Fears over homes on land contaminated with asbestos

Nearly 300 new homes could be built on the site of a former power station – on land which is heavily contaminated with asbestos.

Yelling Power Station during demolition.

Yelland Power Station during demolition.

 

Local protester Joanne Bell said 600 tonnes of asbestos had been left on the site of the East Yelland Power Station, on the Taw-Torridge estuary, next to the Tarka Trail in North Devon.

She said the scheme, for 280 dwellings plus commercial and community space, would ruin the Tarka Trail and the estuary.

Opponents of the development are holding a protest meeting on Thursday.

“Yelland Action Group and others in North Devon have mounted a strong campaign to stop all development along our Taw/Torridge estuary – which our MP and all political parties have supported,” she said.

The site is a former Coal Fired Power Station that was decommissioned in the mid-eighties, the Bideford-based developer, Yelland Quay Ltd, says in its planning application to North Devon District Council.

“Currently the site is mostly derelict with an existing concrete and mineral distribution plant business located in the southeast corner,” the application says.

“The former ash beds land to the east has been capped in the last 12 years and approved by Devon County Council as this historically was a licensed asbestos burial site.”

The planning application includes “all the associated infrastructure including removal of any contamination”.

In its application, the company accepts that herons, oystercatcher, sand martin and kingfisher have been confirmed nesting on the site, but says the development “is unlikely to significantly affect the integrity of any statutory designated nature conservation sites”.

 

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Mrs Bell said this latest development, alongside an earlier scheme for 130 homes, “is going to ruin the estuary”.

“Almost unbelievably, finally the latest scheme has been lodged with North Devon Council for a massive housing estate on the banks of our precious estuary.

“I am unsure just how trendy and modern it is to buy a very expensive three-storey home sitting on buried asbestos on unstable land on an estuary and in a flood zone.”

She said that removing the asbestos would be expensive, and questioned whether it would happen. The land is to be built up three metres before the housing is put up, she said, meaning that the estate would be highly visible.

Fremington Parish Council is holding a public meeting on Monday, April 25 at 6.30pm at the Parish Hall.

“I am informed that the owners of this asbestos site – Dick Huxtable and Paul Jury – have been invited and I sincerely hope they will have to courtesy to attend.

The community is holding a protest meeting on Thursday, April 14, at 11am along the Tarka Trail adjacent to the site.

Source: Plymouth Herald

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