Hatton

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Object

Preferred Options

Representation ID: 46296

Received: 28/06/2012

Respondent: ed boyle

Representation Summary:

There is no affordable housing within the area of Hatton Green. A suitable mix (well designed regarding the locality for the future with market housing) will be most beneficial and satisfy the policies of the District Council as to local needs and sustainability within a distinct separate village/rural area.

Full text:

Hatton Park and Hatton Green are separate logistical entities. Both have their own village halls, open space recreational areas.
Hatton Green has its own Church (Haseley Church also which is 1/2 mile north on Firs Lane.)
They both have separate resident associations (Even if both are, for the time being, under the umbrella of the old Hatton Parish Council - there are moves by the residents of Hatton Park to become separate.)
Hatton Green has its own primary school which is served directly by a regular bus service. It is oversubscribed and should be expanded. - ref Council documents.
Hatton Green has its own substantial employment centres. Haseley Manor, Hatton Country World, Offices (such as in converted buildings in Dark Lane),Haseley Hall, several sizable public houses, Haseley Hotel, The Falcon, The Waterman, extensive horticultural/arbour facility a mile down the Hockley Road, the Slaughter House off Five Ways which is logistically nearer than Shrewley. ET Al. Employees are largely drawn from other areas of the District.

Object

Preferred Options

Representation ID: 46854

Received: 24/07/2012

Respondent: Mrs Alexandra Davis

Representation Summary:

Additional housing in Hatton would cause further conjestion on the A4177 Birmingham Road.

Full text:

Additional housing in Hatton would cause further conjestion on the A4177 Birmingham Road.

Support

Preferred Options

Representation ID: 47296

Received: 28/07/2012

Respondent: mr. edward brown

Representation Summary:

Hatton Green - traffic solutions.

Full text:

the Hockley Road/A4177 is slated as a dangerous blacl spot with regard to accidents. and it has to be improved as soon as possible. A round about here or in the immediate area will sonve this problem. Public funds are desperately low. If the area between Hatton Green and the A4177 is granted for a good mix of housing with suitable open spaces, including an extension of the existing burial ground for The Holy Trinity Church and better car parking/acess for this, the developers can be called to installed the long term effective improvements for this.
It is also noted that the school at Hatton Green will have to be expanded as soon as possible as there is a desperate need for extra places. The school already has severe parking and access problems. this can be solved by improvements to the Firs Lane cross roads and the accesses from this and the Hockley Road/A4177 by developing the said land. The redevelopment of the school- majorly by developers contribution. So saving the public purse.

Object

Preferred Options

Representation ID: 47840

Received: 26/07/2012

Respondent: Hatton Parish Plan Steering Group

Representation Summary:

Object to inclusion of Hatton as a Category 2 village. 60% of residents in poll opposed to more housing.
Hatton already contributed more than fair share of housing,
New houses at Hatton Park mean parish has two distinct settlements, plus a significant scatter of other houses. Neither Hatton Park nor Hatton Green has basic facilities to support sustainable growth.
Recognise communities cannot stand still and that further development will be required at some stage. Quarter of residents would favour more starter homes, shared ownership or rented homes.

Full text:

