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FIGHT CONTINUES OVER EAST STREET DEVELOPMENT
Waverley Council denies accusations
of secrecy and injustice over East Street
East Street Action has
been accused of going the wrong way about being a positive influence on
the East Street redevelopment by Waverley Council's portfolio holder for
the project, Chris Mansell.
Mr Mansell was present
at the meeting organised by the pressure group three weeks ago, at which
an audience of 200 passed a motion of no confidence in the way Waverley
was managing the scheme.
The meeting heard a
catalogue of accusations of secrecy and injustice, which Mr Mansell, who
had held fire until after the local government elections, responded to
in a very details statement to The Farnham Herald.
He queried whether the town's best interests are being
served by the group's approach.
"Councillors are elected to take decisions on behalf of
the community and officers are appointed on the basis of their
professional expertise and diligence.
"These two groups have the main impact ion decisions..
What effect on these groups do personally abusive letters to the
newspaper and mass meeting, hands-in-the-air motions of no confidence
really have?
"Members are working cross-party to get the East Street
project right," he said and referred to the "valuable input" of
"carefully thought through contributions from organisations like the
Farnham Society and the Chamber of Commerce and Farnham Town Council's
work on the Health Check and Urban Safety Management.
East Street Action, he suggested, was opposed in
principle to the regeneration of the East Street area.
"The whole point of a regeneration plan is that the
development is mixed and coordinated," he insisted.
"The evidence of the last 30 years is that town centre
schemes which set out to blend housing, commercial, retail, leisure and
community features give a more vibrant and coherent environment than
sporadic piecemeal development, which was the pattern in the 60s and 70s
and gave rise to some of the bland wastelands that some of the UK's town
centres have since become.
"East Street Action clearly wants to revert to that
approach."
At the meeting the pressure group had complained that the
development was being driven by financial considerations.
"Is it really surprising that Crest-Nicholson, a
medium-sized public company, expects to make a profit?" asked Chris
Mansell.
"Does East Street Action really expect a development
valued at £100m to be undertaken without financial considerations?"
He queried what the effect on Farnham would be if the
developer went bankrupt halfway through the construction period.
And, with regard to Waverley's financial interest, he
said the most important point was how the money was spent.
"Within the development there are already valuable
community benefits - a pedestrianised East Street, refurbished
Brightwell's House, significant affordable housing, a revamped Gostrey
Centre, landscaped public spaces, Shopmobility - which have a cost, and
Waverley councillors are responsible for making the decision on how the
gain will be eventually dispersed."
Speakers at the East Street Action meeting spoke out
about the uncertainly facing the Gostrey Club, and Brightwell tennis and
bowls clubs.
Mr Mansell countered: "The needs of the Gostrey Club are
well understood and officers are working away at potential solutions
until a best option emerges.
"With the changed situation at Riverside the same applies
to the location of the tennis and bowls clubs, although in the case of
the former there needs to be a wider debate as to whether a private club
of 80 members should occupy an important green space at the heart of the
development to the exclusion of many hundreds of local residents of all
ages."
East Street Action has made claims that the NOP survey
which showed support for a mixed use scheme was distorted through the
questions asked.
But Mr Mansell defended the poll, pointing to changes
made to the proposals as a result. "NOP World is an £80m turnover
international research company - its work depends crucially on
sustaining credibility and integrity," he said.
He went on to deal in some detail with traffic issues,
referring to the "familiar apocalyptic generalisations which East Street
Action have been offering" and flood risk issues affecting Riverside,
claiming "just because a project is difficult does not make it wrong."
He acknowledged that the construction period - the dust,
noise and traffic - will be difficult.
"Mitigating this will be a key element of the developer's
planning application. It will require imaginative thinking."
Mr Mansell pointed out that East Street Action had made
no mention of the report of the South East design Panel, which described
Waverley's proactive approach to developing the land as an example to
other local authorities.
And he concluded with a challenge to East Street Action
with the first of four meetings of the Design Consultative Forum
expected to take place on 7 June.
The protest group have been invited to participate and
the public are also welcome.
But these are not occasions for accusation and posturing.
Hopefully, East Street Action will take advantage of the opportunity
offered to them to crystalise their work into well-researched and
measured statements that will contribute positively to a successful
outcome for Farnham and Waverley."
This article first appeared in the
Farnham Herald, Friday 20 May 2005. Note that in the Herald
attendance at the meeting was mistakenly reported as 700.
Details of the public
meeting |