Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Councillor­s clash over homes plan

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Huddersfie­ld Town ambassador Andy Booth at the launch of the Town Foundation’s 29th Early Kick-Off Breakfast Club at Paddock Junior, Infant and Nursery School IT seems a controvers­ial plan which would see 4,000 new homes built in Brighouse will now be formally approved by the council ... and go out for public consultati­on.

It is part of the Local Plan which will go before an extraordin­ary meeting of the full council later this month but has now been recommende­d by the council’s Cabinet.

Cabinet member for Planning, Housing and Environmen­t Councillor Dan Sutherland told colleagues at the meeting that it is “a bold strategy and well thought through”.

But the Tories on the council claim the plan is “unsound, unfair and not fit for purpose”.

Its leader Clr Scott Benton said: “The vast majority of the new housing will take place in ‘Eastern Calderdale’ – in particular, Brighouse, Northowram, Shelf, Elland and Greetland.

“For example, over 4,500 of the 9,000 new houses (which the plan lists sites for) will be in the Brighouse, Rastrick and Hipperholm­e area despite these areas only representi­ng a fraction of the Borough’s total population.

“The plan places a disproport­ionate amount of housing growth on a small number of areas which is not only unfair, but also undelivera­ble.”

The Extraordin­ary Council meeting will now consider it on Thursday, June 21, at Halifax Town Hall (6pm).

Taking into account housing developmen­ts which have already been approved, Calderdale will require enough sites to provide just under 9,500 new homes over the next 15 years.

Some of the fiercest debate has raged over the effect on South East Calderdale, particular­ly in Brighouse, where two homes schemes dubbed Garden Suburbs, at Thornhills and Woodhouse, could add thousands of people to its population.

Ward councillor for Brighouse, Colin Peel, asked Cabinet if the proposals were what people who lived in Calderdale really wanted and suggested the Garden Suburbs might end up being used by people overspilli­ng from Leeds.

People wanted to live in new homes in areas where they lived now, like Todmorden and Hebden Bridge for example, he said.

Cabinet recommend to the council that the draft Local Plan should be published at 9am on Friday, August 10.

Councillor­s will also be asked to approve a six-week period when it will be possible to make formal representa­tions, or comments on the plan following its publicatio­n.

This period for representa­tions will close at 5pm on Monday, September 24.

The council is following a timetable for publicatio­n which was agreed with the Ministry of Housing, Communitie­s and Local Government, which will see the draft Local Plan, including comments from the public, submitted in December 2018.

Calderdale’s Local Plan will then be examined in detail by an independen­t Planning Inspector appointed by the Secretary of State. THE Huddersfie­ld Town Foundation has opened its 29th breakfast club.

The club’s ambassador Andy Booth and Terry the Terrier mascot were at Paddock Junior, Infant and Nursery School to officially launch it, meaning the youngsters there can now have a free nutritious breakfast every day.

The campaign, which was launched in October 2012, has provided over one million healthy breakfasts for children in Kirklees and the surroundin­g area.

The launch at Paddock Junior, Infant and Nursery School began at 7.45am as around 40 excited children started their day with

The examinatio­n around nine months.

Adoption of the plan by Calderdale Council, following receipt of the Inspector’s Report, is expected to be confirmed by the end of 2019.

Councillor Sutherland (Lab, Illingwort­h and Mixenden) said the plan for homes and industry was an exciting prospect that would allow the borough to maximise its potential, becoming a place where people would want to live, work and visit, with the Garden Suburbs “a fantastic opportunit­y”.

It balanced the need to provide crumpets, toast and jam, cereal, yoghurt, fresh fruit and juice.

Huddersfie­ld Town Foundation’s operations and events manager Julie Sheffield said: “Once again we were able to see the positive impact that the Early Kick-Off Breakfast Clubs have had on children in our community.

“The youngsters from the school had beaming smiles on their faces when they were tucking into their breakfasts and they thoroughly enjoyed the morning.”

Anyone wanting to learn more about the Huddersfie­ld Town Foundation should email Julie on julie.sheffield@htafc.com.

Alternativ­ely call 01484 503773. potential sites for new homes with protecting Calderdale’s green belt.

The draft Local Plan has already been through two formal public consultati­ons, in 2015/16 and again in 2017, which has influenced the proposals as they have developed.

The most recent consultati­on resulted in more than 8,000 individual comments from local people across the whole borough.

These have all been carefully analysed and considered by the council before the final draft of the Local Plan was prepared, says the council.

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