Cabinet Member: Growth & Infrastructure
Forward Plan Ref: 2011/190
Contact: Peter Day, Mineral & Waste Policy Team Leader Tel: (01865) 815544
Report by Deputy Director for Environment & Economy – Growth & Infrastructure (CA6).
The Minerals and Waste Core Strategy will set out the vision, objectives, spatial strategy, core policies and implementation framework for the supply of minerals and management of waste in Oxfordshire to 2030. The County Council carried out consultation on draft Minerals and Waste Planning Strategies in September/October 2011. Responses were received from 779 individuals and organisations, including 548 objections to a new mineral working area at Cholsey.
Overall the consultation has not resulted in any substantive issues being raised that call into question the principles of the draft strategies. But a number of more detailed issues have been raised, in response to which some changes to the strategy policies are proposed.
The consultation responses, issues raised and possible changes to policies have been considered by the Minerals and Waste Plan Working Group; and the Growth and Infrastructure Scrutiny Committee on 27 February 2012 considered key issues arising from the consultation and proposed changes to policies in response to them.
The report sets out the key issues arising from the consultation and actions that have been undertaken in response to them. It draws conclusions on where changes need to be made to polices and it puts forward a set of proposed changes to the minerals, waste and core polices and the minerals and waste vision and objectives, for inclusion in a revised Minerals and Waste Core Strategy.
The next stage in the process, subject to approval by full Council, is for the revised Minerals and Waste Core Strategy to be published for public comment and submitted to the government for independent examination.
The Cabinet is RECOMMENDED to:
(a)
agree
the amended minerals, waste and core policies in Annex 1 and the amended
minerals and waste vision and objectives in Annex 2 as the basis of the
Minerals and Waste Core Strategy – Proposed Submission Document for approval by
the full County Council.
(b)
delegate
authority to finalise the Minerals and Waste Core Strategy – Proposed
Submission Document, including amendments to the supporting text, to the
Cabinet Member for Growth & Infrastructure.
(c)
delegate
authority to finalise the County Council’s responses to the comments made in
response to the Minerals Planning Strategy and Waste Planning Strategy
Consultation Drafts, September 2011 to the Cabinet Member for Growth &
Infrastructure.
(d) RECOMMEND to the full County Council that the Minerals and Waste Core Strategy – Proposed Submission Document as finalised by the Cabinet Member for Growth & Infrastructure be approved and be published to enable representations to be made and submitted to the Secretary of State for independent examination.
Minutes:
The Cabinet had before them a report (CA6) which set out the
vision, objections, spatial strategy, core policies and implementation
framework for the supply on minerals and management of waste in Oxfordshire to
2030.
Councillor Mathew stated that, in his opinion, none of the
substantial issues and conflicts had been addressed when preparing the final draft
and that the fundamental matters which had been stressed ad nauseam were
conspicuous by their absence. The matter
of gravel miles; the north/south of the Thames dichotomy of the source versus
the need, the effect of cumulative excavation, the lack of clarity of
mathematics in the document on the calculation of primary and secondary gravel
excavation and need, the lack of coordination with neighbouring counties had
again been completely ignored. For these
reasons, he feared the core strategy remained unsound and in grave danger of
being rejected.
Mr Chris Hargreaves, Policy Manager, West Oxfordshire
District Council, spoke to express the concerns of that Council to the proposed
minerals strategy. He referred to the previously expressed concerns about
Mr Adrian Hatt, a solicitor from Hedges in Wallinford, spoke
on behalf of the Communities against Gravel Extraction (CAGE) against the
proposal to site a new gravel pit between
Councillor Patrick Greene, speaking as the local Councillor for Cholsey
including Winterbrook spoke in support of the work carried out by CAGE in
respect of their third party and even handed investigations by an expert. He noted that Cholsey was singled out at a
late stage in deciding on matters of Policy M3. He referred to a number of
matters that would be fundamental to the proposed strategy such as – AONB final
decisions for both Chilterns and North Wessex Downs, planning matters and views
from RAF Benson on bird strike. These matters could all stop extraction at
Cholsey with an inspector finding our strategy unjustified and unsound
He expressed concern that if policy M3 went ahead there would be blight
on the area of
Councillor Lynda Atkins, speaking as a local Councillor for
Mr Mark Gray, spoke as Chair of Cholsey Parish Council and indicated he
was also a member of CAGE. He supported the views previously expressed by Mr
Hatt and focussed on other sites that could have been short-listed. He
questioned the approach used in determining a new site which was not based on
finding the areas where sand and gravel are located and then weeding out the
most constrained sites. He referred to the arguments from officers that
detailed analysis was not needed at this stage and would be for site
allocations in the future. However local residents had always known that the
proposed area around Cholsey comprised three adjacent sites and not some
broader area. He referred to the concerns of CAGE and the Parish Council that
had led to the engagement of a minerals specialist to assess the alternative
sites in
Mr John Taylor, Chairman of PAGE (Parishes Against Gravel Extraction)
spoke in support of policy M1 with a target of at least 0.9 million tonnes of
secondary and recycled aggregate a year.
However, rather than encourage the production and supply of secondary
and recycled aggregates, PAGE asked that Oxfordshire County Council should
proactively work with appropriate stakeholders to develop an action plan to
achieve and surpass this target. He
further urged the County Council to adopt a more progressive policy towards the
use of secondary and recycled aggregate in order to preserve the Oxfordshire
landscape from future land-won minerals working. The establishment of further permanent and
temporary sites should be a focus for future planning policy.
