Scottish Power Site Re-development 3 - supermarket + housing

Discussion and debate on the issues affecting Portobello
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Franck
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Post by Franck » 14 Sep 2010, 10:47

Marya wrote: As far as I'm aware, all comments so far, have been from local traders (including one communication from the Chair of the Traders Association) all urging that the CC oppose the proposal.
I find that astonishing.The traders of Portobello have come out opposing the delivery of 100's of new clients to their doorstep?

Come to think of it, did someone on here ( a trader?) not post something endorsing the proposal?I hope it's not been 'lost in the post'

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Post by Makaveli » 14 Sep 2010, 10:54

Something isn't adding up here.

Like Franck says there will be a load of new customers arriving with the flats and there would also be alot of business from the workman/delviery people etc. used during the building of the flats.

I may be missing something but I fail to see how any trader would be against that.

It is all begining to sound a bit Royston Vasey new road!!!!

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Post by Maria » 14 Sep 2010, 11:29

Franck wrote:
Marya wrote: As far as I'm aware, all comments so far, have been from local traders (including one communication from the Chair of the Traders Association) all urging that the CC oppose the proposal.
I find that astonishing.The traders of Portobello have come out opposing the delivery of 100's of new clients to their doorstep?

Come to think of it, did someone on here ( a trader?) not post something endorsing the proposal?I hope it's not been 'lost in the post'
Yes, there was such a post, Franck, but as far as I am aware that email has not been circulated as yet to CC members. I have asked the chair of PCC, whether all emails received to date have been circulated. If it has been 'lost in the post' I'll make sure that it is delivered.
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Post by Porty » 14 Sep 2010, 11:53

wangi wrote:
Bob Jefferson wrote:Let's take a common-sense look at this. If a Waitrose up the road has a meat counter, is Findlay's going to sell more meat or less meat as a result?
I have a bit of trouble with this air of "entitlement". No shop deserves special treatment or a monopoly position. They are more than capable of competing on quality and service.

Put it like this - which of your mythical meat counters would be willing to let me buy from them at 7:30pm?

Increased competition doesn't necessarily mean a reduced cut for the incumbents. It can result in an increased market - a more vibrant High Street that draws in more people because it offers more. If you want an example think about the deregulated airlines / airports in Europe.
I totally agree Wangi. Joe Findlay is a decent bloke that runs a very good business. Over the years he has seen off the most of the of the direct competition on PHS. He diversifies, develops his own products and offers great service. All of these elements allow charging a premium price for his products. Joe has been in competition with Supermarkets for the last 40 years. The percentage of his customers that also shop in Supermarkets must be close to 100%. It is natural that he wishes to protect what he has but it is by no means certain that the additional residents and Waitrose will have a detrimental effect on revenue.

What is certain? Having an alternative to Scotmid will improve the local shopping experience for 1000's of Porty Residents, if it doesn't they won't patronise Waitrose.

As I've already said: Joe Findlay has been exceptionally innovative. Perhaps he should approach the buyers at Waitrose and propose that to ameliorate the potential lost revenue he may experience should they open in Porty, they stock some of his range in Bruntsfield, Stockbridge and perhaps further afield?

Would he Dance with the Devil?

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Post by Porty » 14 Sep 2010, 12:50

seanie wrote:
As I pointed out when the last draft was circulated, I do not recall the PCC agreeing to this and if the proposition had been put forward as our position, I would have insisted on a vital caveat. Whilst the NWPDB is an important consideration, the overriding duty of the Community Council is to represent the views of the community it serves. That is a far more important consideration than a planning document drafted by the Planning Department, particularly when such documents are always open to interpretation.

I considered the previous application to be broadly compliant with the NWPDB. More importantly the Planning Department considered the previous application to be broadly compliant with the NWPDB. And yet the PCC vehemently objected.

