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The boss of Toby Carvery has apologised after the company ... I can only apologise for all the upset that it has caused." Enfield Council reported the matter to the Metropolitan Police earlier ...
Enfield Council owns the land the tree was located on, and it is leased to Toby Carvery. The owner of Toby Carvery, Mitchells & Butlers, said the chain was advised by contractors to cut the tree ...
Enfield Council received reports that the ... by Mitchells & Butlers Retail (MBR), the company operating the nearby Toby Carvery and leasing the land where the tree was located from Enfield ...
The chief executive of Toby Carvery has said he is "very sorry" about the felling an ancient oak tree in north London. The almost 500-year-old tree, located near the pub in Whitewebbs Park, Enfield, ...
Toby Carvery's owner has apologised over the upset caused after the company felled an ancient oak tree and admitted "we need to tighten our protocols" in a letter seen by the BBC. The company cut ...
The oak, which was cut down on 3 April, was located on the edge of council-owned Whitewebbs Park and overlooked a Toby Carvery. Enfield Council said on Tuesday it had reported the felling as a ...
Mitchells & Butlers CEO has since apologised to Enfield people in a letter. Council leader Cllr Ergin Erbil said that Toby Carvery had "broken the terms of the lease" by not even seeking advice ...
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Pub Chain Is Sorry for Felling 500-Year-Old OakThe 500-year-old oak was on land Toby Carvery had leased from Enfield Council to use as a parking lot for its branch in Whitewebbs Park, CNN reports. The chain's parent company, Mitchell & Butler ...
Toby Carvery’s owners may have to pay more than a million pounds in damages after hacking back an ancient oak tree in north London, a legal tree expert has said. Enfield Council is seeking legal ...
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