St Andrews Bay Development (Kingask)
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Call to planners after Scooniehill decision
Michael Alexander, The Courier, 2 March 2001
The Scottish Executives decision to reject plans for a
£25 million golf and leisure development at Scooniehill, near St Andrews,
must cast considerable doubt on the quality of advice given by Fife
Councils planners, claimed the vice-chairman of St Andrews Community
Council Dr Frank Riddell yesterday.
Noting that the Reporter backed local councillors who
rejected the plans against the advice of Fife Council officials, Dr Riddell
said council planning officials should seriously consider their
positions" and called for an inquiry into why the recommendation was made.
Dr Riddell also backed St Andrews Green Belt Forum chairman
Professor Terence Lee, who said the grounds on which the Reporter rejected the
Scooniehill application were virtually identical to those on which local
residents objected to the St Andrews Bay development nearing completion at
Kingask.
These claims were flatly denied by Fife Council, which said
the outcome of one appeal decision did not entitle Dr Riddell to conclude there
is a problem with the planning service, while his attempt to compare
Scooniehill with the Kingask application was misguided and
ill-founded.
The International Golf Club of St Andrews targeted the
Scooniehill site on the south side of the town to develop two golf courses, a
clubhouse, lodges and parking. Executive Reporter lain Lumsden turned down its
appeal after the councils east area development committee rejected the
plans.
The Reporter stated approval would contravene council
policies on protection of the landscape and development in the countryside, and
that the clubhouse would be unduly prominent - a criticism levelled at the
Kingask plans.
Yesterday Dr Riddell said St Andrews Community Council
welcomed the Reporters conclusion but the fact that it flies in the face
of the recommendation by Fife Councils planning officials must, he said,
cast doubt on the quality of advice being given to councillors.
Dr Riddell said the Reporter essentially states that
officials misinterpreted the planning policies in the Fife Structure Plan and
the St Andrews Local Plan.
In paragraph 66 of his report he shows that the
determining policies should have been environmental ones. Fife Councils
officials chose, wrongly, to use policies on tourism to determine the issue. In
paragraph 68 he rubbishes the Fife Council road department witness who said the
low level of car parking was appropriate.
The grounds on which the Reporter rejected the
Scooniehill application were virtually identical to those on which residents
objected to the Kingask development ... The time has come for planning
officials in Fife Council seriously to consider their own positions.
Dr Riddell said this was the vindication of local
democracy that Kingask was not.
Last night Fife Council chief executive Douglas Sinclair
said, It is difficult to see how the outcome of one planning appeal
decision entitles Dr Riddell to conclude there is a problem about the quality
of advice given by Fife Councils planners.
The council deals with some 3500 planning
applications each year. Over 70% of these are delegated to officials ... Of
these some 3% are subject to the planning appeal process. The council
successfully defends its position on some 80% of these. The council can stand
comparison with all Scottish planning authorities in terms of performance and
quality of advice.
Dr Riddells attempt to compare the Scooniehill
planning application circumstances with the Kingask planning application
is misguided and ill-founded. These are two entirely different applications
which raise different determining issues.
Dr Riddell seems to imply there has been some
irregular conduct by senior officials. This ... we reject.
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