Many on the PCC thought the last proposal did not comply, but it's worth remembering that the NWPDB was written by the Planning Department. If there is disagreement over the interpretation of the NWPDB any fault in understanding may not necessarily lie with the Planning Department.
There's a few things that stand out here. It seems to me: Firstly, someone at PCC is making representations that were not agreed by the body of the kirk. Not only do they not seek the views of the community, he/she/them actually misrepresent the views put forward by their own members. At worst this is dishonest and best it is careless. Secondly; Planners decided the last BL plan was compliant with the NWPDP. It is extremely doubtful that many PCC members have the requisite skill and knowledge to measue whether the scheme complied?

The author of their initial response is the Chair, so he either went along with the misreprentation or was responsible for it.( That's if one accepts what Seanie says and maybe Marya or someone else could back him up?) Personally, I don't need the back up.

Recently he has been leading the charge of objections to several, smaller applications:

Bellfield Lane 1 PCC Against - Granted
Bellfield Lane 2 PCC Against- Granted
Bellfield Lane 3 PCC Against- Granted
Joppa Park 1 PCC Against- Granted
Joppa Park 2 PCC Against- Granted
Marlbourogh Street - PCC Against- Granted

The bloke clearly doesn't know his arse from his elbow, when it comes to planning.

It doesn't instill much confidence does it? The SP site is a significant opportunity/concern for Portobello. Somehow or other the PCC has managed to get itself into a position where it holds final sway over what happens there. The community needs a Council that truthfully and fairly represents the views of its people, traders etc. What we appear to have at the moment is a Council that cannot even truthfully and fairly represent its own members.
Competence is serious issue here and someone needs to take a long hard look at themselves.

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Post by philip myerscough » 14 Sep 2010, 13:35

Makaveli wrote: Is there anyway that we can show our support for this development (and I don't just mean via this website) as I know alot of people that would like to give a big fat 'yes go and build it' to this development. Is there a chance to get some sort of petition or letters sent to the PCC to let them know that the wider community want this and that just because they don't that should not be the end of it?

Please let me know how I and others can register support.
I fully support Marya's suggestion that you email the PCC. However you may take the view that your email might get lost in the post or ignored.

Edinburgh Council have made it clear that, while they will consult with PCC and have due regard to its comments as a statutory consultee, they really want to hear from the Community at large. So I would suggest that you email the planning officer in charge of the project whose name is Lesley Carus (lesley.carus@edinburgh.gov.uk). I know she is taking a keen interest in this debate. I would copy your email to your 3 local councillors and to PCC. I would also copy it to Councillor Tom Buchanan who is interested in this development from the economic and social benefit point of view (tom.buchanan@edinburgh.gov.uk) and to John Bury who as Head of Planning is taking a keen interest in this proposal and how the public consultation process is (or is not) working (john.bury@edinburgh.gov.uk)

You may not be aware but a planning application has not yet been lodged. We are in the pre-planning consultation phase. When we submit an application we will need to include a report on the consultation that we have carried out and the various responses. Could you therefore please also copy your email to me (phil@bldev.co.uk).

I would encourage anyone with an opinion on the proposal, for or against, or indeed an opinion on the consultation process, to do likewise.
Philip Myerscough

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Post by Maria » 14 Sep 2010, 13:53

Seanie's quoted that the PCC wrote: *

“The community council also feels that any revised planning application which BL submits must be in agreement with the development brief for the area, the North West Portobello Development Brief. The NW Portobello Development Brief represents a clear indication of the views of local residents and this has to be acknowledged by the community council in determining its stance on your revised proposals.”
Seanie wrote:As I pointed out when the last draft was circulated, I do not recall the PCC agreeing to this and if the proposition had been put forward as our position, I would have insisted on a vital caveat. Whilst the NWPDB is an important consideration, the overriding duty of the Community Council is to represent the views of the community it serves. That is a far more important consideration than a planning document drafted by the Planning Department, particularly when such documents are always open to interpretation.
Porty wrote:
There's a few things that stand out here. It seems to me: Firstly, someone at PCC is making representations that were not agreed by the body of the kirk. Not only do they not seek the views of the community, he/she/them actually misrepresent the views put forward by their own members. At worst this is dishonest and best it is careless. Secondly; Planners decided the last BL plan was compliant with the NWPDP. It is extremely doubtful that many PCC members have the requisite skill and knowledge to measue whether the scheme complied?

