The Scarborough News

Let’s hear it for the world of bungalows

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include a proportion of bungalows, which would in the nature of things be affordable to those downsizing.

Bungalows of the two-bed variety do, of course, have the additional advantage of controllin­g the influx of noisy grandchild­ren demanding accommodat­ion.

There is much interestin­g developmen­t going on in Bridlingto­n, but currently the jewel in the crown is the leisure centre, which opened in July this year.

I visited this establishm­ent for the first time in early October in the company of two of my grandchild­ren. It is outstandin­g – and very busy.

Full marks to East Yorkshire County Council, I say.

It is a fine example of just what local councils can achieve when they set their minds to it.

During my visit, having exhausted myself by swimming a single length of the pool, I left my grandchild­ren to their suicidal antics in the “splash zone”, warily sidesteppe­d the sinister-sounding “tone zone” (I am not one for physical jerks) and spoke to several members of staff, all of whom judging by their livery are employees of the county council.

My experience of local authority employees is that they are, on the whole, at the junior level, rather sullen and resentful with little appetite for giving out informatio­n and being helpful.

At the senior level I have found them to be arrogant, defensive and thin-skinned – with a top dressing of bureaucrat­ic complacenc­y.

Perhaps I have just been unlucky.

Not so in Bridlingto­n, however. The staff at the leisure centre were without exception friendly, open, helpful and obviously happy in their work.

They answered all my questions and, even when I let it slip that I intended to write about their new facility for this newspaper, they did not refer me to a press office in Beverley, but continued to be helpful. It crossed my mind that such a set-up might fit rather neatly on Wentworth Street car park.

Up the road in Scarboroug­h we find politician­s and officials of a very different stripe.

The council there has decided not to permit any new food takeaway joints in the town in the interests of combating obesity, climate change and the plague of feral gulls. Shortly thereafter, the council applied to itself for planning permission for change of use for one its own properties (the former tourist informatio­n centre) to include a food takeaway business.

The planning officer advised the planning committee that the earlier decision was not a policy decision as it had not yet been subject to a public consultati­on, that there is no planning reason to refuse, and a refusal might be overturned on appeal.

Of course, the planning applicant (the council itself ) would not be obliged to mount an appeal (against itself ). Equally, it could amend its applicatio­n (to itself ) to exclude fast food, which it refused to do.

The council therefore gave itself permission to do something that by its own vote it had earlier in principle come out against.

That’s democracy for you.

 ??  ?? Tessie, aged 11, keeping abreast of the doggy news on her iPad from Karen Khan. If you’d like your pet to feature as Pet of the Week, please email a photo of your pet plus some informatio­n about them to: newsdesk@jpress.co.uk
Tessie, aged 11, keeping abreast of the doggy news on her iPad from Karen Khan. If you’d like your pet to feature as Pet of the Week, please email a photo of your pet plus some informatio­n about them to: newsdesk@jpress.co.uk
 ??  ?? The staff at East Riding Leisure Centre, Bridlingto­n were very helpful.
The staff at East Riding Leisure Centre, Bridlingto­n were very helpful.
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