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EPPING FOREST: New homes target 'threatens green belt'

9:58am Tuesday 1st July 2008

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By James Colasanti »

A SEARCH for sites for thousands of new homes should not lead to erosion of the green belt or cramped flat developments, a senior councillor has warned.

Epping Forest District Council is appealing for landowners to put forward potential sites for developments over the next 15 years which will be aimed at meeting housing and employment targets, and the need for more traveller sites.

Sites will be judged against their potential social, economic and environmental impact - including flood risks or heritage importance - before being put out for public consultation.

The appeal is part of the council's formulation of its new Local Development Framework, which will outline the planning strategy for the district over the next 20 years.

It is also driven by the need to provide additional travellers sites and create thousands of new jobs and homes in the district by 2021, as part of the Government's East of England Plan, published in May.

Liberal Democrat group leader Jon Whitehouse welcomed the process, but called for strict guidelines.

He said: "Obviously the need for new homes is the driving force here and we recognise that need.

"But it's important this should not become a free-for-all for development, and the danger is that the pressure for new houses will damage the areas which make the district such a special place to live in the first place, such as our forest.

"What we don't want to see is inappropriate blocks of flats crammed into back gardens, and the council needs to put together very strict criteria as to where development is appropriate.

"It's crucial to make sure the necessary infrastructure is in place too, or developments will be turned down as we have just seen with homes plan on the St Margaret's Hospital site in Epping."

Planning and economic development portfolio holder Anne Grigg said the council was looking for landowners thinking about redeveloping a residential or brownfield site.

But she added it was "not an invitation to concrete over large swathes of green belt".

Landowners, developers, agents, residents, and parish and town councils who have submitted a local planning application in recent years are urged to complete a land availability form and return it to the district council by Friday, July 18.

l For further information, or to download the forms, visit www.eppingforestdc.gov.uk.

Your Say Your Guardian

Nigel, East Herts says...
3:23pm Tue 1 Jul 08

I do however note that Epping Forest Council have been quite happy to support the concreting over the green belt north of Harlow in East Herts .

Jonathan Smyth, Loughton says...
3:29pm Tue 1 Jul 08

Nigel,
Check your facts. The recently published East of England Plan outlines how many numbers Epping Forest, Harlow and East Herts have to take. It's Harlow that's driving this with the Government. The fact we have to build a MINIMUM of 16,000 new houses between us is set in stone. If we don't do it, the Government will introduce an agency to do it for us, as they have in Cambridge and other areas. We estimate 4,500 will have to be found in Epping Forest, so that seems like a pretty fair split to me...!!

Jay, Loughton says...
5:36pm Tue 1 Jul 08

Sadly this is the start of the Government's plan to connect C. London - Epping with housing.

And the government's plan includes building on Epping Forest near the Wakes Arms roundabout and the entrance of Epping! So some of Epping Forest will be lost despite what EFDC say.

Nigel, East Herts says...
12:06pm Wed 2 Jul 08

Jonathan, I do not dispute that the Government has forced unsustainable housing numbers on the districts.
What I challenge is Epping Forest Council's plea to save its own Green Belt when it has publicly argued for development north of Harlow in East Herts' Green belt.
The meeting of Epping Forest and Harlow Council leaders to actively push this proposal was reported in the press.
The Council's position on development north of Harlow is clear from the various submission made to public consultations and at the Examination in Public.
As an active campaigner, elected councillor and somebody you had a seat at the Examination in Public I do know my facts.

The whole Plan is now subject to a judicial review brought by Hertfordshire County Council. I hope Epping Forest Council would support this action

Nigel, East Herts says...
12:26pm Wed 2 Jul 08

At Epping Forest Council on 26th June the Leader can be clearly heard on the web cast to say the Plans is "as we wanted it -the main thrust of that Plan is for Harlow north "

Gemma, says...
4:07pm Wed 2 Jul 08

bye bye Essex countryside!

helen, e17 says...
3:04pm Thu 3 Jul 08

I would say the Epping councillors are doing a job: trying to protect their area and their constituents from at least some of the ravages of the East of England plan and trying to preserve its identity and sense of place. Who can answer where are all the extra people coming from? Where are they now?

girlfromessex, Loughton says...
6:30pm Thu 3 Jul 08

I have just been looking at the plans for Debden Broadway - new homes everywhere, including on the site of the station carpark. Given the problems we have had down there with people not being able to get into the carpark, you would have thought they would have thought twice before proposing building on that site. There is a public consultation, so anyone who doesn't want to see the Winston Churchill pub and service station knocked down for housing or the carpark being used in the same way, please go to the Epping Forest District Council website and complete the online opinion survey. Also write to Eleanor Laing MP. Again you can do that simply on line: http://www.hearfromy
ourmp.com/ You can also sign up to a petition to get Ms Laing to send out a newsletter to her constituents by email.

Pete Westley, chingford says...
6:20am Fri 4 Jul 08

has anyone taken into account the green house effect and the environmental impact on london as found in the rain forests and jungles the more trees felled the less the air is cleaned globely and even closer to home the current haze over london will become a smog

Kim Roberts, says...
11:31am Fri 4 Jul 08

Pete Westley wrote:
has anyone taken into account the green house effect and the environmental impact on london as found in the rain forests and jungles the more trees felled the less the air is cleaned globely and even closer to home the current haze over london will become a smog
Nope, that's called 'Forward Thinking', something this Government isn't capable of!!!

Inézc, Epping says...
3:10pm Sat 5 Jul 08

Kim, there's little if any evidence that this Government is capable of any type of thought at all!

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