The author of their initial response is the Chair so he either went along with the misreprentation or was responsible for it.( That's if one accepts what Seanie says and maybe Marya or someone else could back him up?)
I can confirm that no vote was taken at the meeting regarding the PCC's position on BL's revised development plans in the context of the NWPDP, although the NWPDP was alluded to by some members. Certainly at previous meetings Seanie has pointed out that the Development Brief is a set of guidelines so I have no doubt he would have done so again given the opportunity.

I do think, however, the PCC will need very strong evidence that the majority of the community are supportive of BL's new plans, in order to over rule previous community consultation i.e. the NWPDP. I know that some planning phrases such as 'modern density levels' are open to interpretation, but the section on retail seems pretty clear.:?


* edit - Seanie quoted wrongly from a draft letter and I in turn lifted the quote from him. The final letter actually said


"The majority of the community council also feels that any revised planning application which BL submits must be in agreement with the development brief for the area, the North West Portobello Development Brief. The NW Portobello Development Brief represents a clear indication of the views of local residents and this has to be acknowledged by the community council in determining its stance on your revised proposals.
Last edited by Maria on 14 Sep 2010, 17:10, edited 1 time in total.
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Post by Franck » 14 Sep 2010, 13:57

Marya wrote:[
I do think, however, the PCC will need very strong evidence that the majority of the community are supportive of BL's new plans, in order to over rule previous community consultation
So that begs the question how are they going to go about gauging the communities opinion?

I'd also gladly accept it if the majority of people were still against the development, as long as the cc documented the voices of those supporters like me who are in favour and were able to supply proof that this had been done.

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Post by Mark Cameron » 14 Sep 2010, 14:00

Can one of the Admins tell us how many registered users there are on ths site/forum. I wonder what proportion of the regular posters are on the PCC? I'm quite surprised by some of the numbers I'm seeing (39 people have voted on here in total re the proposed development on the SP site, Phillip M mentions 100 people turned up at the drop-in sessions.

What is clear to me is that we as a community are in real danger of letting a few steer important decisions for the many.

Porty your comments are quite strong about the PCC and the Chair (of course I don't know if you have reason for them to be so). I do agree with your general thoughts though.

As a relatively new member of the Porty community it seems clear to me that there are problems with the way the CC communicate/engage in general (people not sure of email addresses / not sure if emails are being represented / other posters not having been canvassed about issues) Don't get me wrong I accept this isn't an easy job.

It seems from all I hear that the CC is a 'closed shop' and I don't think I've heard one positive thing being said which I'm sure must be an unfair reflection - Portobello needs a strong community council who really engage with the wider community to understand their needs in order to be taken seriously. The difficult part is coming up with a framework to achieve this with limited resource/time.

Could the CC perhaps build up an email database of local residents and send a monthly newsletter / update / minutes? This could also be a means of garnering opinion? Could they set up a Facebook page to get views and that way Porty people could invite porty 'friends' to join.

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Post by Maria » 14 Sep 2010, 14:34

mcdryburn wrote:Can one of the Admins tell us how many registered users there are on ths site/forum. I wonder what proportion of the regular posters are on the PCC? I'm quite surprised by some of the numbers I'm seeing (39 people have voted on here in total re the proposed development on the SP site, Phillip M mentions 100 people turned up at the drop-in sessions.

Anyone can see how many members there are - just click on member list on the menu bar at the top of the page. It will also tell you who has the most to say :oops:

I am no longer an Admin on here so can't tell you current viewing figures, but certainly about 2 years ago, although the number of posters seemed small the site had over 1000 individual visitors regularly viewing threads. People may be reluctant to post , but they are interested in reading what is going on. In order to vote in a poll you have to register and log on, but anyone can simply view the site.

There are at least 2 current members of the CC who post on here ; Seanie and I. There may be more.

