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Thursday, April 13, 2006

LIBERALS FIGHT TO SAVE STANLEY PARK - LIVERPOOL

 FC's plans for a new 60,000-seater stadium on Stanley Park were re-confirmed by the city's planning committee after a marathon meeting

Opponents of the scheme immediately vowed to seek a judicial review to overturn the decision and force the club to look for a new site away from built-up areas.

The ground capacity will be restricted to 45,000 until an agreed park-and-ride and controlled parking plan have been introduced.

Planning officer Mike Burchnall said the scheme was essentially the same one approved by the planning committee in 2004, but the club re-submitted it because of changes to national and regional planning policies.

 


The committee was told that because it was essentially a fresh look at a previously agreed application, councillors had the option to refuse permission.

 

More than a dozen local people lodged objections to the stadium plan and called for the council to review its support for the scheme.

 

But chairman Cllr Lady Doreen Jones recommended that permission should be given and she won unanimous support - even though only 4 members of the planning committee sat through the hearing and the joke oppositioon Labour Group was missing

 

Once the club receives its planning consent, there will be a 90-day stand-off during which the approval can be legally challenged.

Last night former councillor Joe Kenny of the Anfield Regeneration Action Committee, and a staunch critic of the Stanley Park plan, vowed: "We can guarantee a legal challenge. As soon as the decision is published our lawyers are ready and waiting, and we know we have a strong case."

A number of local residents spoke of the problems of living within the shadow of a major football stadium on match days, from parking chaos and anti-social behaviour, to being "virtual prisoners" in their homes.

The biggest complaint is the proposed use of between a third and a half of the Victorian park as a new home for the club.

Mike Butler, secretary of the Anfield action group and Liberal Party Candidate for Anfield, accused the club of "moving the goalposts" by going for a 45,000-seater stadium.

"It will cease to be a public park once the stadium is built," he said.

In the original planning application, first lodged in 2003, the club included a timetable showing that the new stadium would open for business this May.

 


At that time the facility was scheduled to cost £80m, but the costs have now at least doubled due mainly to the increased cost of steel.

 

The key question for the club now is to find the private finance which will help make the stadium plan a reality as many fans have become increasingly sceptical about it ever going ahead.

 

Liberal Party Leader Cllr Steve Radford, who lodged an objection, said: "Now that this application has come before the committee again, why doesn't the council look at the option of a fresh look at the whole scheme?, he urged the commitee look at sites at the end of motorways for example the East Lancs Road and Speke rather than build in the most densely populated part of Liverpool

 

The committee also granted permission to the club to dismantle the "Monkey House" bandstand and re-erect it elsewhere on the park, and also dismantle the bowling green pavilion for re-building also on the park.

author: Steve | 04/13/06 12:13 | comments

Thursday, April 06, 2006

Largest Liberal Fielding in Liverpool

Twentynine Out of Thirty Wards Contested

The Liberal Party are standing candidates in all thirty wards of the Liverpool local elections, bar one. Even though we are the third strongest force in Liverpool, (polling more than the Conservatives and Greens combined), our members decided not to target St Michael's ward because the three councillors already representing it have regularly opposed plans to demolish thousands of homes in the city under the Housing Market Renewal Initiative, and have fought to save the local parks.

The Liberal Party is fiercely opposed to these policies and many of the new candidates are local campaigners who have been fighting to overturn the plans, including Nina Edge from the Welsh Streets, Mike Butler from Anfield, Griff Parry in the Picton ward and Elizabeth Pascoe who is challenging the Kensington and Fairfield Ward.

Liberal Party President  Cllr Steve Radford said: "This is the highest number of wards we have ever fielded."

"There is a huge amount of people in this city who do not want to see swathes of Liverpool knocked down. Because we have a Liberal Democrat leadership, and this is a Labour government policy, there is no one to oppose the scheme except us."

"We are a network of ordinary people with sound principals and our main aim at the moment is to put a stop to this madness."

The full list of Liberal Party candidates is available here:
http://www.liberal.org.uk/electsdesk/2006/local.htm

 

author: Steve | 04/06/06 17:38 | comments

Plight of 21,000 in queue for homes

As reported in the Daily Post Eleanor

LIVERPOOL has been plunged into its biggest-ever housing crisis, with almost 21,000 people waiting in the queue for homes, a city councillor warned last night.

Cllr Steve Radford, leader of the minority Liberal group said the situation will become even worse when 5,000 tenants who need to be decanted to alternative homes join the list.

The waiting list is growing at the rate of up to 50 applicants a week, council assistant executive director Cath Green admitted in a report to Cllr Radford.

Cllr Radford and The Liberal Party realise that the council's decision to demolish dwellings instead of repairing them is the reason behind the rapid increase in demand for homes. This is the key feature of the Merseyside Pathfinder Project

He said: "The council is spending £42m of taxpayers' money to demolish housing but we need renovation not demolition. They are driving people out of the city.

There are 13,500 people on the council's waiting list, which rises to 20,687 for the Propertypool waiting list, a scheme introduced in 2004 including 14 registered social landlords.

Cllr Marilyn Fielding, Liverpool's executive member for housing, insisted the dramatic rise in the numbers waiting to be rehoused were due to the introduction of new schemes.

She said: "John Prescott's office has set targets for all local authorities to introduce 'Choice Based Letting Schemes' which makes it easier for people to register with us and apply for social housing.

If you want to challenge the councils neglect of its obligation to help those needing social housing ensure you vote for Liberal Party candidates on May 4th

 

author: Steve | 04/06/06 17:30 | comments