Wednesday October 25 | 2017
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Cookery school comes close to crashing as celebrity chef finds herself in hot water By Eileen Leahy
Historic moment as cinema INSIDE site finally gets the green light
Talking to the Times about the school she said: “It was really just a bit too big to take on by myself. I had a lot of people supporting me because I’ve been around a long time but I had the wrong people in place advising me financially at the time and it was a disaster.” “My naivety and lack of experience and business acumen was one of the key things that led to the financial troubles. “The day I met Mark LumsdonTaylor, CEO from the Hadlow Group in 2016 I knew I couldn’t carry on any longer. It had taken everything from me - my energy, my sleep. I was looking ghastly and I felt ghastly. We were counting the days…” She told Lumsdon-Taylor that he had approximately one week to save her school. “I was totally honest with him.”
Full story pages 62 and 63
Lamberhurst mother dies in Avignon accident Page 3
Developer pays £600,000 to community and avoids the need for affordable homes
CELEBRITY chef Rosemary Shrager revealed this week how her Tunbridge Wells cookery school turned into a ‘disaster’ and came close to going under before she teamed up with the Hadlow Group and turned it all around.
Disaster
RIVERBOAT TRAGEDY
TOWN FOCUS The proposed new development
BEWARE THE BEAR
Charity warns of bogus ‘Pudsey’ collecting in local park Page 5
WASTELAND The former cinema site
ON THE SPOT FINES
Council considers issuing penalty notices to beggars Page 11
By William Mata will@timesoftunbridgewells.co.uk SEVENTEEN years of disappointment, frustration and at times anger last night came to an end for the residents of Tunbridge Wells when the go ahead was given for a start on the redevelopment of the old cinema site. Members of the Borough Council’s Planning Committee voted 8-3 in favour of a planning application submitted by the developer Altitude. Since the Odeon cinema closed and fell into disrepair there have been numerous false dawns with plans for the plot falling
by the wayside and the land becoming known as the town’s biggest eyesore. Bulldozers and diggers are on standby to move onto the town centre site and start the £45million project. It will be known as The
‘Unfortunately the scheme cannot support any affordable housing’ Belvedere will include a three-screen cinema, five restaurants and nine shops alongside at least 99 homes. As well as car parking spaces, there would also be space for either another
nine properties or a medical centre on the site on the Mount Pleasant / Church Road corner. The Belvedere is expected to be complete within the next two and a half to three years and the construction is expected to create around 290 jobs. None of the one, two and three bed properties on offer would classify as ‘affordable housing’. Don Sloan, committee member and councillor for the relevant Culverden ward, said: “I’m really positive about it, we have gone to a lot of trouble to develop these plans.
Continued on page 2
ALL MAPPED OUT?
Proposed boundary changes for MP’s constituency? Page 14