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Wearying process that can eat up your time – and your money

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Published Date: 29 June 2009
THIS year, I spent my two-week summer holiday at the Holiday Inn next to Edinburgh Zoo – despite living in the capital's Dalry Colonies, near Haymarket.
I was there because, for the past two and a half years, I have been heavily involved in the Haymarket planning saga.

The Holiday Inn was hosting a public inquiry, but the residents' association very much felt like Cinderella going to the ball
without the aid of a fairy godmother.

Those of us who opposed the development but who couldn't afford a planning consultant or legal counsel had to spend a lot of money and time preparing for the inquiry in Edinburgh's Central Library, reading and photocopying. Electronic copies were not available to us, unfortunately.

At the Holiday Inn, we watched sandwiches (paid for on expenses) being delivered to the main parties, while we sneaked in our own (highly illegal) sandwiches to avoid the expensive hotel lunches and brought in our own drinks.

To add insult to injury, we also had to pay to print and post copies of the evidence we submitted to the inquiry (e-mail was not sufficient) and we did not have any administrators to do it for us or any company-supplied photocopiers to use.

We are now an organisation even more financially challenged than before as a result of this development, and I almost had to resort to begging at our AGM in April for residents' donations to keep us sufficiently afloat to allow us to continue to print newsletters.

If you ever get involved in one of these planning sagas yourself, then I hope you are rich and well-connected.

It would have been easy to be beaten down by what turned out to be a two-and-a-half- year-long, drawn-out process, but you do have to wonder whether that is what developers of sites such as this rely on: members of the public falling by the wayside because they assume that the system is against them and that they don't have the time (or money!) to be or stay involved.

• Maria Kelly is chairwoman of the Dalry Colonies Residents' Association.





The full article contains 369 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 28 June 2009 9:56 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Colin B,

Bearsden 29/06/2009 00:50:52
Maria
Dont vote Labour or Liberal if you want an effective planning process-they protect the useless public sector wasters
2

Robert Dunn,

Edinburgh 29/06/2009 02:00:10
Re: David V Goliath Situations
1) "Might makes Right" - Pro Goliath
2) Voltaire" God is not on the side of the big battalions, but on the side of those who shoot best"- Pro David.

So Maria aim to shoot best.
3

Bret,

Aberdeen 29/06/2009 02:21:17
Great article on commitment by a taxpayer!
This kind of dedication should serve as an example of the power of the people.
If Scots work with this calibre of dedication through the process of independence, then Scotland becomes the top country in the world. Dreams are made of this kind of dedication. Well done!
4

drunken proffet,

Tassy 29/06/2009 06:29:10
You could maybe check the old shale workings in the Haymarket area. It was rumoured that they stretched from West Lothian into Haymarket, how true that is and where they would run or how deep I do not know. However I do remember when they were building one of the motorways an old miner suggested that they move a certain section a couple of hundred metres North. They didn't, well not at first. Just a suggestion not too sure who would have any information but West Lothian Council are maybe the best place to start.
5

Climate change is real,

29/06/2009 11:18:29
"Dont vote Labour or Liberal if you want an effective planning process"

I spy petty party political point scoring going on. Not unusual for this newspaper.

Don't vote for the SNP either if you want an effective planning process. They are the ones who have used the National Planning Framework to remove the ability of the public to object to "major" projects.

Not many members of the public know this yet, it has been sneaked through with the minimum of debate. The public will find out when they try and object to these schemes and then they will get very angry that their right to object was taken away by a bunch of Munchkins in Holyrood at the behest of the SNP.

To be fair to the SNP, this scandal was started by the previous administration, but the SNP did nothing to correct the mistakes of the previous administration.


6

Statsman,

Edinburgh 29/06/2009 11:45:35
Edinburgh Council don't care about residents when it comes to large planning applications. They only care about how fat a cheque or what inducements they get for planning gain.

Both the elected councillors (in general) and the planning department are useless and regard the public with contempt.

 

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