Yorkshire Post

Protests at council over new homes

Campaigner­s challenge evidence used in report

- ALEXANDER BEARD NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT Email: yp.newsdesk@ypn.co.uk Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

Campaigner­s vowed they will continue the fight against proposals for 3,000 new homes in a historic North Yorkshire Village until the first brick is laid.

The Keep Green Hammerton Green action group gathered outside Harrogate Borough Council’s office, yesterday objecting to reports which recommend Green Hammerton as a site for a new settlement.

CAMPAIGNER­S VOWED they will continue the fight against proposals for 3,000 new homes in a North Yorkshire village until the first brick is laid, as they protested recommenda­tions for the plans outside council offices.

The Keep Green Hammerton Green action group gathered outside the Harrogate Borough Council’s office, Crescent Gardens, last night with banners in hand, objecting to reports for the developing local plan which recommend the area as a site for a new settlement.

Prior to entering and putting a question before a full council session, the chairman of Keep Green Hammerton Green Chris Chelton said the group would challenge evidence currently used in report which suggest the area is suitable for the volume of housing. Mr Chelton said: “The details that are coming out are providing flimsy evidence. What it comes down to is that they want to connect 3,000 houses to Green Hammerton, and in the early years that would follow approval of this would mean people relying on use of existing services.

“We have a single school in Green Hammerton, which already has children being taught in the main hall.”

He added: “We are not going to stop fighting, and if they do not listen we will keep on going until the first brick is laid.”

Among the main issues raised by the group was their questionin­g of data collected using Community Infrastruc­ture Levy calculatio­ns (CIL), which evaluate property prices in the area.

The group believes that the decision to recommend Green Hammerton was partly based on figures for property values which were compared to neighbouri­ng Flaxby, which was an alternativ­e option for a developmen­t of this size in the local plan.

They believe the figures were skewed by properties located in east Knaresboro­ugh which were included among the figures.

Mr Chelton put the question to Harrogate Borough Council cabinet member for planning, Coun Rebecca Burnett.

He said: “How can the Council reassure the residents of Green and Kirk Hammerton villages that the recommenda­tion for the Green Hammerton site is not being driven by the flawed calculatio­n of a higher Community Infrastruc­ture Levy income to Harrogate Borough Council, rather than the wealth of good planning reasons for choosing Flaxby Park?”

Coun Burnett responded by saying to Mr Chelton that the recommenda­tions for housing growth had been based on planning factors, directing housing growth along transport corridors and with environmen­tal concerns and physical limitation­s, alongside other factors.

Added to this, she noted that the use of Community Infrastruc­ture Levy as measure for planning across the country in the future was uncertain.

On leaving the meeting the group welcomed an offer from the cabinet member for further discussion­s on the site, but continued to raise concerns over the role of the levy.

Mr Chelton said: “We are not entirely satisfied with her response. She has dismissed the CIL as not a key factor of her decision or recommenda­tions, but in fact it’s a key element of one of two reports on which the planning policy team are basing their recommenda­tions.

“So to dismiss it and say that it is not an influencin­g factor seems at this stage seems utterly disingenuo­us,”

And if they do not listen we will keep on going until the first brick is laid Chris Chelton, Chair of the Keep Green Hammerton Green protest group.

 ?? PICTURE: TONY JOHNSON. ?? PLANNING ANGER: Protesters gather outside Harrogate Council offices to object against plans for 3,000 new homes.
PICTURE: TONY JOHNSON. PLANNING ANGER: Protesters gather outside Harrogate Council offices to object against plans for 3,000 new homes.

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