St Andrews Bay Development (Kingask)
Kingask versus Scooniehill - same policies, different
interpretation more Development Phase News more
general Kingask News back to
Local News
Scooniehill and Kingask
Professor Terence Lee, Letter to Editor, The Citizen, 16
March 2001
Fife Council is obviously discomfited by the Scottish
Executives rejection of Scooniehill. The Reporter at the public inquiry
based his decision to reject on many of the arguments that were ignored or
overruled when Fife Council took the decision to accept Kingask.
Moreover, Fifes planning professionals had recommended acceptance of
Scooniehill - more embarrassment!
But for Councillor Bill Kay (Citizen, March 9), to seek
reassurance by claiming that the Kingask decision had the backing of the
Scottish Executive, on the grounds that the late Donald Dewar did not
intervene, is clutching at straws.
What we were given to understand, by the then First
Minister, Donald Dewar, and his predecessor, Secretary of State Dr John Reid,
is that government policy firmly decrees that responsibility for dealing with
planning applications must rest with the local planning authority. There are
circumstances in which they can intervene - but these are very closely
prescribed by law under the Town and Country Planning Act (1997) and did not
apply in this case. (One of these circumstances would be if Fife Council had
notified him of a 'significant departure from the Development Plan' - they
obviously should have, but they didnt).
Given his hands-off stance, the First Minister did not have
the option, under policy or in law, to impose a public inquiry while Fife
Council was considering the Kingask application. Nor could he impose one
after the consent had been granted, for that would imply that he disagreed with
the outcome - invalidating any subsequent appeal. (Letter to Green Belt Forum,
July 30, 2000). In fact, he made it absolutely clear that it would be improper
for him to express an opinion at all - about either side of the dispute.
To conclude from this that the late Donald Dewar was
satisfied with the way the Council was handling the matter" is a self-serving
fantasy. more Development
Phase News more general Kingask News back to
Local News up to
Top |