Object

Preferred Options for Sites

Representation ID: 65097

Received: 02/05/2014

Respondent: Barford, Sherbourne and Wasperton Joint Parish Council

Representation Summary:

GT01
Should be included as AMBER (at least) and progressed.
investigate/elucidate/address any issues on this site.
Costs/mitigation/compensation would be low.
Houses are already immediately adjacent to A46 elsewhere.
Can negotiate the design access.

GT07
Should be 'Amber'
Should challenge Green Belt paradigm
Issues possibly overstated: Coventry is NOT a busy or noisy airport anymore; access is clearly possible

GT07
Should be 'Amber'
Should challenge Green Belt paradigm
Issues possibly overstated: Coventry is NOT a busy or noisy airport anymore; access is clearly possible

GT09
Should be an 'Amber' site and although probably not popular with either Barford or Bishops Tachbrook villages it needs further evaluation.
Costs/mitigation/compensation would be low-medium.

GT10
Should be an 'Green' site and although probably not popular with either Barford or Bishops Tachbrook villages it needs to be more thoroughly evaluated.
Access issues are grossly overstated and landfill part of the site would not be required for this development.
Impact of noise from M40 not likely to be any worse than parts of Bishops Tachbrook.
Sensitivity of existing use markedly overstated.
Costs/mitigation/compensation would be low-medium.

GTalt 6
Perhaps it should be considered for and integrated properly.
Costs/mitigation/compensation would be medium.

GTalt7
It seems to only have been rejected on Green Belt issues. This should be a 'Green' site.
Impact on local character would be no worse than GT12 and no more difficult to achieve access than GT08.
Covenant on site can be overcome in the 'public interest'.
Costs/mitigation/compensation would be low - medium.

GTalt08
Should be 'Amber' and considered further.
Allocation from employment use can change especially as we are in a time of flux with Local Plan.
They can be integrated/adjacent to industrial areas.
Recent planning permission for GTalt01 seems to have been disregarded, so maybe not an issue here either?
Costs/mitigation/compensation would be medium.

GTalt9
Should be 'Amber' and considered further.
Allocation from employment use can change especially as we are in a time of flux with Local Plan.
Sites can be integrated/adjacent to other uses.
Costs/mitigation/compensation would be medium.

Gtalt11
Should be considered further and marked as 'Amber'
In many ways this could be an ideal "wider location/area of search"
Gypsies and travellers could meet site's rural based employment allocation.
Already significant residential numbers in the vicinity.
If intensification of access and issue here then it calls into question many other sites.
Costs/mitigation/compensation would be low.

Gtalt14
There is housing and employment use very near this location.
Smells from the sewage works are probably overstated.
WDC should review all sites on East of Stratford Road from Longbridge through to the conventional Stratford Road houses - this area would be an ideal site and is set back and screened to protect from the tourist route.
Costs/mitigation/compensation would be medium.

GTalt16
Should be included as 'amber' (at least) and progressed.
Need to investigate/elucidate/address Green Belt issue.
This would be the very best opportunity to integrate gypsy and traveller requirements into a bigger scheme.
Costs/mitigation/compensation would be low - medium.

GTalt17
Should be included as 'Amber' and progressed
There is housing and employment use very near this location and so is another good opportunity to integrate gypsies and travellers in a planned manner
Costs/mitigation/compensation would be low - medium.

Full text:

WDC Local Plan Gypsies & Travellers Preferred Options Consultation


The JPC accepts that allocations must be made for the G&T community within the WDC New Local Plan - rather than relying on sites coming forward through the conventional planning process and we also understand the importance of G&T issues in the Local Plan process, however the JPC believes that any such allocation must be made on a fully democratic and objective basis.

When the June 2013 consultation was staged we were unimpressed with the level of detail provided and very disappointed at the lack of local knowledge and erroneous justifications for selected sites. It can be no surprise that local communities erupted in response to such ill thought-out blight on our district.

Given the levels of residents' responses it is surprising that the Preferred Options consultation has now followed with a similar level of erroneous information and even less quantifiable justification for the Preferred Option choices.

We find the presentation of material confusing at best given that much of the important evidence is buried on the website as "Further Evidence" and "Background" and much that is there is either erroneous and/or conflicting with the March 2014 PO document. At another level we and the vast majority of our residents who have commented found the "Drop-In Sessions" with just a couple of posters and scattered booklets to be a singularly poor way to disseminate information especially as the staff provided had minimal technical knowledge of the subject matter and made it clear that they would not be collating comment made on the day.

