Mill Hill East Transport (before the bean counters cut it all)

 

Thursday, 13 October 2011

Daily Telegraph: "Planning minister Greg Clark faces opposition from his own council in Tunbridge Wells"

Link to Daily Telegraph

"Conservative-controlled Tunbridge Wells Borough Council this morning voted to accept a report from its own planning officials calling for reforms to the National Planning Policy Framework.

"The study will now be sent to Mr Clark, who is MP for Tunbridge Wells, at the Department of Communities and Local Government ahead of the ending of a consultation on the reforms on Monday.

"The draft NPPF, which distils 1,300 pages of planning guidance into as few as 52, writes into planning rules a new “presumption in favour of sustainable development”, without defining clearly what it means."

Saturday, 8 October 2011

Barnet-on-Sea

Link to BBC web site

"Semi-detached houses with gardens, clothes drying in the courtyards, walls and well-made streets - Pavlopetri epitomises the suburban way of life. Except that it's a Bronze Age port, submerged for millennia off the south-east coast of Greece.

"This summer it became the first underwater city to be fully digitally mapped and recorded in three dimensions, and then brought back to life with computer graphics."

Tuesday, 4 October 2011

Mill Hill East plan gets planning permission

Click above for overall plan (PDF file from 2009)
The dustcart depot is bottom-centre.


The Inglis Consortium a group of landowners (comprising VSM Estates, Annington Property and the London Borough of Barnet) has received outline planning permission from the London Borough of Barnet for the redevelopment of its new ''Millbrook Park' ['Mill Hill East' to anyone else] development in London. The site is now expected to be sold on as a phased development. 

Sunday, 2 October 2011

Sunday Telegraph: "Bill Bryson warns the Coalition against turning England into a suburban nation"

Link to Sunday Telegraph

"Bill Bryson, US-born, British resident, incurably Anglophile, is warning that the country he loves is at risk of turning into the country he is from thanks to the Government's proposed reforms to the planning laws:
"Where I grew up, in Des Moines, Iowa, there is hardly any downtown economic activity now. Everybody shops in malls – you don't find a sense of community in malls. The solution, he suggests, lies in building on brownfield sites, or in Britain's 'very appealing, liveable towns' – with their existing infrastructure and unoccupied properties.

The Government talks as if the planning system is an impediment to growth. I would say it stops foolish or greedy people being rapacious to the built environment."

Thursday, 29 September 2011

Daily Telegraph: "Top civil servant lands planning job"

Link to Daily Telegraph

"Richard McCarthy, a director-general at the Department for Communities and Local Government, is joining Capita Symonds, which advises major developers on planning and construction. 

"The department said he was leaving his £180,000-a-year post after bringing about 'major changes in planning'. 

"John Mann, a Labour MP, said Mr McCarthy’s move was 'wholly unacceptable' and risked a major conflict of interest."

Monday, 26 September 2011

Daily Telegraph: "Planning reforms already having an impact on countryside"

Link to Daily Telegraph

"Planning officials have cited the Government's proposed changes to the planning system in a series of contentious decisions even though the new guidelines have yet to come into force. 

"The disclosure shows that the new 'presumption in favour of development' and the end of the 'brownfield first' rule in the current system which limits development in rural areas are being used already to decide whether building goes ahead."

Thursday, 15 September 2011

BBC: "What would Britain look like without a green belt?"

Link to BBC web site

"Plans to speed up England's planning process put the green belt at risk, campaigners warn. But what would the country look like without such a system?

"For its supporters it has preserved cherished landscapes and the British way of life. Its critics claim it has hindered development, stifled growth and fuelled house price inflation.

"Its advocates say that, without the protection it has afforded, cities like London would expand ever-outwards, subsuming smaller settlements beyond its boundaries such as Hertford and Guildford. Opponents say other European countries have managed to prevent this kind of urban creep without green belt policies."

Wednesday, 14 September 2011

'Rejoin the two branches of the Northern Line,' say campaigners

Link to 2-sided PDF leaflet
(ignore any incorrect 'unsafe web site' message)

"Barnet Council has predicted over 29,000 extra cars every working day at Brent Cross Cricklewood (including West Hendon). This means massive jams!

"Whatever the figure, it is not possible to build 14-million square feet of shops, offices, and homes at Brent Cross, plus MORE at Colindale, plus MORE at Mill Hill East, without creating huge road congestion across Barnet."

Daily Telegraph: "Green belt will have 'no protection' despite promises of ministers"

Link to Daily Telegraph

"Researchers at the independent House of Commons library have said that the Government’s legal presumption in favour of sustainable development will apply 'even within the green belt'.

"The framework’s legal presumption tells councils to 'plan positively for new development, and approve all individual proposals wherever possible'. It has led to warnings over unrestrained development, and is being opposed by groups including the National Trust and the Campaign for the Protection of Rural England."

