Forest of Dean charity frustrated over injured animal recovery ban Published duration 4 May 2016

image copyright A Wild Life with Animals image caption Scott Passmore's offer of free help to rescue injured wildlife on Forestry Commission managed land in the Forest of Dean has been turned down

An animal rescue group has been warned that it could be breaking the law if it recovers injured wild animals from Forestry Commission managed land.

The charity A Wild Life with Animals has offered to run a 24-hour call out service for free in the Forest of Dean.

Forestry Commission Rangers work 09:00-15:00 from Monday to Friday. The charity said leaving injured wildlife for more than 48 hours was "inhumane".

The FC said it did not believe wild animals needed an "emergency service".

'Very let down'

In a statement it warned charity founder Scott Passmore against going onto land it managed to recover injured wildlife, saying he may be "in breach of The Forestry Commission Byelaws 1982 and the Welfare of Animals (Transport) order 1997 by an individual causing suffering to an injured wild animal, even by taking it to a vet".

An FC spokesman said it employed staff "to deal with animal welfare issues" on its land but "response may need to wait until staff are available".

The FC said it respected Mr Passmore's "good intentions" but would not grant permission to recover animals.

Mr Passmore said he would be writing to The Department for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) to ask whether the FC might be in breach of animal welfare laws

"We feel very let down and frustrated," said Mr Passmore.