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Electric wayleaves
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<blockquote data-quote="holwellcourtfarm" data-source="post: 2341952" data-attributes="member: 42914"><p>Who defines "arable land" for a wayleave? Bearing in mind the RPA definition of regularly re-sown pasture as "permanent pasture" after 5 years in grass despite it being re-sown every 3 years.</p><p></p><p>If the payment rates are supposed to reflect the impact of their plant (litle impact on true permanent pasture but can be a pain to cultivate around on arable crops or grass re-seeding work) then I'd argue that grass leys should count as "arable" rates.</p><p></p><p>I'm awaiting a visit from a UK Power Networks surveyor to agree what I'm due in wayleave payments. I have over 20 poles, some double, 14 stays, 3 transformers (one supplies me and 2 other properties) and 100 metres of 11kv cable buried across my yard to supply a third party. I've owned the farm for 14 years and received nothing. It could be an interesting negotiation!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="holwellcourtfarm, post: 2341952, member: 42914"] Who defines "arable land" for a wayleave? Bearing in mind the RPA definition of regularly re-sown pasture as "permanent pasture" after 5 years in grass despite it being re-sown every 3 years. If the payment rates are supposed to reflect the impact of their plant (litle impact on true permanent pasture but can be a pain to cultivate around on arable crops or grass re-seeding work) then I'd argue that grass leys should count as "arable" rates. I'm awaiting a visit from a UK Power Networks surveyor to agree what I'm due in wayleave payments. I have over 20 poles, some double, 14 stays, 3 transformers (one supplies me and 2 other properties) and 100 metres of 11kv cable buried across my yard to supply a third party. I've owned the farm for 14 years and received nothing. It could be an interesting negotiation! [/QUOTE]
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