Agricultural land owned by College
Dear Harris Manchester College, Oxford,
SOS-UK is developing a programme to support universities and colleges to manage the agricultural land that they own to achieve their Net Zero targets and to support the recovery of nature and biodiversity in the UK.
We are writing to all universities and colleges across the UK to find out if they (or any wholly owned subsidiary) own agricultural land, so that we can plan our new programme to best fit the needs of the sector.
Under the Freedom of Information Act, we would appreciate it if you could please provide us with responses to the questions below, to help us with this important work.
We define a "wholly owned subsidiary" to be a company or other formally recognised organisation that is under full ownership or control of the college.
We define an "agricultural land" as per the Agricultural Act 1947:
“agriculture” includes horticulture, fruit growing, seed growing, dairy farming and livestock breeding and keeping, the use of land as grazing land, meadow land, osier land, market gardens and nursery grounds, and the use of land for woodlands where that use is ancillary to the farming of land for other agricultural purposes ( https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Geo...>)
Our request below therefore excludes any woodland that is managed for commercial production.
Please could you tell us:
1. Does your college, and/or any wholly owned subsidiary, own any agricultural land in the UK?
2. What is the approximate total area, in hectares, of the agricultural land holdings owned by your college, and/or wholly owned subsidiary, in the UK?
3. If the agricultural land that your college, and/or any wholly owned subsidiary, owns is split over multiple holdings under separate management, please could you tell us the number of separately managed agricultural holdings?
4. How many hectares of the agricultural land owned by your college, and/or any wholly owned subsidiary, are managed by staff employed directly by your college and/or the subsidiary?
5. How many hectares of the agricultural land owned by your college, and/or any wholly owned subsidiary, are leased to one or more tenant farmers?
6. Please tell us the type of leases in place on that tenanted land: (a) farm business tenancy (subject to the Agricultural Tenancies Act 1995), (b) annual grazing/cropping license, (c) full agricultural tenancy (subject to the Agricultural Tenancies Act 1986), (d) other (please specify)
If you are interested to find out more about this work on farming, climate and nature please get in touch at [email address].
Yours faithfully,
SOS-UK
Dear Harris Manchester College, Oxford,
I am getting in touch because we have not yet received your response to our FOI request about your agricultural land holdings.
We have written to all universities across the UK to find out if they (or any wholly owned subsidiary) own agricultural land, so that we can plan our new programme on nature and climate positive land management to best fit the needs of the sector.
Your response is a really valuable part of the information we need to do this effectively.
We have used the FOI process to get as complete a set of data as possible and it is a legal requirement that you respond to reasonable requests and that you do so within 28 days of receipt. So far we have had a response from 65% of universities across the UK.
We would really appreciate it if you could let us know when you plan to respond to our request.
If you have any questions about it please don't hesitate to contact us.
Thanks very much,
Kate & the Food and Farming Team @ SOS-UK
Dear Kate,
Thank you for your enquiry, which has been forwarded to me for response.
Apologies for the delay - your previous message does not seem to have reached me.
I can confirm that the College does not have agricultural land holdings.
Best wishes
Ashley
Mr Ashley J Walters
Director of Governance & Projects, Official Fellow
Harris Manchester College, University of Oxford
Mansfield Road, Oxford, OX1 3TD
www.hmc.ox.ac.uk
+44 (0) 1865 271006
If you require an internal review of this response, you should refer this to the College’s Information Officer ([cyfeiriad ebost]) within 40 working days of receiving this response. You also have a right to complain to the Information Commissioner under section 50 of FOIA should you be unhappy following the review outcome.
Dear Ashley Walters,
Many thanks for taking the time to reply to our request. Your response is really valuable in helping us to assess the potential for farmland holdings in the education sector to have a positive impact for the climate and nature.
If you have any questions about our research or our programme, please feel free to get in touch with the team at [email address].
Warm regards,
Kate Winters
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