Additionally, Bob Jefferson, Porty and Epykat are ex-members of the CC.

It seems from all I hear that the CC is a 'closed shop' and I don't think I've heard one positive thing being said which I'm sure must be an unfair reflection - Portobello needs a strong community council who really engage with the wider community to understand their needs in order to be taken seriously. The difficult part is coming up with a framework to achieve this with limited resource/time.
The trouble is trying to get folk interested. It is easy to make allegations of a closed shop but anyone can get themselves elected by filling in the form and being prepared to take part in an election. The sad fact is that there have been no elections, not because membership is a 'closed shop' , but because of lack of interest from the community. Most of the time, CC meetings deal with the minutiae of life in Porty - cycling on the Prom. dog dirt on pavements, signs being vandalised etc. However, recently Portobello seems to have been at the centre of several big planning developments and suddenly more folk take an interest and well, accusations start to fly.

Could the CC perhaps build up an email database of local residents and send a monthly newsletter / update / minutes? This could also be a means of garnering opinion? Could they set up a Facebook page to get views and that way Porty people could invite porty 'friends' to join.
All good suggestions. We do use 'The Porty Reporter' to try and keep in touch with local residents and there was a proposal to produce a newsletter. The stumbling block was shortage of time and money. Not easily overcome.

I would add however, that not all CC members have a PC and some have a strong opinion that web based communication , such as this forum, is not a credible conduit of local feeling.
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Post by wangi » 14 Sep 2010, 14:40

mcdryburn wrote:Can one of the Admins tell us how many registered users there are on ths site/forum. I wonder what proportion of the regular posters are on the PCC?
As the sole admin... We have ~700 registered users; ~1400 absolutely unique visitors in the last month. Also remember the 90-9-1 rule... Of those participating in this thread you have at least two members of the CC.

Can we try and keep discussion on this thread to the matter at hand; and if there are general questions or concerns with the CC put those on this thread.

Thanks/L

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Post by Porty » 14 Sep 2010, 16:26

mcdryburn wrote:
Porty your comments are quite strong about the PCC and the Chair (of course I don't know if you have reason for them to be so). I do agree with your general thoughts though.
Nothing personal against the Chair, he's a nice chap. I'm purely concerned with the lack of understanding of planning and the recent track record of objecting to applications that are acceptable to planners. I was on the receiving end of one of the PCC objection letters, for a small development we were doing in Porty. They wrote to object that there was no material change from our previous application- we had reduced the footprint by 30% which he/they failed to notice.

Surely he should take stock and say "I'm wrong maybe 8 or 9 times out 10, perhaps it is time to desist?"

Look at the BL situation:
  • Using their expertise and knowledge Planners spend considerable time and money producing a North West Portobello Development Brief. It is well recieved by many.

    BL Developments know they will have to come up with a scheme that meets the guidelines of the NWPDB. (I imagine at considerable effort and expense.

    Planners (the ones who wrote the Brief) assess the BL proposal and decide that it complies with their guidelines.

    The Chair of PCC ( who i think may have been a cookery teacher) writes to the Planners to say "you are wrong Planners; On behalf of Portobello Community Council and the people we represent, we say BL do NOT comply with the guidelines. The ones that you worked long and hard to put together. " - I'm reminded of the Harry Enfield character that used to say "you don't want to do it like that, do it like this".
We need better representation, that's all I'm saying.
Last edited by Porty on 14 Sep 2010, 17:01, edited 2 times in total.

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Post by seanie » 14 Sep 2010, 16:39

I have quite rightly been rebuked by the Chair of the PCC for a mistake on my part, albeit unintentional. He has asked me to post a comment here explaining my mistake.

In my post this morning I accidently quoted from a draft letter instead of the final letter. Obviously drafts are for internal purposes and should not be used or quoted outside of that. I confess that I posted in something of a hurry, so perhaps didn't take enough care to check the wording. For that I apologise. I used a copy and paste of an objection I had raised earlier without noticing a change in the wording between the draft and the final letter.

