Belfast Telegraph

Planning permission for £20m hotel is quashed after Allister legal challenge

- BY ALAN ERWIN

PLANNING permission for a new £20 m hotel and leisure resort on the north coast is to be quashed, a High Court judge has ruled.

Lord Justice McCloskey had already held that Causeway Coast and Glens Borough Council’s decision to approve the fourstar complex near Portstewar­t was procedural­ly unfair.

His final order yesterday, in a legal challenge by TUV leader Jim Allister, means the planning applicatio­n must be reconsider­ed in accordance with the law.

The judge said a mere declaratio­n identifyin­g the breaches in the process would be insufficie­nt. He confirmed: “I consider the appropriat­e exercise of the court’s discretion to entail the making of an order of certiorari quashing the impugned grant of planning decision.”

Mr Allister described the outcome as “most gratifying” and called on the planning decision to be taken out of the council’s hands.

With permission first given for the project in 2017, but withdrawn after the North Antrim MLA initially threatened court action, he claimed the authority has now got it wrong twice.

“I could have no confidence in the council again deciding this applicatio­n, particular­ly in circumstan­ces where there are now judicial findings against it of procedural unfairness and misapplica­tion of policy,” he said. “The Department for Infrastruc­ture should now exercise its powers of ‘call in’, under the Planning Act, if there is to be any further considerat­ion of this applicatio­n.”

Together with a neighbour, Mr Allister sought a judicial review after the developmen­t close to their homes was approved.

Proceeding­s were brought after the council granted planning permission for a hotel and spa complex on the Ballyreagh Road for a second time in March 2018. The project also includes conference and banqueting facilities, holiday cottages, a restaurant and visitor attraction centre for the North West 200 motorbike races.

Nearly 100 full-time jobs, generating almost £2 min salaries, would be created, it was claimed.

With up to 50,000 guests expected annually by the third year of operation, the court heard projection­s they could spend around £6m per annum in the local economy.

During the case an independen­t councillor who sat on the planning committee which approved the resort dramatical­ly intervened to claim he had covertly recorded relevant conversati­ons with officials.

Padraig McShane said he had amassed hours of material.

Based on those alleged conversati­ons and emails, Mr Allister’s legal team argued that hotel developmen­t was seen as key for the borough.

They contended there was a bias towards securing planning approval at all costs.

However, the judge backed counter arguments that the local authority’s representa­tives held up to close scrutiny.

Mr Allister mounted a wide-ranging challenge to the planning permission, including claims the environmen­tal screening process was flawed.

He also contended that the council should have considered the applicatio­n under a policy for a larger-scale tourism attraction.

Despite dismissing some grounds advanced in a judgment last month, Lord Justice McCloskey ruled for him in four areas: procedural unfairness, breach of the Planning Committee’s Protocol, error of law in respect of Policy CMP3 and breach of the Environmen­tal Impact Assessment Regulation­s. Returning to the case yesterday, the judge also made a protected costs order in Mr Allister’s favour.

 ??  ?? MLA Jim Allister challenged planning permission for a proposed north coast resort in the courts
MLA Jim Allister challenged planning permission for a proposed north coast resort in the courts

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