The Pembrokeshire Herald

‘Honest’ caravan site owner ran site ‘under the radar’ for 20 years

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A PEMBROKESH­IRE caravan site owner who “honestly” admitted “dodging under the radar” by running his site without permission for some 20 years will not be allowed to continue doing do.

In an applicatio­n before Pembrokesh­ire County Council’s April planning committee, Nicholas Kinahan sought retrospect­ive permission to continue operating his caravan site with 19 touring pitches, along with caravan storage and the erection of a storage shed at Penrath Farm, Ryelands Lane, Kilgetty.

The long-running site operation, a kilometre from nearby Kilgetty, off the narrow Ryelands Lane, was discovered as part of an ongoing enforcemen­t action.

The applicatio­n was recommende­d for refusal on a long list of grounds including the site was in the open countrysid­e,

did not propose any community facility, was not supported by a Green Infrastruc­ture Statement, no biodiversi­ty enhancemen­t features, the nearby road being a narrow single-track lane with no visibility splays for access, and concerns over foul waste disposal.

Kilgetty/Begelly Community Council has objected to the scheme on the basis of a lack of informatio­n provided within the applicatio­n and access safety.

One third party representa­tion was also received, raising concerns including a lack of informatio­n in respect of type of caravans and their use, no surface water or foul waste drainage details, a lack of an ecology survey, and no highway impact assessment.

Speaking at the meeting, farmer and caravan site owner Mr Kinahan said there were three caravans onsite after he moved to Kilgetty in 2004, housing tenants “on benefits,” with nine caravans onsite by 2010 and ‘ vans from other sites stored on site later.

“We’ve done wrong and we know we’ve done wrong,” he told councillor­s, adding: “I can’t afford to live there without this little bit of extra income.”

Speaking on behalf of neighbour Micheal Ormond of Ryelands Caravan Park and his concerns, Andrew Vaughan-Harries – a planning agent who normally represents applicants – said to the applicant: “When I look at this applicatio­n, personally, I think you’ve tried to do the applicatio­n yourself.

“We see many, many problems with this applicatio­n, a septic tank is not acceptable in 2024, there are lots of issues; it’s unsustaina­ble and has to fail.”

Councillor Mark Carter said: “What can I say really? I think we’re looking at a very honest man, unfortunat­ely in this case he’s got it wrong; he’s had a 20year run of dodging under the radar.

“We have to respect the law and the policy and be fair to every caravan site.”

Moving the applicatio­n be turned down, he said: “Much as

I admire the gentleman for his initiative, I have to go with the officer recommenda­tion for refusal.”

Councillor Rhys Jordan thanked the applicant for his honesty, adding: “I don’t think he’s tried to ride roughshod over planning, I think he’s been naïve, but I can’t support this applicatio­n.”

The applicatio­n was unanimousl­y refused by planners.

Members heard the saga of Kinahan’s caravans may not be ended with a planning refusal, the option of a potential certificat­e of lawfulness – if he could prove the developmen­t had been in place enforcemen­t- free for a decade-plus – being mooted at the meeting.

Committee chairman Cllr Jacob Williams said: “If you can prove it’s immune from enforcemen­t it could be a ‘ trump card’.”

 ?? ?? Bruce Sinclair
Local Democracy reporter
Bruce Sinclair Local Democracy reporter

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