• About
    • Ethics policy
    • Privacy Policy
    • Ownership, funding and corrections
    • Complaints procedure
    • Terms & Conditions
  • Contact
  • Support
  • Newsletter
Brighton and Hove News
26 December, 2025
  • News
    • Politics
    • Business
    • Opinion
    • Community
  • Arts and Culture
    • Music
    • Theatre
    • Food and Drink
  • Sport
    • Brighton and Hove Albion
    • Cricket
  • Newsletter
  • Public notices
  • Advertise
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Politics
    • Business
    • Opinion
    • Community
  • Arts and Culture
    • Music
    • Theatre
    • Food and Drink
  • Sport
    • Brighton and Hove Albion
    • Cricket
  • Newsletter
  • Public notices
  • Advertise
No Result
View All Result
Brighton and Hove News
No Result
View All Result
Home Brighton

Angry neighbour hurls insults at Brighton and Hove’s planners

by Frank le Duc
Wednesday 18 Dec, 2013 at 1:27PM
A A
2

Passions can run high at the planning meetings held every three weeks at Hove Town Hall.

One angry applicant pelted local politicians with tomatoes. Last week a man living close to proposed new flats for people with dementia hurled abuse at those debating the scheme.

Older professionals remember the death of planning officer Harry Collinson, shot by Albert Dryden, in Consett, Co Durham, in 1991.

If planning seems dull on the surface, it becomes less so when people find themselves affected by a scheme. And many do.

Planning applications are the bread and butter of local councils up and down the land.

Brighton and Hove City Council receives more than 50 applications in an average week.

The total for the past year was more than 3,000 – a rise on recent years although the figure was much higher before the credit crunch.

Councillor Phélim Mac Cafferty
Councillor Phélim Mac Cafferty

The council’s Planning Committee met last Wednesday (11 December). With an agenda nearly 700 pages long, the meeting started at 10.30am instead of the usual 2.30pm. It finished six and a half hours later.

Twelve councillors debated 14 planning applications – ten of them were major applications, although six of those were connected.

As members of the Planning Committee emerged into the dark of night, one of their sternest critics, Valerie Paynter, from Save Hove, tweeted in praise of them. She said: “I congratulate those sitting on the Planning Committee for their ability to concentrate and identify issues in the exceptional all day mtg!”

The public took part too. Planning meetings may not attract the same crowds as Brighton and Hove Albion. But thousands registered their support for or opposition to the football club’s plans before permission was finally granted for the Amex Stadium in Falmer.

The last major application dealing with the King Alfred Leisure Centre in Hove also played to a packed house.

It emerged later that the scheme’s cheering supporters were actors hired for the occasion to keep out protesters.

Both schemes to years to decide.

The applications discussed at last week’s meeting alone generated a response from more than 1,200 people.

Almost half of those signed a single petition. The rest wrote to the council by letter or email.

The councillors who sit on the Planning Committee often ask applicants whether they have consulted others affected by schemes.

As elected representatives, they are more sensitive than most to public opinion.

The high level of public interest in the City College application – with hundreds supporting and opposing the plans – was reflected in the result.

Six councillors each voted for and against the £79 million scheme to knock down the Pelham Tower and out up an eight-storey teaching block and a ten-storey building housing 442 student flats.

The college’s principal Lynn Thackway had tears in her eyes as the scheme went through on the casting vote of the Planning Committee chairman Councillor Phélim Mac Cafferty.

Votes tend not to go along party lines and so it was with City College.

Lynn Thackway
Lynn Thackway

Two of Councillor Mac Cafferty’s Green Party colleagues, Lizzie Deane and Pete West, sent a letter of objection setting out the concerns of many residents.

The other North Laine ward councillor Ian Davey usually sits on the Planning Committee and felt understandably obliged not to be seen to have prejudged the application.

In the event he was involved in another meeting at the same time last Wednesday so a party colleague took his place.

Kathryn Boggiano, the planning officer who handled the application, also dealt with another big scheme recently – the £420 million modernisation of the Royal Sussex County Hospital.

It seems unfair to single out a single person in some respects but her assured performance did not go unnoticed by at least one veteran observer of these meetings.

Unlike City College, Dorothy Stringer School faced disappointment with its plans.

It applied for permission to build a floodlit all-weather football pitch on a piece of ground prone to waterlogging.

The plans were rejected by ten votes to two.

The school is not the first in recent years to attract opposition to floodlights and artificial sports pitches in place of grass.

The loss of two mature elm trees was given as one of the reasons for turning down the scheme.

Plans to change the face of a corner of The Lanes won approval. Two separate developers, including the locally based Centurion Group, worked hard to win support and neutralise potential opposition.

As a result Brighton Square will be given a makeover. A 17th century cottage will be visible to the public for the first time in years. And a new lane will be created.

During the debate Councillor Ben Duncan raised a laugh and gave some pause for thought when he said: “The whole Lanes area is one of the jewels in the crown of this city and it wouldn’t be there if we sat there looking at every single building and every single street next to a set of planning policies.

“It’s actually the lack of a committee like this historically that has given us much to be proud of in the area.”

Occasional visitors have commented on the need for stamina, a sturdy bladder and a high boredom threshold. But these are useful qualities for anyone taking part in politics.

Martin Randall
Martin Randall

Another criticism is that members of the Planning Committee sometimes seem to focus on the trivial.

