Sadly, the tone of the message at the top of this thread suggests to me that the decision is already made.
This "consulutation" is just an unsubtle PR excersise. I hope that I am wrong.
There is a link between this initiative and the arrival of the World Trials Championships in 2010. May I expand on this-
I feel that the SSDT in 2009 was a wonderful success and the organisers have been rightly praised for their handling of some unbelievable meteorological conditions.
They do, however, need to consider the wisdom of their decision to allow the 2010 World Round organisers to hijack the opening parade.
Spectators at the SSDT are thin on the ground these days.
What a bad idea idea it was, therefore, to allow an event to promote itself in front of the very people who may choose to attend that event next year instead of the SSDT.
The SSDT relies on an enormous amount of goodwill from the local residents, authorities and Police who tolerate motorcycle, which are barely road legal, to travel backwards and forwards virtually unchallenged for a week in order to access the wonderful terrain which all competitors enjoy.
That goodwill is based on one benefit to the town which is, quite simply, an influx of people spending money.
Moving the heart of the trial out of town can only diminish it's links with the community, and ultimately the goodwill which leads to the above-mentioned tolerance. It may also, unwittingly, lead to the event becoming off-road only (and, god forbid, on pre- something or other bikes).
Promoting the World Round was an error.
World Rounds are just indoor trials held outdoors, which have no relevance whatsoever (in riding terms) to 99% of trials riders. They merely have some shallow entertainment value which, in all probability, we would get bored of watching very quickly.
TThe SSDT is one of the last real motorcycle trials. It is held outdoors - and that includes mending the bikes.
It is, in principal, not broken. So don't mend it.