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This profile was automatically generated using 4 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 4 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
Employment History
View...Web References
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1. Norwich Evening News 24
www.eveningnews24.co.uk/conten - [Cached]Published on: 2/4/2005 Last Visited: 2/5/2005
The long-serving respected chairman of the Norwich and District Anglers Association, Stan Alden, launched a blistering attack on the Environment Agency and the Broads Authority at Tuesday night's annual meeting of Norfolk's biggest angling body, held in the City Supporters' Club.
This was the chairman's 48th annual address to his members and very probably the most scathing criticism of the various authorities controlling the Broads fisheries and angling in the area.
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All the officers were re-elected â€" chairman, Stan Alden; vice-chairman, Mick Rowles; secretary/treasurer, Cyril Wigg; assistant secretary, Alan Towers; match secretary, Tony Gibbons. -
2. EDP24 Sport
www.edp24.co.uk/content/Sport/ - [Cached]Published on: 5/13/2004 Last Visited: 5/13/2004
Speaking at an angling dinner in Norwich last Friday, Norwich and District AA's respected chairman Stan Alden said some of the statistics in the 75-page document were highly questionable.
He commented: "The report states there are four million anglers in England and Wales, the great majority of them freshwater fishermen. -
3. CCAG : Broads under threat from North Sea
www.happisburgh.org.uk/press/n - [Cached]Published on: 2/7/2003 Last Visited: 5/8/2005
Chairman of the Norwich and District Anglers' Association, Stan Alden, whose biggest angling body in Norfolk leases banks of the tidal Rivers Bure and Thurne, said the revelation that coastal areas adjacent to The Broads were likely to be sacrificed to sea came as no surprise.
He said: "The writing was on the wall when the tidal barrier schemes that were put forward after the floods of 1953 right up to the late 1970s were finally rejected by a Government conspiracy with local authorities that the cost was not justified.
"I think The Broads will become sea lakes within a matter of a few years and all anglers will have then are non-tidal rivers and the commercial fisheries."
He concluded: "It is a very grim prospect indeed for the famous Norfolk Broads fisheries that have been visited and enjoyed by millions of delighted anglers in the past 100 years or more."

