South Wales Evening Post

Outdoor music gets go-ahead

- TED PESKETT Local Democracy Reporter

A HOLIDAY park’s controvers­ial licensing applicatio­n to allow live and recorded music outdoors until 2am on weekdays has been approved.

Bridgend County Borough Council (BCBC) approved the applicatio­n to vary the premises licence of Trecco Bay Holiday Park in Porthcawl with a string of new conditions.

A number of residents revealed their concerns about the applicatio­n at a BCBC planning meeting last Friday, pointing to previous complaints of noise nuisance at the holiday park.

“It was really poor,” said Newton, Porthcawl, resident Simon Judd on recalling his experience of one noisy evening on July 28 when Trecco Bay Holiday Park hosted a karaoke night.

“I went down to the ground the next day and there were numerous guests and residents queuing up to make the same complaint. The noise on that night was an absolute disgrace. The whole of the town [was] up in arms and getting this applicatio­n through was really quite poorly thought of in my view.”

Operator Parkdean Resorts agreed to a number of new conditions to address these concerns when the planning meeting recommence­d on Monday. These include limiting the outside area where entertainm­ent can take place after 11pm to the pavilion, installing a noise limiter to the sound system, and restrictin­g the number of events that can be held over the course of the year to six occasions of four consecutiv­e days.

A log book to record complaints and readily available contact details for a member of staff on site to handle complaints are also part of the new conditions. Pavilion noise levels will be restricted to about 75 decibels.

At Monday’s planning meeting, another resident, Ken Bonham, said: “We are looking at having inflicted on us the typical noise that people would [hear] on the high street or in a factory at that time of day.”

Representi­ng Parkdean Resorts at the meeting, Jonathan Smith from Poppleston Allen Solicitors, said that this level of noise would be restricted to the pavilion area.

Mr Bonham, who has lived in Porthcawl for 40 years, later added: “The prevailing wind in this town is from the south-west into the town and it goes past Trecco into Newton. [Any noise] that happens in that caravan park ends up in Newton. The noise level gets louder as the entertainm­ent goes on. That is a fact, whether it is Tom Jones or Tom Dooley. The acts will start off at a relatively low level and they will build momentum and sound to satisfy the crowd. Having a lack of control over the sound generated by the crowd is a major problem.”

Trecco Bay hosts a number of events throughout the year, including the Porthcawl Elvis Festival and

Planet Rockstock. Mr Smith, of Poppleston Allen, said one of the reasons for allowing the playing of live and recorded music outdoors was due to the closure and replacemen­t of its Time Out nightclub with an Indian restaurant. In his closing statement, Mr Smith concluded: “We have to live in peace and harmony with our local residents. We are not here to cause a disturbanc­e. We want to be good neighbours. We do have a positive effect on the local economy and we have enjoyed good working relationsh­ips in the past. “I apologise again for the incident in July. It wasn’t done through a noise limiter, it was done on [a] square bit of car park. There was nothing illegal about it. It was just done and it was too loud. We are not making any applicatio­n to extend the hours for alcohol here. “There are plenty of ways in which we can be held to account, but we don’t want to get to that point. This is about the prevention of public nuisance, not causing it in the first place.”

The noise level gets louder as the entertainm­ent goes on. That is a fact, whether it is Tom Jones or Tom Dooley Porthcawl resident Ken Bonham

 ?? MATTHEW HORWOOD ?? Trecco Bay holiday park in Porthcawl.
MATTHEW HORWOOD Trecco Bay holiday park in Porthcawl.

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