rotrax
Well-Known Member
As I understand it to be granted a CRT licence you agree to abide to certain conditions. You sign a document, so no surprise should await.
If, at some later stage you are found to be in breach of what you agreed to, your licence can be revoked. A requirement is a permanent mooring. Without a permanent mooring it is possible to be a "continuous cruiser"-IE cruising pretty well non stop around our extensive canal system. Trouble is, during the BWB era there was little enforcement-or the will to enforce. Those who stated they were continuous cruisers and cheated are now having their collars felt by the CRT-and they dont like it!
Without said licence your boat cannot remain on the waterway.
The canals have ALWAYS charged for use, formerly by tolls and after nationalisation by licence. There is no right of free navigation as a general rule.
People are not being evicted per se, but their boats are having the licence revoked for non complience. Ergo, not allowed on CRT waterways.
The above may be a little simplistic, but its what is happening.
If, at some later stage you are found to be in breach of what you agreed to, your licence can be revoked. A requirement is a permanent mooring. Without a permanent mooring it is possible to be a "continuous cruiser"-IE cruising pretty well non stop around our extensive canal system. Trouble is, during the BWB era there was little enforcement-or the will to enforce. Those who stated they were continuous cruisers and cheated are now having their collars felt by the CRT-and they dont like it!
Without said licence your boat cannot remain on the waterway.
The canals have ALWAYS charged for use, formerly by tolls and after nationalisation by licence. There is no right of free navigation as a general rule.
People are not being evicted per se, but their boats are having the licence revoked for non complience. Ergo, not allowed on CRT waterways.
The above may be a little simplistic, but its what is happening.