The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Council should consider bottoms ‘polluting loch’

- KATHRYN ANDERSON, LOCAL DEMOCRACY REPORTER

Acouncillo­r has suggested Perth and Kinross Council should consider the number of bottoms rather than houses polluting Loch Leven.

A council committee last week gave the nod to revised guidance to protect the Kinross-shire loch – designated as a Special Protection Area.

Problems with Loch Leven’s water quality have been noted due to phosphorus and nitrogen entering the loch from man-made sources.

Perth and Kinross Council’s finance and resources committee was recommende­d to approve the update when it met on June 15 to support the implementa­tion of PKC’S Local Developmen­t Plan (LDP).

The aim is to ensure phosphorus levels in the loch do not increase as a result of waste water from new developmen­ts in the Loch Leven area.

The guidance sets out requiremen­ts for phosphorus mitigation for private wastewater systems.

The report – put before councillor­s last week – said the Kinross-shire local committee raised concerns over “a discord between the LDP reducing the housing land requiremen­t in Kinross-shire to protect Loch Leven, and the housing numbers on allocated sites invariably being approved for higher numbers than identified in the plan”.

The Kinross-shire local committee was content with the revised guidance subject to this and “continued issues with combined sewers where the storm drains overflow during periods of heavy rainfall releasing sewerage” being addressed when the next version of the LDP is prepared.

Blairgowri­e and Glens SNP councillor Tom Mcewan, who lives next to a Perthshire loch with similar issues, said he was “scratching his head” over the number of houses being a factor.

He said: “I thought in relation to phosphate, it’s the amount of phosphate produced by the number of people/bottoms in that house that is the marker.

“So one four-bedroomed house could have the same phosphate production as three two-bedroomed houses could have.

“The important thing is the number of people that would be expected to live in any said developmen­t, not the said number of houses that is important in relation to phosphate production.”

A council officer told Mr Mcewan that was a “correct assumption” and that they had reallocate­d some housing land requiremen­t from Kinross-shire to Perth.

Developmen­t plan team leader Brenda Murray said: “When we were preparing the plan we did realise there is this issue in relation to the Kinrossshi­re area specifical­ly.

“So it was felt it would be prudent to look to allocate some of the housing land requiremen­t for the Kinross-shire area outwith that housing market area into the Perth housing market area... It was taking account of the sensitivit­ies in relation to the loch.”

Planning officer Robert Wills acknowledg­ed it was a “valid point” and added: “It’s quite difficult to manage numbers of people.

“It came about by looking at the environmen­tal assessment of the previous developmen­t plan and looking at how much areas were constraine­d by designatio­ns and environmen­tally-sensitive areas.

“The Kinross-shire housing market area was a lot more constraine­d by environmen­tal considerat­ions than others.

“That’s why we took the decision – as a precaution – to move 10% of housing land to another area.”

The revised guidance was approved.

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