CLLR WILL SANDRY AND CLLR SHAUN MCGALL - REPRESENTING OLDFIELD WARD IN THE HEART OF THE CITY OF BATH Weekly Advice Surgeries: First Saturday of the month, 11.30 a.m. to 12.30 p.m. In the foyer of the Co-op Scala, Shaftesbury Road, Oldfield Park. No appointments needed, just turn up and we'll try and help...

23 January 2008

Nick Clegg sets out his vision for a people's health service

Liberal Democrat Leader Nick Clegg today outlined his vision for the NHS, setting out plans to give communities genuine control over local health services, freed from Whitehall, and providing for older people with personal care needs. The proposals update Liberal Democrat policy on personal care for the elderly based on the projections of the 2006 Wanless report on the future needs for social care in England. The Policy Paper, which will go to the Party’s Spring Conference in March, details:

  • Introducing a ‘Care Guarantee’ by spending £2 billion on a personal care payment for all elderly people requiring care, based on need and not their ability to pay. It would also set out carers’ rights including the right to complain about unsatisfactory care.


  • A ‘Patient Contract’ guaranteeing every citizen access to a high standard of core healthcare entitlements within maximum waiting times. To make sure that the NHS delivers, patients would have the right to receive private treatment, paid for by the NHS, if the waiting time was not met.


  • Directly elected local Health Boards instead of unaccountable Primary Care Trusts. This would put people in charge of decisions about their local health services.


  • Roll out the use of direct payments and individual budgets for people with chronic, long term conditions, for mental health services and support for those with learning disabilities.
  • For more information on the Lib Dem's vison for a people's health service, please click here.

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    “Grave concerns” over increase in Home Care charges

    Cllr Will Sandry, a members of the Council's Healthier Communities and Older People Overview and Scrutiny Panel has commented on this weeks meeting when he questioned the proposed 74% increase in Home Care charges.

    The Lib Dem Councillors on the Panel accepted that service users should pay the actual cost of the care they receive, providing that they are in a position to pay for it. However Will had grave concerns that this proposed immediate increase of 74% will place up to 90 service users in a very difficult financial position.

    Will and the other Lib Dem members wanted to instruct Conservative Cabinet Member, Cllr Vic Prichard, not to increase the charges by 74%, but unfortunately the Overview and Scrutiny panel does not have that authority. The Liberal Democrat Group was unable to support the draft recommendations and as a result of this the Overview and Scrutiny panel did not move to a vote and will therefore formally "express concerns" over the proposed increase.

    Cllr Vic Prichard was at the meeting and is therefore now fully aware of the strength of our concerns.

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    21 January 2008

    Appeal Decision - Land rear of 25-32 Sladebrook Avenue

    Thanks to the efforts of local residents working alongside local councillors the Planning Inspectorate has dissmissed the appeal against the Council's decision to refuse planning permission on land rear of 25-32 Sladebrook Avenue.

    The main issues were–
    (i) The effect of the proposed development on the character and appearance
    of the surrounding area; and
    (ii) The impact of the proposed access on the safety of highway users.
    Reasons
    The effect on the character and appearance of the surrounding area

    The Inspector stated, "Although I consider that the proposed development would not materially harm the safety of other highway users, this does not outweigh my conclusions that the loss of this open land would materially harm both the context of the local landscape and the setting of the World Heritage Site thus unacceptably affecting the character and appearance of the surrounding area. Therefore, for the reasons given above, I conclude that the appeal should be dismissed."

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    Incinerator U-turn Welcomed

    Local Liberal Democrats are welcoming a change of heart by the Conservative-run Cabinet on the Council regarding the proposal to build an incinerator for non-recyclable waste in the West.

    Liberal Democrats from across the former Avon area have been campaigning against the incinerator plans, being considered by the West of England Waste Partnership following a public consultation which has been described as ‘flawed'.

    Liberal Democrats called on the Cabinet member responsible for waste to oppose the incinerator, in line with the Council's policy on zero waste, but the Cabinet member refused to make his position known. In a statement today the Cabinet member confirmed that the Council opposes mass-burn incineration and that the other members of the Waste Partnership had been informed that this Council could not participate in such a scheme.

