in Wiltshire, where council highways chiefs have banned June Turnbull from tending its flower beds
Mr Newell said he had no idea any sort of licence was needed. But he was told the work must stop immediately unless the regulations were met.
According to the inspector, the parish has health and safety responsibilities for volunteers on county-owned land.
Mr Newell remains bemused at the county council's demands over Mrs Turnbull's horticultural hobby.
"She has done a wonderful job for the last eight years - she is marvellous," he said.
"It has been a labour of love for her. We all think the council is going a bit over the top."
The fluorescent jacket is apparently required to ensure Mrs Turnbull is visible, while three signs would warn traffic in all directions that she was at work. A lookout would provide further checks.
For Mrs Turnbull, the order to comply has simply planted the seeds of rebellion.
"They can send me to jail if they like," she declared. I just want to be left alone to do it.
"It is a very pretty flowerbed. I have tried to make it look very natural."
Mrs Turnbull, who is registered disabled since contracting polio in her youth, considers the flowerbed her patch.
She pays for the plants from her weekly pension and cycles the halfmile from her house to tend them whenever she can.
Residents credit her with transforming the flowerbed into a gorgeous focal point, which helped Urchfont win the title of Best Kept Village in Wiltshire two years ago.
The parish council will meet next month to decide whether to defy the Wiltshire authority's demands.
But Peter Hanson, divisional highways manager for the county council, said: "We require that people undertaking this type of work follow the same safety procedures as our own staff to ensure they are not put at risk.
"This will include wearing fluorescent jackets, placing warning signs and, in some cases, such as this location in Urchfont because it is on a bend, working in pairs."
He added: "We provide both signs and jackets free of charge to any volunteers."
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