Sunday, 11 September 2011

Sunday Telegraph: "Flight to countryside fuels housing problem"

Link to Sunday Telegraph

"The current struggle between ministers and the rural lobby over the future of planning in England is a real 'culture war'. 

"It is a stand-off between protectors of the countryside and a Government which believes existing plans stifle economic growth and, in particular, house-building.

"The past success of the lobby to protect the countryside has had the effect of making it even more desirable. Cities are often seen as dangerous and cramped places to live."

Tuesday, 6 September 2011

BBC: "Barnet FC blasts council on Copthall stadium plans"

Link to BBC London

"The chairman of Barnet Football Club has criticised the borough over plans for the redevelopment of a stadium.

"Tony Kleanthous said Barnet Council had made it impossible for the League Two side to move to the Copthall stadium in north London.


"Responding to Barnet FC's claims, Councillor Richard Cornelius, Leader of Barnet Council, simply said: 'Rubbish'."

Monday, 5 September 2011

Watford Observer: "Saracens submit revised £18m planning application for Copthall as Barnet issue angry statement"

(Sarries chief executive Edward Griffiths) 
Link to Watford Observer

" Saracens have submitted a revised planning application for Copthall, which will involve investing £18m into reviving the stadium.

"Barnet issued a statement today on their website criticising Barnet Council, and accusing them of trying to 'push football out of the area and move rugby in'."

Daily Telegraph: "Planning reforms: George Osborne says 'We are determined to win this battle'."

Link to Daily Telegraph

"The Chancellor defended the controversial changes to planning reforms, that campaigners claim will damage the countryside, as 'key to our economic recovery'.

"Planning delays cost the economy up to £3bn a year, and reform is 'imperative' to kick-start growth to Britain’s faltering economy."

Sunday, 4 September 2011

The Observer: Planning Changes

(Mary Creagh, Labour's environment spokesman)
Link to The Observer

"Campaigners and grassroots Tories fear excessive development under the new Draft National Planning Policy Framework, which was published in July and features a presumption in favour of 'sustainable development"'

"Fiona Reynolds, director of the 3.5 million-member National Trust, has called for a fundamental rethink of the reforms. 'We firmly believe that the government has got its proposals for planning reform wrong,' she said.

"As the Observer reports today, Britain's leading countryside campaigner, the author Bill Bryson, has now added his voiced to the chorus, increasing the pressure for a U-turn."



(Bill Bryson, president of the Campaign to Protect Rural England)
Link to The Observer
"Britain's leading countryside campaigner, Bill Bryson, has joined a growing wave of opposition to government moves to shake up planning laws.

"As groups from the National Trust to the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds line up against proposals to ease new development across the country, Bryson told the Observer he was deeply concerned by the direction of policy.

" 'The government's good intentions risk being undermined by the talk of economic growth at any cost,' said the American writer, who champions the English countryside and is president of the Campaign to Protect Rural England (CPRE). 'We are deeply worried to learn that environmental laws are regarded as red tape and that the planning system might be weakened to allow for more development'."

Evening Standard: "Warning over green space plans"

Link to web site

"New plans for designating green spaces could mean communities lose out on being able to protect local areas they cherish, the UK's oldest conservation organisation has warned.

"The Open Spaces Society is concerned that ministers are set to weaken, abolish or completely change the rules that allow people to register a local space as a new 'village green' if they have used it for recreation for more than 20 years."

Wednesday, 31 August 2011

The Independent Leading Article: "Time to rethink the Green Belt"

Link to web site

"Houses trebled in price in the decade to 2007. A global credit squeeze is requiring young couples to come up with £40,000-plus deposits. Waiting lists for social housing are at record levels. And both house prices and rents are predicted to soar by 20 per cent over the next five years."

Thursday, 25 August 2011

Barnet Press: "Green campaigner slams the ‘barking mad’ bicycle policy"

Link to Barnet Press


"A LONDON Assembly member has described Barnet Council’s attitude to cyclists as 'beyond old-fashioned' and that more should be done to make this a bike-friendly borough.

"Green Party member Jenny Jones went on a fact-finding mission around Barnet to discover how the Smarter Travel scheme, aimed at converting drivers into cyclists and pedestrians, would work in the borough."

Wednesday, 27 July 2011

Daily Telegraph: "New planning laws threaten green belt"

Link to Daily Telegraph

"The new national planning policy "dramatically" simplifies the planning system, including slashing 1,000 pages of policy to just 52.

"However environmental groups fear it will lead to more homes on the green belt and destruction of wildlife habitat.

"The proposals, launched for consultation, will not be made offical policy until next year but will already be affecting plans for development.

"Greg Clarke, the planning minister, said it would make it much quicker to build a new house or office block."

Tuesday, 26 July 2011

The Independent: "National Trust concerns over planning move"

Link to The Independent

"The National Trust today voiced 'grave concerns' over Government proposals aimed at dramatically simplifying the planning system, warning of 'damaging development' not seen since the 1930s.

"Ministers said they wanted to slash 1,000 pages of policy to just 52, while continuing to protect the green belt and areas of natural or scientific beauty.

