downsmail.co.uk Make councillors pay up
Dear Sir – It never ceases to amaze me how stupid councillors can be. In the latest episode the planning commieewent against expert officer recommendations and deferred applications for housing in the Suon Road area, despite the land being designated for the purpose. This is extremely naive and stupid and riskswasting council taxpayers’ money. With the Government demanding that Maidstone provides so many houses, and land being allocated in the core strategy for that very purpose, certain members of the planning commiee, led by acting Lib Dem group leader, Tony Harwood, tried to derail the process, despite officer advice that if the applicants appeal, they would win and Maidstonewould have to pick up the bill for costs running to many thousands of pounds. We, whowould pick up the tab, have
every right to be concerned. But this never seems to be shared by irresponsible councillors. I remember many years ago Gordon Bonner, the then leader of the ruling Conservative group,warning cavalier councillors that they must stop going against officer advice, especially when it costs the council money. Is it not time now for the chief executive
of the council towarn our irresponsible representatives that there might come a time when, if they disregard expert advice they might have to pick up subsequent bills for costs themselves as individuals? Wewould all vote for that I think. The alternative is to not elect these navel- gazing idiots when they stand again. Peter Edwards, HarrowWay,Weavering
I understand your point, Peter, but when councillors are determining a scheme that would see the provision of almost 900 homes as well as the widening of a residential road, they owe it to residents to make the right decision. If this takes a lile longer than the developers
would want then so be it. Your definition of an irresponsible councillor differs to mine.Waving through large schemes at the hint of an appeal threat from a developer is irresponsible. Ordering planning officers to negotiate a
beer deal for Maidstone is responsible and the end result was that councillors accepted the scheme at the next commiee meeting three weeks later (see page 34) aer concerns on affordable housing and road widening – two key issues – were allayed. I would like to know how many other readers
agree with your suggestion that councillors should be fined for overruling officers. Given backbench councillors, many of whom made the decision you criticise, pick up a basic allowance of £388 per month and modest travel and subsistence expenses, it would deter those without a fortune to fall back on. A borough council whose members are exclusively rich is not my idea of local democracy. Response by Stephen
Contact our team ...
Stephen Eighteen Editor
stephen@downsmail.co.uk 01622 734735 ext 231
32 Maidstone South March 2014 Diane Nicholls
Assistant editor
diane@downsmail.co.uk 01622 734735 ext 232
Jane Shotliff Journalist
jane@downsmail.co.uk 01622 734735 ext 233
Dawn Kingsford
Journalist
dawn@downsmail.co.uk 01622 734735 ext 233
Changes no improvement
Dear Sir – Reading (or aempting) the new and “improved” Downs Mail Iwas reminded of an old American proverb – “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it”. The paperwas valued for its clear, black, readable print and its wide and succinct reportage, aswell as for its minimal but relevant editorial input. Thatwas fine, just the way itwas. What
has been “improved”? G E French, Marion Crescent, Maidstone
Comment not welcome
Dear Sir – Until now I have loved receiving the Downs Mail andwould immediately turn to the Leers page. It belonged to the readers and felt like a genuine forum for our opinions, freely expressed. Now you have changed it to what appears to be a page for you and your staff to express their own opinions for at least 50% of content. In addition, the new typeface is too small to read. Give it back to us; return it to the previous format.We are quite capable of forming our own opinions on leer content. Everyone I have spoken to feels the same. Jean and Malcolm Beaton, Hill Brow, Bearsted
Thank you for your feedback.We have taken on board comments on the main body type size and have increased it aer the first round of editions. I hope you notice a positive difference. As for the Comment section, we at Downs
Mail have always offered our views through the Mail Marks column.We felt that responding to some (not all) leers would provide additional opinions and encourage debate. There are also occasions when we can use our insight to clarify unqualified points made by the writer. We aren’t aiming to be controversial or to
belile the views of our readers but to interact beer with them. Hopefully you will grow to like the section. Response by Stephen
Sticking up for residents
Dear Sir – It is disappointing that the once politically-fair Downs Mail should launch such a partisan and personal aack on me (Mail Marks, February) rather than sticking up for residents and the borough’s open spaces. To correct your editorial, I have never
said there can be zero greenfield development. But I do demand that we prioritise brownfield development rather than pushing a whopping 90% of new housing on to green fields. All Lib Dem councillors are as passionate
as I amabout this. I amproud that our councillors pushed for a new policy to prioritise brownfield development over sites such as Five Acre and BluebellWoods. I amonly sad that thiswas defeated by Conservative councillors.
We all understand the development pressure, but do Maidstone Conservatives take no responsibility for the devastating development they are about to unleash on this once rural borough? Liberal Democrats, the Campaign for the Protection of Rural England, and even Conservative politicians such as Eric Pickles and Kent county councillors all agree that the buck stops with the council. All this cheerleading in the Tory press
tells me is that Conservatives are terrified that they are going to be punished for their developer-led planning free-for-all in May’s local elections. Jasper Gerard, Lib Dem parliamentary campaigner, Maidstone and theWeald
Let me assure you, Jasper, that Downs Mail does not favour any political party. Mail Marks is a column that represents the opinions of one individual and has no bearing on our non-slanted approach to local news. Response by Stephen
Reason for evictions
Dear Sir – I am writing in response to the article about Judith and FergusWilson evicting tenants on benefits. My husband and I lived in a property in Maidstone that we rented through a private landlord andwe toowere evicted because part of the rentwas paid to our landlord by housing benefit, but I believe thiswas not the only reason. Our landlord had not placed our deposit
in a rent deposit scheme and whenwe received the court paperswe put this in our defence. Whenwewent to court, she was fined a month's rent. She pleaded ignorance even though she rented out three other properties. She had previously rented the flatwe
lived in to foreign tenants because they are not up on English law and I think the same applies to Judith and FergusWilson because housing benefit is guaranteed and people can lose jobs in this economic climate. Linda Sane, by email
There may also be another element to this, Linda. The introduction of the benefit cap last year has frightened off some private landlords from accepting people on housing benefit. With claimants now less likely to afford the
market value of their rent and rental property in high demand by those in employment, the temptation is greater for landlords to seek tenants not on state benefits. Response by Stephen
Habitats, not homes
Dear Sir – Last month’s Downs Mail seems to have been saturated with discussions about our current housing needs. Apparently Maidstone Council has been calculating a figure of about 14,080 new houses, whilst independent consultants say the need is for 19,600 dwellings up to 2031.
Comment
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