Chichester Observer

Row over 15m mast eyesore

- Anna Khoo news@chiobserve­r.co.uk

The fight is on to move a communicat­ions mast put up in the middle of a village after a planning ‘error’.

Residents in West Marden are fighting to have a 15 metre high telephone mast moved after a planning technicali­ty allowed it to be built in the middle of their village.

Telefonica applied for permission to erect the mast and was told by the South Downs National Park Authority (SDNPA) that it would be harmful to the area due to ‘significan­t concerns’ about its height.

But a decision was issued a day late by the planning authority, allowing the communicat­ions company ‘deemed consent’ to put up the structure by default.

Compton parish councillor Ranjit Verghese said residents would welcome a phone mast for better signal but the location was inappropri­ate and he was concerned.

He said: “We just don’t want it here, it’s an absolute eyesore.

“There’s a national accord set up between the mobile operators’ associatio­n and national parks and this flies completely in the face of that.”

He said the council had put forward two alternativ­e sites for the company to consider, one of which would be on the site used to create mobile phone coverage for emergency service calls half a mile away.

Tim Slaney, director of planning for the SDNPA, said it had been given assurances from Telefonica that no further work would take place while discussion­s continued over the mast, which is not operationa­l.

He said: “It is disappoint­ing that Telefonica have chosen to carry out this work, given that positive discussion­s to find an alternativ­e location and/or revise the design for the mast were under way.

“We recognise that by the letter of the law the operators are able to erect the mast but we were close to securing a more suitable scheme and this sort of action is both unfortunat­e and damaging.”

The national park authority has said the decision notice being issued a day late after the 56-day deadline was due to a system error but pre-applicatio­n advice to Telefonica had raised concerns over the mast’s appearance in a ‘sensitive’ area.

A spokespers­on for CTIL, a contractor for Telefonica involved in the constructi­on of the mast, said the deemed consent was now valid for five years and could be used by any operator.

She said the company had ‘worked closely’ with the local community in West Marden and had stopped any further building work while it investigat­ed the alterative locations suggested.

 ?? PHOTO: DEREK MARTIN DM1932908A ?? Ranjit Verghese, left, and Martin Edney with the telephone mast in the middle of West Marden
PHOTO: DEREK MARTIN DM1932908A Ranjit Verghese, left, and Martin Edney with the telephone mast in the middle of West Marden

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