Times of Tonbridge 2nd September 2020

Page 1

Wednesday September 2 | 2020

Jack Charles

Local, National and International

OF TONBRIDGE

Estate Agents

Sales & Lettings 01732 75 75 80 jackcharles.co.uk

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CLUBBING TOGETHER Tonbridge Rotary Club climbed the O2 Dome to raise money to end polio in Africa Full story see page 2

Concern after primary school plans for new housing development are shelved By Richard Williams A PRIMARY school to accompany 125 new homes planned for on the edge of a local beauty spot will not be built. The school had been proposed on a site north of Upper Haysden Lane, where developers Hallam are constructing a new housing estate. The development has already caused controversy as it is next to Haysden Country Park, one of Tonbridge’s most cherished beauty spots. The area already has a shortage of primary places, with

parents wanting to send children to the closest school, Sussex Road Community School, having to sit on a 40-child long waiting list. The proposed development, which is currently under public consultation until September 9, will further add to the pressures facing local primary school places, with parents forced to travel across Tonbridge to other schools. While the housing development was originally planned to have a two form entry primary school, Kent County Council have now decided the

school will not be built. In a consultee letter to Tonbridge & Malling Borough Council’s [TMBC] planning committee, they admit that ‘existing schools within the

‘There is a real need for a new primary school in the area’ area do not have the scope to accommodate expansion and therefore it is proposed that a new school be established to accommodate the growth’. But they add: “Viewed in

isolation and assessed against the shorter term forecasts, the construction of 125 houses will not necessitate additional primary places being commissioned.” They say that because TMBC’s Local Plan is currently only in draft form, any application has to be viewed ‘in a piecemeal manner’. TMBC’s draft Local Plan does include a requirement that the County Council construct a school, but the current housing estate plans do

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