Monday 25 June 2012

H&F press on with Market development

H&F: Putting Developers First
Nick Botterill, H&F's new Leader, has decided to follow his predecessor Stephen Greenhalgh's style, which came so spectacularly undone last week, and put two fingers up to the Judge who found the Council to have acted unlawfully over their determination to allow the developers Orion to bulldoze the historic Goldhawk Road row of shops.

Greenhalgh promised, at this public meeting in December 2010 and on behalf of H&F Council, not to do this if the shop owners did not want it to happen. I have been told by source who would have a cast iron claim to know that the day after I reported this there were frantic phone calls from the H&F press office to senior managers at Orion to try to get them to deny that he had ever said it. They knew that he had, so they didn't. But that level of stage management tells you all you need to know about this council's style - and it's a great shame that Mr Botterill seems to want to carry it on.

The council maintains that they were found to be acting illegally only on one process and that the planning permission was granted via another one. So ya-boo to you, we'll do it anyway.

The shop owners all received notices of Compulsory Purchase Order last Friday and signs have been posted on lamp-posts in and around the Market giving notice of the works going ahead. The traders, however, are not about to give in and are meeting lawyers later today.

The council's defeat in court last time cost the tax payer tens of thousands of pounds. It looks like a return to the High Court is on the cards again - and guess what, you the public are paying.

4 comments:

  1. More development, more offices, more flats, more people, more cars in one of the most congested boroughs in London.

    This Council doesn't worry about the traders or residents.

    But they are attracting more wildfowl to our borough - I've never seen so many cranes in our neighbourhood.

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  2. And I thought Tories believed in the rule of law....was I being naive?

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  3. No doubt any judge who dares to oppose the compulsory purchase will go the way of council staff and be made 'redundant' due to the 'cuts'. Local business people will then be replaced by the property developers, the only industry left now.

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  4. Of course the Tories believe in the rule of law. In the 'Right' hands used in the 'Right' way...

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