Sunday, 8 March 2015

Roger Gale MP's submission re the draft Thanet Local Plan


My MP, Sir Roger Gale's (Thanet North) response to the draft Thanet Local Plan. The deadline for comments was on Friday 6th.

A very good response from Sir Roger. All in all this is a piece of work where I think Roger has done a very good job as an elected member of parliament. Roger quite rightly points out the numbers don't add up.  12,000 new homes and only 5,000 jobs, anyone? As for Westwood Cross being rebranded Westwood and being the prime town centre, Roger quite rightly points out it isn't a town. 


Take it away, Sir Roger:


5 March, 2015.

The Strategic Planning Manager
Thanet District Council
PO Box 9
MARGATE
CT9 1XZ




Sir,

Thanet District Council – Draft Local Plan

I have studied with care Thanet District Council`s Draft Local Plan, I have attended public meetings and I have received many communication by e-mail and by post from a large number of constituents and representative bodies.  Most particularly I have received input from Manston Parish Council, St. Nicholas at Wade  Parish Council, The Westgate on Sea Residents` Association, Birchington Parish Council, Acol Parish Council, Minster Parish Council, Garlinge, Cliffsend , Broadstairs  and the Margate Civic Society.  From that informed position I now submit my observations as follows:

National Planning Policy Framework

First, and as indicated in Thanet`s initial consultation document, the NPPF places “The emphasis upon local authorities to produce a local plan that objectively identifies and then meets the housing, business and other development needs of an area”.   The NPPF is not inhibitive in its guidelines and very specifically allows local authorities to determine their own needs with regard to both development and the environment.  The South East Local Plan, which set targets for growth including required housing targets was rescinded on 26th March 2013. Responsibility for the proposals contained within the Draft District Plan therefore lies directly with Thanet District Council. It is in this context that the proposals should be appraised.

General reaction

Overwhelmingly public reaction has opposed aspects of the Draft Plan and most specifically has objected to the Council`s proposals to accommodate “12,000 additional homes over the 20 year period to 2031” as outlined in (North Thanet) Policies SP13, SP14 and SP15,  with considerable disquiet  also expressed about proposals for new housing in the Thanet villages. These proposals appear to conflict with Policy SP26  and  “the Protection of Open Space”.

Concern has also been expressed in relation to the Council`s intention to widen the designation of Manston Airport to describe the site as an “opportunity area”, facilitating the possibility of the alternative use of a site that the majority of people of Thanet see as a national and local asset that should and must be preserved for aviation and related purposes only.


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Public response

I have received no representations at all in support of the Draft Local Plan as a whole or in part.  While there is clearly a recognition of the need for “local homes for local people”, for the creation of employment opportunities within the wider East Kent and for additional provision of infrastructure to meet existing needs, all of the observations that I have received, and those which have been made in considerable numbers to Thanet District Council, have been negative and reflect very real misgivings.

Assessment

In describing Thanet the Draft Plan notes that

“The villages retain their separate physical identity, historic character and have vibrant communities and services” and adds that “The open countryside between the towns and villages remains essentially undeveloped, with a varied landscape, tranquility and distinctive views”.

while Strategic Priority 4 lays emphasis on the need to

“safeguard local distinctiveness and promote awareness, responsible enjoyment, protection and enhancement of Thanet`s environment…….”

This appears to be little more than lip-service in the light of what is actually being put forward for consideration.

The proposals contained within the Draft Plan threaten to destroy not only the “separate physical identity” of Westbrook, Garlinge, Westgate on Sea and Birchington  which residents correctly regard as villages in their own right, but to overwhelm the “tranquility and distinctive views” of the smaller Thanet Villages that I represent while not meeting even the current requirements for enhanced local education, medical and other services.

The Draft Plan asserts that:

“It is recognised that any growth in Thanet must be supported by the necessary infrastructure, such as roads, schools and health facilities. The Plan aims to take a co-ordinated approach to delivering such facilities alongside new development and the Council has and will continue to work with other agencies, organisations and service providers to ensure that this is achieved”.

