Chichester Observer

Readers give their views on our new campaign

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Readers have added their views to our campaign against unsustaina­ble housing across the county. The campaign calls for stronger protection for our greenfield sites and greater powers for councils to determine their own housing needs and annual targets. Readers on our Facebook pages added their comments and many spoke in support of our campaign.

Christian Mark Bode said: “This is highly complex. We need more housing, especially social housing. Challenge is where.

“Not convinced enough is done in terms of brownfield sites or redevelopi­ng old stock locations ie knocking down low density and replacing with higher density more efficient.

“Developers though need to contribute more for infrastruc­ture for any developmen­t no matter size.

“This should also be based on greater charges for greenfield developmen­t.”

John Elliott said: “If we keep building, it doesn’t matter who owns the houses or not, the biodiversi­ty of the area will suffer and that needs to be protected for all our futures.

“Best solution is to put a halt on peple buying second homes and pricing people out the market.”

Glen Hewlett said: “Perhaps the campaign should be against developers ‘land banking’? Arun for example are seen as failing in the last three years – they have ‘only’ delivered 65 per cent of their housing target yet applicatio­ns for over 14,000 houses have been approved yet not built.

“Because we are seen as failing the government’s (in London) presumptio­n in Arun is for developmen­t when it comes to appeals.”

Some people, like Eloise Turner, acknowledg­ed that ‘people need to live somewhere’. But in response, Catherine Tonge wrote: “People also need food, fresh water, protection from flooding and clean air. Every greenfield developmen­t threatens all those things, as well as creating unsustaina­ble out of town car-dependent ghettos. “There are plenty of derelict sites within urban areas to build houses. “Many of these already have planning permission but haven’t been developed because there’s more profit to be made from building on greenfield sites.”

Asked by one reader where people should live, Chris Haslett said: “Not on greenfield­s or woodlands or open countrysid­e, of which there is less and less in this part of the world. Use brownfield sites and convert empty buildings.”

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