Archive for December, 2009

Latest news from SAEN

Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

This could be the last bulletin before Christmas, and you may think that it will be OK to forget about the campaign for just a couple of weeks, but before you do, there are just one or two more things to do.

Let me begin by saying ‘thank you’ to all of you who have been writing to the Councillors, both those on the Developmental Control Committee and your own Councillors. You are doing a marvellous job! If you have been busy and have missed the deadline, please send in your objection NOW before Christmas. It will be accepted right up until the date of the DCC Meeting in late January.

What we would also like you to do now is to continue to press for the whole process to be ‘called in’. This will mean that we will all be able to participate in a Public Inquiry, that the whole process will be examined in detail by experts with experience, that we will be able to put our own case, and that our objections will be listened to in full and taken into consideration. If you write to Andrew Edwards, GO-­EAST, Eastbrook, Shaftesbury Road, Cambridge, CB2 8DF, asking for the process to be called in, be sure and express the following concerns:-

  • The confusion over Government Policy on regional airport expansion
  • The effects of expansion on 70,000 people in terms of noise, etc
  • The substantial controversy that the application has given rise to in local press
  • The accepted ‘infringement’ of the church on the runway as a hazard
  • The presence of several schools beneath the flightpath of a predicted 53,300 flights per annum

We would be allowed to put our objections to the DCC, but only if we could contain it all in a 3-minute speech, and that does sound ridiculous!

If you have already done all that, then may I suggest that your topic for the week, to send one letter by e-mail to all the DCC, is congestion? (Send it to sbc-dcc@saen.org.uk, which is delivered to all the members of the DCC)

It has been said that there are two main roads into Southend, but there is in effect only one route towards the airport from the outskirts of the Borough, as the airport is signposted on to the A127 form Sadler’s Farm roundabout on the A13; besides, no-one in their right mind would use the London Road to get to the airport, as it is so littered with traffic lights that progress is far too slow. So in effect we only have one main A-road to the airport, which is over capacity at peak times. The airport claims that traffic will only increase by 5%, when passenger numbers increase, but at the same time, Southend is expected to build another 6,500 homes as part of the Thames Gateway, and at an average of 2 cars per household, that will be another 13,000 cars clogging up our roads on a daily basis.

So the A127, with its 50mph limit, leads us towards the airport. First stop, Rayleigh Weir, which in spite of the underpass, still regularly grinds traffic to a halt. Then when we get going again, the traffic slows inexorably towards Progress Road. Once again, we are stopped by lengthy queues. A crawl towards Kent Elms, gridlock at the Tesco roundabout, another crawl towards The Bell, and finally we can turn off to the airport! Not far now – oh, then we hit the traffic at Harp House roundabout, queuing to get in to the MacDonald’s bar and the shops on the airport trading estate. Of course, you could also come off at the Tesco Roundabout, duck along Eastwoodbury Lane, (the one that’s due for closure) , and then there’s only two more roundabouts and a set of traffic lights and a barrier to overcome, and you are home and dry!

I somehow doubt that the Council can afford to improve the infrastructure of all these approach problems; they don’t seem to have enough money to resurface the current roads, having spent so much money on putting in bumps to stop us killing each other by driving too fast along the rat-runs!

As you may know, on the 10th December we submitted a 40-page document containing our objections to the Planning Office. We expect to be adding more to it by the time the DCC meet, as there are parts which require a little more research before they are submitted.

Good luck with your letters – in spite of what you may read, we really are doing extremely well with the campaign, and your one or two letters a week will make all the difference in the long run.

If you’ve managed to read this far, thank you! Get writing, people – we are relying on you. Have a happy Christmas holiday -

Kiti Theobald and all the committee

Call for all councillors to debate Southend Airport expansion is thwarted

Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

A VOTE on the airport expansion will be taken by the 17 members of the borough council’s planning committee, not the full council.

Lib Dem and Labour councillors had pushed for all 51 councillors to be given a vote on the plans.

A full council meeting on Thursday, voted down the opposition proposals to widen the vote.

Lib Dem leader Graham Longley (Blenheim Park) had argued the issue was of such significance for the town, the normal procedure should be changed so all councillors could decide.

He argued: “It would restore democracy to the town, by giving council the right to make the final decision.

“Southend members can represent residents and express their views. It’s about involving people and not leaving such a major decision to as few as nine members, which would represent a majority on the development control committee.”

However, Tory council leader, Nigel Holdcroft (West Leigh) branded the opposition move as “a cheap political stunt, simply designed to play on residents’ concerns”.

Mr Holdcroft pointed out members of the development control committee had special training to allow them to make informed decisions on planning issues.

David Amess says an inquiry into controversial Southend Airport plan is needed

Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

AN MP has called for a public inquiry into Southend Airport’s expansion plans.

Southend Council is due to vote on January 20 on a planning application for proposals to redevelop the airport.

But David Amess, Tory MP for Southend West, wants the Government to bypass the council and call in the plans for an inquiry and a Whitehall decision.