Submission made on behalf of the Hatton Parish Plan Steering Group.
Overall Strategy
The overriding principle of the National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF) is Sustainable Development. When the previous Core Strategy was being prepared, three sites at Hatton Green, which landowners had put forward for development, were dismissed because the general location was considered to be unsustainable. If the area was considered unsustainable then, how does it suddenly become sustainable and where is the evidence to support this change? Indeed, where is the evidence to suggest that housing spread across the district is the most sustainable form of development?
Table 7.2 show approximately 10% of new housing will be in villages, roughly half of which will be concentrated in five villages along the A4177/B4439 corridor - most of which lack the facilities to support sustainable development. Moreover, this will create a corridor of development that will seriously threaten the integrity of the Green Belt. The A4177 and B4439 are also dangerous roads with bad accident records. Potentially another 400 houses will obviously increase the danger, yet the Plan contains no infrastructure improvements to reduce the risks.
We therefore have serious misgivings about the strategic approach to rural areas.
Local Plan Policy PO4: Distribution of Sites for Housing
We object to the inclusion of Hatton as a Category 2 village. In a recent survey for the Parish Plan, 60% of respondents said they are opposed to more housing. We expect the natural reaction will be to dismiss this as NIMBYism, but there are several sound reasons why residents consider this designation to be inappropriate:
1. Hatton has already contributed more than its fair share of housing to the District, with numbers having increased six-fold in the last 20 years, from 140 to 845 units.
2. The 700 new houses at Hatton Park mean the parish now has two distinct settlements, plus a significant scatter of other houses. We now need time to assimilate the massive impact this change has had and develop a cohesive community.
3. Neither Hatton Park nor Hatton Green has the basic facilities needed to support sustainable growth. Hatton Park has a village hall, small general stores and a reasonable bus service, but all children have to travel to school by bus and there is no bus service to the nearest post office or doctors. Hatton Green has a primary school, but this is already over-subscribed and further expansion would only exacerbate the current traffic problems in the village. Otherwise there is a village hall, but only a skeleton bus service with timings that preclude travelling to work by bus. We do not consider these modest, dispersed facilities sufficient to justify designation as a Category 2 village. They certainly don't measure up to the statement in paragraph 7.34 that "a limited amount of development is directed to those villages with a good range of services and public transport to the towns".
4. If the 700 homes at Hatton Park, with their wide range of types and tenures, cannot meet local needs through natural turnover, then it is highly unlikely that 30-80 extra homes, spread over 15 years, will make any difference. Nor is it likely "to encourage new services" as envisaged in paragraph 7.35.
Notwithstanding the above, we recognise that communities cannot stand still and that further development will be required at some stage to sustain the two existing settlements. Indeed, responses to the Parish Questionnaire show that just over a quarter of residents would favour more starter homes, shared ownership or rented homes. Very few, however, would favour more of the larger homes. The issue is how best to satisfy the residents' views.
We do not believe designation as a Category 2 village, with its subsequent implications for the Green Belt, is the best solution.
Local Plan Policy PO16: Green Belt
The Parish Questionnaire shows virtually 80% of residents to be in favour of retaining the Green Belt as it is, though a quarter consider there could be some review of boundaries.
Paragraph 79 of the NPPF says "the essential characteristics of Green Belts are their openness and their permanence". Paragraph 83 goes on to say "Once established, Green Belt boundaries should only be altered in exceptional circumstances" and that authorities "should have regard to their intended permanence in the long term, so that they should be capable of enduring beyond the plan period".
Taking these statements together, our interpretation is that Green Belts should be essentially permanent; their boundaries, once established (which is the case in Warwickshire), should only be reviewed in exceptional circumstances; and if boundaries are reviewed they should endure beyond the fifteen years of the Local Plan. We question whether the levels of housing being an proposed for Category 2 villages - an average of two to five a year spread over fifteen years - is sufficient to amount to 'exceptional circumstances'. (If all or most were to be built at once however, e.g. very close to our parish at Haseley Manor, then this might constitute exceptional circumstances, but this would almost certainly lead to pressures to release more land.) Because of this we are very concerned that, if village 'envelopes' are created within the Green Belt, the NPPF requires boundaries to be drawn to accommodate expansion beyond the fifteen year period of the current Plan. Notwithstanding the safeguarding provisions in paragraph 85 of the NPPF, we believe this would expose areas to the threat of premature development, which we know from past experience would be extremely difficult to resist.
We certainly believe that creating 'envelopes' for each of the five proposed Category 1 and 2 villages along the A4177/B4439 corridor would fundamentally threaten the integrity of the Green Belt.
In the case of Hatton, with its two very compact settlements, we believe the interests of its residents would best be served by leaving both villages 'washed over' by the Green Belt, leaving any future development to be dealt with as 'limited infilling' or 'limited affordable housing for community needs' in accordance with the NPPF paragraph 89.
Infrastructure
We are surprised that the Plan contains no proposals for improvements to the A4177 and B4439. Both of these roads are extremely dangerous, with the severity of accidents along the stretches at Hatton almost twice the county average (Warwickshire County Council Traffic Accident Statistics pers comm.). Both roads also carry traffic diverted from the M40 and M42 at times when there are incidents on either motorway.
With potentially up to 400 more houses proposed for the five Category 1 and 2 villages along this corridor, the accident risk can only increase and we believe the Local Plan should make provision for infrastructure improvements to minimise the risks.

