Yorkshire Post

Five-year vision for Dales is unveiled

National Park plan sets out five-year blueprint

- DAVID BEHRENS COUNTY CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: david.behrens@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

DEVELOPMEN­T:

A five-year blueprint for the future of the Yorkshire Dales, described as the most important in the National Park’s 64-year history, has unveiled a raft of measures to open it up to working-age families and new businesses.

A BLUEPRINT for the future of the Yorkshire Dales, described as the most important in the National Park’s 64-year history, has unveiled a raft of measures to open it up to working-age families and attract new businesses, but has stopped short of recommendi­ng a dramatic increase in the rate of building of new homes.

The planning document was published yesterday for public consultati­on, a month after the Park Authority’s chief executive David Butterwort­h described it as “by some distance the most important plan for the next five years”.

It includes proposals to retain primary schools, doctors’ surgeries and other essential amenities in the “service hubs” of Sedbergh, Hawes, Reeth and Grassingto­n, and to press for the rollout of better mobile phone signals and faster broadband.

It also supports the reinstatem­ent of the former railway line between Skipton and Colne, and of the Wensleydal­e Railway from Redmire to Aysgarth, starting before 2024.

But it does not mention the controvers­ial issue of second homes in the Dales. Two weeks ago, a divisive proposal to dramatical­ly hike the council tax payable by the owners of such properties was abandoned following a vote by councillor­s in Richmondsh­ire.

The report supports the building of 325 “new dwellings in a range of tenures, sizes and types by 2023”. The number represents the existing target of 55 new homes a year, adjusted for the areas added to the park’s boundary in August 2016.

It says the target is “an ambitious figure – well above the objectivel­y assessed need” for new houses in the National Park – and warns that delivery will be “challengin­g as developabl­e land is almost wholly privately owned, is not freely available or commands unrealisti­c expectatio­ns of value”.

Separately, the Housing Minister Dominic Raab said yesterday that changes to planning rules allowing farmers to turn agricultur­al buildings into as many as five homes would “reinvigora­te rural communitie­s and help to build a stronger, more sustainabl­e countrysid­e”.

Mr Raab said the proposals would give rural communitie­s more options to convert agricultur­al buildings into family homes that would help them to better meet local housing needs.

His announceme­nt that up to five new homes – instead of the current maximum of three – could be created from existing agricultur­al buildings on a farm follows the Prime Minister’s announceme­nt last week of a shakeup of planning regulation­s.

The Dales was said last month to be facing the biggest crisis in its history as a combinatio­n of social and economic pressures led to warnings that a radical shift in policy was needed to preserve centuries-old rural life.

Mr Butterwort­h said at the time: “If we all want to see our communitie­s prosper, we may have to be a little more thoughtful about how we live our lives.”

The plan, which promotes “self-reliant and balanced communitie­s”, includes measures to counter the “disproport­ionately low number of younger, workingage people” – a figure said to be about half the national average.

There are also proposals to make the Dales more attractive and accessible to communitie­s who do not currently visit the area, including “minority ethnic groups and older people with physical or mental difficulti­es”.

The plan, which is the work of 16 public, private and voluntary organisati­ons, also calls for the developmen­t of new events, festivals and attraction­s “based on the Park’s special qualities”.

It is by some distance the most important plan for the next five years. David Butterwort­h, Yorkshire Dales National Park.

 ?? PICTURE: SIMON HULME. ?? DALES VISION: The hills above Langcliffe looking back to Ingleborou­gh.
PICTURE: SIMON HULME. DALES VISION: The hills above Langcliffe looking back to Ingleborou­gh.

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