top of page
Forum Posts
Adrian Bullock
Sep 08, 2024
In Benefits...
I bought my business in Witney 11 years ago, when I bought it Witney had a village feel to it, by that I mean it was friendly, respectful, relaxed, comfortable, relatively clean, safe and busy. The retail offer was a good mix of local and national retailers, hospitality had something for everyone, the town centre was a busy weekend hub of activity (daytime shops, evening eating and late night partying) There was a decent Police presence which managed the late night enthusiasm and those who overdid themselves but it still felt a safe town to enjoy at all times. Witney was a destination for all activities by people in the near vicinity (local villages and Brize/Carterton) Oxford was largely ignored certainly by most.
A decade later and partly due to political policies, lockdowns (a big impact) and economics we have a town which is losing its local shops, has lost 70% of its late night business, has gained more barbers and coffee shops than I thought possible, has more traffic issues than ever before, is dirtier (rubbish on the streets, weeds seemingly left to grow everywhere and paths/roads in terrible disrepair). It no longer attracts people from Brize/Carterton in any numbers, they have a decent late night trade and the lack of options in Witney coupled with reduced disposable income and longer public transport travel times between the towns has killed off 80% of what used to visit witney. The town feels less safe, there is a much larger drug problem than previously (lockdown and lifestyle driven plus lack of a national plan or local police action to stop it) We have gangs of kids 13-18 wandering the streets with nothing to do and even if there was very little money to spend on doing it. A lot of the above is down to societal changes largely impacted by the rise of technology and social media but the lack of political direction to offer an alternative has allowed it to happen.
While witney has a lot to offer the non resident visitor with its location, facilities and offering such as free parking and the retail diversity if we are to push the town as a destination for the local area and regionally let alone nationally we need to address some of the fundamental issues and deficiencies the town has. I doubt witney is alone in this nationally and it certainly is not alone in not having much money but the sad lack of a vision for witney by all shades of politician at all levels is depressing. Focusing on 20mph limits and net zero seems to be the “in thing” yet to the people of the town it is irrelevant if you can’t walk down the pavement without tripping over, drive around the town reasonably quickly without destroying your car on several thousand potholes, if our teenagers don’t have an outlet for their energy and if the police can’t sort the rise in crime then any effort attracting people to the town will be wasted.
I think there needs to be a BIG conversation on where the town is in a decades time and then how we go about getting there at the moment there is realisation of where we are let alone where we want to be…..
0
1
Adrian Bullock
Sep 08, 2024
In Hospitality
Witney has a great variety of venues catering for coffee/cake, takeaway food, pub grub and full on gastro pubs and restaurants. There is a good mix of national and local operators which adds variety and spice to whats available. Some venues such as mine www.rush-witney.com remain secret to a fair number of people that live in the town partly due to location even though we are in the centre we are on a historical industrial estate that is not the easiest just to come by and partly because it is more of a niche pastime. Hospitality is suffering currently due to economics which will pass however it is also seeing a change which is also evident in the leisure sector and that is down to local politicians and councils not having a plan to cater for the youth demographic. Witney has a great many things for those later on in life BUT ot fails dismally when providing outlets for our kids to enjoy themselves. Planning policies have also created issues by allowing conversion of office space in central secondary locations such as above shops in the town centre into residential which has then resulted in the late night industry butting heads with the council when it comes to noise and disturbance. A vibrant attractive town to visit needs outlets for all visitors and its own population and Witney categorically fails in this regard. If we are not careful the youth will desert the town and when the population demographic changes which its starting to do there will be a further impact on hospitality. Local plans need to be developed to balance the needs of hospitality and the local population more evenly and provide the landscape for more youth orientated ventures to open or move to the town. The massive expansion in housing makes this an urgent requirement. Lockdown policies have changed the habits of the generations that came of age during them and we need a roadmap to ensure the next generation that come of age have an outlet to socialise and enjoy. We also need far more options for under 18’s to express themselves and enjoy, there is a marked lack of options for them and this means invariably they make their own entertainment and get into mischief!
0
12
Adrian Bullock
More actions
bottom of page