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Eco-town hint dropped

6:08am Friday 6th June 2008

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THE proposed eco-town scheme near Weston-on-the-Green would need substantial amendments in order to go forward, the Government has hinted.

And the Government has moved to defuse local opposition by pledging it would not permit Oxford's Green Belt to be sacrificed for new eco-homes.

But the reassurance came with the message that the Government was now viewing the scheme to build 15,000 homes on the M40/A34 junction as "a strong proposal".

Campaigners against the proposed Weston Otmoor settlement say that the 2,000-acre site put forward by the developer Parkridge is largely farmland.

And they insist that at least a quarter of the land being earmarked for an eco-settlement falls within the Green Belt.

A spokesman for the Department of Communities and Local Government said that the Government would not abandon its earlier promise to protect the Green Belt.

The spokesman said: "This site is a greenfield site, as set out in the consultation document, and the decision to shortlist this location was taken on that basis.

"But as we have made clear throughout, no eco-town will build housing on Green Belt land - and this includes the Weston Otmoor proposal.

"Weston Otmoor is a strong proposal but there are challenges that developers need to address, as with all locations on the shortlist. No decisions have been taken on the bids that will go forward and only the best ones with the highest environmental standards will be in with a chance of making the final shortlist."

He added: "We desperately need more homes in this country for our young families and first-time buyers, and eco-towns are a unique opportunity to provide more affordable housing where it is needed, while pioneering new green ways of living that will act as a showcase for new development everywhere."

The three-month consultation on preliminary views on 'eco-town' benefits and shortlisted locations ends at the end of this month.

Developer Parkridge already controls 1,600 acres of the site through options to buy farmland from a consortium of landowners. It has also held talks to acquire the remaining 325 acres - the Weston-on-the-Green airfield - from the Ministry of Defence.

The Government comments leave open the option of Green Belt land within the site remaining open for recreation and park land.

Tony Henman, of the Weston Front group, created to oppose the scheme, said he found the Government's comments to be "ambivalent".

He said: "I think they are encouraging in some ways. But we cannot trust the Government. They seem to be making it up as they go along. When they are confronted with a problem they try to engineer their way around it.

"We estimate that between 25 and 30 per cent of the site is in the Green Belt and the rest is greenfield."

The leader of Oxfordshire County Council, Keith Mitchell, has written to Housing and Planning Minister Caroline Flint listing "elementary mistakes" in the Government's assessment of the site.

Mr Mitchell expressed amazement in the letter that the Government classified the site as brownfield.

He wrote: "The vast majority of the site is farmland. About 16 per cent is Weston-on-the-Green airfield, but virtually all that is grass.

"If arguments are being based upon factual inaccuracy, then that lends credence to my belief that a lot of the mathematics that has been done around the much-needed infrastructure will also be full of holes.

"This whole rushed proposal seems to be quickly gaining a distinct air of superficiality."

Meanwhile, the wildlife group BBOWT this week launched its own campaign to stop Weston Otmoor from going ahead.

BBOWT said the settlement would threaten its Woodsides Meadow Nature Reserve, a nationally important wildlife site and a complex of traditional hay meadows called Wendlebury Meads and Mansmoor Closes.

Matthew Jackson, head of policy and planning at BBOWT, said: "BBOWT works hard to protect and nurture the wildlife that does manage to survive and will not stand by and watch such a rare and wonderful slice of countryside be wantonly damaged by this proposal."


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con man cam, N orth Oxon says...
10:08am Fri 6 Jun 08

Why clog the area south of Bicester when there is a perfectly feasible place just up the road at Upper Heyford which is being wasted by the Tory controlled Cherwell Council plans to revert the area back to how it was in the early part of the 20th century
There is ample space to not only have the rail link but also a link straight on to the M40 if you then dammed the valley below you could have the reservoir required by TW in the north of the county it is flooded most winters anyway
so it would be no loss to the general population so come on Mr Mitchell look after the future of Oxfordshire push for all MOD sites to be put to housing the young people who were born in the area instead of looking after your golfing partners and private club members
RAF Bicester MOD sites Piddington, Arncott, Graven Hill, Upper Heyford and Weston on the Green could accommodate the number required easily so do what you were elected for get the youngsters to stay and increase the wealth of the county it does not belong just to the MASONS and their cohorts

Kevan Barnhill, Weston On The Green says...
9:17pm Fri 6 Jun 08

If you ignore the Nu-Lab, class-war, conspiracy theory, ramblings of 'con man cam', he actualy almost makes a good point. If an 'eco-town' must be built in North Oxfordshire, it's difficult to ignore Upper Heyford. The place is an eye-sore that will cost millions to restore - it is right next to the M40 - it's next to a mainline rail station - and it already has gas, electricity, and water. Why are the Brown Nu-Lab class-warriors so keen to rip up 2000 acres of virgin, green fields, when there is one of the largest brownfield sites in the south of England just 5 miles up the road? The more you look at Nu-Labour's 'eco-town' agenda, the more it smells of sheer spite and vindictivness. We need positive actions - not acts of wanton vandelism.

Jock, Headington says...
10:56pm Fri 6 Jun 08

Does anyone else notice too that in all the floods of recent months and years it seems that the Ray in Islip is one of the rivers that is often first to get put onto the highest "flood warning" status. The Ray drains Otmoor and presumably much of the area to the west of Otmoor proper, and this eco-town proposal is right in that basin I'd have thought. That Otmoor, being pretty much like fenland in parts, is like a giant sponge and its main outflow so readily floods should be a big cause for concern as regard adding new development in the area drained by the Ray and its tributaries.

Kevan Barnhill, Weston On The green says...
3:03pm Sat 7 Jun 08

Jock, you're completly correct. Part of this idiotic 'eco-town' scheme involves destroying the Wendlebury flood defences! Just how deliberatly increasing the risk of flooding is supposed to be 'eco' is beyond me or anybody else I've met! Still, Parkridge won't care (they just have an eye on the huge profits to be made), Nu-Labour won't care either - they just seem to want to destroy some more of the English countryside they seem to despise so much.

Robin Stafford Allen, Weston on the Green says...
1:25pm Mon 9 Jun 08

I agree with Kevan that the siting of the Eco-town is logically bonkers. Heyford just 5 miles to the North would make a much more suitable site, and it is on top of a rise, so flooding is not an issue, and wind turbine energy generation a real possibility.
However this muddles up 'logical reasoning' with the proposal from Parkridge which could make them a lot of MONEY and the governement have POLITICAL ideaology to drive them (and a significant bung of more MONEY from Parkridge). These factors are far more likely to drive a decision from this lot in power than logic.

Pity that.

Robin...

Paul J. Lewis, Sonning Common says...
12:37pm Thu 12 Jun 08

Much of the 'logic' behind the 'newspeak' of so-called eco-towns is elucidated very well in George Monbiot's book 'Captive State'. This was written years ago but seems to be even more true today then it was then. Essentially this is just part of the New Labour fire-sale (but started under the Tories) to flog of to big business anything they can get their hands on, democracy be damned.

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