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What Are They Planning for Us?

In the not-too-distant past, ‘they’ usually meant the District Council or the County. However, the goal posts have been radically moved in recent years: the District Council have been required to replace the existing simple system with a multitude of documents forcing it to accept diktats from both the unelected South East Regional Authority and central government itself. There is now a clear and very present danger that we will have little say in what is being planned for us.

The old Local Plan was derived from sets of local policies and national guidelines. These local policies were cognisant of local issues. However, there now exists a South East Plan (SEP), which covers the whole South East Region; this in turn has spawned a raft of local authority documents, known collectively as the Local Development framework (LDF), the sole purpose of which appears to be to enact what the government demands. There is a local consultation process, but this is so structured as to provide a confirmation of the answers they want, rather than what we would like.

One of these documents is the Core Strategy, which is meant to define the way in which all local development plans will realise the government’s aspirations, as laid out in the SEP. The Core Strategy for our area is now in the public domain on the South Bucks website. The consultation phase finished on April 27 and South Bucks will produce the final draft deposit version at the end of the year.

Let’s take a look at what they’re offering. South Bucks has been allocated 1,880 houses, to be built in the period 2006–26, i.e. 94 houses a year. The Core Strategy document tells us that in the last three years we have already built, or approved to build, some 1,272 homes, so on the face of it we only need to build about 600 houses in the next 18 years – that’s 36 a year - to meet our target. If we narrow this down to Taplow, we are planning some 180 on the Mill Lane site. So just by our little selves our parish can supply one third of the entire South Bucks allocation of houses for the next 18 years! And this from a parish with just 2% of the whole South Bucks population. However, when you read the Core Strategy carefully, you will find that the 1,880 houses is a minimum figure. So it’s still open house for the developers’ charter known as the SEP.

Reading even more, you will discover that there are more issues in the south Bucks Core Strategy that will materially affect Taplow. The following is a summary.

I hope the above gives you an outline picture of what is being planned for us all over the next 18 years.

Fred Russell