QUESTION:
What is going on in Southampton Road?
And
what is our publicly-funded system of planning controls worth?
First,
we’ve got Sainsbury’s daft plan for a superstore complete with built-to-flood
car park on the fields next to B&Q.
Despite
some 150 objections and the fact that the site is outside the city’s agreed development
boundaries, the supermarket chain is intent on pursuing this scheme, and is
presumably prepared to take Wiltshire Council through an expensive appeal
process if necessary.
And I
imagine there are plenty of people who would enjoy seeing Tesco face
a powerful challenger on its own out-of-town doorstep.
I
wouldn’t bet against the plan succeeding, given the track record of the final
arbiter, Communities Secretary Eric Pickles - unless our MP John Glen, who’s
his Parliamentary Private Secretary, also happens to be a miracle-worker.
Now
there is an apparently serious proposal to build a 65-bedroom hotel opposite
this mad megastore, between Tesco and the main road.
This
site is also flood plain which, the last time I looked at it a few days ago,
was doing its job – i.e. storing flood water which might otherwise inconvenience
nearby residents and businesses.
But
if the planners approve Sainsbury’s scheme, I can’t see any argument that would
prevent them approving a hotel, too. So maybe they’ll feel they have to turn
them both down? Who knows? We can only hope.
Meanwhile,
do you think we should give up trying to protect our little green wildernesses
on the basis that they’re a lost cause?
Is
yet more chaos on Southampton Road inevitable?
What
do you think local democracy actually amounts to?
With
elections to Wiltshire Council and Salisbury City Council fast approaching,
these are questions worth considering.
No comments:
Post a Comment