"Fiona Reynolds, the trust's director general, said:
"Despite some warm words to this effect, the document makes it clear that development is to be encouraged, even urging local authorities to promote more development than is in the plan, and over-allocate land for housing."

Friday, 10 June 2011

Mr Reasonable: "Barnet Internal Audit Report - It just gets worse!"

Link to Mr Reasonable

"Having ploughed my way through the 268 pages of the Audit Committee papers I have to say that I am utterly shocked by what I have read. On top of what I have already reported on MetPro, the Internal Audit Annual Opinion Report goes much further on the various shortcomings.

"The overall internal audit opinion is only 'limited assurance' - that is, one step above no assurance."



From the report:
  • The Waste Prevention Strategy [below] has been ineffective in delivery of outcomes
  • The Waste Prevention Strategy has not been reviewed since 2005, to ensure that it remains fit for purpose or current
  • There are no governance arrangements in place to scrutinise, oversee and challenge the Waste Prevention Strategy
  • The Waste Project Board does not have a terms of reference, and focuses mainly on project management issues not strategic issues.

Link to document

The Guardian: "UK cities may ban heavily polluting traffic to avoid EU fines"

Link to The Guardian

"The government may act to force local authorities to ban heavily polluting traffic in most British cities, to try to control deadly nitrogen dioxide (NO2) emissions, and avoid unlimited fines from Europe.

"Funding must be prioritised for measures to help people walk, cycle and use public transport more. Schemes that increase the amount of traffic must be abandoned," said Jenny Bates, Friends of the Earth's London campaigner.

"Britain's air quality record is among the worst in Europe, and is already breaking European law for particulate, or PM10, pollution and nitrogen dioxide. According to a Mayor of London-commissioned study, poor air quality causes around 4,300 premature deaths in London every year, and studies show that poor air quality increases risks of heart attacks, asthma attacks and respiratory illness."

Monday, 23 May 2011

Barnet Times: "Saracens reveal new impressions of Mill Hill stadium on day they receive backing from UK Athletics"

Link to Barnet Times
"Plans to revamp Barnet Copthall Stadium by Premiership side Saracens would make it a 'key facility' for athletics, according to UK Athletics, the sports’ governing body.

"Today the rugby club has also released new artist’s impressions of the Mill Hill stadium as it could look, which show the height of the new stands more accurately."

Tuesday, 17 May 2011

Link to Barnet Times


"A SECOND rugby body has given its backing to Saracens' plans to move to the Copthall Stadium.

"The Middlesex RFU, which governs the sport in the area, says the plans by the Men In Black, who yesterday scraped through to the Premiership Final, will 'bring huge long-term benefits' to the area"

Wednesday, 11 May 2011

Barnet Times: "Community director says Copthall stadium plans would benefit Mill Hill and Barnet"

Link to web site

"THE Rugby Football Union (RFU) has written to Barnet Council urging it to allow Saracens to redevelop the Copthall Stadium “for the good of sport in north London”.

"Yesterday 7,000 letters backing proposals to relocate the Premiership club to the Mill Hill site were handed to planners, including 1,500 from the local area."

Saturday, 7 May 2011

25 June - 2 July: Ninth Mill Hill Music Festival

Link to Festival web site

"Over the years, the Mill Hill Music Festival has played host to some great names of the musical world: Humphrey Lyttelton, Warren Vache, Scott Hamilton, Campbell Burnap, The Foundations, Paul Young, Stacey Kent, Acker Bilk, Alan Gresty & Brian White, Gwyneth Herbert, and many more.

"The Festival is organised by music lovers for music lovers, on a not-for-profit basis, and we hope you'll take time this summer to enjoy some wonderful music with us."

Friday, 6 May 2011

Barnet Times: "Saracens' plans for Mill Hill's Copthall stadium criticised in Mayor's report"

Link to web site

"In a stage one ruling by the Mayor - on the Copthall Stadium proposals to develop the 1960s athletics stadium into a 10,000-seater venue - the officers say there is too much car parking, and that it threatens the Green Belt."

Thursday, 5 May 2011

Evening Standard: "Tory Brian Coleman wants to block Saracens stadium move"

Link to Evening Standard
"Brian Coleman opposes a move by Saracens to Barnet's Copthall stadium after his council agreed the club could take over for a peppercorn rent. And in a rallying cry to residents who are also against the scheme, he advised them to 'stick with it and lobby hard'."

Wednesday, 4 May 2011

Barnet Times: " Two leading Barnet Tory politicians oppose Saracens Copthall plans"

Link to Barnet Times
"Last night around 300 residents, many against the proposals by the Premiership club, packed out Copthall School's hall for a meeting, chaired by Hendon MP Matthew Offord to gauge public opinion.

"The plans were set to go before a planning committee in June, but Councillor Coleman, who is in charge of transport and the environment in the borough, said he had been told here were problems and vowed: 'I will not put in a controlled parking zone'."