Yes, in your backyard
Can the government now ride roughshod over its own planning inspectors
This article by Norna Hughes appeared in The Times, August
18, 2004
Would you like a new runway near your backyard, or perhaps a nuclear
power plant or maybe even a waste-recycling centre? Probably not.
However, even if your backyard is in the allegedly protected green
belt, with all the planning restrictions that usually apply, if
the Government deems those plans amount to "very special circumstances"
and are thus in the "national interest" then the protection
of such planning law is useless.
This is the outcome from the recent case by animal protection groups
against the granting of permission to Cambridge University to site
a new primate testing facility on green belt land. Planning permission
had been refused by South Cambridgeshire District Council and, after
a public inquiry, a planning inspector recommended that the university's
appeal be dismissed. So where did it all go wrong?
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Norna Hughes, Solicitor, acted on behalf of Animal Aid and
the National Anti-Vivisection Society in our High
Court challenge.
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| Quite simply, the Government disagreed
with its own inspector because this scheme was in the "national
interest". During the inquiry, the university refused to produce
a witness to give evidence specifically on this issue and relied
instead on two letters written by Lord Sainsbury of Turville, Parliamentary
UnderSecretary of State for Science, to demonstrate that there was
a "need" for the centre. In the letters, Lord Sainsbury
said that the Department of Trade and Industry regarded the proposal
as "nationally important", though he recognised that the
Government "cannot comment at this stage on the specific site".
The existence of the letters had not been made available to the
local council when it considered the application, or to members
of the public affected. Objectors presented detailed evidence on
the lack of need for a non-human primate testing facility on the
site, arguing that the university had failed to explore the availability
of non-animal research.
The inspector concluded that the letters did not represent government
policy and that he had not found objective evidence to the effect
that this proposal was in the national interest. Unfortunately,
on appeal, Mr Justice Collins decided in the High Court that the
inspector was wrong not to have read the Sainsbury letters as government
policy in support of this facility and the First Secretary of State
(John Prescott) was right to rely on them as establishing "need".
The university can, therefore, build a non-human primate testing
facility on a green-belt site in Cambridge at any time over the
next five years.
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For the full background to the case see the
history of the Cambridge campaign.
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| This means that in future, if there
is a development that the Government wants to see developed - where
it would not normally receive planning permission, as in this case
because it was in the green belt - then a letter from a Government
minister stating it to be government policy has the effect of neutering
conventional consideration of a planning application. The relevant
considerations in determining the application in such cases would
only be whether there is a better alternative site/route in the
vicinity and what the site can physically accommodate the development.
So that runway could be near you.
This dramatically affects the ability of people to influence controversial
planning applications. There is a presumption against granting planning
permission for development in the green belt in the UK and this
can only be outweighed by "very special circumstances".
But if the Government decides that a proposal is in the national
interest, then any conflicting evidence on this issue from specialists
and members of the public can be disregarded.
So in fairness to everyone, if that is to be the way forward on
controversial developments then a clear statement of government
policy should accompany the planning application and the Government
should indicate in clear terms what evidence is to be excluded -
and why.
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Join Animal Aid in the campaign against animal experiments.
Send for a free vivisection
pack now or make
an online donation towards our Cambridge 'fighting fund'.
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