The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Councillor­s insisting on squirrel bridge at new road ‘reasonable’

- CHERYL PEEBLES

Councillor­s acted reasonably in insisting a squirrel bridge be constructe­d over a new road in St Andrews, Fife Council has stated.

Despite only one red squirrel being found before constructi­on of the road from the A91 to the new Madras College, the north-east planning committee refused to drop a requiremen­t for the structure.

Trees were felled in the North Haugh to make way for the route, which will also serve the planned St Andrews West expansion.

The bridge, possibly a rope suspension, was among mitigation measures including mammal tunnels required to protect wildlife.

St Andrews West LLP, the consortium building the road, has appealed to the Scottish Government to vary planning conditions, which will remove the need for the crossing.

Amid fears red squirrels had already been displaced but could return, the committee went against the advice of the council’s own planning officers in refusing to allow changes to the conditions.

In its response to the appeal, council solicitor Steven Paterson said the committee’s decision was predicated on sound and proper planning grounds and it was its prerogativ­e to go against the recommenda­tion.

In its appeal, St Andrews West LLP, which comprises St Andrews University, Headon Developmen­ts and landowners, said Scottish Natural Heritage and the council’s own ecologist were satisfied with its proposed mitigation measures.

It intends to undertake squirrel monitoring for five years and suggested further measures could be adopted if a population became establishe­d in the area.

Planning consultant David Wardrop quoted a report which said: “The squirrel bridge would not have any benefit or provide suitable mitigation given the very low numbers of squirrels surveyed in the area both pre and post commenceme­nt of the road.”

The appeal will be determined by government-appointed reporter Alison Kirkwood who will conduct a site inspection after movement restrictio­ns are lifted.

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