The creation of 9
no. off-street parking spaces and planting of 3no. new trees.
Officers introduced the application, which had
been previously deferred for a site visit.
Members considered the request to defer the
item and decided to consider the application without deferral.
The applicant and agent addressed the
Committee and made the following points:
- It was important to discuss the
current application, and not future or other applications
- Many people were affected by the
current lack of dedicated parking
- Safe and ready access to cars was a
necessity
- After the previous meeting and site
visit, the applicant had been asked to implement a controlled
parking scheme. This had been implemented for six months but
ultimately failed
- A large white van parked illegally
had partially obstructed the road before it was clamped, and before
it could be removed an emergency vehicle was unable to pass.
Therefore, the controlled parking scheme was suspended
- A parking control scheme was
considered integral, but due to the narrow nature of the road,
parking must be off street
- This would allow for safe and
clearer access for emergency vehicles, at which point a scheme
could be reintroduced with far less kerbside, on-street
parking
- Parking controls were effective when
balanced with health and safety concerns, which the application
addressed directly
- This application reduced the total
number of on-street spaces, creating a safer environment
- Nine new bays with a smaller kerb
area would limit overall capacity
- Residents could consider installing
lockable posts to stop parking in the bays
- The site visit allowed officers and
Members to witness a refuse lorry entering and exiting Dyson Drive,
which does not have a pavement. Vehicles passed at speed, very
close to front doors and windows, which was a safety concern
- The proposal would move these
vehicles further away from residents’ homes
- The London Plan applied to both
inner and outer London in equal measure, and in this case led to
the opposite of what was intended, a less safe and healthy
environment
- The Planning Committee regularly
approved applications that deviated from planning codes when the
benefits outweighed the policy deviation. In this case, the
significant health and safety benefits and the reduction in
anti-social behaviour far outweighed the single policy
deviation
- Members had the right to exercise
their own judgement and overturn officers’
recommendations
- A transport safety note had been
submitted which set out issues of highway safety and anti-social
behaviour
- Every application should be judged
on its own planning merits, and in this case, there were merits and
circumstances to overturn the recommendation
Members noted that during the site visit, the
dust cart was travelling 5-10 mph.
Members noted that during the course of the
application, additional elements had been required by officers. The
applicant had provided on transport but not on parking
enforcement.
Officers noted that there was an addendum
which referred to a petition in objection to the application and in
support of officers’ recommendations.
Officers highlighted that there had been
little mention of the purpose of ...
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