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OF TUNBRIDGE WELLS
DON’T MISS OUT ON TOM WILLIAMS’ HOMECOMING GIG AT THE FORUM Page 82
Patient transport failings exposed by whistle blower By Murray Jones and Adam Hignett DRIVERS for patient transport provider G4S face regular battles with an indifferent management obsessed with hitting targets, but they have scored a small victory over how they treat the terminally sick. The revelation comes from a G4S whistle blower who approached the Times after reading its ongoing investigation into how the multi-national company runs West Kent’s patient transport service. Sean Woods (not his real name), who is himself a driver for the firm, lifts the lid on a culture in which front-line staff regularly have their concerns ignored by a management team. In his interview, Mr Woods also revealed: Staff in the G4S control room ‘blatantly lie’ to patients about how long they will be kept waiting. There is little accountability among the management, who address concerns with ‘a shrug’. Frontline staff doubt the patient transport will get any better with G4S at the helm. However, in one area those on the front line ‘made such a fuss’ they were able to secure some desirable change, Mr Woods, said: “This was in how they treated those on their way to receive palliative care, who until recently had no priority. For the full story see page 7
THIS IS THE MONTH TO TEMPT TASTE BUDS WITH SOME ORGANIC DELIGHTS Page age 64
HIGH FLYING LEGAL EAGLES NAMED AS TOP YOUNG LAWYERS IN WEBSITE AWARDS Page 11
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All the news that matters
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Wednesday September 13 | 2017
GARDENING EXPERT VICTORIA TRUMAN ON HOW TO KEEP WINTER WINDS AT BAY Page 70
Residents launch legal bid INSIDE to block new budget hotel
BUSINESS AS USUSAL Mayor carries on as Tories call a crisis meeting Page 3
IRONIC TWIST Former courthouse is subject of legal dispute
HISTORIC MOMENT
Grammar school ‘annexe’ finally opens its doors Page 8
WELCOME HOME
Thirty six pages of the finest properties to buy or let Page 27
Ellen Kent
By Adam Hignett adam@timesoftunbridgewells.co.uk
PREMIER INN faces a major setback in its plans to build a 110-bed hotel on London Road after opponents started legal action against the Borough Council. Those against the £7million redevelopment of Merevale House, which served as a county court until last year, believe the council acted ‘unlawfully’ when it gave the hotel chain the go-ahead in April. They also claim the council’s actions are creating a ‘perfect storm’ of discontent, as it already faces concerted opposition to its £72million Civic Complex plans.
Opponents want a judicial review, in which a judge reviews the lawfulness of a decision. They started action against the council at the High Court of Justice on September 4 and the local authority was served papers relating to that action two days later.
‘The council are killing what made the town special; they are killing the golden goose’ Representing residents is Landmark Chambers, a law firm specialising in planning disputes, which is headquartered just yards from the High Court on Fleet Street. The legal challenge focuses on the
approach of the council to the impact of the hotel development on the Tunbridge Wells Conservation Area. By statute, ‘considerable importance and weight’ must be attached to how developments may impact, both positively and negatively, upon conservation areas. Opponents of the hotel, including Ellen Kent (above) say planning officers failed to advise members of the planning committee properly on issues in their report, which ultimately recommended the scheme’s approval. They point to contradictions within the report itself which stated, on the one hand, the development would ‘improve the
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SPORTING TIMES
Reality check for Wells after a winning start Page 86