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Kig victory is no guarantee MailMarks


I BELIEVE campaigners against devel-


opment are wrong to consider Maidstone’s great victory against the Kent International Gateway (Kig) proposal is now a defensive wig against new and very different planning proposals for parts of that land. Maidstone Council spent about £1.7m de- fending the borough from a proposal which included a strategic rail freight interchange (up to 13 freight trains a day) with massive warehousing and other commercial develop- ment running for miles close to the M20 from Hollingbourne to Bearsted. Most of the money was spent fighting the


long and vigorous appeal against its planning decision to reject the Axa application. Local parishes teamed up well and financed their own separate battle against Kig. Maidstone rejoiced five years ago when the inspector threw out the massive and un- sightly development for 290 acres, so damag- ing to this rural area and the borough as a whole.


Maidstone Council, whose vital work on evolving Maidstone’s local planwas seriously delayed, won scant praise for the way it fronted this success.And nowadays it receives brickbats when it handles new, unrelated planning applications for parts of the land.


Sacrifice remembered


Dear Sir – In a world which once again is in turmoil and unrestwe should, at the 100th anniversary of her death, pause and reflect on the life and work of nurse Edith Cavell. We should remember the heroic sacrifice,


her heroism, her fortitude and her humanity in her work and life. She, with many others, fought the typhoid epidemic that came to Maidstone in the summer of 1897. In 1915 she again rose to the challenge


and worked tirelessly for the wounded from all sides, during what is now known as the GreatWar (WorldWar I) and paid for her duty with her life. At a memorial service in London itwas


said: ” The crowning horror of the treatment of womanhood is the atrocious murder of this woman, who lived to alleviate suffering and who only did what any one of us would have done in saving the lives of refugees who sought shelter of a home.” Aswe commemorate the anniversary of


her deathwe should remember her supreme sacrifice and how she has set the world an example of howwe should bear ourselves in a crisis. We should remember and reflect on her


words given in the few hours before her execution. “Patriotism is not enough – I must have


no hatred or bierness towards anyone.“ Cllr David Picke, Bower Street, Maidstone


Contact our team ...


Stephen Eighteen Editor stephen@downsmail.co.uk 01622 734735 ext 231


42 Maidstone East November 2015 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


DENNISFOWLE President dfowle2011@aol.com


Each new application must now be consid-


ered on its individual merits and a significant factor will be the Len Valley Landscape of Local Value which runs from Bearsted, south of theM20 to Lenham, as now included in the draft local plan. But this landscape area is not a total ban on developments and cases can be made for it to be overridden. An often expressed fear is that development


in this area will see Bearsted merge with Hollingbourne and then through to Harriet- sham and Lenham. This is a nightmare sce- nario almost on a parallel with Kig. I believe this is scaremongering and there


are no intentions for this. The landscaping designation will play a major role in this. However, Maidstone Council faces massive challenges meetingGovernment demands for new housing, especially with our infrastruc- ture difficulties, and it must look at the at- tractive transport advantages of this area – the M20, A20 and the mainline rail link with sta-


Support junior doctors


Dear Sir –As senior doctors who have worked in Kent for many years,we write to express our grave concern about the Government’s intention to impose a damaging and dangerous working contract on our junior colleagues. So-called “junior” doctors make up all doctors from every specialty in hospitals, except consultants, and are the backbone of medical care.Without them there would be no expert healthcare for patients and the service would be paralysed. Sadly, Government ministers do not


seem to recognise this. If they did, they would not be trying to force on these dedicated doctors’ “normal” working hours of 7am-10pm six days aweek with the added insult of a 30% pay cut. In the same shameful package, juniors entering general practice could earn up to 40% less. This is not only unjust, but idiotic in view of the lack of GPs. Safeguards against working dangerous hours are to be removed and maternity pay affected. Wewere told bankers needed their high


pay and bonuses to stop them leaving the country. Too many junior doctors are already leaving the UK because of Government policies towards the NHS, and this contract will accelerate the exodus. Double standards indeed. We support junior doctors fully in their


fight to retain safe working conditions. Tired doctors make mistakes. Patients and the NHS will undoubtedly be put at risk by





tions every few miles. I believe too that M20 Junction 8 is the right


place for significant business development to boost Maidstone’s economy. The attraction to businesses with such easy access to the M20 for the Channel ports and linked motorway infrastructure to the rest of Britain is undeni- able. Workforces will value the M20 access. But I am not comfortable that the Woodcut


Farm site between the M20 and A20 between Bearsted and Hollingbourne is preferable to the more hiddenWaterside Park site south of the A20. That debate has not ended.


Caring for the aged I become very concerned about care for


our aged sick. Increasingly they block vital beds in our hospitals because of problems ac- commodating them. The hospital trust is highly critical of social services management and had threatened to invoice the service and KCC for costs. Now we hear of KCC making further cut-


backs and closing some of its homes. How many can afford to fund their own residential or nursing home care? A friend who moved in to a home is having to find the best part of £40,000 a year. As our population ages this problem will grow.


these cynical proposals. The great British public needs to lobby


MPs and show support for their doctors. Everyone will need their services one day. Dr Paul Hobday, Dr Karen Poerton, Dr Ali Abbas, Dr K Bala, Dr Jonathan Goodman, Dr Roger Hart, Dr David Tod, Dr Carol Jones, Dr Akbar Soorma, Dr Amit Saha, Dr S. Renkema, Dr R Blundell, DrM Lile, DrMIronmonger, Dr J Dennison, Dr P Hanrath, Dr G Singh, Dr S Jones, Dr P Gildeh, Dr P Jones, Dr T Cantor, DrM South, DrMHeber, Dr G Hagan, Dr H Terrell, DrA Jones, DrMMoss, Dr N Pile


Preserve village green


Dear Sir – Iwas astonished to read in the Downs Mail (October) that the new Bearsted Parish Council “liked the idea, particularly if itwere to become an annual event” of 250 bikers taking over Bearsted Green on a Sunday. The bumper motorbike rally would raise


major issues of noise disturbance (multiply the decibels of one motorbike by 250), damage to the green and displacement of locals wishing to use it. Concerns are growing that the current


parish council sees Bearsted Green as an “asset” to be hired out to all-comers for commercial gain. The green is a confined space surrounded by period houses. First and foremost it is a traditional, quintessential, historic village green. Secondly, it is a


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