Yorkshire Post

Promises in ‘double standards’ Park row

- STUART MINTING LOCAL DEMOCRACY REPORTER ■ Email: yp.newsdesk@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

AN ORGANISATI­ON charged with conserving the natural beauty and cultural heritage of a National Park has issued assurances to villagers they will not face any more developmen­t after being accused of double standards.

The North York Moors National Park Authority was responding after residents of Coxwold spoke out over its approval of a housing scheme to help fund the restoratio­n of a nearby stately home, Newburgh Priory, which is said to be the final resting place of Oliver Cromwell.

To fund repairs to the Grade I listed former Augustinia­n priory, its ancestral owners, the Wombwell family, had applied to build four “principal residence” homes in an area of nearby Coxwold. Residents said the developmen­t would heighten flood risk, ruin views and spoil the village’s character.

Moira Fulton, who has lived in the village for 38 years, said by approving the scheme, the authority had ignored “all their own planning regulation­s which are normally very strictly enforced on ordinary people”.

She said: “Giving permission to Newburgh to build despite all planning regulation­s was another example of the Dominic Cummings syndrome, one rule for one. Obviously planning regulation­s do not apply when you are a large landowner.”

Coxwold residents said the

housing developmen­t would set a precedent for further developmen­ts in the village as it was passed on the basis that a Grade I listed building needed finances for its upkeep and that it would bring about affordable housing.

Chris France, the director of planning for the authority, said the decision had reflected its new Local Plan approach to housing in villages. The plan allows an appropriat­e increase in housing to help offset the National Park’s population loss, which has been a concern for some 20 years.

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