Residents ‘ignored’ on estate plan
PEOPLE living near fields earmarked for a new housing estate fear their concerns over flooding, noise and increased traffic have been treated as an irrelevance.
Laura Shaw and neighbours living on High Street in Hanging Heaton have objected to plans to build 55 homes on four acres of fields between their houses and the B6128 Challenge Way.
Castleford-based Vistry Partnerships Yorkshire aims to build a mix of detached, semi-detached and terraced homes on the land with access from Challenge Way.
The scheme, which was deferred last month by a planning committee, will return this week.
It has been recommended for approval as all issues have been addressed.
That decision has frustrated Laura and others who believe their concerns have been overlooked.
She said the officer’s report to the meeting was published five days before the end of a consultation period, which she said showed ‘blatant disregard’ for local views.
She said: “It is clear the concerns of the local residents have not been properly addressed at all. Despite having lived here a number of years I feel my knowledge and views on this are being treated as totally irrelevant.
“It feels like there is a desperation for this development to be pushed through the process and approved as quickly as possible.
“Just because land has been allocated for development does not mean that any housing should be accepted at any cost.”
She and other residents have been backed by Dewsbury MP Mark Eastwood.
He said: “Public consultations are vital for people to share their views, and those views should be fully fed into the process and fully considered before any recommendation is made.
“Any attempt to do otherwise gives concern to people feeling their views do not matter as decisions have already been predetermined.”
Laura said local knowledge of subterranean streams flowing under homes and into the proposed building site had not been investigated despite being repeatedly raised by residents.
And after objecting to a noise survey being conducted during lockdown, a new survey was carried out.
However Laura said the survey of noise from a local working men’s club had taken place on a “notoriously quiet” weekday evening with equipment placed behind a wall and removed the following morning.
A report to the council’s Heavy Woollen Planning Sub-Committee says residents’ concerns had been “comprehensively addressed”.
A large underground storage tank will deal with flood water though the site is in a low-risk flood area.
Noise levels have been found to be satisfactory and vehicular access into the estate site are deemed acceptable.