Tuesday 13 April 2021

AI’s ‘final submission of additional information’ prompts another consultation

On 5 March 2021, Aggregate Industries lodged what it called its "final submission of additional information" in respect of planning application DCC/3944/2017 to quarry Straitgate Farm, saying: 
We would now ask that our application is progressed to the next available committee and confirm our agreement to a time extension until the 31st July 2021 in order to achieve this.   
This additional information was originally requested almost 4 years ago, but seemingly it still didn’t tick all the boxes that Devon County Council had wanted. On 11 March 2021, Devon County Council wrote back to Aggregate Industries saying: 
Additional information is required to determine the associated application at Straitgate Farm reference DCC/3944/2017… I am writing to ask you to formally agree to extend the period for the determination of your application until 30 September 2021. You have indicated this will give you adequate time. 
Despite the above, no further information has been provided beyond that final submission. 

On 7 April 2021, Aggregate Industries wrote to Devon County Council again, this time saying:
We would now ask that our application is progressed to the next available committee and confirm our agreement to a time extension until the 30th September 2021 in order to achieve this.    
Devon County Council has now started a new 30-day public consultation on this application and also DCC/3945/2017 which seeks to import the as-dug sand and gravel from Straitgate Farm into Hillhead Quarry near Uffculme for processing – a 2.5 million-mile operation


How the public are supposed to wade through the disparate collection of documents and muddle is anybody’s guess. You might have hoped – in all the intervening years – that Aggregate Industries would have done some serious thinking about this application, that it would have all its ducks aligned. But no. This final submission contains the normal assortment of nonsense, omissions, falsity and contradictions.

Even the cattle crossing issue remains unresolved. Devon County Council has previously said
We therefore conclude that any increase in animal or farm traffic crossing this road is a direct consequence of the current planning application and needs to be assessed as a part of the highways impacts.
Remarkably, but tellingly, no assessment has been lodged on what impact 150 cows crossing four times daily would have on the functioning of the main road into and out of Ottery St Mary. The application lodged with East Devon District Council to facilitate such a crossing remains undetermined.

The final submission supplied by Aggregate Industries includes: 
TRAFFIC: Transport Assessment, July 2018, which supersedes previous assessments. 
LANDSCAPE & SOILS: Set of revised plans to accompany above report, which supersede the previously submitted versions of all the following plans 
CLIMATE CHANGE: Greenhouse Gas Assessment of the Proposed Quarry at Straitgate Farm, Centre for Energy and the Environment, Exeter University, March 2021 
HYDROGEOLOGY: Collation of post Regulation 22 discussions and clarifications, Wood Group UK Ltd, February 2021. Note this document contains the revised modelling of the MWWT at item 10.
RESOURCE ASSESSMENT: Straitgate Quarry (Prospect): Resource Assessment, February 2021. 
However, much of the information Devon County Council requested in 2017 has still not been supplied.

Comments on this final submission, or any other part of the applications, should be made to Devon County Council, either online or by email to planning@devon.gov.uk including name, address and the reference numbers above.