Councillor recorded talks on hotel plans, court told
A COUNCILLOR has “hours” of recorded conversations with officials connected to a legal challenge over a planned £20m hotel and leisure complex on the north coast, he told the High Court yesterday.
Padraig McShane claimed he used an electronic device to tape the encounters.
Causeway Coast and Glens Borough Council is now seeking an order for him to hand over any recordings or other relevant material. A judge is expected to rule on its application for disclosure next week.
The intervention by Mr McShane has already led to the challenge mounted by TUV leader Jim Allister being put on hold.
Mr Allister is judicially reviewing the council for giving the green light to the luxury accommodation facilities in Portstewart.
Mr McShane was a member of its planning committee, which approved the proposed resort at the heart of the North West 200 race route earlier this year.
Plans include a 120-bedroom hotel, spa, holiday cottages, conference facilities and restaurant being built on the Ballyreagh Road.
But the case was adjourned
TUV leader Jim Allister and (right) independent councillor Padraig McShane
earlier this week when it emerged that the independent councillor has sent a sworn affidavit to both the Attorney General and the Northern Ireland Public Services Ombudsman setting out his claims.
At a further hearing yesterday he was granted interested party status and asked about the alleged recordings.
He told Mr Justice McCloskey that he has “hours” of material which were taped on a device other than a mobile phone. Mr McShane also claimed: “There is substantially more on the recordings that impacts on other things.”
A barrister representing the council confirmed the extent of disclosure being sought.
Stewart Beattie QC said: “We are seeking any recordings or documentation that is relevant to those proceedings.
“At this stage the correspondence makes a series of assertions that may have wider-reaching consequences, we don’t know.”
With no lawyer present in court to represent Mr McShane, the judge adjourned the disclosure application until next week.
Permission for the hotel and leisure complex was first given in June 2017, but withdrawn after Mr Allister initially threatened legal action.
The North Antrim MLA, who has a home overlooking the site, restarted proceedings when council representatives passed the planning application for a second time.
Another resident in the surrounding area has joined Mr Allister in seeking a judicial review.
Their legal challenge involves claims that there was a flawed environmental screening process and that the wrong criteria were applied for the scale of the tourism attraction.