He said: “It is increasingly clear many local residents will not feel satisfied their concerns have been listened to by an impartial party, unless a public inquiry is held.

“Ever since proposals were announced to expand Southend Airport, many constituents have contacted me on a whole range of issues concerning those plans.

“I have kept in regular contact with those constituents and I have raised many of these issues with the owner of the airport, the local authority and with ministers.”

A public inquiry, chaired by a planning inspector, could be called, in any case, if the council rejected the proposals and owner the Stobart Group appealed to the Secretary of State.

Leigh Town Council also recently voted to ask Go East, the Government office for the East of England, to call in the application for an inquiry.

The town council has objected in writing to Southend Council because it fears a lack of a limit on passenger numbers could see many of the airport’s current light aircraft flights swapped to make room for larger passenger jets.

The airport’s management argues the runway extension would allow larger, more modern planes to land and increase the capacity to carry up to two million passengers a year by 2020.

Under the proposals, flights in and out of the airport could increase from 42,000 a year to about 53,300.

More than 2,300 comment on Southend Airport expansion

Monday, December 14th, 2009

SOUTHEND Council has been inundated with more than 2,300 comments about the plans to extend the runway at Southend Airport.

Owner, the Stobart Group, wants to lengthen the runway by almost 1,000ft, pushing it across Eastwoodbury Lane, as part of a plan to reinvent the airport as a passenger hub handling more than two million passengers by 2020.

The deadline to make comments online has now closed, but interested parties can still have a say by writing to the council right up until the development control committee meeting on January 20.

Kiti Theobald, chairman of protest group, Stop Airport Extension Now, said the number of comments received so far only represented a tenth of all those living under the flightpath.

She added: “It sounds like a good response, but the council will dismiss it as small, because it doesn’t want to know.

“It is good to know so many people have gone to the trouble of writing, whatever their views.”

Neighbouring Rochford District Council’s development control committee has already voted not to oppose the plans.

The councils head of planning, Shaun Scrutton, backed the application as an opportunity to achieve at new controls on the airport, which would benefit the area and reduce its environmental impact.

‘Let whole council decide on airport’

Friday, December 11th, 2009

Lib Dem challenge to Tory leadership

A DECISION on Southend Airport’s runway extension should be made by the whole council rather than just a few members of the development control committee, Lib Dems have claimed.

The group’s leader Graham Longley is due to put a motion to the full council on Thursday, which would allow all councillors to have their say on the issue.

Three years ago, the Tory administration agreed the 17 members of the planning committee could have full control of all planning matters, rather than the whole council having a chance to decide on major issues.

Mr Longley said: “Currently, as few as nine members of the council could club together and make a majority decision on a very important issue for the town.

“This is patently unfair and it is also undemocratic.

“I believe that if an application will have a major effect on the town, its residents and economic development, then the whole council should make the final decision. It is essential to ensure all members are involved and I hope the administration will be prepared to say on this one occasion they will support the proposal we are putting forward.”

Council leader Nigel Holdcroft said he was looking at the situation and would make a statement at the next full council meeting.

He went on: “It would be against the council’s constitution and there are a lot of issues which will have to be looked at and I have asked our legal team to examine them.

“Some members of the Lib Dem group have expressed strong opinions against the proposal which could mean they could not speak or vote on the application.

“If the Government decided the airport scheme was important enough to be called in for a public inquiry then the whole issue would be academic and we are trying to find out now if this is likely to be the case.

“My understanding is that we should have the indication from the Government before the runway proposals go to a special committee meeting in January.”

Tourism is airport’s red herring

Friday, December 11th, 2009

It’s pie in the sky to believe Southend Airport will encourage tourism to the town.

If people should fly into Southend they will get straight on the trains from the newly constructed airport station and go directly to London.

This most certainly will apply regarding the Olympics in 2012.

Sorry, but no one will fly in with an aim to wander around a cold uninviting precinct which mirrors the same basic design as many others in the UK, nor will they take time out to wander down a pier which offers nothing at its end because of the conceited dithering of consecutive councils.

They will come for the main body of the Olympic spectacle and that’s at the other end of the line in Stratford.

Even if people should travel from London to fly from Southend, that’s exactly what they will do.

In fact the new airport station will serve to keep them away from the town.

When flying from Gatwick do we wander around and spend our holiday money in Crawley?

So, all this talk about bringing wealth and prosperity to our hotels and shops I believe to be a load of codswallop liberally served up with a red herring.

The only people to prosper from the airport will be Stobarts which own the airport.

I am sorry for those such as the Roslin Hotel, but I don’t believe I am far off the mark by suggesting it might only be a short time before there is another hotel here in Southend built on airport land and owned exclusively by Stobarts, if indeed they are seriously going into the air passenger trade, which somehow I doubt they will.

Stobarts are about Stobarts and Stobarts are about freight and we should not lose sight of that fact.

Peter Monk
Oakleigh Park Drive
Leigh

Schools affected by airport expansion

Friday, December 11th, 2009

Schools will be detrimentally affected by the extension or expansion of Southend Airport.

