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Rights of Way
Torfaen County Borough Council’s Countryside Service manages miles of public footpaths, bridleways and unsurfaced roads.
These are maintained locally by teams who work with landowners to keep vegetation under control and ensure that the paths are clear.
Types of Rights of Way
Rights of way are paths and tracks which you can use to cross private land. There are four types of path on which you are allowed to do different things. It is a criminal offence to prevent the public exercising the rights below to access:
A f
ootpath is a highway over which the public has a right of way on foot only
A
bridleway is a highway over which the public has a right of way on foot, horseback and on a pedal cycle (including mountain-bikes). There may also be a right to drive animals along a bridleway
A
restricted byway is a highway over which the public is entitled to travel on foot, horseback and with non-mechanically propelled vehicles (such as pedal cycles and horse drawn vehicles). There may also be a right to drive animals along a restricted byway
A
Byway Open to All Traffic (BOAT) is a highway over which the public is entitled to travel on foot, horseback or pedal cycle and by wheeled vehicle of all kinds, including horse-drawn vehicles, but which is used by the public mainly for walking or for riding. Most of these highways do not have a surface suitable for ordinary motor traffic
A
permissive path is not a public right of way, but the public is allowed to use it with the permission of the land owner
A
green lane is an unsurfaced track or path, bounded by hedges or walls, and often of some antiquity. The term has no legal meaning, and, if there is a public right of way along such a track, it will usually be classified under one of the above headings.
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