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New twist in site saga


A PUBLIC inquiry will be held to determine a contentious major planning application in Tadley after a Government minister stepped in.

The ongoing development saga at the Boundary Hall site has taken a new twist as John Denham, the Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government, has called in the application to be looked at by a public inquiry and decided centrally.

In February, Basingstoke and Deane Borough Council’s development control committee approved plans for Cala Homes to build 115 new homes on the former Ministry of Defence site.

The application falls within a 3km Detailed Emergency Planning Zone surrounding the Atomic Weapons Establishment at Aldermaston, and following the committee’s approval, the Health and Safety Executive wrote to the Government Office for the South East (GOSE) to formally request that the application be determined by Whitehall.

Matt Laxton, head of housing and planning at GOSE, said: “What happens next is the parties involved in the inquiry – the developer, the local authority and Planning Inspectorate – will draw up a bespoke timetable.

“Then the inquiry will take place and the inspector will issue his or her report to the Secretary of State who will consider the report and make a decision.

“The timing depends on how ready [the parties] are. The Planning Inspectorate are keen to do it sooner rather than later but it depends on the timetable.”

Giorgio Framalicco, planning development manager at the borough council, said: “It is likely that a public inquiry will be held during the summer although the formal timetable has yet to be agreed by the Planning Inspectorate.

“Once the timetable has been agreed those residents who made a comment on the planning application will be formally notified of the arrangements.”

Comments(2)

Ricecracker says...
11:32pm Sun 21 Mar 10

I hope the planning inquiry will look carefully at the risks presented to the public by AWE Aldermaston. This much needed development would have been built long ago were it not for the proximity of the Boundary Hall site to the AWE site, and the evasiveness of AWE in discussing safety issues with local councils.

king_of_basingstoke says...
9:57am Tue 23 Mar 10

What totally scares me is that our local council have this as a 'Detailed Emergency Planning Zone'. Given their inability to deal with snow I'd be seriously concerned if there were any kind of 'incident' at the site. It's almost worthy of a deep, painfully belly laugh.


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