Kent Messenger Maidstone

Timing of Local Plan hearings is ‘appalling’

- By Alan Smith ajsmith@thekmgroup.co.uk @ajsmithKM

A public inquiry into plans which will shape the future of the County Town and surroundin­g areas – and where to build nearly 18,000 homes – is set to resume in May.

David Spencer, the government planning inspector, has announced two weeks of “in person” hearings to be held in Maidstone Town Hall.

They are due to start on Monday, May 15, and a further week of evidence will be given virtually in the week starting Monday, June 5.

The inspector had held sessions previously in September but suspended them when Maidstone council introduced a raft of new evidence during the hearing, with the inspector saying nobody would have time to properly absorb the material. At stake is the council’s developmen­t plan which will shape the future of the town and its associated villages until 2031. The council is obliged by government policy to find room to build 17,660 new homes in that period.

Its solution of where to place the housing – primarily on two Garden Village sites at Lenham Heath and at Lidsing – has proved controvers­ial.

The plan also considers other matters such as the allocation of gypsy sites and the provision for commercial and retail use. In the earlier sessions, the inspector addressed the wider issues, such as whether the council had followed the correct

procedures when formulatin­g the plan and fully consulted with neighbouri­ng authoritie­s. Failure to consult saw Tonbridge and Malling council forced to withdraw its plan in 2021 and start again.

This time around Mr Spencer will be drilling down into individual sites and he has set a number of questions about each that he wants answered.

The inspector has published the list of details he has

requested from respondent­s and these can be found online at tinyurl.com/maidstonep­lan The relevant documents: are EX72 – Inspector’s Matters Issues and Questions for Stage 2 Hearings; and EX73 – Inspector’s Updated Guidance Notes. Kate Hammond, chairman of the Save Our Heathlands group which is opposed to the Lenham Heath garden village scheme, said: “We have put in our submission­s and requested

the chance to speak. We shall be fighting this all the way to the end.”

John Britt is the chairman of Lenham Parish Council and he was particular­ly critical of when the public inquiry would resume, given the fact it would be just after local elections and the King’s Coronation.

He said: “Frankly the timing of these hearings is appalling. We are all up for election on May 4 – as is a third of Maidstone council. Plus there is the King’s Coronation on May 6 followed by a Bank Holiday on May 8.

“We would like to speak but it’s very difficult to say who that could be.

“In addition, the council has not yet responded to the inspector’s criticisms of the soundness of their garden village proposal and until we see their proposed mitigation measures, it is difficult to know what our response will be.”

 ?? Stock image ?? The target is to build nearly 18,000 homes in and around Maidstone by 2031
Stock image The target is to build nearly 18,000 homes in and around Maidstone by 2031

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