Instead of the quote I did provide, I should have provided the following;
"The majority of the community council also feels that any revised planning application which BL submits must be in agreement with the development brief for the area, the North West Portobello Development Brief. The NW Portobello Development Brief represents a clear indication of the views of local residents and this has to be acknowledged by the community council in determining its stance on your revised proposals."
In my defence I may have failed to notice the difference as, to my mind, the change makes no material difference to the sentiment expressed and completely fails to address the point that I was making. Namely that;

I do not recall the PCC agreeing to this and if the proposition had been put forward as our position, I would have insisted on a vital caveat. Whilst the NWPDB is an important consideration, the overriding duty of the Community Council is to represent the views of the community it serves. That is a far more important consideration than a planning document drafted by the Planning Department, particularly when such documents are always open to interpretation.

However, I should have taken more care and should not have quoted from a draft.

Again apologies.

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Post by Porty » 14 Sep 2010, 16:56

Thanks Seanie. It takes a brave man to apologise for being right all along.

Good to know the Chair is reading the thread.

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Post by wangi » 14 Sep 2010, 17:02

So:
“The community council also feels that any revised planning application which BL submits must be in agreement with the development brief for the area, the North West Portobello Development Brief. The NW Portobello Development Brief represents a clear indication of the views of local residents and this has to be acknowledged by the community council in determining its stance on your revised proposals.”
vs
"The majority of the community council also feels that any revised planning application which BL submits must be in agreement with the development brief for the area, the North West Portobello Development Brief. The NW Portobello Development Brief represents a clear indication of the views of local residents and this has to be acknowledged by the community council in determining its stance on your revised proposals."
Splitting hairs indeed.

I don't get how "the NW Portobello Development Brief represents a clear indication of the views of local residents". Surely asking the residents would be a better approach?

L/

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Post by Bob Jefferson » 14 Sep 2010, 17:47

philip myerscough wrote:Just to complete the picture Out of the Blue have been occupying buildings on our site rent free for the past 3 years. Sparta Boxing Club who do fantastic work with young men in our communities also occupy space rent free. Before they came to Portobello they occupied a building we owned rent free at Meadowbank. Before that they occupied buildings at our site at Shrub Place Leith Walk for 2 years rent free. They came to us when they were thrown out of their McDonald Road premises which they had occupied for years by someone who wanted to develop the site.

The Porty Boat Club have been using premises at our site rent free for the past year to build their famous boat that you will all know about. I think they are presently building another. I met today with Tom Black who is looking for somehere to store stuff associated with the very successful Brighton Place market. Not a problem.

So please don't question my integrity
I don't think I am. But please don't pretend that you are doing all this entirely out of the goodness of your heart. Presumably these free lets advantage you in some way, and not just in PR terms. I'm sure the groups concerned are grateful and I know how long, for example, the rowing club spent looking for workshop space but, let's face it, it would just have lain empty otherwise. It doesn't even have an electrical supply.

Lets see how many of these 'community' facilities make it to the plans you submit and on what basis they operate.

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Post by seanie » 14 Sep 2010, 17:55

wangi wrote:I don't get how "the NW Portobello Development Brief represents a clear indication of the views of local residents". Surely asking the residents would be a better approach?
The NWPDB represents the considered view of the Planning Department, following a consultation with the community AND other parties, INCLUDING developers.

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Post by philip myerscough » 14 Sep 2010, 18:05

Marya wrote:I do think, however, the PCC will need very strong evidence that the majority of the community are supportive of BL's new plans, in order to over rule previous community consultation i.e. the NWPDP. I know that some planning phrases such as 'modern density levels' are open to interpretation, but the section on retail seems pretty clear.:?
Aha! So now it becomes clear why the NorthWest Portobello Development Brief has suddenly become the Bible. It has something to say about retail!

At the end of the day the Planning Dept not PCC will be the judge of what emphasis if any to put on that. The job of the PCC is to reflect the views of the community not to interpret planning policy.
Philip Myerscough

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Post by seanie » 14 Sep 2010, 18:52

The NWPDB.