Prof Stansfeld led the Lancet team from Barts and the NHS Trust who studied 2,800 nine and ten year-olds who went to schools around various airports.

Their conclusions were for every five decibles increase in aircraft noise, a child’s reading, comprehension and recognition memory was impaired by up to two months and 20 decibles equated to eight months delay. However children with learning difficulties suffer by three times these amounts.

When I challenged airport boss Alastair Welch and the Southend planning office, they said “not everybody agrees with those findings”.

When I challenged the leader of Southend Council, he told me he hadn’t sought advice on this specific issue.

Well since this affects many schools, teachers, thousands of children and their families, I suggest the council does seek expert advice before it is accused of failing in its duty of care.

Prof Stansfeld told me no authoritative source has ever refuted his findings, in fact they have been concurred by experts in America and Europe.

This is not something that can be resolved with a bit of insulation. The very least we deserve is a public enquiry, where everybody can have their say and all points of view can be listened to, alternatively reject the application for extending the runway.

Raymond Snell
Mountdale Gardens
Leigh

SAEN submits objection to Planning Application

Thursday, December 10th, 2009
SAEN's Objection to the Planning Application

SAEN's Objection to the Planning Application (7MB)

SAEN has today submitted its objection to the planning application to extend the runway at Southend Airport. The report is the culmination of the research done by SAEN to date and was written by members of the SAEN committee.

We would particularly like to thank Roger Wood and the other members of the LADACAN campaign who advised us on some of the aviation technicalities.

We anticipate releasing a new version of the document closer to the time of the Development Control Committee’s meeting as there are other matters of importance that are not currently addressed.

The report is now available for download.

Environmental Group Calls for a Night Air Freight Tax

Thursday, December 10th, 2009

Press Release – Embargoed until 00.01 Thursday 10th December

Members of AirportWatch and SAEN launch the report at Southend Airport.

Members of AirportWatch and SAEN launch the report at Southend Airport.


Launch of New Report: Air Freight: The Impacts

10th December – 11am
Outside Southend Airport, Eastwoodbury Crescent, Southend

AirportWatch, the umbrella body of organisations opposed to airport expansion, is calling for a Night Air Freight Tax. The call comes on the day AirportWatch launches a major report on air freight (1). The report, Air Freight: The Impacts, will be launched at 11am on 10th December. The launch will be taking place in Southend (2), to coincide with the last day on consultation of plans to expand the local airport being proposed by the freight magnate Eddie Stobbart (3).

The 40 page report highlights the tax-breaks enjoyed by the aviation freight industry. It pays no tax on aviation fuel. It is exempt from VAT. And it does not pay the equivalent of Air Passenger Duty. AirportWatch is calling for Air Passenger Duty to be replaced by a Plane Tax, a proposal supported by both the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats. But AirportWatch is calling for a higher rate of tax to be paid on freight planes using the airports at night.

John Stewart, the current Chair of AirportWatch, said, “A higher charge on night freight flights would be a sensible market mechanism to force the industry to decide just how much freight really needs to be flown during the night. Our report suggests that only about 20% of express freight is time-critical. Fewer freight flights at night would bring real benefits to residents under the flight paths.”

The report also highlights the global impact of air freight. It estimates that air cargo accounts for about 20% of all global aviation emissions. It has found that air freight produces the most carbon emissions per tonne of any form of freight transport, with considerably greater amounts of CO2 produced per tonne kilometre than shipping.

Rose Bridger, the author of the report, said, ‘Air freight volumes have reduced during the recession, but freight capacity expansion is planned and underway at airports all over the UK. This will either undermine our greenhouse gas reduction targets, or leave us with white elephants if it is underutilised’.

The report found that the UK is running a considerable air freight trade deficit – over £20 billion annually with non-EU countries (which account for 85% of UK freight).

ENDS

Notes for Editors

  1. The Report, a summary and an airport-by-airport analysis are available.
  2. The location is the passenger entrance to Southend Airport, Eastwoodbury Crescent, Southend. A map is available at http://tr.im/GsIN
  3. The Stobart Group, most famous for their freight business, bought London Southend Airport in December 2008. They plan a massive expansion, taking the airport from under 50,000 to two million passengers per year by 2020. As well as passenger flights, Stobart anticipates that up to 10% of the 53,300 flights they are permitted each year will be for freight. Local residents are worried about the noise, pollution and road congestion that this will cause and are fighting the proposal to extend the airport’s runway.

Rail station may open by March

Wednesday, December 9th, 2009

THE new £12 million rail station at Southend Airport could open as early as March.

It will be part of the Southend Victoria to London Liverpool Street line. Airport managing director Alastair Welch said work was on target. The station will open between March and June.

Mr Welch said: “There are now buildings taking shape along the line where the new station is being built. It has been a long and complex procedure to get everything in place when you are building a new station.

“For example, we have had to deal with Network Rail, the train operating company, the Ministry of Transport and the Office of Rail Regulation to name just a few of the bodies involved.”

The project is seen as vital to reviving commercial passenger flights from the airport, which wants to see two million passengers using the airport by 2020.