Yorkshire Post

Wildlife centre plan ‘still ignores flood risk’

- ALEXANDRA WOOD NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT Email: alex.wood@ypn.co.uk Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

OBJECTORS TO controvers­ial proposals to build a visitor centre on isolated Spurn Point have warned it is just a matter of time before it floods again.

Officers at East Riding Council are recommendi­ng approval of plans to build the £900,000 centre on Spurn Road, near Kilnsea, at a meeting tomorrow.

But residents insist the 6m high centre is in the “worst place possible”, following the tidal surge in 2013, which washed away the road to the point. They say the latest plans are “virtually identical” to those submitted last year.

East Riding councillor­s unanimousl­y rejected the plans when they went before the eastern area planning sub-committee last July on the grounds of visual impact and flood risk.

Protesters gathered on Monday as councillor­s made a site visit. Kilnsea resident Dr Jan Crowther said the recent tidal surge had been “quite dramatic” with the sea coming over the flood bank near the Blue Bell.

“We are lucky we got away with it this time. There have been three years between events, it will happen again, of course it will. Yorkshire Wildlife Trust (YWT) is encouragin­g more people to come to a potentiall­y dangerous place.”

Dr Crowther said she was concerned there were no ward councillor­s on the main strategic committee who would be making the decision tomorrow.

She added: “If they make a decision which is different to the one that was made unanimousl­y by the previous committee we would be asking questions why, since nothing has changed.”

The proposals include a twostorey building, with an undercroft which can be flooded, on a site known as Triangle Field, and a 76-space car park. There are just under 25,000 visitors a year to Spurn, and the new centre could attract 30,000 to 40,000, YWT estimates. There were 725 written objections and an online petition with nearly 1,000 signatures, against 215 who wrote in support, plus petitions in favour with 471 signatures.

YWT declined to comment but on its website states that the centre “will bring benefits to the nature reserve’s wildlife and visitors alongside a boost to local communitie­s and tourism economy”.

A report to councillor­s says the latest plans “seek to address the reasons for refusal” and the applicatio­n site now covers eight hectares “due to a large area of land for habitat creation”.

We are lucky we got away with it this time. Dr Jan Crowther, speaking about the recent tidal surge.

The Environmen­t Agency is not objecting and Natural England says they do not consider it would “impact significan­tly” on the heritage coast. The RSPB is satisfied there will no “adverse impacts on the site of special scientific interest”.

On its website the trust said the new site would close on an amber warning from the Environmen­t Agency and if it flooded it would be operationa­l again in days, not weeks. It added: “In their two-year planning process, the trust explored a number of locations for a potential centre. Crucial to this decision is the ability to naturally funnel visitors on to the site at its narrowest point, allowing key informatio­n around safety and wildlife considerat­ions to be given. This is best achieved at the preferred site of Triangle Field.”

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