
Developers let off Huddersfield path promised 10 years ago
More than 40 objections to the flower bed scheme were lodged with the council, with residents saying the cost of maintenance of the landscaped area would fall on homeowners via estate management fees.According to the Local Democracy Reporting Service, one person commented: "Expecting residents to bear the cost of maintaining an area that serves them no practical purpose is entirely unreasonable."This appears to be a deliberate attempt to evade responsibilities laid out in the original agreement."
However, West Yorkshire Police agreed that the path should be omitted from plans as it would be "narrow and unlit" and would "increase opportunities for anti-social behaviour".Jon Beeson, planning manager at Harron Homes, said it was "perhaps regrettable" that the path was not built originally, with the company now wanting to resolve the "legacy issue".He said the path on the estate, which saw building work begin in 2011 and houses built and occupied over the last decade, would have been of "very modest" benefit to a small number of residents.Planning officer Liz Chippendale, said: "There was no dedicated condition explicitly requiring the provision of the footpath imposed at the time of the original decision."The local planning authority are therefore unable to enforce the construction of the footpath and refusing to accept the variation of condition would be unreasonable."
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Times
2 hours ago
- Times
The DVLA has stalled our £8k aid trip to Ukraine
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Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
The predator that's set to clip the wings of Britain's growing green parakeet population
Britain's burgeoning parakeet population could soon have a new nemesis. There are tens of thousands of the green birds in the UK, according to estimates, but experts claim that they will soon come under threat from goshawks. The predators feed on pigeons, grey squirrels and rats, and conservationists say they will soon be targeting parakeets. Hazel Jackson, of the UK Centre for Hydrology and Ecology, said goshawks could possibly prey on parakeets, just as peregrine falcons do now. She said: 'We do know that peregrines in London are predating on parakeets, and so in theory, and given the growing quantity of parakeets, there is a chance goshawks might take advantage of them as another source of food.' Sightings of goshawks – which have a 5 ft wingspan and long talons – have increased on the edges of London in recent months, and experts say they will soon make their way to other British cities. The birds were virtually wiped out by the Victorians but escaped goshawks owned by falconers began to re-establish numbers from the beginning of the 1970s. Goshawks are now living in cities across Europe including Berlin, Amsterdam, Riga and Moscow. In the UK, there have been sightings in Sussex, Kent and Surrey, as well as on marshes on the edges of the River Thames in London. Conor Mark Jameson, author of Looking for the Goshawk, told The Mail on Sunday he expected them to appear in parks around cities including London, Bath, Southampton, Glasgow and Edinburgh within the next few years. 'In my lifetime this bird has come back from extinction in the UK and now goshawks could become a feature of British cities in a matter of a few years,' he added. 'It's recovering in some of the Home Counties – Sussex in particular, Surrey and Kent – and reports in and over London appear to be increasing. 'Slowly but surely they will work their way into suburbia. There is superabundant food in the form of pigeons of all kinds, ring-necked parakeets, corvids, grey squirrels and even rats and stout trees in which to nest in large gardens, hospital grounds, cemeteries and recreation areas.' Andy Evans, of the RSPB, said that 'with continued protections' goshawks may be as common a sight in London as they are in other cities across Europe.


The Sun
2 hours ago
- The Sun
Four ways to transform tins of fruit into quick desserts your family will love
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