Well, Councillor Barton has emerged from hibernation, no doubt wearing her red and white knitted scarf and bobble hat, with a
new entry on her website about her activities since her last report.
Curiously, when you consider how seminal it is in terms of the
development of her political career, arising from the “parking wars” last year
and in January, it doesn’t mention the Local Committee meeting on July 5th. Could this be because she wasn’t there, for
her first such meeting?
On the subject of parking, she notes the proposed review of
the residents’ parking schemes to be discussed at the December meeting of the
committee – presumably she will make an effort to attend that one!
She has also “volunteered” David Curl, a Surrey Highways Dept
official with responsibility for
parking, to receive “feedback”, giving his email on her website - david.curl@surreycc.gov.uk
Now, the review is not supposed to be a repetition of
the public consultation exercises carried out last year. Rather it is a technical review, looking at
how in detail the schemes are working – traffic counts, and surveys of where,
when, how many cars are parked in the individual roads to see if usable space
is being left unnecessarily idle. (For
example, could limited daytime parking be permitted, if residents have left
spaces to drive to work, so long as they can find space to park when they come
home?). I don’t think Mr Curl is really interested in general expressions of objection
or indeed support for the schemes, but comment on detailed implementation may
be worth making.
For example, I’ll probably take a camera and a tape measure
down to Bunch Lane and examine the northernmost block of parking bays, to see whether
in fact there would be more road width and better sight lines if the spaces
were to be shifted 20 metres or so further north.
Frack off!
Mrs Barton has also commented on the planning proposal
submitted by Celtique Energie for “fracking” at Fernhurst, and has provided a
useful link for further information.
From there, you can link to the South Downs national Park’s planning
portal, where you can submit comments on the Celtique proposal.
And indeed I did just that, with the following result:
Dear Ms
Harding
Thankyou for
your reply.
If
that is the case, then why have you opened a process for submitting comments?
Regards
From: Lucy
Harding <Lucy.Harding@southdowns.gov.uk>
To:
To:
Sent: Tuesday, 16
July 2013, 11:03
Subject: SDNP/13/02126/SCOPE
Subject: SDNP/13/02126/SCOPE
Dear
Proposed Oil and Gas
Exploration Site near Fernhurst
Thank you for your
email regarding the above. I am responding on behalf of Tim Slaney, Director of
Planning.
An application has not been submitted and I
am therefore unable to take your comments into consideration at this stage
because they will not relate to the final proposal. You can however send you
comments and concerns to Celtique Energie by using the community consultation
line 0800 023 2148 or consultation@celtiqueenergie.com.
As part of the early stages of a statutory
process called Environmental Impact Assessment, we are currently seeking the
views of relevant statutory and non-statutory consultees, such as the
Environment Agency, to make sure that the Environmental Statement that will be
submitted with the application contains sufficient information for us to be
able to fully consider the environmental impacts of the proposal.
When an application is submitted, you will be
notified via a number of ways including a site notice, details provided on our
website and in the press.
We have made Celtique Energie aware of the
concern residents have expressed to date in relation to the proposal and for
further information about oil and gas development please see the Frequently
Asked Questions document which shall in due course be placed on our website: http://www.southdowns.gov.uk/
Kind
regards,
Lucy
Harding MSc
Minerals
and Waste Planning Officer
Freedom of Information
Request
I asked Waverley Borough Council for some information about
parking in the town centre car parks under their management. I hadn’t actually framed it as a FOI request,
although that is how they chose to respond – no matter, the point is what information
I got back from them.
I had hoped they might be able to provide information specifically
on the number of hours’ worth parking tickets sold for each of the three
central car parks – High Street (Waitrose), Chestnut Avenue, and Tanner’s
Lane. Unfortunately, due to various issues
notably vandalism to the ticket machines (did I see someone hopping away rapidly
on crutches one night? Probably my
imagination) this was not possible, but I did get the next best thing, annual
sterling revenues and tables of hourly rates from which to estimate the number
of hours sold.
I asked for 2008/9, as the last full year before Waitrose
opened to replace the former Somerfield store, and the most recent two years.
I have made some calculations from this data: converting £ revenues into hours of parking
purchased by using the tabled hourly rates, and then hours per bay using the
tabled number of available paid bays (total less disabled parking, which are
free).
