Welsh farming family ‘devastated’ after developers serve eviction notice on home of 90 years

Welsh farming family ‘devastated’ after developers serve eviction notice on home of 90 years

A Welsh farming family, who have occupied the same plot of land for nearly a century have been served a “devastating” eviction notice

The family are fighting to save their farm after developers announced plans to build a 45-acre business park on the site near Cardiff airport.

Four generations of the Jenkins family have worked at Model Farm on Port Road in the Vale of Glamorgan since 1935.

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Speaking to Wales Online, Rhys Jenkins who lives at Model Farm with his wife Kelly Jenkins, their two daughters, and his father, Gethin said: “We’ve got photos of mum and dad on the farm when they were kids, and me and my sisters were brought up here on the farm.”

Gethin, who is now 68, was born and raised on the farm and has spent his entire life there.

“It’s devastating. It’s had a real effect on dad, to be honest,” said Rhys.

“It’s horrible to see what it’s doing to everyone, but especially to dad. He’s spent pretty much every day of his life on this farm since he was born until this day. To see what he’s going through is not nice at all. It’s not doing his health any good, I know that.”

Rhys added: “Dad has always had the ambition to pass the farm on to me. He’s worked on building everything up on this farm from a young age. When his father was first on there, there was no water tanks, no fences, there was nothing. You couldn’t have livestock here at all because there was no water supply.

“So that’s something they’ve had to do is dig every hedgerow and put water pipes and water tanks in every field to be able to put livestock in them. Build up the soil and condition it and get good soil, and that’s not something that happens overnight. That’s taken 50, 60 years at least to get right and to get to the point where we are now where we’re very productive and the soil is in good condition.

“Like I said, I can’t imagine what he’s going through. He’s poured all of his blood, sweat and tears into this farm and just like that it can get taken away.”

Legal and General, a financial services firm which owns the land Model Farm stands on, received planning permission last month to build a business park on the farm.

A campaign group set up to save Model Farm is quickly gaining thousands of supporters, raising money for legal fees to appeal the decision and is planning a protest at the Senedd building on Saturday.

Politicians have slammed Vale of Glamorgan council for granting planning permission, which in the same month declared a “nature emergency” and pledged to protect the environment.

Legal and General said the business park would create more than 3,000 jobs and bring in £94 million of wages each year. The council said it would help support the local economy.

Kelly Jenkins said the family is still in shock and is unsure where they will move to next year.

She said: “We’ve been given 12 months, until July 31 next year. They handed our notice to us on July 31 just gone, with a letter delivered by an enforcement officer. We have had no contact with Legal and General whatsoever. We thought they would at least have the decency to sit us down and talk to us about it. It’s shocking how they’re treating us.

“We haven’t spoken about [where we’ll go]. We didn’t think it was going to go ahead. We didn’t think they would pursue the plans with Covid, and with the climate emergency the Vale council has declared, we didn’t think they would let this go ahead.

(Image: WalesOnline/Rob Browne)

“Rhys will try to carry on the farm. Maybe something might come up between now and in 12 months time. But at the minute it’s all up in the air. As a family we’re just devastated.”

The family rear beef cattle and grow cereal crops and wildflowers, selling wildflower seeds across Wales. Model Farm lies north of Porthkerry Country Park. As part of the plans, Legal and General will give about 49 hectares of land towards extending the country park.

But despite the extension, local campaigners are claiming the business park will have a negative impact on the local environment, harming biodiversity and increasing congestion.

Vale Communities Unite, a community group set up to save Model Farm, has launched a fundraiser for legal fees, and is planning to protest outside the Senedd today.

Gail Elizabeth, one of the campaigners, said: “I didn’t think it would get this far. When permission was granted I was horrified. There’s huge opposition from locals, and over 1,000 residents opposed it.

“The farmers have supported us over a number of years in various ways. They’re huge in the community and have been for years. The main road out of Rhoose, Porthkerry Road, has flooded on a number of occasions, so we were trapped. And the farmer pumped out the water for us and cleared the road.”

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