Western Morning News (Saturday)

Planning bid for G7 hotel rooms faces opposition

- RICHARD WHITEHOUSE richard.whitehouse@reachplc.com

APLANNING applicatio­n for meeting rooms built without planning permission at the hotel which hosted the G7 summit will not be considered until at least September – six months after it was submitted.

There was outcry earlier this year when the Carbis Bay Hotel started work on meeting rooms overlookin­g the beach without having secured planning consent for the developmen­t.

The hotel said that the rooms were required for the G7 summit which saw world leaders including Prime Minister Boris Johnson and US President Joe Biden meeting at the hotel.

However the Government insisted that the rooms were not required for the summit and that it had been happy with the facilities already at the hotel when it was chosen as the host venue.

Objectors say that the developmen­t should never have been allowed and has destroyed wildlife and environmen­tal habitats in the area.

Cornwall Council had called on the hotel to stop the works but a retrospect­ive planning applicatio­n was submitted on March 15.

Planning permission had previously been refused for a similar developmen­t to build new accommodat­ion for the hotel.

Local Cornwall councillor for Carbis Bay Linda Taylor has requested that the applicatio­n should be considered by a council planning committee.

However, five months later there has been no sign of the applicatio­n on any committee agenda and it has still not appeared on the agenda for the west sub-area planning committee which is set to meet on Monday, August 23.

That means that the earliest that the applicatio­n might be considered by councillor­s will be at the committee’s next meeting on September 20 – more than six months after the applicatio­n was first submitted.

When asked about the delay and when the applicatio­n might be considered Cornwall Council said: “Following the full assessment of the planning applicatio­n, the local member requested that the applicatio­n be determined by a planning committee, made up of elected Cornwall councillor­s. We are currently awaiting some further informatio­n from the applicant in relation to the applicatio­n. Once this is received, a date will be set for its determinat­ion.”

There are now 392 comments from members of the public about the plans. The council’s website states that 391 of them are objections.

Cornwall CPRE has also objected to the applicatio­n. Richard Stubbs, chairman of CPRE Cornwall, said that the hotel had cleared a natural area including many establishe­d trees, adding: “The rules are there to protect the exceptiona­l character and beauty of Cornwall.”

He said: “We will be doing our very best to ensure the current planning applicatio­n is refused and, should it become necessary, that Cornwall Council issues an enforcemen­t order for these buildings to be demolished and removed.”

 ??  ?? > The newly constructe­d buildings at Carbis Bay Hotel
> The newly constructe­d buildings at Carbis Bay Hotel

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