In fact, it emerges from the Draft Plan that little or no realistic provision has been made for the required services and that there is a bland assumption that “ the developer” will provide the  “two form entry primary schools” that it is believed will meet the needs of the families occupying new homes and will presumably also create, for example, the “new link road to serve the development (in Birchington) and extending from Minnis Road and the A28”  while offering no solution to any increased secondary school need.  There is no indication that “other agencies,


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 organisations and service providers” will be either able or willing to step up to the mark and small faith can be placed, on the basis of current performance, in the claims contained within Policy SP32- Community Infrastructure and SP 33 – The expansion of Primary Schools. It is not enough to suggest that “Thanet will work with Kent County Council in identifying, allocating and safeguarding land as appropriate.” Adequate provision must be identified, resourced and made in advance, not as an afterthought.

In fact, the lack of thought given to or provision for supporting road, education, primary and secondary healthcare  and other ( social and emergency) services forms the justified basis for very many of the critical observations that have been submitted by individual residents and, in great detail, by the genuinely representative bodies that have made submissions.

Housing

Turning specifically to housing,  Policy SP 11 Housing Provision indicates that :

“Provision is made for a total of 12,000 additional homes in the period to 2031 with notional delivery across the period…..”   “attributed evenly over four five-year periods.”

This figure, which represents a dramatic increase over the number of homes predicted as needed in the previous (2006)  local plan, seems to be predicated upon “The Council`s aspirations for economic and employment growth” which in turn is based subliminally not upon the needs of local people but upon inward migration from the rest of the United kingdom.

Brutally, East Kent in general and Thanet in particular has suffered for too long from the “dumping”, by London Boroughs of problem children and problem families and there is a very real fear that much of the proposed additional housing may be used to accommodate not local people at all but those which the London Boroughs seek to re-locate out-of-area.  Thanet has neither the facilities nor the finances to meet these demands and the provision of housing that is not supported by fully adequate infrastructure and employment is neither acceptable nor sustainable.

Under the heading “Protecting the Countryside” the Draft Plan indicates that:

(4.1) The National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF) states that local plans should take account of the roles and character of different areas, promoting the vitality of our main urban areas and recognising the intrinsic character and beauty of the countryside”.

The Draft Plan accepts that:

(4.1)“Thanet`s open countryside is particularly vulnerable to development because of its limited extent, the openness and flatness of the rural landscape and the proximity of the towns. Thanet`s countryside provides important landscapes that contribute to its sense of place, as well as making Thanet an attractive place that people want to come to. Much of the countryside is classified as `best and most versatile agricultural land`. The countryside also supports a variety of habitats and species, particularly a number of important species of farmland birds which have declined in numbers over the last few years”.

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The authors of the report might have added the Thanet Brown Hare to their list of species but the assertion (4.3) that “there is a presumption against the development in the countryside as the sites allocated in this plan meet the development needs of the District” is disingenuous.  It is very precisely the rural hinterland of Garlinge, Westgate on Sea and Birchington, that is being proposed as part of the solution to “the development needs of the District” while the impact of the proposals upon the smaller rural villages is also designed to intrude upon countryside and habitat.

Specifically, and in relation to Quex Park, we are told that:

(4.24)”The Park is unique within the Thanet context, comprising a formal and extensive wooded parkland and amenity landscape within an otherwise open intensively farmed landscape”

How can (SP 22/5)

“New development proposals respect the historic character of the (Quex Park) parkland and gardens”

succeed if a housing estate, complete (presumably) with all of the necessary supporting roads , street lighting, drainage, convenience stores and other infrastructure is to be permitted to be built upon the doorstep of this “unique” park on the hitherto  “open and intensively-farmed landscape”?

Instead of asserting, as the Draft Plan does, that:

“A significant amount of greenfield housing land is required to meet the housing target”

the Council must first review its methodology and justify the amount of additional housing that will actually be required in the foreseeable future.

In tandem with this approach there must be a thorough appraisal of unoccupied and under-occupied property and an acceptance of the need, given the age profile of the population, to seek to create suitable accommodation (not merely the proposed `flats for single-person occupancy` - Table 4/Market Homes) designed to meet the requirements of those who wish to downsize and release larger homes for family occupation.

Next, there needs to be a thorough and imaginative examination of all of the available brownfield sites, irrespective of their current designation and excepting Manston Airport, in order to meet the current and foreseeable need.

