Object

Proposed Modifications January 2016

Representation ID: 68765

Received: 22/04/2016

Respondent: Linda Price

Legally compliant? Not specified

Sound? Not specified

Duty to co-operate? Not specified

Representation Summary:

New local plan will have impact on the following:
- Increase in traffic congestion at peak times in all surrounding areas.
- Increase in pollution and risk of accidents.
- No assessment appears to have been made in respect of services, facilities.
- Adverse impact on local infrastructure
- plan should support reductions in greenhouse gas emissions, reduce congestion and minimise need to travel
- Local plan has not demonstrated how the choices made in plan are backed up by facts.

Full text:

My views is that the Local Plan and Sustainability Appraisal (SA) are not safe. I believe the technical references are Mod Number: H27 and H51;
Paragraph Number; Mod Policies Map -H27 and H51 & Table of Proposed Modifications January 2016, Appendix C Changes, Policy Map 20.

I don't believe the Local Plan is Legally Compliant or sound. I feel it has not been positively prepared (by identifying a previously discarded site) or is justified in terms of services such as school, GP surgery and other services could not cope with the additional families needed to be catered for with an additional 145 homes. And it is certainly not effective in terms of transportation. Budbrooke is a rural village surrounded by narrow lanes and accessible via Hampton on the Hill and off the main A4177 both of which allow only single track carriageway reducing to traffic light controlled single carriageway under the bridge at the entrance to Parkway station. There is no prospect of improving the roadways width or capacity to cope with significantly increased traffic flow. There are some developments to be made to Stanks Island towards the end of the year but this will not impact on the heavy flow of traffic using country lanes skirting Hampton Magna and cutting through the village of Hampton on the Hill which also has traffic calming measures imposed. I don't believe the new plan is consistent with national policy as it increased the village size of Hampton magna by one third - far too great a number of homes and families to be catered for within an existing village WITH LIMITED RESOURCES. Furthermore to be consistent with national policy the proposal for Hampton Magna should enable the delivery of sustainable development in accordance with the policies in the NPPF. This has not been achieved and more detailed reasons are listed below.

Transport

By the NPPF paragraph 32, plans and decisions should take account of whether safe and suitable access to the site can be achieved for all people.

There is already traffic congestion to and from Budbrooke village at peak times.
This is due to the fact that access in and out of Budbrooke village is by way of a single road. At one end, Old Budbrooke Road becomes a single lane under the railway bridge approaching Warwick Parkway Railway Station and this is controlled by alternating traffic lights system which allows only a few vehicles at a time in and out of the village. When traffic enters the village or Warwick Parkway Station it prevents access out of the village.

The overall affect is that traffic congestion and delays are experienced at peak times. If there is a traffic incident in a nearby motorway this causes huge traffic build up in areas surrounding Budbrooke Village which further exacerbates the situation. Traffic flows and congestion will increase very significantly for both peak morning and evening if there are additional housing allocations.

An alternative access route to Warwick is through Hampton on the Hill and on to the Hampton Road but this is subject to two narrow access points in Hampton on the Hill which are subject to priority give way lane control arrow signals resulting in potential choke points in and out of Hampton on the Hill. In addition Hampton Road is subject to busy traffic travelling down the hill into Warwick thus forming an impediment to exit. Traffic (particularly at peak times) also uses this route for access into the village down the Old Budbrooke Road and under the railway bridge for journeys to the Birmingham Road and to Stanks Island. All of this will create additional congestion and pollution for local residents and the risk of accidents.

There is a Strategic Transport Assessment which proposes changes to Stanks Island to alleviate traffic congestion due to increased traffic flow to and from destinations served by Stanks Island. This assessment fails to address and demonstrate how the scheme will enable safe and suitable access to and from Hampton Magna at peak times.

There is a separate technical study (Old Budbrooke Road/Warwick Parkway Station Access Junction - LinSig Assessment) which considers the potential impact of the railway bridge on traffic in and out of Hampton Magna. This shows that the peak morning assessment is near to or exceeding The Degree of Saturation shown and states it is likely that congestion will develop. We contend that the cumulative impacts of traffic from the proposed 245 extra homes at Hampton Magna, the additional proposed housing at Opus 40 and Hatton Park, the growing commuter capacity and increasing vehicle use at Warwick Parkway station and the increasing use of Hampton Magna as a cut through route from the Hampton Road are likely to be severe.

Also, the peak morning period is taken as 8am to 9am. It does not show the affects on traffic flows if the peak times are increased, as is the case for many motorists needing to reach their destination on time given increasingly lengthy journey times which result from increased traffic flows in the Birmingham Road/Stanks Island vicinity.

The theoretical modelling study has failed to properly consider the above problems adequately. The additional traffic will also adversely impact on public transport at peak times and could result in emergency services vehicle access being delayed or prevented. So the proposal does not enable the delivery of sustainable development or show with certainty that suitable transport access can be achieved for all people. Therefore it is not consistent with NPPF transport policy.

Infrastructure

The NPPF (paragraph 162) states that local planning authorities should work with other providers to assess the quality and capacity of water supply, waste-water and its treatment, energy, health and education, and its ability to meet forecast demands. It covers other matters not listed here. I feel the plan must clearly show how they providers have been work with to properly assess how they are able to meet forecast demands at Hampton Magna. General and superficial assurances given in the Infrastructure Delivery plan for water supply, waste-water and its treatment, energy are not adequate. No assessment appears to have been made in respect of health, re GP surgery. More details are given in the "Not Effective" section. Therefore it has failed to meet the requirements in respect of the infrastructure policy.


