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No. 46 NEWSLETTER Summer 2000

WEST MIDLANDS BRANCH, BUTTERFLY CONSERVATION

 

Anchors Aweigh - Well almost!

 

About two years ago Peter Newell, a member from Aldridge, submitted a Butterfly survey form for Anchor Meadow on which he recorded Dingy Skipper, Common Blue and a dozen or so other species. As a footnote he mentioned that the site might be lost due to proposed development. I needed to know more, so after a couple of phone calls I asked Peter to monitor the site and I rang Dave Haslam at Walsall Council's Countryside Services to see if we had a chance to protect the colony. Dave's response was optimistic and due to our mutual Branch involvement with the Birmingham and Black Country Biodiversity Action Plan we arranged a meeting with Planning Officers and sought to 'negotiate' a way of excluding the core of the site from development.

From this came a request to prepare a species action plan for Dingy Skipper, for inclusion in the BAP, which I did with relish, however it was not until the 24th May this year that the Developer gave us a lifeline for at least half of the site and with an offer of additional land being made available from both Walsall Council and the adjacent Health Centre we now seem to be nearing the final stages of saving this site.

You may think that I am blowing my own trumpet. It’s really more like holding my breath, with the prospect of a long sigh of relief at the end. Things could have gone awry at any time from day one and still could, but the point of this article is to demonstrate how the power of a small group of local people can change the planning process, if you act soon enough.

Early on in the debacle, it transpired that the Council's inter-departmental communication process needed fine tuning as one Department knew about the Dingy Skippers but the stream of knowledge had run dry somewhere in between. With the pending implementation of the BAP it is hoped that this problem will be ironed out in the future. Consequently, this particular developer did not know about, and therefore could not be alerted to, the butterfly interest on the site before he submitted his outline planning application.

I work for a local authority and the last thing you want to have levelled against you is the old accusation that 'the right hand doesn't know what the left hand is doing'.

After Peter Newell’s initial comment a whole Pandora's box opened up as to how to best tackle this and future threatened sites. The draft Biodiversity Action Plan in my view, acted as a catalyst as did our own Regional Action Plan which includes Dingy Skipper as a locally important species. These documents played an integral part in influencing the decision makers, and thankfully the landowner, into reaching a sympathetic decision.

The moral of this tale is to say to say to members, shout out !!! if there is the merest hint of a good site going under the bulldozer. Your local Council will no doubt have a Conservation Officer or a Planner willing to assist in making a case.

An extremely useful planning tool, comes in the form of an Agreement made under the powers contained in Section 106 of The Town and Country Planning Act 1990. A Council can request a developer to enter into an obligation to commit to a beneficial act as part of the development, such as providing a children’s play area or a nature reserve amongst other things. (If you become embroiled in a similar situation, ask your Council to consider including a relevant condition in a Section 106 Agreement).

A press article also made people aware of the situation, and in the case of Anchor Meadow at least fifty people deserve our biggest thanks for writing to the Council. I am sure that such local support helped change the Council's views and the developer’s intentions. I hope that my next article on this matter will be to confirm this little success story, only brought about by one individual’s short comment on a survey form, and the fifty or so letters of support.

Lastly, I feel it is most appropriate to thank Simon Phipps and Dave Haslam of Walsall Council for being extremely helpful in pulling together the various development strands and also two of our Conservation subcommittee members. Our Communications Officer Richard Southwell cajoled myself and others into positive action and our Conservation Officer Mike Williams ensured tactful negotiations throughout the various meetings.

Despite getting the Branch involved at the eleventh hour, with the goodwill and expertise of local Council Officers, the landowner and Dr Wells at the Health Centre, we are almost there. All involved in the Branch have been through a sharp learning curve which bodes well for future campaigns.

At times one or two of us nearly threw in the towel at the possibility of losing out. But to those who grasp any future nettles take heart – don't be afraid, when a good site comes under the developers eye, to go for it and write those letters. Like us, you may be extremely surprised at the response you receive.

David Jackson

 

 

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