Then and only then should consideration be given to greenfield sites to meet any genuine local shortfall.

Thanet is blessed with a very significant amount of Grade 1 agricultural land that, in the national interest, is and will be needed to maintain the sustainability of the United Kingdom as a food producer.




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It is clear that insufficient value has been placed upon this land that, once built over, would not only be lost forever but would have significant additional implications in the form of  damage to the already fragile water sources and demand for sewage treatment and disposal.

Economic development and employment

It is astonishing that, given that “Thanet`s business parks have been slow to develop and there is a considerable amount of land available” (Par. 1.9) consideration should be given at all to the prospect of still more land being designated (at Manston Airport) for industrial use. 

Manston Park, Eurokent Business Park, Thanet Reach Business Park and the Hedgend Industrial Estate are already available and under-occupied and the former Pfizer site, not in but immediately adjacent to Thanet, has potential that is still very largely unrealised.

To quote the Draft Plan again:

(1.30) “Forecasts show that Thanet will need in the region of 15 hectares of employment land over the plan period…….”

While

(1.31) “The 15 hectares is significantly below the amount of land that was allocated in the 2006 Thanet local plan……..”

And

(1.32) “This brings into question the need to maintain an oversupply in Thanet`s employment land portfolio”.

Or, put another way, there is, surely, land earmarked already for industrial use that could and should be considered for release for housing.

Thanet most certainly needs not only housing but local jobs for, particularly young, local people. If we are to reverse the exodus of brains and skills from the Island then we should be concentrating our efforts not on moving existing jobs from elsewhere to the Discovery Park on the back of the attractions offered by an Enterprise Zone and claiming “job creation” but maximising our efforts to create genuinely new growth and fresh entrepreneurial endeavour on the sites that we already have available to us in abundance.


Westwood “Town Centre”

Westwood is described by the Council as a “town centre” when it is not, yet, a town at all.  It is certainly true that the retail offer has helped to stem to flow of out-of-area shopping and may even have drawn in some customers from the wider East Kent but this has been achieved at a cost to the traditional Town centres of, particularly, Margate, Broadstairs and Ramsgate and with woefully inadequate advance thought given to, or planning for, transport infrastructure.

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The Draft Plan states that

(2.21) “The area currently suffers from poor connectivity between sites, both vehicular and pedestrian”

That is an understatement. The ”connectivity” is approaching gridlock and if it is the intention to create a “Westwood New Town” with all of the housing, medical and community centres and schools that will be required to support what will, effectively, be a sizeable  new village then serious investment will have to be made to resolve the current and future road network and public (road and rail) transport services.

Even now little thought seems to have been given to how and by whom that provision of infrastructure will be funded.

While much has already been achieved (SP08, SP09, SP10) with the regeneration of the Old Town Centres Westwood remains the `elephant in the room`. Everyone can see it but nobody appears to be prepared to take a strategic and comprehensive, rather than a piecemeal, responsibility for it.

Manston Airport

Manston Airport is (local Plan 2006) designated as exactly that. An airport.

The Draft Local Plan states:

(Strategic Priority 1) Objectives:

“Support the sustainable development and regeneration of Manston Airport to enable it to function as a local regional airport, providing for significant employment opportunities, other supporting development and improved surface access subject to environmental safeguards”.

Unfortunately, after that promising start the Draft Plan now adds:

“….or as an opportunity site promoting mixed-use development that will deliver high quality employment and a quality environment”

which dilutes the airport designation and paves the way for a housing and industrial estate.

As highlighted earlier, Thanet has acres of under-occupied industrial land and there is no shortage of land to meet actual, rather than theoretical local housing demand either.  By contrast, the United Kingdom is short of runway capacity in the South East, short of a major aircraft diversion facility, needs a Search and Rescue base from which to cover the Straits of Dover and needs to relieve airfreight capacity to release slots at larger passenger airports.  Manston Airport can have a viable future dedicated to aviation and supporting industries . Such a project has a willing buyer and operator and huge and immediate skilled and semi-skilled local employment potential and the designation of Manston as an airport, exclusively, should be reflected in the Local Plan and maintained.



