4 June 2008 11:57
ANY idea opposed by Jeremy Clarkson, Janet Street-Porter and Tim Henman's parents can't be all bad but a succession of backbench MPs left the government in no doubt yesterday about the extent of opposition to eco-towns.
MPs with constituencies affected by the 15 shortlisted schemes - and all but three of them are Conservative - queued up to have a go at the plan at a Westminster Hall debate yesterday. Like the local objectors competing to make the most noise with marches and pantos and demonstrations, all had arguments at their fingertops about why their particular local scheme was completely inappropriate. More worryingly for the government, they also teamed up to criticise the entire process.
Leading the way was Vale of York MP Anne McIntosh, who at one stage had to apologise for hitting her microphone because she was so angry. She was one of the MPs consulted by housing minister Caroline Flint in a conference call at 9am on the morning of the shortlisting. 'I found it a little offensive and insulting that the constituents that I have the honour to represent were excluded from the process of open parliamentary scrutiny,' she said. 'I was kept on the phone for a full three or four minutes before deciding that this was not the best way forward.'
What made things even worse for McIntosh was that the shortlisted site for her local eco-town has not yet been identified but will just be somewhere in the Leeds City Region (the former pit at Gascoigne Wood now looks to be favourite). She was backed up by a succession of mostly Conservative MPs queuing to denounce the proposal affecting their constituency.
However, it was the more general criticism of the programme that will worry ministers more. McIntosh argued that eco-towns will flout normal planning rules and that there was no clarity about where people living in them will work, what standards they will be built to or even whether they will sell. Another Conservative, Geoffrey Clifton-Brown, claimed the Treasury would make a £1 billion profit from selling public sector land.
And Tory backbencher Tony Baldry - a former planning minister - complained that the idea of issuing a planning policy statement listing the approved eco-towns. 'For the first time since 1945, the government will effectively direct local authorities that they have little alternative but to approve planning applications for those eco-towns identified by the government under the planning policy statement.
However, the programme was supported by York Labour MP Hugh Bayley because it would provide desperately needed new homes and because new sustainable technologies need to be tested on a community scale.
But will eco-towns ever get built - especially if the Conservatives win the next election? Tory housing spokesman Stewart Jackson said the party was not against eco-towns 'per se' and would support plans for 'genuine brownfield sites'. That would appear to rule out most, if not all, of the proposals since the rules dictate that they should be new communties rather than existing ones.
Housing minister Iain Wright rejected criticism of the consultation - Flint's conference call had been in addition to normal parliamentary convention, he said - and argued that scrutiny of the 15 proposals would cover all of the sustainability points raised by MPs. And he pledged: 'Decisions will not be made in some darkened room, but as part of the full planning application process.'
Posted by Jules Birch, June 4
Posted in Environment, Housebuilding