The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)
Removal of radioactive waste from Dalgety Bay beach delayed until July
Long-overdue work to clear radioactive waste from a Fife beach is on hold until at least July, the Ministry of Defence (MoD) has confirmed.
Politicians reacted with fury after confirmation of further delays to the 11-year wait to rid Dalgety Bay of hazardous radium.
Labour MSP Alex Rowley and SNP MP Neale Hanvey have now called for clarity after the Ministry of Defence (MoD) and the Scottish Environment Protection Agency (Sepa) adopted “contradictory positions” on the issue.
The MoD said its contractor had applied to the environment watchdog for the required clean-up permit, an EASR 18, in November.
However, Sepa insists it has not received all of the paperwork it needs to grant permission for the £10.5 million work and it could take up to four months to process the application once they do receive it.
Meanwhile, Dalgety Bay beach is still contaminated with hazardous radium from scrapped aircraft instrument panels and remains fenced off.
The MoD said discussions with Sepa are ongoing and has now given an expected start date of July 1.
Minister of state for defence procurement, Jeremy Quin MP, said in a letter to Mr Hanvey that he looked forward to “the submission of the final elements of the application”.
The Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath MP said there was a “clear inconsistency” between the MoD’s claims and Sepa’s position.
He expressed “serious alarm” at the failure to obtain the licences in time for the original start date.
“The minister had the gall to tell me they are looking forward to work getting under way in the summer,” Mr Hanvey said. “We’ve heard it all before. “I think folk in Dalgety Bay can be forgiven for being sceptical about the MoD’s promises although, it must be said, this is the first time there has been such a clear inconsistency between the MoD’s claims and the truth as set out by Sepa.
“The MoD must face up to its responsibilities and understand that no amount of mealy-mouthed excuses will make this issue go away.”
Mr Rowley, who has written to the MoD and Sepa asking what they will do to address the delays, said: “The situation has been going on for 11 years.
“Further delays will come as a blow to residents and continue to cause damage to the environment along the coastline.
“It is, quite simply, not acceptable.
“This has dragged on long enough and it is time the beach was cleaned of this toxic material.”
Sepa’s radioactive substances manager, Dr Paul Dale, is disappointed the April 1 start date will be missed.
“The MoD contractor cannot start work to remediate the site until an EASR 18 permit is in place from Sepa,” he said.
“That cannot be provided until we have received the application.”
Dr Dale said the application should include a variety of documents, including details of how the removal of waste will be monitored.
“While the MoD has applied for some permits from Sepa for the works, we have not received an application for an EASR 18 permit from the MoD’s contractor,” he said.
“Once an EASR 18 permit application has been received, Sepa has up to four months to determine the outcome.
“We will aim to do so as quickly as possible.”
An MoD spokesman said: “Balfour Beatty submitted their application to Sepa on Friday, November 20, 2020.
“We understand there are elements to the application which Balfour Beatty is working through with Sepa.
“Preliminary work is under way on the site and, subject to a licence being granted, Balfour Beatty expects the clear up to commence on July 1, 2021.”
Plans for more than 70 new homes on the site of a fire-hit Fife school look likely to be approved this week.
Councillors will consider an application for 73 properties at the former Viewforth High School in Kirkcaldy, which was engulfed in flames last August.
Developer Whiteburn Viewforth LLP wants to build a mix of houses and flats on the Loughborough Road site.
Fourteen people have objected to the proposal, which council planners have classed as a major development.
The old Viewforth High School closed in 2016 and moved to a new site on Windmill Road.
Last year’s fire destroyed the main C-listed school building, and Historic Environment Scotland officially de-listed it in January.
As a result, it is no longer part of the development site which now only focuses on the B-listed stables and washroom building.
But Whiteburn Viewforth wants to create a future for the building and expects to submit another application to develop that section of the site soon.
The neighbouring 1870s-built Eastbank House – hit by two separate fires in the last two years – is also not included.
In a report to go before the central and west planning committee on Wednesday, planning officer Natasha Cockburn says the proposal is for a housing development on a previously developed site.
“The site is allocated for education use. However, this allocation is based on the historic use of the site as a high school,” she said.
“It is considered that an alternative use needs to be found to secure the longterm future of this brownfield site.”
However, the new homes could create a “critical capacity risk” at nearby Sinclairtown Primary School.
It means the school would need an extra 20 classes for the next five years.
Ms Cockburn said the developer had agreed to pay towards the £610,400 cost of providing temporary classrooms and toilets.
This will be the subject of a legal agreement.
Some neighbours fear demolishing historic buildings to make way for the new homes would negatively affect the area.
Others claim the plan is not in keeping with surrounding houses and cite potential problems with parking and access.
However, Ms Cockburn said it meets the requirements of the local plan, adding: “The proposal is for the development of a brownfield site which would otherwise lie vacant.”
Councillors will be asked to approve the plans on Wednesday, subject to conditions which include payment towards the cost of extra classrooms at the primary school.