PAGE cautiously supported policy M2 with a planned sand and gravel
extraction rate of a maximum of 1.26 million tonnes a year.
In relation to policy M3, PAGE supported the policy for the locations of
land-won aggregates, particularly as the County had now reviewed the expected
locations of economic development growth over the next 15 years with a 50:50
balance between north and south Oxfordshire.
PAGE further supported the selection of Cholsey as the south Oxfordshire
site to replace Sutton Courtenay as it was nearest to the centres of demand and
has limited flood risk.
Councillor Anne Purse, whilst acknowledging that a lot of
work and discussion had gone into preparing the strategy, expressed concern
that too much weight had been placed on West Oxfordshire to provide gravel
which was not in proportion to the level of development in that part of the
County. The west of the County had
already seen the destruction of meadows that should still be there. She further recognised that safeguarding had
been put in place in certain areas, but felt that this meant even more intense
extraction in other areas.
In relation to waste, she sought assurance that
archaeological and Paleontological finds would be protected should they be
found on waste sites
Professor John Dowling expressed reservations about the
validity of the core strategy on the basis that the Council was in a period of
change and should not be making fundamental decisions which could be opposed by
the new Cabinet in May.
Councillor Lorraine Lindsay-Gale, Cabinet Member for Growth &
Infrastructure in moving the recommendations asked for approval to submit the
revised polices in the Minerals & Waste Core Strategy to full Council on 3
April. She noted that this would mark the end of a very long process which had
included two previous consultations. She informed cabinet that in September
2011 the Strategy had gone out for a third Consultation. Responses have been
assessed by the Minerals & Waste Working Group and considered by the Growth
& Infrastructure Scrutiny Committee on 27h February 2012.
Overall this work had not led to any new substantive issues being put forward
that call into question the principles on which the draft strategies were
prepared. She referred to the huge amount of time officers had spent working on
this consultation and she was confident that they had carefully addressed all
the concerns and issues raised by local residents, producers and contractors.
She outlined why there was a vital and pressing need to provide clarity
and certainty within the county’s minerals and waste planning process for all
concerned, and hoped that if colleagues agreed the changes today, the Core
Strategy could take another decisive step towards official adoption by central
government.
Councillor Lindsay-Gale highlighted two issues:
Firstly the robustness of 1.26 mtpa apportionment figure has been
criticized for being too low by the producers and too high by those seeking to protect
the environment. She had begun calling for a locally derived extraction figure
for the county in 2009 so that we could prove to central government that the
2.1 mtpa annual figure passed down to us by SEERA was far too high. The figure
of 1.26 already agreed by Cabinet was arrived at on the basis of an average
between two figures, one derived from the past 10 year’s production and the
other from planned population growth.
Our officers have re-examined their methodology and are confident that
this approach is robust. Indeed there has been no alternative put forward or
any challenge made to the 1.26 from central government. I trust this indicates
that they too recognize it as being robust.
In the current uncertain economic climate this figure may look high, but
we must hope and indeed plan for an upturn in demand, and provide a landbank of
potential reserves over the period of the plan.
Secondly she commented on the inclusion of Cholsey as the preferred
option for a site in the south of the county to replace Sutton Courtenay when
it runs out in about 8 years time. She stated that the residents had campaigned
strongly and Cabinet had listened to their concerns today. However after
careful re-examination of their case our officers were confident that Cholsey
was the best option in terms of location, lack of constraints, closeness to
market and access to good transport links.
In additional to the two issues she refuted the argument that all the
proposed development was in the south, and all of the extraction is in the west
referring to current growth figures. The strategy provided a positive overall
direction of travel. The proposals provided a cap to current levels of
production in the west.
With regard to mineral miles Councillor Lindsay-Gale asked for patience
– as the County Council were addressing the issue but had to work through
existing permissions which meant progress would inevitably be slow. The
inclusion of Cholsey demonstrated the ambition to minimize mineral miles as
much as we can going forward.
Councillor Lindsay-Gale also referred to the waste proposals that made
provision for facilities that would be required for the management of all
wastes in Oxfordshire up to 2030. This included not only municipal waste, but
also waste that is produced by the private sector, including commercial,
industrial, construction, demolition and excavation waste. She outlined the key
challenge for this council to provide and enable facilities that will increase
recycling and the recovery of materials as an alternative to sending them to
landfill. She referred to the successful growth in recycling so far and
referred to the aim to build on this success by raising our target to 70% by
2025 which will in turn result in our investment requirements becoming less. We
will also work to ensure that our facilities meet Oxfordshire’s needs, not
others. The Ardley EfW facility was now under
construction and would treat at least 95 per cent of Oxfordshire's
non-recyclable household waste, diverting it away from landfill, at the same
time generating electricity. She commented on work with the National
Decommissioning Agency and the local members in the Harwell and Culham areas to
ensure that the Council’s policies on dealing with legacy radioactive waste
reflect requirements at a national level. The waste proposals had been out to
consultation and she referred to some changes being proposed in reaction to the
responses received as set out in Annexes 1 and 2.
RESOLVED: to: (by 8 votes to 1)
(a)
agree
the amended minerals, waste and core policies in Annex 1 and the amended
minerals and waste vision and objectives in Annex 2 as the basis of the
Minerals and Waste Core Strategy – Proposed Submission Document for approval by
the full County Council.
(b)
delegate
authority to finalise the Minerals and Waste Core Strategy – Proposed
Submission Document, including amendments to the supporting text, to the
Cabinet Member for Growth & Infrastructure.
Supporting documents: