00:00Bob is a grandfather, boat enthusiast and DIY expert, but most of all he enjoys solitude.
00:09He lives at the tip of the Swanscombe Peninsula at Broadness Cruising Club,
00:13but he might only have a month left of the life he's come to enjoy.
00:17Anyone that turned up at the gate to come down here, any of the members,
00:21they were given a bit of paper telling them that they've got no access now
00:29unless they want to pick something up, in which case they would have to be escorted down
00:34and escorted out by security.
00:36Whatever's left here will be considered abandoned and removed,
00:42and we'll get a £150,000 bill.
00:48It all started in mid-July when the members of the club noticed a fence being put up around the dock,
00:53along with a notice of access to the site being revoked.
00:56All because the owners of the site, Land Logical, said the area was dangerous.
01:01Now as you can see there's a lot of boats moored here at the site,
01:04and many are in fact owned by quite elderly members of the club.
01:07And for them it's becoming harder and harder for them to be able to actually fix their boats.
01:11The only way they can get access to the site is through a 20 minute walk,
01:15parts of which are particularly overgrown, making it practically impossible for them to come and fix their boats.
01:21Dave is one of those members and because of the revoked access has to make a longer walk up to the club to make his repairs,
01:28despite having two knee replacements.
01:30It's just got unbearable really. We have to walk down here. I've got like two knee replacements so I can't walk very far anyway.
01:41I'm lucky to be here today really. It's only because I'll get Bob to grab me down again.
01:52According to Land Logical, Swanscombe Development LLP has a duty of care to ensure the safety of all individuals accessing its sites.
01:59Following a detailed H&S review, access to the Broadness Cruising Club site on Swanscombe Peninsula was withdrawn on health and safety grounds.
02:07We recognise the long-standing presence of the Broadness Cruising Club, and in light of that history,
02:12we extended the original deadline for members to remove boats and personal belongings beyond August 31st as a gesture of goodwill.
02:19Despite this, many members feel as though they're in a catch-22, with the restricted access meaning it can be difficult to actually make any repairs or move the boats.
02:28I just don't understand it. I don't understand how people can come along and just wreck people's lives, and that's what they're doing.
02:37There's a lot of good people here, and there's a lot of older people, and it shattered them. It's absolutely shattering them. It really is. It's upsetting them.
02:45Many of the structures at the dock are handmade by the club, which has been there for 34 years,
02:50and the members say they want some kind of compromise or discussion before the door is closed on them forever.
02:56Finn McDermid for KMTV in Swanscombe.
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