More than 100 objections to plans for village gipsy and traveller site
MORE THAN 100 objections have been received by planners who will decide next week whether to grant permission for a new gipsy and traveller site in a South Yorkshire village.
Barnsley Council’s planning board is being asked to grant permission for the site close to the village of Little Houghton, which would have 11 pitches capable of accommodating 10 static caravans and up to 17 touring caravans on land off Middlecliffe Lane. The development would mean the construction of a new six metre wide access road, turning head and parking spaces, along with buildings needed on site and “other domestic paraphernalia”, according to a report to councillors who will make the decision.
There have been 102 individual letters objecting to the proposal, with Billingley Parish Council also raising a list of concerns about the potential impact of the site.
Yorkshire Water has also objected and Barnsley Council’s highways department have recommended that the application is refused on safety grounds.
Planners are recommending the application is refused, telling councillors the development “would have a significant and harmful effect on openness through the site conflicting with the aims of national Green Belt planning policy”.
The council has already had to conduct enforcement action as a result of work being done to what would be the access road to the site, without permission in place.
Billingley Parish Council have argued the site is in an unsuitable location and an inappropriate use of green belt land, while also harming the setting of the Billingley Conservation Area.
Parish councillors also accuse the application of being “misleading” with an expectation that actual occupancy would exceed the 11 plots in the application.
Yorkshire Water say some of the caravan plots would be over a public sewer, which could “seriously jeopardise Yorkshire Water’s ability to maintain the public sewerage network and is not acceptable,” the planning board will hear.
The application argues that special circumstances exist to justify the creation of the site, an argument which can be used to successfully override green belt planning restrictions.
Families living on another nearby site, Ings Road, which has previously been affected by flooding would be able to move to the new site, removing the fears they experience about a repeat of damage to their homes in future.
But planners say that argument loses credibility because the same ‘special circumstances’ argument was used to help justify the creation of another site a few miles away, at Burntwood Cottages.
The planning board meets on Tuesday.
(The plan) would have a significant effect on openness. Barnsley Council planning department.