    This statement from the Cabinet member signals a victory for the Liberal Democrat and Friends of the Earth campaign against the proposal for mass burn incineration. We very much welcome this u-turn by the Tories and we are pleased that Cllr Charles Gerrish has acknowledged our part in the effective campaign against this expensive, unsustainable proposal. Mass burn incineration is now 'dead in the water'.

    The recent Zero Waste Week showed what achievements are possible for waste reduction. We must now start working with the commercial sector to ensure that these waste streams are minimised as well. It would be fantastic if all our pubs, restaurants and shops could sign up to Zero Waste. The less total waste heading for landfill from all sources the less chance we have of anyone considering incineration in the West.

    We still however need to pursude Labour controlled Bristol and Tory controlled South Gloucestershire and North Somerset Council's of this view, therefore please still do sign our petition.

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    Planning Applications in Oldfield Ward w/c 24th January 2008

    All representation must arrive no later than the 15th February 2008.
    App Ref: 08/00129/FUL
    Registered: 11th January 2008
    Expiry Date: 7th March 2008
    Location: 39 Second Avenue, Oldfield Park,Bath. BA2 3NN
    Grid Ref: (E)373945 - (N)163971
    Proposal: Conversion of loft with rear dormer
    Planning Case Officer: Hazel Short
    Applicant: Mr Jonathon Mayman,39 Second Avenue, Bath.BA2 3NN
    Agent: Western Building Consultants Ltd, Unit 2, Wansdyke Business Centre, Oldfield Lane, Bath. BA2 3LY

    To find out more about this application click here.

    All representation must arrive no later than the 15th February 2008.

    App Ref: 08/00130/FUL
    Registered: 11th January 2008
    Expiry Date: 7th March 2008
    Location: 62 Faulkland Road, Oldfield Park, Bath. BA2 3LT
    Grid Ref: (E)373777 - (N)164119
    Proposal: Installation of a rear flat roof dormer
    Planning Case Officer: Tessa Hampden
    Applicant: Ms Sharon Found, 62 Faulkland Road, Oldfield Park, Bath. BA2 3LT
    Agent: Attic Life Ltd, Unit 5B, Charmborough Farm, Charlton Road, Radstock. BA3 5EX

    To find out more about this application click here.

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    20 January 2008

    Use-class Orders - Controlling the spread of HMOs

    As you will know Cllr Shaun McGall and fellow Liberal Democrat Councillors in Bath and across the country have been campigning for years to get central Government to give local Councils the powers to make landlords apply for planning permission to convert a 'family' home into a privately rented property, where that is for students, nurses, or young professional.

    The National HMO Lobby (which includes the Bath Fed. of Residents Associations), the Councillors' Campaign for Balanced Communities (includes Cllr Shaun McGall) and the All Party Parliamentary Group on Balanced and Sustainable Communities (includes Don Foster, MP for Bath) have been lobbying for this and to bring English law into line with that of Northern Ireland.

    The Secretary for State for Communities and Local Government, Iain Wright MP, replied to a parliamentary written question on the 15th January 2008, stating:

    "Under existing planning regulations, the conversion of a dwelling house into bed sits may require planning permission, depending on the characteristics of the proposed domestic arrangements and whether these are deemed to result in a material change of use. The Government recognise that there may be instances where the use of dwelling houses in group occupation may have adverse impacts upon the character and amenity of existing neighbourhoods. We intend to conduct further research into the extent of this problem and possible ways of addressing it. There may be a case for amending the Town and Country Planning (Use Classes) Order 1987 to strengthen the ability of local planning authorities to control the proliferation of houses in multiple occupation (HMOs). We propose to consult on possible amendments to the Use Classes Order in relation to HMOs later in the year."

    This is a great step forward and local Liberal Democrats will be encouraging as many local residents and interested parties to respond to this consultation when it occurs later in the year.

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    Report non-registered privately rented houses

    Finally the Council has agreed to take a hard line with landlords of houses in multiple occupation (e.g. flats, bedsits and shared houses) that have failed to come forward and become licensed, as required by the Housing Act 2004.

    The legal requirement to licence certain types of houses in multiple occupation came into force on the 6 April 2006 and since that time the Council has been processing and issuing licences for these properties. To be licensed, the property must be free from serious hazards, be well managed by a ‘fit and proper’ manager and have adequate amenities and facilities for the number of people living there. There is a five yearly charge for being licensed, which for a building with five units of accommodation is currently £340.

