Permanent status bid for Newark traveller site expected to be rejected

An outline map of the site at Tolney Lane, which currently only has temporary status.
By Matt Jarram, Local Democracy Reporter

Newark and Sherwood District Council are set to reject plans to turn a temporary gypsy and traveller site into a permanent fixture.

The site, known as Green Park, is accessed from Tolney Lane in Newark via a route through an existing Gypsy and Traveller site known as Hirrams Paddock.

Green Park represents the final gypsy and traveller site at the south-western end of Tolney Lane.

The council says “the majority of the site” consisting of 10 pitches is within a flood zone and therefore plans to transform it into a permanent site would not be advisable.

In total, Tolney Lane accommodates a large gypsy and traveller community providing approximately 300 pitches, the council states.

Temporary permission for the 10 pitches at this site lasts until November 30, 2021, and the applicants wish to change the use of this part of the site to permanent.

Papers prepared for the council’s planning meeting on Tuesday, September 7, state: “When temporary permission was first granted on this site there were no available Gypsy and Traveller sites in areas at lower risk of flooding.

“To allow permanent occupation of the site at such high risk of flooding would therefore place both the occupants of the site and members of the emergency services at unnecessary risk.”

The agents for the site said: “In the six years the site has been occupied, the residents have become part and parcel of the local community and have demonstrated by their actions that they are good neighbours.

“Approving this application would resolve the accommodation needs of 10 Traveller families on a Previously Developed Site, whilst reducing unmet need and making a meaningful contribution to the required five-year supply.”

In the past, a planning inspector had deemed temporary occupancy of this site appropriate, overruling the council’s flood risk objection.

The council said the inspector’s reasoning was that a temporary five-year permission would allow the local authority to identify an alternative site of lesser flood risk to which the temporary occupants of this site could then be moved.

An alternative site of lesser flood risk has still not been identified.

A three-year extension of the site’s temporary permission is being sought if the council rejects the permanent proposal.

A decision will be made by the council’s planning committee on Tuesday, September 7.

(Visited 1 times, 1 visits today)