Summary
of Comments.
Nearly 600
letters of comment, mostly objections, have been submitted in this
round
of consultation.
UK-Planning provide an on-line repository for the comments which have
been submitted both by members of the public and also by what are
termed statutory consultees. Confusingly the comments are scattered
around different parts of the site but the main bulk are spread between
the application for the
main
development and that for the effective
closure of the Bourley
Road car park.
Individuals who have written in may be interested to see if/how their
comments have been detailed in Hart's official summary
sheet.
We have provided links from this page to the comments made by
significant statutory consultees as they can be tricky to track down
on the UK-planning web-site.
- PAG (130k Bytes)
-
is Fleet & Church Crookham's Planning Advisory Group. This body,
which acts in place of a town Council, held a public meeting on 29th
November to discuss the QEB. Sadly only half the councillors who sit on
the committee turned up to listen to the debate, these were; Cllrs.
Stephen Parker, John Pearson, Wallace
Vincent, Sue Fisher James & Jenny Radley,
and Dennis Gotel. Those not hampered by being on
planning committee have recorded their views.
- Hampshire County
Council
Highways (310k Bytes) - rarely say no to a
development, some suggest that they
hate to turn down the developer's highway contributions. Nothing much
in their letter - no reference to the congestion expected to snarl up
Reading Road South. They rule out improving the junction between
Redfields Lane & the A287.
- English Nature
(1.2M Bytes) - At first sight EN appear to be
agreeing that the mitigation measures are sufficient to protect the
pSPA from the harmful impacts of the QEB development. However they do
state that the removal of their objection is dependent on the
securing of long-term funding to ensure that these measures are
effective. As has been stated in Hart District's local plan, nature
conservation is for ever (in perpetuity) - so securing this funding may
be a major challenge for the developer.
- RSPB (200 kBytes)
- Pleased by some of the advancements made by Taylor Woodrow - but
still holding their objection until it can be proven through legal
agreements that their nature conservation measures can be made to work.
In particular they require funding to be available "in perpetuity", which according to
my dictionary is a very long time.