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Conclusions

Much hard work has, indubitably, gone into the Draft Local Plan and the authors should be thanked for providing a base from which to now commence a serious and in-depth revision of the entire document.

I have deliberately eschewed the fine detail that is included in other submissions in order to avoid repetition but I would hope and expect, in the interests of those that I am elected to represent, that careful attention and scrutiny will be given to each and every one of the individual and collective submissions that have been made and that, under the guidance of a newly appointed  fully-qualified Chief Executive and Officers, the plan will be re-written in its entirety and submitted to the newly-elected administration that will arise from the May District Council elections  for approval and onward transmission to the Inspector for further scrutiny.










Sir Roger Gale, MP
North Thanet                                                                                                                         4th March 2015.























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Monday, 2 March 2015

A Better Cliftonville General Meeting + wine + wisdom



Those lovely folks at A Better Cliftonville (Facebook Page) have got it sussed. Not only do they live in what was described by CABE (Commission for Architecture and the Built Environment ) as potentially one of the most desirable places to live in the country, (CABE Urban Panel Review April 2009),



but when it comes to community organising, they're spicing up the residents meeting format to include a bit of socialising too.


'Our first general meeting of 2015, followed by a fun social event! Open to all residents!

Friday 27th March 2015
Cliftonville Community Centre, St Paul's Road CT9 2DB
6pm - 7pm General Meeting
7pm onwards - Wine & Wisdom'


Saturday, 28 February 2015

UKIP's Margate Spring Conference

I've seen more pop from a party popper! UKIP's spring conference came and went. An empty purple battle bus of 'common sense' made endless circuits of Margate. The most exciting thing was a stunt pulled by the musical The Producers who turned up at the conference venue on Friday morning in a tank with a dancing Hitler.

Yesterday, Margate seafront and the Old Town were less busy than usual for a sunny Friday afternoon.

Pictures from Friday 27th.

The Reality Party bus not UKIP's





Today there was the Thanet Stand Up to UKIP march from 12pm. There was a really good turn out for what was today a cold and blustery day. There was a carnival atmosphere as people marched up from the railway station to the Winter Gardens.  I had to leave early to get back to work, so only saw the news of scuffles at the Turner on the Thanet Gazette newsfeed.








There was a small group of cape wearing UKIP supporters waiting for the march to reach the Clock Tower. I think it was an homage to Madonna.






As Channel 4 news's Michael Crick pointed out to UKIP's head of Communications, the conference has turned out to be a bit of a shambles with apparantly no wifi, no mobile phone access and crucially, no manifesto.



By far the best photography coming out of the conference was from photo journalist Guy Smallman. Simply amazing. @guysmallman

Friday, 30 January 2015

A roll call of shame - Hoser's Corner planning permissions for flats dating back to 1991 unbuilt

After yesterday's missing file incident, I was contacted by email this morning with the news that the 05/0070 file had been found and was available to view at The Gateway. It was quite a big file and the contents too many of interest to discuss in just one post.

I thought I'd start with the big list of planning permissions granted on Hoser's Corner dating back to 1991. 1991!!!

If ever there was a list of shame, this is it. Permission granted (OL/TH/91/0540) by Thanet Council in 1991 that  was never started and extended over and over again for almost a decade to the year 2000 and all the while the corner site remained a derelict eyesore site blighting this prominent corner of seafront Ethelbert Terrace. Then to come back five years late in 2005 with (05/0070) to then be decided in July 2007 under delegated authority.

It begs the question why was no enforcement ever undertaken to put a stop to this awful land banking?

Here's the list of applications:



Hoser's Corner update: Thanet Council had stated they intended to refuse the application in 2010

I booked out the planning files for the development of 26 flats at Hoser's Corner today. I went to view them at The Gateway aka Margate Library. When I got there, I was told one of the files was missing and couldn't be found, despite them searching the basement. This is the file for actual permission that's was granted on July 25th 2007 (05/0070). 

The file I viewed (10/0289) contained an email exchange on May 12th 2010 where Thanet Council's Planning Manager informed Clive Hart: "The application is contrary to the Cliftonville DPO and therefore we would refuse the application under delegated authority."