If this is the case, it may be because the bigger questions are answered in the detailed reports before them.

Last week planning consultant Paul Burgess, from the local firm Lewis and Co, did pose one of the bigger questions.

He asked them to think about the effect of their policies when a building – an old children’s home – had stood empty for ten years.

The building in question, in Wellington Road, next to Brighton’s first new council houses for 30 years, is not listed. It is liked and admired.

The council’s own plans for 45 flats for people with dementia also attracted criticism.

The Brooke Mead proposal in Albion Street, Brighton, includes no car parking spaces. It will have one loading bay.

Given that the project is an extra care scheme, it is likely that carers will need to come and go.

Councillors Lynda Hyde and Bob Carden, both former chairmen of the Planning Committee, were among those to voice their concerns. Councillor Carden’s late wife Merle was a carer.

They pointed out how little time the council allows for carers to spend with each person. And how that time would be even less if carers had search for a free parking space in the surrounding streets.

Councillor Mac Cafferty asked officials for ways to solve the problem without the need to delay the application.

Head of planning Jeanette Walsh said that the council owned the surrounding land and promised to explore whether a carer’s parking space could be set aside.

The planning system involves balancing competing interests and Brooke Mead was a case in point.

Those competing interests are often advanced by people with passionately held opinions.

The outburst from a neighbour of Brooke Mead last week was also a case in point.

The outcome of a planning application can have an enormous effect on the financial value of someone’s land or property. This just makes the stakes even higher.

It can take a long time to reach a decision on some applications.

The council’s planning chief, Martin Randall, has taken to countering criticism of the process and those who make it work.

He regularly updates councillors, developers and the public with the evidence of progress on major projects in Brighton and Hove.

But it is underpinned by a determination to ensure that progress continues and to show that Brighton and Hove is a place that is open for business.

ShareTweetShareSendSendShare

Comments 2

  1. HJarrs says:
    12 years ago

    What an excellent and informative article.

    Reply
  2. HJarrs says:
    12 years ago

    What an excellent and informative article.

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Most read

Woman raped in Hove

Brighton-born boy, 13, stabbed to death in Portugal

Bell at oldest church to ring in Christmas Day after years of silence

Brighton and Hove Albion players given Christmas fixture at home

Council warns people of danger of a Christmas Day dip in the sea

A revelation for Christmas as scaffolding comes down at St Peter’s after 11 years

Angry neighbour hurls insults at Brighton and Hove’s planners

Route and frequency of new bus service come in for criticism

First face ID arrest made in Brighton

Local cab trade penalised, say drivers’ union reps

Newsletter

Arts and Culture

  • All
  • Music
  • Theatre
  • Food and Drink
Tributes – Day 3 of 3: The Bootleg Beatles perform The Beatles

Tributes – Day 3 of 3: The Bootleg Beatles perform The Beatles

22 December 2025
Tributes – Day 2 of 3: Absolute Bowie perform David Bowie set at Concorde 2

Tributes – Day 2 of 3: Absolute Bowie perform David Bowie set at Concorde 2

21 December 2025
FLIP Fabrique: Blizzard

FLIP Fabrique: Blizzard

21 December 2025
A Town Called Christmas – Preview

A Town Called Christmas – Preview

20 December 2025
Load More

Sport

  • All
  • Brighton and Hove Albion
  • Cricket
Brighton and Hove Albion draw a blank against Sunderland

Brighton and Hove Albion players given Christmas fixture at home

by PA sport staff
24 December 2025
0

With two away games looming, Brighton and Hove Albion’s players have been given a home fixture this Christmas. Head coach...

No surprises – just another routine win for Brighton and Hove Albion against Manchester United

Welbeck could return for Brighton and Hove Albion trip to Arsenal

by PA sport staff
23 December 2025
0

Former Gunner Danny Welbeck could make a return to the Brighton and Hove Albion match-day squad in time for the...

Hürzeler says Brighton and Hove Albion may need to ‘win ugly’

Brighton and Hove Albion boss speaks out after Seagulls drop more points

by Frank le Duc
22 December 2025
0

Brighton and Hove Albion boss Fabian Hürzeler has spoken out after the Seagulls dropped more points at the weekend. The...

Brighton and Hove Albion draw a blank against Sunderland

Brighton and Hove Albion draw a blank against Sunderland

by Ed Elliot - PA
20 December 2025
0

Brighton and Hove Albion 0 Sunderland 0 December remained winless for Brighton and Hove Albion as they were held to...

Load More
December 2013
M T W T F S S
 1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
3031  
« Nov   Jan »

RSS From Sussex News

  • Sussex boy, 13, stabbed to death while trying to protect his mother 25 December 2025
  • Snapchat paedophile jailed for trying to groom three girls 24 December 2025
  • Three teenage boys in court after fatal stabbing 23 December 2025
  • Japanese knotweed specialists from Sussex win national award 22 December 2025
  • Woman hit by car suffers serious injuries 21 December 2025
ADVERTISEMENT
  • About
  • Contact
  • Support
  • Newsletter
  • Privacy
  • Complaints
  • Ownership, funding and corrections
  • Ethics
  • T&C

© 2023 Brighton and Hove News

No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Opinion
  • Arts and Culture
    • Music
    • Theatre
  • Sport
    • Cricket
  • Newsletter
  • Public notices
  • Advertise
  • About
  • Contact

© 2023 Brighton and Hove News