The Friends of Whitewebbs Park have launched a crowdfunder asking people to pledge money needed to mount a legal challenge to Enfield Council's apparent determination to lease more than half of the park to Tottenham Hotspur Football Club (THFC).
The Friends, who have teamed up with greenbelt campaigners Enfield RoadWatch and CPRE London to contest the legality of the deal, say that they anticipate that they will need around £40,000 in total to pay legal fees, but that the immediate requirement is for £18,000, the amount needed to start the process of judicial review of the council's actions. However, they warn potential donors that, even though they believe they have a good case, "there is a risk in taking legal action and a favourable result cannot be guaranteed".
We have tried arguments
We have written letters
We have voted
We have protested
We have petitioned
We have been ignored
Now we have to go to Law!
To do this we need Funds
The campaigners claim that their efforts over a period of more than a year to persuade Enfield Council to engage in "meaningful" consultation about the planned lease and to gain more clarity about the football club's intentions have all been rebuffed. While it is known that THFC want to use around 40 acres at the northern end of the park, adjacent to Whitewebbs Lane, to create a women's football academy, it is unclear why they are planning to lease a further 100 acres of former golf course land. In view of the fact that the lease would give THFC complete control over all the entrances to the park and car parks and that there are no public rights of way across the land, only permissive footpaths, the suspicion is that the longer-term intention of ENIC, the offshore company that owns the football club, is to turn it into "the Spurs private country estate".
Why Enfield RoadWatch believe Whitewebbs should be saved
An enlightened Council purchased Whitewebbs for the people of Enfield in 1931 as open space. It consists of a large area of ancient woodland and an open parkland area formerly used as a public golf course. The golf course was closed in 2021 and has rapidly reverted to meadowland rich in animal and plant life. It is part of an arc of public space stretching from Forty Hall in the east to Hilly Fields to the south west. Together with these parks, Whitewebbs offers a wide range of landscapes and biodiversity with walks to suit all ages, interests and inclinations.
Why should the people of Enfield be denied access to 60% of this land for their health and enjoyment?
Source: Email sent by Enfield RoadWatch May 2023
The links below are to detailed information about the crowdfunding appeal, copies of solicitors' letters and downloadable versions of the Friends of Whitewebbs Park's newsletters.