The Spymaster speaks

Published: Thursday, 17 January 2013

THERE are 4,320 boaters without home moorings on Canal & River Trust waterways that are breaking the law, writes Allan Richards.

That is the astounding claim of Inland Waterways Association trustee, Vaughan Welch, who believes that just 180 of an estimated 4,500 boaters who declare that they do not have a home mooring when licencing a boat manage to comply with the legal requirements of the British Waterways 1995 Act.

Lots of hats

Vaughan Welch wears lots of hats. Not only is he an  IWA trustee but he is also chair of the IWA West Midlands region. To that can be added membership of the West Midlands Waterways Partnership together with fellow trustee Ivor Caplan.

However, not known to many is that he is also an observer to the Licencing and Mooring sub committee of CaRT's Navigation Advisory Group (NAG) which advises CaRT on boating matters.

Not a boating organisation

He is perhaps best known to boaters as one of four IWA members, three of them trustees, appointed as boaters representatives to the 35 strong CaRT council.  This is because these appointments have caused controversy as IWA is not a boaters' organisation. Some boaters feel that they will pursue an IWA agenda rather than represent boaters.

That IWA is not a boater organisation and is following its own agenda is confirmed by Vaughan Welch himself writing in Navigation, his regional newsletter. He confirms  that IWA is not a boater organisation and condemns BW/CaRT for treating it as such:

'Most Executives of BW/CRT think that IWA is a boating organisation which of course it is not. Given that these people have been in their posts and dealing with IWA for some time it is surprising that they still don't seem to have taken this on board. If they cannot understand this when it's been made clear to them so many times over, then what hope is there that staff will change their views either?'.

Umbrella organisation

He suggests, correctly, that IWA's remit is much wider, being seen as an umbrella organisation by many, but bemoans the fact that IWA has no automatic seat on council. He says this is unfair adding: 'So until changes are brought about to change this unfairness, we have had little choice but to endorse a number of candidates for boaters places on the Trust's council'.

Oh dear!

It is, of course, the same Vaughan Welch who states that IWA is not a boating organisation, who is encouraging IWA members to spy on boats in the West Midlands region (Underhand snoopers are IWA—narrowboatworld 4/1/2013).

Wacky world

Time to enter the wacky world of Vaughan Welch and document some of his other claims!

First up, Vaughan Welch believes that 80% of the 4,500 that declare a boat as having no home mooring (so called 'continuous cruisers') simply never move.  Furthermore he believes that of the 900 that do move only 20%, some 180 boats, move far enough to comply with his personal and peculiar interpretation of the law.

Another example of his mindset is that he believes that: 'In London the problem is so bad that it is now becoming difficult for visiting boaters to get a mooring anywhere between Bulls Bridge and some distance up the River Lee past Tottenham'.

He goes on to suggest that continuous moorers form an almost unbroken line of boats between these two points and what is more they are two or three deep.

That's over 25 miles of boats up to three abreast!

Time to reach for the calculator. That's somewhere between 4,000 (two abreast) and 6,000 boats (three abreast).

The midnight shuffle

According to Vaughan, these London boaters circumvent the law by doing the 'midnight shuffle'. This apparently takes place 'in the early hours so as to avoid any genuine visiting boater taking up their moorings'.

Perhaps the trust can obtain a grant to fit these boats with lights such that they become a tourist attraction!