A concerned Tenby resident has called for action to be taken to save one of the resort's cliff fronts. The concerns of Mr. Graham Hughes come following a landslip above the boat park on the North Walk sometime over the weekend. "The cliff front above Tenby's North Beach is a sight for sore eyes, very sore eyes," said Mr. Hughes in a letter to the Observer this week (see letters page). "Many thousands of pounds have recently been spent on what now appears to be a very weedy, rat infested site, the rats being delighted to snug down under the warm netting covering the cliff, with every tree and sapling destroyed," he continued. The landslip has also led to county councillor Michael Williams voicing his concerns. "I must admit to being surprised at this, as a considerable amount of work has recently been carried out on this cliff, which I assumed was a long-term solution to a problem of many years," he said. Clr. Williams has also contacted the county council's director of transportation and environment, Mr. Ian Westley, about the matter. "I am concerned as following a considerable expenditure last year, I had assumed that the work carried out would give long-term security to this walkway," he stated. "Property owners in Crackwell Street have had the worry about the stability of the cliff for many years, and this event, even though it is not directly underneath, must give cause for concern." Tenby Town Council were alerted to the landslip by a local resident on Monday morning, and after the town clerk, Mr. Andrew Davies, and the harbourmaster had viewed the site, they immediately contacted county council to report it. A spokesperson for Pembrokeshire County Council commented: "PCC is investigating a landslip on the embankment above the North Beach in Tenby; any problems will be dealt with appropriately".