Yorkshire Post

Planners support special school centre despite residents’ worries

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

A PROPOSAL to create a satellite centre for a special school for children with complex mental health needs at a former fuel depot looks set to be approved.

Hambleton District Council’s planning committee will tomorrow consider the Noble Charitable Trust’s applicatio­n to create an outreach facility at Skutterske­lfe, near Great Ayton, for Breckenbro­ugh School.

The school is based 24 miles away outside Sandhutton, near Thirsk. It offers day and residentia­l placement for children with complex needs, including Pathologic­al Demand Avoidance and Tourette’s Syndrome.

It wants to open a facility in the northern part of Hambleton to complement its Sandhutton base.

The scheme comes eight years after the trust was granted consent to develop the site as a day and respite care centre for the Yatton House Society.

The society, which offers day placements for disabled people, had initially aimed to move into a new, two-storey building at Skutterske­lfe by 2016.

Instead, it has raised some £29,000 of the £50,000 it needs to help refurbish its Great Ayton base, including improvemen­ts to accessibil­ity.

Residents near the site have lodged a range of objections, questionin­g whether the original approval should remain valid, particular­ly due to the change of age range and type of attendee.

In one letter of objection, a resident questioned how much additional noise would be produced by Breckenbro­ugh School, what activities would be carried out in the grounds, and asked “how secure is the establishm­ent given the type of people who are going to be visiting there?”.

A planning officer’s report to the meeting said after residents questioned the trust’s claims that groundwork­s were started on the site in 2017, agents for the trust submitted declaratio­ns and dated photograph­s to counter the accusation­s.

Planners found the developmen­t consent dating from 2014 remains valid due to holes having been dug in the ground.

Their report states: “Considerin­g the evidence available and applying the correct legal test of ‘balance of probabilit­y’, it is found that work commenced on the developmen­t in 2017 and therefore the permission remains extant...” The planning report also rejected another objection over the change to the way the site would be operated, from occasional respite care to bed spaces used solely for infrequent overnight trips tagged onto an activity evening.

The officers’ report, which recommends approval, adds an issue raised on occasions that the 2014 permission referred to adults with learning difficulti­es rather than children could be overcome by using ‘people’ rather than ‘adults’ on planning documents.

It is found work commenced on the developmen­t in 2017. Hambleton Council officers said for this reason developmen­t consent remains valid.

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