We are also concerned at WDC's apparent willingness to rely on the Compulsory Purchase approach given the associated costs and delays which will render most sites non-viable financially and non-deliverable in the terms required. Furthermore success of the CPO process has yet to be established as evidenced by the 2012 Mid Suffolk DC case when the Inspector found insufficient evidence to support CPO on the grounds of "public interest".

We would question WDC's election to limit site sizes to a maximum of 10 pitches, with some considerably less, as this means that site provision must then blight more communities and settlements than is reasonably necessary. If site size limitation is in order to facilitate management and policing this surely gives credence to many residents' concerns about crime and disorder in or near such sites.

Reduction in site size (or more specifically pitch numbers on individual sites) loses economies of scale in terms of establishment costs, management costs and land take whilst directly impacting a greater number of the general population.

National guidance suggests sites of 5-15 to be preferable and this would suggest that our required 31 pitches could reasonably be accommodated in two or at most three sites.

The JPC would suggest that any or all proposed sites could be best accommodated and assimilated in areas which are not current settlements and that they should be properly planned, at a very early stage, into much larger schemes preferably incorporating residential and employment development.

We find the cursory dismissal of such an approach (Page 12, end of section 5) totally unsatisfactory and unacceptable.

The JPC also believes that the Siskin Drive and Gateway area should be vigorously explored to create a site with a mechanism to accommodate the G&T community within an evolving area where they could best integrate with their surroundings.

Whilst reviewing WDC's commentaries on sites in the original and the current consultation we have found that they are erratic and inconsistent. Criteria are sometimes used to support a choice/site and at other times the same criteria are used in a converse manner. The way in which the supporting Sustainability and Sites Assessments have been used to arrive at the Preferred Options is opaque in the extreme and certainly the interpretation of the Sustainability Assessments based on colour coding appears to be minimally objective.

Examples of inconsistencies relate to noise impacts, site prominence in the landscape, flooding, agricultural land value/viability, proximity of services and pedestrian access/safety. Latterly, especially with the "GTalt" sites, there seems to be an inordinate reference to "surface flooding".

The paperwork provided and the public consultations staged also seem to take no or little account of the cost implications inherent in the various Preferred Option choices and we believe this should be a significant factor when making a final selection given the inherent importance of economic viability.

In consideration of the above the JPC has conducted an objective assessment of all the sites which have come forward under these consultations, as well as our lay skills permit, and concludes that not all of the selected Preferred Options are indeed the best sites of those presented.

The findings are presented in spreadsheet format showing support where we believe it to be appropriate. Where we draw different conclusions we offer rebuttal and further comments as seems appropriate and helpful.

The spreadsheet details are as follows:

* Column 1 - Site identification number and PO indication and JPC support or otherwise
* Column 2 - Précis of WDC comments
* Column 3 - JPC commentary
* Column 4 - Sites which JPC consider could reasonably be progressed (where sites cannot be integrated into "larger schemes").

Inevitably the JPC has been much exercised by contact from residents concerning sites proposed within our JPC parishes and we must comment that these sites seem to have been singularly poorly selected. This situation is not helped by the fact that they seem to have come forward accompanied by blatantly incorrect supporting information, viz:
* Repeated reference to Barford doctors' surgery - when the last part-time surgery closed over 30 years ago
* Inclusion of the Barford Bypass flood compensation pond area as site GT16
* Inclusion of Barford Community Orchard and Riverside Walk in GTalt12
* Inclusion of spillage/reed ponds within GT12 in March 2014
* Confusion over the maps for GT12 And GT16 in June 2013
* Confusion over the map of GT12 in March 2014
* Confusion over the map of GTalt12 in March 2014

On a purely local basis it seems bizarre and is certainly unacceptable to blight Barford, recently judged amongst the best 10 places in the Midlands (and number 57 nationally) to live, with the Preferred Options selection of such obviously poor sites. Should the Barford sites persist we are sure that residents will support the landowner in challenging Compulsory Purchase, increasing costs and delay to all concerned and further impacting deliverability.

We are also reminded that there is a duty to co-operate across boundaries and would draw your attention to the site which Stratford DC have at Blackhill, immediately adjacent to Sherbourne parish.

We hope that you will take this letter and the associated spreadsheet in the constructive manner in which it is intended, in order to assist in achieving the best possible solution for both the settled and travelling communities.