Object

Draft Local Plan - Supplementary Consultation

Representation ID: 8955

Received: 15/03/2019

Respondent: Alison Robbins

Representation Summary:

No better than original proposal for Site 13.
Traffic in local area is already too high and to add 300 to 400 new houses in this focused area alone will cause major disruption on Bills Lane/Haslucks Green Road equivalent to Site 13 and additional pollution.
Flooding is a massive risk that is not clearly understood or explained in this proposal. The April 2018 flooding in the area blocked roads and damaged property. If housing is built here, how will surface water be managed with the huge increase in hard-standing through roads and driveways for this volume of houses?

Full text:

I object to this latest proposal as it is no better than the original proposal of Allocation 13.
The original plan was for 600 houses and the area touched on to Dickens Heath Road/Tanworth Lane at one end and Bills Lane/Haslucks Green Road - an assumption would have been that approximately 50% of traffic would exit/enter one end, and 50% would exit/enter at the other putting more traffic onto already congested roads - this latest site 26 proposal will now only affect Bills Lane/Haslucks Green Road end with 300 houses - therefore the traffic impact will be no better for Bills Lane and Haslucks green road which is already overloaded with traffic coming from Dickens Heath. This point is touched on in the plan in the word "shifting" and acknowledging that Dickens Heath Road is already congested - 'Shifting the focus of vehicular traffic movements away from the congested Dickens Heath Road to Bills Lane/Haslucks Green Road.'

I do not see this current proposal as sustainable due to the high volume of houses in one focused area.

Despite changes to the initial plan I gather that Shirley South is still to receive 38% of proposed new housing in the Solihull borough, which remains disproportionate and unacceptable given the size of the borough.
The effect on the local area by way of flooding and environmental issues is in no way fully understood and not addressed in the proposal from what I can understand. This area suffered massive flooding in April of 2018. If housing is built on the natural land and flood plains the results could be much worse than previously.

I will also refer to a point I made in my initial objection of the 38% of housing in Shirley is that new housing allocation should be developed to compliment current and new infrastructure. In the case of HS2 which is referred to in the current plans, this will be running to the North of the borough and not stopping anywhere near to these proposed Shirley developments - therefore more congestion would be caused by people driving to the proposed HS2 station as there is inadequate public transport to that area of the borough.