    Thankfully, the Council is now starting to concentrate on those landlords that have not licensed their properties. Those landlords who have not come forward to licence their properties and have had to be tracked down by the Council will be charged an additional £100 on their licence fee. This sum will cover the cost of the work in trying to identify them.

    Landlords can also be prosecuted for not licensing their properties. Currently the maximum fine for failing to licence a property is £20,000. We hope the Council will take prosecution action where appropriate. A landlord may also be ordered to repay the rent to the tenants for the period the property was without a licence.

    Landlords have a responsibility to ensure that the appropriate standards are met and however, we know there are landlords who have not yet contacted the Council and this crackdown will help identify those properties which are not up to standard.

    Do you know of any privately rented house in Oldfield Park which you feel should be licensed as it is three stores high (including a basement, or a loft conversion)?
    Please report this property to the Council's Housing Services on 01225 396269.

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    Save Moorland Road Post Office

    Sign up to support our campaign against any further Post Office closures in Bath which could affect our Post Office here on Moorland Road. The government consultation for our area begins in February 2008, and our Post Office could be under threat.

    Please sign our petition against any further closures here.

    The state of the post office network

    The Post Office network is crumbling. Over the last two decades, post offices have been closing at a rate of over 300 a year. Under the last Conservative Government, 3,500 local post offices closed, and under Labour another 4,000 have closed, hitting communities across the country. And, with the news of another 2,500 closures, things are set to get even worse.
    The Government's policy to avoid “unnecessary” rural Post Office branch closures came to an end in March 2006. This policy has previously slowed down the rate of closure in rural areas.

    And the Government has announced that it will not extend its contract beyond 2010 for pension and benefit payments using the Post Office Card Account, worth £1 billion of income for post offices between 2003 and 2010. A replacement will be put in place but the competitive tender process means that the Post Office could lose this work altogether. The likelihood is that, while the Government ducks the long term decisions necessary to secure the future of Post Offices, 12,000 post office branches (urban and rural) will close.

    Why this matters

    Post offices are the lifeblood of communities in both rural and urban areas, particularly when they are combined with other services, such as the local shop. When the local post office closes other services often follow suit, which can be devastating for the community. It is vital that the true social value of this network is included as well as its economic value when looking at the long-term future of this valuable network. Post Offices in rural areas play a particularly crucial role. They have an ‘existence value’ similar to the local school or village pub. They also provide vital face-to-face access to government, postal and commercial services for communities which may not have, for example, a local bank branch.

    Research for Postwatch in 2004 showed that:

    75% of those surveyed felt their local post office was ‘extremely important’
    59% thought it was ‘essential to their way of life’
    91% agreed it played an ‘important role in their local community’
    86% felt that losing a Post Office means ‘a lot of people lose their independence’
    27% found it difficult to get to another post office when their local one closed

    These figures increased among the elderly or those with disabilities affecting their mobility.
    Action is needed by the Government now to prevent the mass closure of post offices occurring.
    Only the Liberal Democrats have a plan which can save the post office network.

    The Liberal Democrat plan

    Following the passing of the new policy at Harrogate Conference in March 2006, we are the only party to have a costed and credible set of proposals to keep post offices open and, where necessary, to open others. Our opponents have no such policy.

    Our plan keeps the Post Office Ltd in the public sector and enables Royal Mail employees to get a share in their company through a radical employee share ownership Trust, similar to the John Lewis Partnership. Royal Mail will take a new ownership model, with the sale of some of its shares providing the investment needed by our post offices.

    The Liberal Democrat plan would enable us to –

    Open new post office branches where they are needed
    Keep the Post Office in the public sector
    Make the Royal Mail into a successful company, with new investment freedoms
    Give Royal Mail staff a guaranteed stake in their company through employee share holding and participation
    Protect and improve the service to customers that provides a daily delivery at a uniform price across the country

    You can find out about the proposals in more details by reading our background paper on the policy.

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    14 January 2008

    No mass Burn Incinerator

    Please help us in our campaign to put a stop to the planned construction of a Mass Burn Incinerator in Bristol.