There's quite a lot that can be said about it but I'd highlight two things;
1.3 The purpose of this Development Brief is to provide a general framework to guide and co-ordinate the development of North West Portobello over the next 15 to 20 years. It is however intended to be flexible, and will be expanded as required as specific proposals, additional sites, or development pressures come forward.
It's a guide, and an important one, but it's not set in stone. And as with any planning document there is a degree of interpretation.
Retail
3.8 Other than a possible purely local “corner shop” facility within the development, perhaps as the focus of a local centre or at the seafront, no new retail provision is envisaged within the area.
Not being envisaged is not the same as being prohibited. The planners approved the previous retail-less scheme but that's been knocked back. They'll recognise that any new proposal will have to address the reasons given for that refusal; height, density, traffic. An enlarged retail element, in return for the reduced height and density, is the kind of flexible approach the Planners will at least be willing to consider.

Various criteria will still have to be satisfied but there's no reason, at this stage, to conclude that the proposal is not compatible with the NWPDB.

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Post by Pal of Porty » 15 Sep 2010, 22:36

philip myerscough wrote:....The job of the PCC is to reflect the views of the community not to interpret planning policy.
This is one of the issues at the heart of the matter for me and is graphically illustrated by the PCC position on the recent Bellfield Planning Application. The letters of support for the application outweighed the objections by a ratio of around 3 to 1, yet the PCC still saw fit to object.

I am not trying to justify that the reasons for support were any less or any more valid than the reasons for objection but clearly the community wanted this project to happen and the PCC did not reflect their views. This situation was further compounded when the PCC and their interpretation of policy was again found to be at odds with the final decision given the application was granted.

There are a lot of good people on the PCC and I have great difficulty reconciling this with much of the written output published under the PCC banner. 8)
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development site

Post by sho » 17 Sep 2010, 12:13

[quote]"I'm fed up with the shit on that site...even a 16 storey hypermarket bordered by a prostitute safe zone with a 24/7 fun fair and a jet Ski pond is beginning to sound appealing."[unquote]

be careful what you wish for!

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Post by Porty » 17 Sep 2010, 12:43

How true!!

All the more reason for getting on side a reasonable proposal.

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Post by seanie » 17 Sep 2010, 12:50

My letter.

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Post by Bob Jefferson » 17 Sep 2010, 15:34

This FOE briefing from 2005 has some interesting things to say about edge of town supermarkets:

Good Neighbours?
In other words, rather than leading to spin-off shopping, edge-of-centre has the potential to produce ‘spin-away’ effects, where shopping is drawn away from the existing centre.

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we have a place to treasure - not trash

Post by sho » 17 Sep 2010, 16:16

Portobello is unique in it's location as a seaside areas in a European capital city - and this unique location and appeal needs to be respected, nurtured and built upon, not subsumed by and transformed into yet another generic suburb with only superstore provision, I have strong memories of visiting my Nana in Portobello as a child...and I fell in love with Portobello all over again ten years ago because it is one of the few areas of the city that has managed to preserve a traditional 'town centre' with family-owned shops and local community services.

The uniqueness of this wonderful area, the continued existance and success of the local shops and services and the well-being of the local community should not be sacrificed for the profit of private enterprise.
:)

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Post by Bob Jefferson » 17 Sep 2010, 16:25

I believe that, in addition to Findlay's, Fine Wines and Kitchener's Deli have both written to the CC expressing their concern at the BL proposals to include a supermarket. Are CC members aware of any others?

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Post by Porty » 17 Sep 2010, 16:57

Sho- welcome to the forum and welcome back to Porty. I agree that Portobello is unique but its not because its the beach area in a European Capital City. A number of European Capital Cities have beaches.

BTT

Seanie, that is pretty strong stuff- disassociating yourself from the Community Councils' offical account of the meetings outcome?