There was no record in the file about the Building Control site visit in the July or a mention of authorisation of commencement of works. There was a a copy of the 2007 permission with each of the outstanding conditions highlighted that still had to be submitted and approved prior to works commencing.

To all intents and purposes, there is no documentary evidence of the permission being approved in the files available at the Council and online.

There is a Full Plans Building Control Application (FP/80967/10)dated June 20th 2010. For 26 flats this full application will have cost many thousands of pounds, plus the drawing of the detailed plans.





See Thanet's Building Control fee table:




Monday, 26 January 2015

Update: Hoser's Corner - Council approved 'foundation trenches' for the development in July 2010



Today, I received a reply from Thanet Council's Head of Planning today on the planning status of Hoser's Corner, the derelict broken corner of weed infested concrete, complete with bits of tiles, from the previous dwelling:


From: Simon Thomas Date: 26 January 2015 at 15:14Subject: RE: Hoser's Corner planning statusTo: Louise Oldfield 

Dear LouiseThank you for your email regarding the site at Hosers Corner.Planning permission was granted in 2007 for the re-development of the site. The permission was granted on the condition that works should be commenced within 3 years of the date of the permission. In July 2010 the Councils Building Control Officer visited the site and has confirmed that the foundation trenches had been dug and concreted. This constitutes commencement of the development under the Planning Act and therefore the 2007 planning permission is extant.I hope this clarifies the position.RegardsSimon

So, 'foundation trenches' were dug and inspected in July 2010.

Where would these foundation trenches be? When I went to the the site yesterday I found no evidence of any works. Perhaps I wasn't looking hard enough.



The answer came later today on Facebook and Twitter from Labour MP candidate, Will Scobie stated he'd been informed the works ie the 'foundation trenches' were in a section of Percy Road side of the development.

This is a detail from their Lower Ground proposed plan of the Percy Road side of the development:





Obviously, as  the vast majority of the site clearly has no evidence of works having been started. The concrete floor surface is old and contains patches of the original floor coverings of the previous dwelling.

The chronology of how these 'foundation trenches' might have happened is:

-  April 4th 2010, the developer, Mr Lam, made a application (F/TH/10/0289) to extend the planning  permission granted in 2007 (F/TH/05/0070). As part of this application Mr Lam stated that no works had commenced on site.

- July 2010 the site was then inspected by a Thanet Council Building Control Officer who signed off that works had started by seeing evidence of foundations in a section of Percy Road. The exact date hasn't yet been confirmed by Thanet Council. The 2007 permission was granted July 25th 2007 and required works to have commenced by 3 years from this date.

- The 2010 application (F/TH/10/0289) to extend planning permission was withdrawn at some point in the summer 2010.

Some further things to consider about this issue:

- A series conditions were applied to the original 2007 permission granted (F/TH/05/0070) stipulating that no works be commenced on site until they were submitted to the Council and agreed.

Were any of these conditions fulfilled by the developer prior to works starting on site for the 'foundation trenches' that were constructed between April and July 2010?




- What constitutes work on site having started? This falls under the The Town & Country Planning Act 1990, Section 56, Para 2:
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1990/8/section/56

- What evidence of the 'foundation trenches' for the development was inspected and signed off by Thanet Council's Building Control department?

What we do know is the everyday reality of this derelict site has been an eyesore for over a decade.

Let's see the Building Control Officer's sign off of the works having started.



Sunday, 25 January 2015

Hoser's Corner - Where is the evidence of works having started?



Following on from yesterday's Twitter discussion regarding the planning status of Hoser's Corner, I went out to the site today. I couldn't find any visible evidence of building works having started at all.



It will be interesting to see the evidence of what works have supposed to have been carried out and signed off by Thanet Council. This derelict plot is a complete eyesore. The previous owner has left it like this for a decade. Since this planning application was approved, Thanet Council put a stop to any more 1 bed flats being proposed in Cliftonville West.

Planning permission was first sought for 26 flats on this site in 2005 (F/TH/05/0070). Since that time, Thanet Council could have enforced this eyesore problem through the legislation at its disposal (Town and Country Planning Act). It has, in the past,  leveraged these powers at the owners of other problem buildings nearby eg The Arcadian and Fort Road Hotel.