·
hourly rates increased in February 2012 so there
isn’t a clean comparison between the rates charged for the whole of the years
ended 31 March 2012 and 31 March 2013. I
have assumed rates changing at the year end – the earlier increase probably
means that slightly fewer hours were sold in 2011/12 than I have estimated;
·
the number of available spaces in High St
reduced significantly but I don’t have the date for that so I have assumed at
the fiscal year-end;
·
I have assumed that 40% of High St tickets are 2
hours so the average in 2012/13, of 70p for one hour and 75p/hr for two hours,
is 72p. (Anecdotally, I am told that the
great majority of High St tickets are one hour, so the rate is closer to 70p
and the hours sold correspondingly, probably, higher).
The results are:
| High St | Revenue | £/hr | Hrs | Spaces | Hrs/space | |
| 2008/9 | 229000 | 0.60 | 382000 | 164 | 2329 | |
| 2011/12 | 274000 | 0.60 | 457000 | 164 | 2787 | |
| 2012/13 | 275000 | 0.72 | 382000 | 134 | 2851 | |
| Chestnut Ave | ||||||
| 2008/9 | 90000 | 0.50 | 180000 | 132 | 1364 | |
| 2011/12 | 105000 | 0.50 | 210000 | 132 | 1591 | |
| 2012/13 | 109000 | 0.50 | 218000 | 127 | 1717 | |
| Tanners Lane | ||||||
| 2008/9 | 25000 | 0.25 | 100000 | 50 | 2000 | |
| 2011/12 | 31000 | 0.25 | 124000 | 50 | 2480 | |
| 2012/13 | 39000 | 0.25 | 156000 | 46 | 3391 | |
So, what conclusions can be drawn from this?
·
Total parking sales increased materially in all
three car parks following the arrival of Waitrose.
·
Some of that gain was clawed back in the latest
year, although apparently there was some transfer from High St to the other two. This may be attributed to the Lower St
gasworks and the severe winter we had in 2012/13, compared with 2011/12, but
also evidently the reduced number of available spaces (due to building works)
had an impact, as the hours sold for each available space increased again
·
The reduction in High St sales appears to be more
about the extraneous factors than the pricing – the increase from 60p to 70p
does not appear to have deterred people from parking there if they can find a
space
·
Although the price of the High St car park has
increased again, to 80p for the first hour from April 2013, the increases have
followed several years in which prices did not change at all, indeed prices for
Chestnut Avenue and Tanner’s Lane have
not changed at all since before April 2008.
Not much in this week’s Haslemere Herald. The front
page has an article – “Tories break
ranks over planning row” - about the Core Strategy, rejected by the
inspector recently because it made insufficient provision for housebuilding. The battleground seems to be around Dunsfold
Aerodrome site, and it is curious (not) to note that one councillor firmly
opposed to the notion of a large housing estate there, and therefore remaining
with the main Tory fold, is Richard
Gates (Bramley – in other words, in the path of all the traffic emanating from
Dunsfold in the direction of Godalming and Guildford). Even uncuriouser are the identities of the
dissidents: Mary Forysewski (Cranleigh
Rural) and Janet Somerville (Cranleigh East) who “crossed the floor” to side
with the two UKIP councillors Diane James (Ewhurst) and Brett Vorley (Cranleigh
East) in opposing. Question one: where are several hundred houses proposed on “Greenfield”
sites close to the village centre?
Question two: Cranleigh may be “The
largest village in England” but doesn’t it seem a tad over-represented judging
by this array of talent?
And finally, this letter from the Chairman of Dunsfold Parish Council
Yes, as I said last week:
Dunsfold does not have a consent for “unrestricted” aviation
movements, merely no restrictions on movements related to aircraft maintenance
and repair. Dunsfold is not about to
become the new Gatwick, and the number of movements will still be low. This was merely an attempt to scare local
people and the planners into accepting a large housing development on the basis
of fearing something worse.
Regarding the parking controls implemented in the middle of July, its already abundantly clear that it has solved nothing. As an example, the parking bays and yellow lines on Tanners Lane at the current point have made the problem worse. Bridge Road is now almost impassable and Tanners Lane towards the church has twice created a situation where I have had to reverse my car almost 100 yards to let oncoming traffic through. ITS A TOTAL DISASTER!! (and its holiday too so will only get worse) Wake up SCC and HPAG, neither of you have a clue as to what to do. Haslemere needs to eradicate ALL FREE PARKING for daily commuters. This is the root cause of the problems. Sort it out.
ReplyDeleteVery very annoyed.