This is a hard issue for me as I worked with Travellers for many years. I was the picture editor and project manager for their national magazine The Travellers' Times.
Just to be clear, Traveller is now the accepted term for Gypsies (Irish, English, Scottish, Welsh) and also for what were once called New Age Travellers).
Here is what I found - amongst the Traveller community there were good and bad (just like the rest of us); there were people who I was proud to call friends, and those who I would go out of my way to avoid (just like the rest of us); there were honest people and dishonest people (just like the rest of us); there were those who tried to avoid taxes and those who paid them (just like the rest of us).
There were things about their culture that I hated: the role of women (although that is changing), the love of boxing.
There were things that I admired, particularly their sense of family and staunch support of each other, and their love of music.
In order to understand the current impasse that exists, with Travellers at loggerheads with the rest of the community, it is necessary to understand the history. At one time Travellers were an important part of the local rural communities and travelled from farm to farm doing seasonal work- fruit picking, hop, picking, hedging etc. They were a welcome and accepted part of the rural scene, and farmers allowed them to park in their fields whilst they were working. In the 1990s a new piece of legislation was passed that outlawed this, only allowing one or two caravans on a farm - this ran totally counter to their culture as they travel in large family groups. The obligation on local councils to provide Traveller sites was also removed.
From then on, the stage was set for conflict, and this is what we have got.
They had two choices: ditch the culture and way of life into which they were born and of which they are proud; or get by as best they may, finding places to stay wherever they can.
I should also add that some Travellers are indeed "settled" on sites, but they are still Travellers - they travel during the summer looking for work; and also there is a great deal more to being a Traveller and to their culture than just moving around.
I have met Travellers who were millionaires, having set up Europe-wide businesses (and no I did not ask them if they paid taxes - any more than I would someone from the settled community); I have met Travellers living on the breadline.
It is very important to recognise that they are a diverse community and that, whilst we might look upon them as one group, there are many different groups within this.
I enjoyed working alongside them - they were feisty and fun - challenging indeed, but with something to teach us about family loyalty. They are in many ways very different from us settled people, but the same under the skin.
Take a look at:http://travellerstimes.org.uk/