    The construction of the Incinerator would be a major backward step in our efforts to make Bristol and Bath area, a Cleaner and Greener place to live.

    For more information and to sign our petition please click here.

    Find out more at the Friends of the Earth website.

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    Planning Applications in Oldfield Ward w/c 17th January 2008

    All representation must arrive no later than the 10th February 2008.

    App Ref: 07/03722/FUL
    Registered: 13th December 2007
    Expiry Date: 7th February 2008
    Location: 12 First Avenue, Oldfield Park, Bath. BA2 3NW
    Grid Ref: (E)374018 - (N)163953
    Proposal: Erection of a single storey infill extension to rear and lower garden level to form patio
    Planning Case Officer: Richard StottApplicant: Mr Clive Skinner, 12 First Avenue, Bath. BA2 3NW
    Agent: Western Building Consultants Ltd, Unit 2, Wansdyke Business Centre, Oldfield Lane, Bath.BA2 3LY

    To find out more about this application click here.

    App Ref: 07/03736/FUL
    Registered: 14th December 2007
    Expiry Date: 8th February 2008
    Location: 11 First Avenue, Oldfield Park, Bath. BA2 3NW
    Grid Ref: (E)374020 - (N)163957
    Proposal: Erection of a single storey infill extension to rear
    Planning Case Officer: Richard Stott
    Applicant: Mr Christopher Fry, 11 First Avenue, Bath. BA2 3NW
    Agent: Western Building Consultants Ltd, Unit 2, Wansdyke Business Centre, Oldfield Lane, Bath. BA2 3LY

    To find out more about this application click here.

    App Ref: 08/00114/FUL
    Registered: 7th January 2008
    Expiry Date: 3rd March 2008
    Location: 133 Englishcombe Lane, Bath. BA2 2EL
    Grid Ref: (E)373419 - (N)163340
    Proposal: Erection of a detached dwelling
    Planning Case Officer: Mark Reynolds
    Applicant: Mr Roy Newport C/o Agent
    Agent: LPC (Trull) Ltd, Trull, Tetbury, Gloucestershire. GL8 8SQ

    To find out more about this application click here.

    All representation must arrive no later than the 10th February 2008.

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    13 January 2008

    Taxpayers must not subsidise nuclear power

    The Government has given the go-ahead to a new generation of nuclear power stations, which is a flawed decision based on a sham consultation - we all know that ministers made up their minds long ago.

    The Government has effectively locked us into nuclear power for the best part of a century. By the time they are up and running in the 2020s nuclear power plants may be obsolete given the breathtaking progress in renewable technologies.

    The Labour Government Minister, John Hutton MP, was not able to give a cast iron guarantee that taxpayers will not have to subsidise the costs of nuclear in the future. The Government had nothing to say about today's pressing issue - spiralling fuel prices. The new Energy Bill must include measures to protect the millions of households who are struggling to meet their winter fuel bills.

    The UK has an energy crisis now - nuclear power cannot fill the energy gap. Energy conservation and investment in renewables should be our top priorities.

    To find our more visit our party website. If you would like to take further action to help, you can encourage people you know to sign the petition .

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    Rail commuters plan next move in battle against fare increases

    Local rail commuters are meeting in Bath on Tuesday to plan the next phase of their campaign for better services at Oldfield Park Railway Station.

    This time last year, Cllr Shaun McGall, supported the fares protest, due to the overcrowding on services in the Bath, Bristol and West of England area.

    The new timetable which was launched on the 9th December remains below the standard of service commuters should recieve, and this combined with the unjustified hike in prices in January, timetable changes, short trains, old rolling stock, and continuing poor punctuality and reliability means we must put more press on both the Labour Government and First Great Western to up their game and provide a modern, and fairly priced service across our area.
    Please play your part in helping to pile on the presure to First and the Governement to ensure we get more trains, and that passengers not shareholders come first.
    Please write to Don Foster, our Member of Parliament and to the Managing Director of First Great Western, with your comments and views.

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    Two Tunnels Lottery success

    A campaign to win a portion of £50 million of Lottery funding to create new cycle routes in Bath has been successful.

    It was revealed on the 12th December that the Two Tunnels project will be awarded £1m, thanks to the votes of local people.

