Leicester Mercury

‘Illegal’ use of holiday let leads to £875 fine for a repeat offender

LANDOWNER HAS BEEN FINED BEFORE FOR BREACHING

- By HANNAH RICHARDSON hannah.richardson@reachplc.com @HRichardso­nLDR PLANNING RULES

THE belief that a holiday let is being used illegally has led to another fine for a repeat offender.

There is reason to believe the holiday home in Granitetho­rpe Quarry, Sapcote, is being used as a permanent home, Blaby District Council has said.

This is a breach of planning controls, but attempts by the authority to contact the occupants and landowner, John Roger Mac, through a planning contravent­ion notice (PCN) went unanswered.

The notice was intended to help the council find out what was going on and would have given Mr Mac and the occupants a chance to put across their point of view, the council said.

It then took the matter to Leicester Magistrate­s’ Court where Mac, of Hinckley Road, Wolvey, was found guilty of non-compliance with a PCN.

He was ordered to pay a total of £875, which included a fine of £220, costs of £567, as well as a victim surcharge of £88.

Mac has been fined a number of times already by the council for illegal building work on various sites. He was given a fine of almost £9,000 last October for failing to stop illegal building work at the quarry, when the council’s planning enforcemen­t team said the single structure under

It is disappoint­ing neither the holiday let occupants nor Mr Mac responded to our notices

Coun Taylor

had not been permitted and had an “unsympathe­tic and unduly urbanising effect on the site’s rural character and appearance”.

Another fine of £1,897.50 was issued for illegal building work in February of this year.

The building under constructi­on at Mill Bank House, also in Sapcote, was not in the position agreed when planning permission was granted and was bigger than it should be, the council said, resulting in the overdevelo­pment of the site.

The planning inspectora­te - the government body which oversees planning disputes - ruled in agreement with the council in February last year, and Mac was given six months to clear the land and return it to grass. When he failed to do so within the six months, Blaby District Council started legal proceeding­s.

Speaking on the most recent fine, Councillor Ben Taylor said: “It is disconstru­ction appointing neither the holiday let occupants nor Mr Mac responded to our notices.

“If there had been an open channel of communicat­ion then perhaps legal action may have been avoided.

“However, since no response was received, we had no choice but to move forward with a prosecutio­n. Planning rules are in force for a reason – to ensure fairness and provide a framework for developmen­t and how buildings are managed. We will act if those rules are broken.”

 ?? BLABY DISTRICT COUNCIL ?? UNANSWERED PLANNING NOTICE: A holiday let in Sapcote is believed to be being used illegally
BLABY DISTRICT COUNCIL UNANSWERED PLANNING NOTICE: A holiday let in Sapcote is believed to be being used illegally

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