Support

Preferred Options

Representation ID: 47973

Received: 25/07/2012

Respondent: Trustees of the Haseley Settlement

Agent: RPS Planning & Development

Representation Summary:

Support for development at Hatton.
Sustainable with range of services and publci transport.
Within easy reach of towns.

Full text:

Letter and representation form attached electronically.

Attachments:

Object

Preferred Options

Representation ID: 48127

Received: 27/07/2012

Respondent: Mr Graham Harrison

Representation Summary:

We object to the inclusion of Hatton as a Category 2 village. Reasons why residents consider this designation inappropriate:
1. Hatton has already contributed more than its fair share of housing to the district, with numbers having increased from 140 to 845 units.
2. With 700 new houses and two distinct settlements. We now need time to assimilate the impact this change has had.
3. Neither Hatton Park or Hatton Green has the basic facilities needed to support sustainable growth.
4. If 700 homes fail to meet needs through natural turnover it is unlikely 30-80 extra will make any difference.

Full text:

Scanned Response Form

Attachments:

Object

Preferred Options

Representation ID: 50035

Received: 03/08/2012

Respondent: Mr Edward Walpole-Brown

Agent: Brown and Co

Representation Summary:

Within the category 2 villages there is a wide variety of services and facilities. It is noted that the symbol on Map 3 refers to Hatton Green which has a wide variety of facilities. The level of service provision is much greater than most of the other category 2 villages. We would therefore suggest that for Hatton the level of housing development proposed be more in the range of 50-100 dwellings, rather than 30-80 dwellings.

Full text:

See Attachment

Attachments:

Support

Preferred Options

Representation ID: 50036

Received: 03/08/2012

Respondent: Mr Edward Walpole-Brown

Agent: Brown and Co

Representation Summary:

Land between Birmingham Road (A4177), Hockley Road (B4439) and The Green, Hatton Green together with land north of Hockely Road, west of the Green and south of Hatton Wood is available for development. This could accommodate potential housing araes, an extension to the school site, parking for the Holy Trinity Church, and possible play area and playing field for the village. We would suggest that the Council retains a degree of flexibility in the plan until individual development assessments can be completed for each village. We therefore support ther setting of a range of figures for the category 2 villages.

Full text:

See Attachment

Attachments:

Object

Preferred Options

Representation ID: 50090

Received: 20/07/2012

Respondent: RPS Planning & Development

Representation Summary:

The scale of housing development identified for Hatton (and it is not clear if the reference to 'Hatton' in the Plan includes Hatton Station and Hatton Park) is low given the potential availability of small scale extension sites. Our client has circa. 4.5Ha of land across three sites (see site Plan) on the edge of Hatton Station, and a further site on the edge of Hatton Park which would be able to deliver sustainable communities phased across the plan period without resulting in significant adverse impacts on any of the dimensions of sustainable development, and are identified in the Council's SHLAA. It is, therefore, suggested that, in addition to brownfield land within extended village envelopes and greenfield infill sites, small scale village extensions should also be allocated where appropriate, to meet the District's housing requirements rather than relying on windfall projections. Policy PO4 should be amended to reflect this and allow for a proportion of the District's housing growth to be on allocated greenfield sites adjacent to the villages.

Full text:

See Attachments

Object

Preferred Options

Representation ID: 51285

Received: 27/07/2012

Respondent: Hatton Parish Council

Representation Summary:

Hatton Parish has contributed approximately 750 dwellings to the District's housing stock over the last 15 years, and should therefore be exempt from any further imposition in this plan, and placed in Category 3.

Full text:

See attached representations.

Attachments: