- Demolition of conservatory and replacement with single storey rear extension, small single storey front extension and new windows and rooflights associated with a loft conversion
7 West Lodge Rousdon Devon DT7 3XPRef. No: 23/0977/FUL | Validated: Thu 04 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - Lawful Development Certificate for the conversion of an existing garage to a utility room and store, construction of a new garage and replacement cladding.Coastlands Cliff Road Sidmouth EX10 8JNRef. No: 23/0982/CPL | Validated: Thu 04 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision
- Lawful Development Certificate for roof conversion and installation of rooflights63 Hawkins Road Exeter Devon EX1 3UWRef. No: 23/0985/CPL | Validated: Fri 05 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision
- Proposed telecommunications installation of 15.0m phase 8 monopole and associated ancillary works
Exmouth Road Clyst St Mary Devon EX5 1BYRef. No: 23/0978/TEL | Validated: Thu 04 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - Proposed dormers, porch side extension, alterations to fenestration, new stove flue & revised materials
70 Halsdon Avenue Exmouth Devon EX8 3DWRef. No: 23/0988/FUL | Validated: Thu 04 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - Change of use/ conversion of the building to a holiday letting unit and the change of use of the remainder of the site to form an associated curtilage area.
Land To East Of Riverside Cottage HarcombeRef. No: 23/0983/FUL | Validated: Thu 04 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - Alterations to the existing care home to provide an extension to the residents’ lounge, provision of a new adjoining window, plus enhancement of the existing hard landscaped frontage to provide a level access ramp, steps and decked terrace
Linksway Nursing Home 17 Douglas Avenue Exmouth Devon EX8 2EYRef. No: 23/0986/FUL | Validated: Thu 04 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - Construction of single storey rear and side extension and change of use from two flats to one house.
Shirley 116 Littleham Road Exmouth EX8 2RDRef. No: 23/0987/FUL | Validated: Thu 04 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - The construction of an agricultural storage building.
Towhill Farm Westwood Broadclyst EX5 3DJRef. No: 23/0971/FUL | Validated: Fri 05 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - Variation of condition 22 (requiring the development to connect to the Decentralised Energy Network) of planning permission 21/3148/MOUT (up-to 6000 sqm of office development) to allow flexibility for alternative heating options to be considered.
Land To The East Of Anning Road/ Tithebarn Way Redhayes ExeterRef. No: 23/0976/VAR | Validated: Wed 03 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - Installation of new dormer window and renovation of existing dormer window
Greenbay Fremington Road Seaton EX12 2HXRef. No: 23/0975/FUL | Validated: Thu 04 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - Scotts Pine : crown lift in all directions to approximately 7m.
15 Warren Park West Hill Ottery St Mary EX11 1TNRef. No: 23/0968/TRE | Validated: Wed 03 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - Single storey front / side extension to dwelling
30 Park Road Beer EX12 3HJRef. No: 23/0950/FUL | Validated: Wed 03 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - Refurbishment of existing function room to include new kitchen and associated roof mounted plant, existing window opening enlarged
Beach Hotel Victoria Road Exmouth EX8 1DRRef. No: 23/0963/FUL | Validated: Wed 03 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - Proposed single storey side extension
4 Dukes Crescent Exmouth EX8 4RQRef. No: 23/0948/FUL | Validated: Wed 03 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - Proposed link single garage conversion.
2 Brook Meadow High Street Newton Poppleford EX10 0EQRef. No: 23/0943/FUL | Validated: Wed 03 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - Proposed two-storey extension, porch and alterations including replacement garden terrace.
11 Meadow Close Lympstone Devon EX8 5LQRef. No: 23/0958/FUL | Validated: Tue 02 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - Ash – fell.
Langstone View Green Lane Exton Devon EX3 0PWRef. No: 23/0938/TRE | Validated: Tue 02 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - T1, Beech : crown reduction via thinning by approximately 15 to 20% of the foliar area; removing branch lengths of up to 4m maximum, making target pruning cuts of up to 60mm diameter.
Grasmere West Hill Road West Hill Ottery St Mary EX11 1UZRef. No: 23/0959/TRE | Validated: Tue 02 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - Conversion of roof space to habitable use to include a rear dormer and 1 front roofight.25 Point Terrace Exmouth Devon EX8 1EFRef. No: 23/0944/CPL | Validated: Tue 02 May 2023 | Status: Approved
- T1 Beech – To carry out an overall crown reduction via thinning, removing no more than 25% of the foliar area. Removing branch ends up to 3m in length, making target pruning cuts of up to 70mm in diameter. To remove lowest primary branch to first union, pruning cut of approximately 75mm.
231 High Street Honiton EX14 1AHRef. No: 23/0956/TCA | Validated: Tue 02 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - Single storey rear extension, dormer extension with associated roof alterations and relocation of detached garage
31 Willow Avenue Exmouth EX8 4QSRef. No: 23/0954/FUL | Validated: Tue 02 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - Construction of front porch.
12 Avenue Mezidon-Canon Honiton Devon EX14 2TTRef. No: 23/0941/FUL | Validated: Tue 02 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - Resurface forecourt and path and regulate levels to improve access for disabled.
Seaton United Reform Church Cross Street Seaton EX12 2LHRef. No: 23/0949/FUL | Validated: Tue 02 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - Conversion of detached workshop to 1-bed annexe.
Newbrae Dalwood Devon EX13 7HGRef. No: 23/0957/FUL | Validated: Fri 05 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - Conversion of domestic office and store to provide accommodation ancillary to Fairlawn House
Fairlawn House Orchard Close Lympstone EX8 5LARef. No: 23/0965/FUL | Validated: Thu 04 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - T1: Oak – reduce branch growing towards the rear corner of Upper Heights, removing the fourth order branch making 1 cut approx 100mm. T2: group of Beech trees – reduce the crowns of the trees by 2 – 3m, (possibly removing end lengths of 4 – 5m) with cuts approximately 60 – 80mm of second and third order branches overhanging the garden of Upper Heights.
Upper Heights Burscombe Lane Sidford Sidmouth EX10 9SFRef. No: 23/0952/TRE | Validated: Thu 04 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - Proposed single storey rear extension, internal alterations and conversion of attic space to form bedroom bathroom, with the addition of one dormer window and two rooflights
15 Yardelands Sidmouth Devon EX10 9LJRef. No: 23/0931/FUL | Validated: Fri 05 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - Re-slate whole roof; re-plaster rear elevation; replace lead flashing in valleys; replace fascia?s on West Facing Elevation; replace guttering and downpipes on South & West Facing Elevation and Install 3 no cowls.
17 Silver Street Ottery St Mary EX11 1DBRef. No: 23/0933/LBC | Validated: Fri 05 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - Permitted development approval is requested for a 5m x 6m garden room to be located at the top of garden approx 38 metres from the main dwelling.Reedmace Woodhouse Lane Uplyme Devon DT7 3SXRef. No: 23/0934/CPL | Validated: Wed 03 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision
- Single storey glass canopy to the rear elevation of the property.
27 Primley Road Sidmouth Devon EX10 9LDRef. No: 23/0921/FUL | Validated: Wed 03 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - Conversion of a coach station mess room and office to two number holiday lets.
Sewards Bus Depot Dalwood Devon EX13 7EJRef. No: 23/0906/FUL | Validated: Tue 02 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - T1, Macrocarpa : remove first and second order branches, approximately 40 – 80mm diameter cuts (snapped limbs from crown). Remedial works to root system beneath the driveway. T2, Chestnut : remove approximately 2m of second and third order branches, diameter cuts of approximately 100mm. T3, Yew : crown lift and shape (predominantly east side of crown), removing second, third and fourth order branches of 3m, cuts 80mm. T4 & T5, Sweet Chestnuts : mostly remove second, third and fourth order branches , 4m in length, diameter cuts 200mm.
Long Orchard Elysian Fields Sidmouth EX10 8UHRef. No: 23/0893/TRE | Validated: Tue 02 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - Installation of 3 x internally illuminated fascia signs and installation of 4 x non-illuminated graphic signs.
Tesco Honiton Store Battishorne Way Honiton EX14 2XDRef. No: 23/0879/ADV | Validated: Tue 02 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - Installation of 25 soil nail type anchors and galvanised rock fall netting to strengthen the existing retaining wall and prevent futher deterioration.
Mrs Ethelstons Primary School Pound Lane Uplyme DT7 3TTRef. No: 23/0878/FUL | Validated: Thu 04 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - Single storey extensions, side pitched roof- garage/ utlity and rear flat roof- kitchen/dining.
2 Leas Road Budleigh Salterton Devon EX9 6SARef. No: 23/0869/FUL | Validated: Fri 05 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - Installation of new tarmac entrance, layout changes, vehicle barriers and alterations to boundary treatments.
Uphams Car ParkRef. No: 23/0852/FUL | Validated: Thu 04 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - Erection of a two-storey rear extension and decking.
61 Douglas Avenue Exmouth Devon EX8 2HGRef. No: 23/0858/FUL | Validated: Tue 02 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - Erection of earth banked slurry lagoon
Highwood Farm Cotleigh EX14 9HYRef. No: 23/0854/FUL | Validated: Wed 03 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - Single storey side and rear extension.
27 Lea Combe Axminster EX13 5LJRef. No: 23/0837/FUL | Validated: Wed 03 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - Beech – cable brace between the two main trunks, above the fork and the failed union, and a crown reduction of about 25/30% by removing 6 – 9m of the crown. Removal of eastern 3rd order branch (extends across road) back to main stem. Many lower side branches will be reduced in length.
Hawkerland Brake Barn, R S P B Exmouth Road Aylesbeare Devon EX5 2JSRef. No: 23/0846/TRE | Validated: Tue 02 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision - T1 Turkey Oak – Raise and reduce crown by removing the sections of the limbs as indicated in submited photo, returning the tree to a more symmetrical structure.
29 Evergreen Close Exmouth Devon EX8 4RRRef. No: 23/0755/TRE | Validated: Tue 02 May 2023 | Status: Awaiting decision
Daily Archives: 15 May 2023
Westminster forgot its promises to ‘coastal communities’, and left them to rot
This article by John Harris starts from issues raised ten years ago.
Owl believes “official” recognition of the problem of coastal communities can be traced much further back.
Before reading the article below consider this conclusion from a Government and Local Communities Committee report of 2006 which featured a visit to consult “Stakeholders” in Exmouth (Annex A).
“Our analysis has identified a number of common characteristics shared by many coastal towns. These include: their physical isolation, deprivation levels, the inward migration of older people, the high levels of transience, the outward migration of young people, poor quality housing and the nature of the coastal economy. Excluding their physical location, none of these characteristics are unique to coastal towns. The combination of these characteristics, however, with the environmental challenges that coastal towns face, does lead to a conclusion that they are in need of focused, specific Government attention.
We were particularly struck by the demography of many coastal towns, where there is a combination of trends occurring, including the outward movement of young people and the inward migration of older people. One of the impacts of this phenomenon is that there tends to be a high proportion of elderly in coastal towns, many of whom have moved away from family support resulting in a significant financial burden on the local public sector in these areas.”
[Those “Stakeholders” consulted included: Ms Jill Elson (EDDC Communities portfolio holder and Exmouth member) Mr Paul Diviani (EDDC Portfolio holder and Exmouth member) Cllr Eileen Wragg (Mayor of Exmouth Town Council)].
John Harris www.theguardian.com
About a decade ago, politicians and journalists were suddenly confronted with an issue that had always festered at the edge of the national conversation: the dire state of England’s seaside towns, and their deep social problems.
The referendum that would pull us out of the EU was a couple of years away, but one of the key things that made it happen was already plain to see: the rise of the UK Independence party, and a surge of grievance and complaint that had particularly strong roots on the East coast. In 2014, the faded Essex resort of Clacton held the byelection that resulted in the Tory turncoat Douglas Carswell becoming the first of Ukip’s two elected MPs. His new party was doing equally brisk political business in coastal towns clustered in Norfolk and Lincolnshire.
When the vote for Brexit came, such places as Blackpool, Great Yarmouth, Canvey Island and Margate were among the leave side’s enthusiastic sources of support. As Nigel Farage and his friends endlessly said, many people in those towns were anxious and angry about immigration. But as I well knew from repeated reporting trips, what they tended to talk about most passionately was stuff that Ukip rarely mentioned: dreadful public transport, poor housing, nonexistent opportunities for young people, and local economies that effectively died for half the year.
