From: roland@perry.uk
In message , at
14:27:26 on Fri, 1 Aug 2025, Jon Ribbens
remarked:
>There's either two possibilities, and I think the answer could be either
>depending on which local authority it is.
>
>Either it isn't "the Definitive Map" at all, it's just an online map,
>in which case I would expect there's no statutory duty to update it.
>It might claim to reflect information from the Definitive Map, but
>that doesn't make it definitive itself.
>
>Or, it is "the Definitive Map", in which case it is, er, definitive.
The Cambridgeshire one's web page is titled "Definitive Map".
>If it shows a right of way exists, then it does, and if it doesn't,
>it doesn't. If they haven't updated it to show rights of way that
>the council intended to create, then they haven't created them.
Are you suggesting it's like TROs without matching road signage, not in
force until both parts have been fully executed?
--
Roland Perry
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