Huddersfield Daily Examiner

‘Worrying gaps’ remain in Amazon warehouse plan

MORE CONSULTATI­ON LIKELY AS KEY INFORMATIO­N ‘STILL OUTSTANDIN­G’

- By TONY EARNSHAW Local Democracy Reporting Service @LdrTony

FURTHER consultati­on “is likely to be necessary” around proposals for a massive Amazon fulfilment centre near the M62 motorway at Scholes once missing details on the scheme have been sent to Kirklees Council.

The authority is waiting on “outstandin­g informatio­n” on jobs and traffic figures associated with the project, which emerged last year and is expected to go before a planning committee this summer.

One councillor who is opposed to the facility said the incomplete nature of informatio­n around the use of surroundin­g residentia­l roads was “worrying”. Clr John Lawson (Lib Dem, Cleckheato­n) said the applicatio­n was “consistent­ly vague”.

In a seven-page letter sent as she left the council on May 24 Kate Mansell, the former group leader – developmen­t management – said timescales would be impacted as a result of further data being needed – and the time required to digest it.

Ms Mansell raised several issues in her letter including environmen­tal health, design and landscape, and the “stopping up” of a public footpath crossing the 59-acre site, which is sandwiched between the A58 Halifax Road and the B6120 Whitechape­l Road.

She also sought clarificat­ion on the number of jobs set to be created on site, which was initially announced as 1,500 to 1,700 permanent positions rising to around 2,400 jobs over a three-year period.

She said a traffic assessment for the site was “not entirely clear” and that greater clarity was needed around staff numbers and shift patterns and how local roads might be affected, particular­ly in relation to schools and walking routes.

A spokesman for campaign group Save Our Spen said it was “shocking” that almost a year after the Amazon applicatio­n was received by Kirklees Council “a significan­t amount of informatio­n is still missing or unclear”.

He added: “One of the major issues concerns the number of jobs claimed. There are examples up and down the country of job claims made during the planning process failing to materialis­e when the Amazon warehouses are operationa­l. That brings us on to another issue: how many jobs are there going to be? If it is really 2,400, why is the traffic report and with it the air and noise pollution report only based on 1,350 employees?”

Clr Lawson commented: “The touted increase in jobs over the first three years obviously impacts the traffic modelling carried out so far. The lack of clarity in the traffic assessment leaves residents in the dark about how noise and air quality are impacted by future shift patterns. It’s only right that applicatio­ns of this size should bring full answers to standard questions, not more questions.

“The incomplete nature of the informatio­n on the use of the roads surroundin­g the site, including Whitechape­l Road past the primary school, is worrying. Residents should expect to see this level of detail; it’s about trust. The level of detail missing and unacceptab­le methodolog­y in producing data does not inspire confidence.

“The applicatio­n continues to drain authority resources by being consistent­ly vague across the board. It’s always a bad sign when officers have to chase developers to this degree.”

The most recent consultati­on period expired on May 31 but via social media Kirklees Council confirmed there will be a further 21-day consultati­on period and that it would take comments on any planning applicatio­n “up until the date a decision is made.”

Comments can be emailed to dc.admin@kirklees.gov.uk

 ?? ?? A photo montage of the proposed Amazon warehouse from Whitechape­l Road in Scholes. Inset: Clr John Lawson
A photo montage of the proposed Amazon warehouse from Whitechape­l Road in Scholes. Inset: Clr John Lawson

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