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Post by wangi » 17 Sep 2010, 17:20

Bob Jefferson wrote:This FOE briefing from 2005 has some interesting things to say about edge of town supermarkets: Good Neighbours?
In other words, rather than leading to spin-off shopping, edge-of-centre has the potential to produce ‘spin-away’ effects, where shopping is drawn away from the existing centre.
An interesting read, and most of it geared toward big supermarkets on edge of town sites. Lets not loose focus of the fact the the proposal here is for a shop of equivalent size to the existing Scotmid.

And while it might be on the edge of Portobello's town centre that does make it closer to residents in Parker Rd, Craigentinny etc.

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Post by Bob Jefferson » 17 Sep 2010, 19:13

Those of you who feel strongly about these proposals, both for and against, should be emailing our local councillors with your views. My understanding is that only a handful of people have bothered to do so thus far. If we want our representatives to take heed of what we think, then we have to communicate with them.

Maureen Child - maureen.child@edinburgh.gov.uk
Stephen Hawkins - stephen.hawkins@edinburgh.gov.uk
Michael Bridgeman - michael.bridgeman@edinburgh.gov.uk

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Post by philip myerscough » 18 Sep 2010, 00:14

Bob Jefferson wrote:Those of you who feel strongly about these proposals, both for and against, should be emailing our local councillors with your views. My understanding is that only a handful of people have bothered to do so thus far. If we want our representatives to take heed of what we think, then we have to communicate with them.
I don't disagree with that. However can I just point out that at this pre planning application stage the consultation is between B L developments and all interested parties. Once consultation is complete if we choose to submit a planning application we must also submit a report on the consultation. That will contain copies of all representations. It will be at that point that the planning dept will collate all responses and consider them.
So, yes, send comments and views and representations to the PCC and to local councillors and to whomever you chose but please copy them in to me at phil@bldev.co.uk otherwise they won't make it into our report.
Philip Myerscough

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Post by seanie » 18 Sep 2010, 01:49

Porty wrote:Seanie, that is pretty strong stuff- disassociating yourself from the Community Councils' offical account of the meetings outcome?
We've yet to see the 'official' account of the meeting's outome. That will be the minutes.

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Post by seanie » 18 Sep 2010, 01:59

Bob Jefferson wrote:Those of you who feel strongly about these proposals, both for and against, should be emailing our local councillors with your views.
No they shouldn't. At this stage that would be pointless.

And instead of just those 'who feel strongly' how about just anybody.

"Not fussed either way" is still a perfectly legitimate position to take, even if it may be more lonely.

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Post by Bob Jefferson » 18 Sep 2010, 08:24

The Community Council is being pressured into taking a position, whether or not to support BL's plans. The CC is duty-bound to reflect the views of the community. The CC is making little effort to consult with the community, therefore it is left to members of the community to get their views across in any way they can. If hundreds of local people write to Maureen Child, for example, supporting/rejecting/or indeed not being fussed about the proposals then I would expect her to reflect that balance of opinion in her report at the next CC meeting. And that should then be a piece of evidence to be considered along with other pieces of evidence, like our online poll, before the CC makes up its mind on the issue.

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Post by seanie » 18 Sep 2010, 09:11

And will that be representative?

Or the angry and the anoraks?

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Post by seanie » 18 Sep 2010, 09:23

Before people get all het up it's important to remember one thing.

It's really not that important either way.

We're pretty much committed to more than a 3 degree rise in global temperatures, with a considerable risk of positve feedbacks accelerating it well beyond. We'll take no meaningful action until it's too late to do anything about it.

The tundra will melt, the rainforests will burn, and the methane hydrates will release.

We've already fished the seas to near extinction and acidification will render them a soup of algae.

And oil, the only reason we have the lifestyles we do, is about to peak.

Given the prospect of the chaos of a collapsed world economy, the devastation to agriculture, the poisoning of the seas, wars over resources, the mass extinction of species, and the possible decimation of the human race within this century, whether or not Portobello gets a Waitrose really ain't of great significance.

Personally, faced with a Mass Extinction Event, I'd find a good deli counter somewhat comforting.

Especially if they have good boquerones.

May as well eat them before they're extinct.

:)

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