On April 17th at Hornsey Vale Community Centre, 40 Haringey residents from many local organisations and groups from all over the borough took part in a residents' conference on planning and development issues.
The conference had been called to mobilise concerned community groups and residents to influence the borough's planning and development policies - known as the Local Development Framework - currently being re-written.
The consultation documents set out very important policy proposals on how the borough will manage issues of housing, climate change, transport, employment, leisure, retail, open space, and design from 2011 to 2026. The documents are about to undergo 6 weeks of public consultation from May 10th to June 21st, following which they will be examined at a long and formal public hearing at the Civic Centre, presided over by a Planning Inspector.
This is a new, complex and confusing process which will replace the 'old-style' 10-year Unitary Development Plans, the last of which was adopted in 2006. The conference enabled participants to identify some of the key concerns over the proposed policies, some of the changes we would like to see, and ways in which local people can respond with their views.
Participants took part in a series of workshop discussions on the following topics: design and conservation; housing & development; open space and community facilities; transport & street scene; climate change and sustainability.
Concerns were expressed about over-development and skyscrapers, advertising hoardings, loss of Haringey's heritage and character, threats to some green spaces, the selling off of community facilities and local pubs, and too much traffic. There were strong feelings that what Haringey's communities actually need but are rarely getting is genuinely affordable housing, well-designed buildings, good quality local jobs, community-led regeneration, safer, greener and more friendly local streets and better public transport, more green space and allotment sites, protection of public land and community facilities, safeguarding of small independent shops, and the long term sustainability of our society.
Finally, in a session entitled 'Community Involvement and Empowerment In Planning - what we can do as residents', there were presentations from some of the local campaigns around Haringey where local residents are standing up for their communities against unpopular and inappropriate development, and sometimes creating their own alternative community plans for contested sites. These included Alexandra Palace, Wards Corner, Hornsey Town Hall, various local parks, and certain back-land sites.
Participants pledged to continue to work together to ensure residents' voices will be heard loud and clear throughout the coming consultation, and beyond.
A website has been set up to help as a reference point and to promote communication and co-ordination.