In the wake of the result, politicians and journalists maintained a sort of guilt-stricken interest in the kind of “left-behind” places that looked out to sea. But then, as the 2019 election came into view, there was a shift. The most vivid political stories suddenly seemed to centre on the old coalfields and former factory towns grouped into the so-called “red wall”. That continuing story has since been joined by that of the supposed “blue wall”: Tory-held seats in the south of England where disgruntled remainers are looking to other parties. There have been a few rather laboured attempts to conceptualise a “sea wall” centred on coastal constituencies, but they have failed to catch on: the plight of seaside towns remains as clear as ever, but they have once again fallen back to the political margins.
Among plenty of others, this is one of the stories that runs through a brilliant new book titled The Seaside: England’s Love Affair, by the former Guardian writer Madeleine Bunting. It is a travelogue, an impressive work of social history, an affectionate celebration and much more besides. But a grim English irony burns through almost every page: the fact that the places many of us still associate with leisure, noisy enjoyment and the health-giving wonders of sea air are also full of isolation, misery and poor health.
Each chapter has a sobering passage that recounts basic facts. “Over 80% of the residents of Skegness and Mablethorpe live in areas categorised as the 20% most deprived in England. Around a third of residents have no or low qualifications … Scarborough’s quaint streets translate into a tragic set of health statistics on the diseases of despair: suicide in the town is 61% higher than the national average, and hospital admissions are 60% higher … Despite the success of Margate’s regeneration, parts of the centre of the town are still among the most deprived in the country; it has three areas in the top half per cent on the index of multiple deprivation.”
What all these numbers reflect is the reality of living on the edge, in every sense. Coastal towns are often not just distant from Westminster, but also on the periphery of local government districts, and therefore neglected even by their own councils. They tend not to have any institutions of higher education. And their public transport is largely terrible: this week’s story about the nationalisation of the failing train operator TransPennine Express, for example, is not only about Leeds, Sheffield and Manchester, but places where dire rail transport compounds glaring economic problems: Redcar, Scarborough, Cleethorpes, Hull, Grimsby.
Such are the results of a neglect that is evident even when people in positions of power are in a mood to help. One of the most telling features of last year’s levelling up white paper was a seemingly reflex tendency to fold coastal areas into generalised descriptions of places with problems – “Urban areas and coastal towns”, “former industrial centres and many coastal communities” – and thereby underplay their very specific issues. The same sense of condescension surrounds the government’s £229m coastal communities fund. As one of the most damning parts of Bunting’s book explains, it has been spread pathetically thinly: £1.6m to renovate the centre of Bognor Regis, £1.4m for “a visitor centre at Walton-on-the-Naze”, £1.2m for Hastings’ new “food court”.
And then there are the government’s much-hyped plans for so-called freeports, replete with promises of thousands of new jobs. These deregulated, low-tax zones – still shrouded in secrecy – are the cheapest kind of regeneration option, reflecting the old laissez-faire idea that if the state steps out of the way, it will somehow open the way to dynamism and innovation. But without huge improvements in transport, housing, training, education and all the rest, the kind of employers who might offer more than low-paid, precarious work will never pitch up. Besides, the plans are centred on a large handful of existing commercial ports, not coastal communities in general: even if their supposed miracles materialise, they will not touch most of the UK’s coastline.
Elsewhere, there are glimmers of hope. The annual £28bn the Labour party is still pledging to spend on new climate measures – which sits alongside other plans for government-led investment in deprived areas – will have clear benefits for coastal places, not least because of the centrality to the plans of offshore wind. Its promised “take back control” bill will at least increase the responsibilities of local councils, and thereby bring some decisions closer to the places they affect. But as ever, more radical thinking might be a good idea. Within central government, coastal communities should surely have their own dedicated minister. Clusters of seaside towns should perhaps be grouped into federations led by mayor-like figures, and given responsibility for collective regeneration plans, along with the kind of substantial spending power that Westminster politicians never like to talk about.
Last summer, I took a family holiday not far from Minehead, a coastal town on the edge of Somerset long associated with deprivation, scarce job opportunities and a sense of being woefully cut off. It is actually a gloriously located place, overlooked by a spectacular headland, with an elegantly wide main street and a lovely beach. It is 60 miles from Bristol and about 40 from Exeter: in the era of working from home, it could thrive.
But besides steam trains that slowly transport tourists across the nearby countryside, its 12,000 residents have no rail service: the town’s station closed in 1971. As with so many other places, choices were made in distant centres of power that condemned it to long years of stagnation and decay. Now, instead of fixating on coastal towns one day and forgetting them the next, could we not just give them what they need?