    The project is part of a national initiative by sustainable transport charity Sustrans and is supported by the Council. Sustrans battled its way into a shortlist of four organisations competing for the £50 million pot to fund projects around the country, under the National Lottery’s The People’s Millions scheme.

    The Sustrans project is called Connect2. Once complete the project will see hundreds of miles of walking and cycling routes spring up around the UK – providing extra bridges, extra links - improving travel and reducing our carbon footprint. Two Tunnels is just one of the many projects included in this scheme.

    The multi-user path will join Bath and Midford by a virtually flat system of tunnels and impressive overland paths following the existing disused railway. The route makes a wide sweep through Oldfield Park, surfaces in the secretive Lyncombe Vale and finally emerges in beautiful open country at Tucking Mill, before joining the long distance Sustrans NCN24 route at Midford.

    The campaign promoters expect the ‘Two Tunnels’ route to benefit businesses, residents and visitors. They believe it will encourage visitors to stay for more than a simple two-hour visit to the city centre, and make more use of what Bath has to offer. It will also secure the future for the impressive railway structures on this famous old route, and offers a chance to make good use of some of Bath’s more under-appreciated assets, reclaiming them for residents and visitors.

    However, the route first has to be built, and while much of the work has already been done courtesy of the Victorian engineers who built the railway, it will cost an estimated £1.8 million to complete.

    Further information on the Connect2 project is available at http://www.sustransconnect2.org.uk/.
    For more information on the Two Tunnels Greenway, see:http://www.twotunnels.org.uk/

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    09 January 2008

    Nick Clegg's acceptance speech as the new Leader of the Liberal Democrats

    18 December 2007

    My election as leader of this party marks a new beginning.
    Today is about two things: ambition, and change.
    Renewed ambition for the Liberal Democrats.
    Renewed ambition to reach out to the millions of people who share our values, but have not yet voted for us.
    It’s about renewed ambition for Britain.
    Because we want to change politics, and change Britain.
    I would like to thank Chris for the energetic and committed way he has campaigned in this leadership election.
    We have been rivals in this contest. From today, we are colleagues again. I look forward to working closely with him for the good of liberalism in Britain.
    I would also like to thank Vince Cable for the magnificent way he has led the party in these past two months.
    There are few men who have excelled as an economist, a comedian and a ballroom dancer.
    Finally, I would like to give my warmest thanks, on behalf of the whole party, to Ming Campbell. He took over the Liberal Democrats at a difficult time, and provided enormous stability and professionalism to the party. Without his work, building on the extraordinary achievements of Charles Kennedy and Paddy Ashdown before him, the party would not have the bright future which it now does.
    I am a Liberal by temperament, by instinct and by upbringing.
    My own family was marked, scattered and reunited by the tragic conflicts of the last century.
    I was taught from an early age that Britain was a place of tolerance and pluralism, with a history steeped in democracy and the rule of law.
    I believe that liberalism is the thread that holds together everything this country stands for. Pull out that thread and the fabric of the nation unravels.
    We are a people with a strong sense of fair play and social justice. An instinct to protect the environment for future generations. We are suspicious of arbitrary power, wary of government interference. We want to play an active, enlightened role in the affairs of the world.
    And we have always put our faith in the power of ordinary men and women to change things for the better.
    So why is Britain still not the liberal nation we want it to be?
    Look around us:
    Our civil liberties casually cast aside.
    Gigantic, faceless and incompetent Government bureaucracies.
    Security and opportunity in short supply, particularly in the poorest communities.
    Families struggling to meet each month’s bills. Struggling to balance the demands of work, and the time for a real family life.
    Above all, our politics is broken.
    Out of step with people.
    Out of step with the modern world.
    That is why I have one sole ambition: to change Britain to make it the liberal country the British people want it to be.
    I want a new politics: a people’s politics.
    I want to live in a country where rights, freedoms and privacy are not the playthings of politicians, but safeguarded for everyone.
    Where political life is not a Westminster village freak show, but open, accessible, and helpful in people’s everyday lives.
    Where parents, pupils and patients are in charge of our schools and hospitals.
    Where fine words on the environment are translated into real action.
    Where social mobility becomes a reality once again, so that no-one is condemned by the circumstances of their birth.
    Why have we stopped imagining a better society?
    Look at what we’ve got.
    The Conservatives and New Labour have governed in the same way.
    Top-down and centralising
    I refuse to believe that the only alternative to a clapped out Labour Government is a Conservative party which has no answers to the big issues - environmentalism without substance, social justice without money, internationalism without Europe.
    The challenge for my party is clear and simple: to define a liberal alternative to the discredited politics of Big Government.
    I want to open up my party, open up Westminster, and open up politics for good.
    To lead well, a leader needs to listen.
    That’s why I will hold regular and public Town Hall Meetings.
    That’s why I want to open up the Liberal Democrats to give people who support us, but aren’t members, a say on the big issues.
    That’s why I will spend at least one day every week listening and campaigning outside Westminster.
    That’s why I will set up a network of real families, who have nothing to do with party politics, in every region of this country to advise me on what they think should be my priorities.
    If you once voted Lib Dem but think we’ve spent too much time focusing on ourselves.
    If you once voted Conservative but don’t know what they stand for any more.
    If you once voted Labour but feel let down after ten years of disappointment.
    If you’ve given up voting altogether, but still care about the world we live in:
    Then a newly united, energetic, optimistic Liberal Democrat party is there for you.
    This is an unprecedented time of opportunity for liberalism in Britain.
    If we are to grab this opportunity, my party will need to change.
    We must start acting like the growing national political movement that we are. More professional. More united. More ambitious.
    Liberalism is the creed of our times.
    The old left-right politics has broken down. Labour and the Conservatives are mutating into each other, united in defence of a system which has let the people down.
    Instead, we must start where people are, not where we think they should be.
    In short, I want the Liberal Democrats to be the future of politics.
    Because Liberal Democrats have the courage to imagine a better society.
    To break the stifling grip of the two-party system for good.
    To bring in a new politics.
    Of politicians who listen to people, not themselves.
    No more business as usual. No more government-knows-best.
    I want today to mark the beginning of real change in Britain.
    The beginning of Britain’s liberal future.