NOT POSITIVELY PREPARED

To be Positively Prepared the plan should be based on a strategy which seeks to meet objectively assessed development and infrastructure requirements.
One of the key requirements is promoting sustainable transport (NPPF paragraphs 29 - 41). In particular, the plan should:

* encourage solutions which support reductions in greenhouse gas emissions and reduce congestion (NPPF policy 29 and 30).

* ensure that developments which generate significant movement are located where the need to travel will be minimized and the use of sustainable transport modes can be maximized (NPPF 34).

For the reasons detailed elsewhere in this response, the additional proposed housing allocation at the sites in Hampton Magna with restricted access to and from Hampton Magna will result in significant increased traffic flow and congestion and conflict with these policies.


NOT JUSTIFIED

To be justified the Local Plan "needs to be founded on a robust and credible evidence base involving research/fact finding demonstrating how the choices made in the plan are backed up by facts."

The new Local Plan in respect of Hampton Magna fails to do this because the proposed figure of 245 additional houses has not been robustly demonstrated as justified even as measured against the Indicative Village Capacity proposed in the Plan.

The Village Profile and Housing Allocations February 2016 document includes the profile for Hampton Magna and contains The Indicative Village Capacity section. This gives a total figure of 180 additional houses for Hampton Magna. It concludes that 180 is indicative and it is reasonable to exceed this "to a degree". However, an increase from 180 to 245 is not "a degree". The proposed 245 is not backed up by facts in the assessment and not justified.

To justify the increase from 180 to 245 houses it uses "the range of services within the village, its sustainable location close to urban area and good quality transport links." However no account has been taken of the negative sustainability impact on certain amenities which will result from the significant proposed number of additional houses, e.g. doctors surgery, primary school and local public and private transport access delays out of the village at peak times.

The plan is also defective in assessing sustainability. The plan says a Sustainability Assessment (SA) for the H51 site for Hampton Magna (land south of Lloyd Close) is not needed because the site has not been subject to change since 2015 when it was originally appraised but not allocated. However this H51 site has clearly changed since 2015 from 0 houses allocation to 145 houses allocation! So there is a huge fundamental change and hence a new Sustainability Assessment (SA) is essential to revisit this. The fact it has not been performed shows no attempt has been made to satisfy the sustainability criteria of justification.

The Local Plan may need to find additional houses in total but it is not justified to allocate another 145 (an increase of 145% to the original 100 houses) simply because Hampton Magna is a village with some amenities. The plan needs to demonstrate precisely how the total figure will be accommodated based on a revised Sustainability Assessment which fully addresses the real problems such an increase will entail.

It does not do this and for these reasons 245 houses in total is Not Justified.

NOT EFFECTIVE

To be effective the Local Plan needs to demonstrate sound infrastructure delivery planning by showing:
* clearly identified policies and proposed solutions
* a schedule setting out who will delivery and when and how it will be funded.
* support for the above by the providers and how it will be achieved.

The Infrastructure Delivery Plan does not do this. The Table in the Infrastructure Delivery Plan shows responses from physical Utility providers in very general terms:

U3 - Water and Sewerage assessment says Severn Trent Water's investment plans for drainage, sewerage and sewerage treatment mean that the development proposals can be accommodated.

U1 High Voltage Electricity Transmission System Electricity assessment says the transmission system will have the capacity to accommodate the additional demand.

However, the poor state of existing water drainage and sewerage systems in Hampton Magna is well known and is acknowledged by Severn Trent Water. There is no current detailed assessment of what work will be required and how and when it will performed to enable the existing systems to adequately cope if additional housing is built.

The existing electricity distribution system in respect of Hampton Magna has also been subject to problems for many years and there no assessment even in general terms as to how the existing system might be affected by the additional housing and how and when any problems arising will be resolved.

Social Infrastructure

- Health GP Services, there is no assessment or proposal in respect of how GP practice at Hampton Magna will cope with the additional patient numbers, whether expansion will be necessary and if so how it will be funded.

- Education.
The January 2016 census recorded 266 pupils against a capacity of 315.

WDC estimate that the total additional proposed homes for Hampton Magna and Hatton Park will generate in the region of 110 primary age pupils. When added to the 266 pupils it would create a total of 376 pupils which is 61 pupils over the 315 capacity. This would entail an expansion of the school from the time the extra housing is built. It does not take account of a future growth in numbers of pupils. However, in respect of such expansion, there is no current detailed assessment of what work will be required, how and when it will performed and how it will be funded with certainty.

Therefore I believe the plan for Hampton Magna fails to satisfy the key requirement to show it is the proposal is Effective


8. Modifications necessary to make the Local Plan legally compliant or sound.

LEGALLY COMPLIANT AND SOUND
As the Plan has failed to satisfy Legal Compliance and Soundness then the allocation of 245 houses should be denied on the basis that such allocation has failed a proven sustainability assessment and the other failures in the Plan as stated in this response.

If the Inspector concludes that the Local Plan is Legally Compliant and Sound in some respects then at the very least it is proposed that there should be a significant reduction in the number of houses allocated for Hampton Magna. How this is achieved is a matter for the Inspector. For instance, he could deny the proposal for the additional 145 houses, or reduce the total 245 number in some other way.

There is potentially a more suitable site nearer to Coventry which should be considered as an alternative, e.g. Bubbenhall, given that meeting Coventry's housing is the focus of the Plan. This would also better meet the Positively Prepared key requirement in respect promoting sustainable transport in accordance with NPPF.