Campaigners step up fight to prevent garden village plan
The chorus of protests against a plan for 2,000 new homes is growing ever stronger. Alan Smith reports on the latest moves to oppose it.
“Let Maidstone Borough Council know that they cannot ignore local people” - that is the plea from the Against Lidsing Garden Development campaign group.
It is opposed to a proposal in the borough’s Local Plan review to build more than
2,000 houses on farmland at Lidsing, a hamlet of just 13 houses between Hempstead, Lordswood and Bredhurst.
The development is expected to have significant knock-on effects for the surrounding area, and has also been opposed by Medway Council which fears it, rather than Maidstone, will end up having to deal with the majority of the extra traffic generated and pressure on local services.
Alan Jarrett, leader of Medway Council, has called the Maidstone proposal “reprehensible”.
Maidstone on the other hand points out that the scheme would provide the area with a new primary school and a new link road to the M2.
Although right on the border with Medway, the development site actually falls mostly within Boxley parish and partly within Bredhurst parish, both in Maidstone.
When the council first consulted on the Local Plan review in December 2020, it received 1,700 objections against the Lidsing proposal. The results from a second public consultation in December 2021 have yet to be released, but there were a total of 2,250 responses.
Against Lidsing Garden Development said: “If this development goes ahead
on a greenfield site with the spur road in an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty and next to Bredhurst Woods with SNCI (Site of Nature Conservation Interest) status, it will adversely affect many people’s lives and set a dangerous precedent for other large developments in areas which should remain protected.”
But Maidstone Borough Council said: “The UK needs more homes, and the Government has set out its strategy for how local authorities should achieve this.
“Maidstone is working to deliver the Government’s strategy both in terms of the number of new homes required, along with the wide range of jobs, health, education, other facilities and infrastructure needed to support our existing and future communities.
“This is a challenging task – and we very much appreciate that there are a wide variety of views about how this should be achieved. However, it is important to recognise that there is not an option for doing nothing.”
The spokesman added: “Failing to get a local plan in place would mean that we effectively lose almost all local control over where development goes in our borough and risk a scenario whereby the first sites the development industry brings forward are the least suitable and which provide the least scope for us to achieve wider community benefit or to mitigate effectively the adverse impacts of development.”
It is expected the draft Local Plan will be submitted to the Government by the end of next month.
Meanwhile, Against Lidsing Garden Development has started an online petition calling on the borough council to change its mind.
It received 376 signatures in the first 24 hours.
To see the petition, visit tinyurl.com/lidsingno