    Photo credit: Alex Folkes / Fishnik.com

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    Planning Applications in Oldfield Ward w/c 10th Janaury 2008

    All representation must arrive no later than the 31th January 2008.
    App Ref: 07/03549/FUL
    Registered: 19th December 2007
    Expiry Date: 13th February 2008
    Location: 141 Englishcombe Lane, Bath. BA2 2EL
    Grid Ref: (E)373388 - (N)163348
    Proposal: Conversion of existing maisonette into three flats and internal refurbishment works to residential and commercial elements
    Planning Case Officer: Rachel Le Huray
    Applicant: Mr M Wilcox - Front Door Property Developments Ltd, Coombe Lodge, Bourne Lane, Blagdon. BS40 7RG
    Agent: Lewis Foster Lewis Archiects, 3 The Plain, Thornbury. BS35 2AG

    To find out more about this application click here.

    All representation must arrive no later than the 31th January 2008.

    App Ref: 07/03794/FUL
    Registered: 17th December 2007
    Expiry Date: 11th February 2008
    Location: 62A Moorfields Road, Moorlands, Bath. BA2 2DG
    Grid Ref: (E)373809 - (N)163533
    Proposal: Change of use and conversion of retail shop to self contained flat and associated external alterations
    Planning Case Officer: Rachel Le Huray
    Applicant: Mr N Stephenson, 75 Midford Road, Combe Down, Bath. BA2 5RT
    Agent: Paul Rossiter Associates, 48 Boyd Road, Saltford, Bristol. BS31 3AU

    To find out more about this application click here.

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    Planning Applications in Oldfield Ward w/c 27th December 2007

    All representation must arrive no later than the 24th January 2008.

    App Ref: 07/03730/FUL
    Registered: 20th December 2007
    Expiry Date: 14th February 2008
    Location: 16 Acacia Grove, Bath. BA2 2HG
    Grid Ref: (E)373291 - (N)163485
    Proposal: Erection of a two storey side extension
    Planning Case Officer: Rebecca Roberts
    Applicant: Mr Michael Whelan, 16 Acacia Grove, Bath. BA2 2HG
    Agent: Western Building Consultants Ltd, Unit 2, Wansdyke Business Centre, Oldfield Lane, Bath. BA2 3LY

    To find out more about this application click here.

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