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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Friends of Basildon Golf Course v Basildon District Council & Anor [2009] EWHC 66 (Admin) (23 January 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2009/66.html Cite as: [2009] NPC 13, [2010] Env LR 1, [2009] EWHC 66 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE FRIENDS OF BASILDON GOLF COURSE |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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BASILDON DISTRICT COUNCIL |
Defendant |
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- and - |
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BASILDON GOLF CENTRE LIMITED |
Interested Party |
____________________
Ms Galina Ward (instructed by The Legal Services Department of the Defendant)
for the Defendant
No appearance by or on behalf of the Interested Party
Hearing dates: 7 November 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Wyn Williams :
"Development of golf clubhouse, driving range, maintenance building, ancillary facilities and associated landscaping/ engineering work."
Ground 1
"This screening opinion relates to proposals to carry out alterations to Basildon Golf Course. The proposals comprise the provision of a golf driving range and new clubhouse and associated landscaping and engineering works. The associated works will involve the importation of inert material to remodel areas of the existing golf course by creating landscaped, bunds and mounds. The development is to be undertaken in two phases and the first application deals with only with the first phase. A subsequent application will be submitted for the remodelling of the remainder of the course. However, in accordance with the Regulations this screening opinion will consider the impact of all the proposed works".
"In this case the inert material is being brought to the site to create the landscaped mounds and not as a waste of operation. The total amount inert material to be brought to the site will be less than 50,000 tonnes per year for all phases of the development."
The phrase "for all phases of the development" naturally and sensibly refers to all the development anticipated to take place at the golf course as opposed to the development specified in the particular planning application. That is especially so when the phrase is read in the context of the opening paragraph of the opinion as set out above.
" I have enclosed a copy of the Screening Opinion. The Screening Opinion sets out the Council's views as to whether an Environmental Impact Assessment would be necessary in relation to the first phase of the Development. It concludes that an Environmental Impact Assessment would not be required. I trust that this now deals with this head of challenge".
"59 .The principal point which emerges from the authorities cited is that the question of whether a local planning authority has sufficient information in order to be able to reach a proper judgment on its screening opinion is a matter for the relevant decision maker whose view is challengeable only on normal judicial review grounds. It is very much a matter of planning judgment, which depends on the facts of the given case. It may not therefore be very persuasive to take the circumstances of one case and to try to use it as a measure by which other cases had been judged.
60. What was said in [R(Jones) v Mansfield District Council [2003] EWCA Civ 1408 ] is particularly apposite: the planning authority must have sufficient information to be able to reach the relevant conclusion; it is not necessary that all uncertainties be resolved or that a detailed and comprehensive assessment be made of impacts at the screening opinion stage. That stage cannot turn into something equivalent to the environmental statement itself. An understanding of where the uncertainties lie and the likely range of those uncertainties may be necessary in order to be satisfied that the development is not likely to have significant environmental effects. The nature and range of the uncertainties may make it impossible to reach the conclusion that development is not EIA development. Equally, it is possible to have sufficient information for reaching a decision on the screening opinion, even though there are uncertainties and further surveys are required for the final decision on the development permission .. It may well be possible in any given case to conclude that it is unlikely that uncertainties will be resolved in such a way as to yield a significant environmental effect. The availability of standard conditions or other straight forward and obvious remedial measures may well bite on that conclusion as well.
61. .
62. Indicative material can assist in judging whether the range of uncertainties is so great that a planning officer has insufficient knowledge to judge whether there are likely to be significant environmental effects or whether there are some site layouts or designs for which it can be said that they would be likely and then likely to have significant effects. The planning officer will also be able to make a judgment about the degree to which standard conditions can at that stage be envisaged as sufficient to make unlikely those developments layouts or components which would be likely to have significant environmental effects."
"A36. The likelihood of significant effects will generally depend on the scale of development and the nature of the potential impact in terms of discharges, emissions or odour. For installations (including landfill sites) for the deposit, recovery/or disposal of household, industrial and/or commercial wastes (as defined by the Controlled Waste Regulations 1992) EIA is more likely to be required where new capacity is created to hold more than 50,000 tonnes per year or hold waste on a site of 10 hectares or more. Sites taking smaller quantities of these wastes, sites seeking only to accept inert wastes (demolition rubbles etc) or Civic Amenity sites, are unlikely to require EIA."
"The inert material is being brought to the site to create landscaped mounds and not as a waste operation. The total amount of inert material to be brought to the site will be less than 50,000 tonnes per year for all phases of the development."
"Proposal: 0700373/Full Construction of new clubhouse and maintenance shed and development of a golf driving range"
Thank you for consulting Natural England on the above proposal .
we consider that this proposal in isolation will not have a significant effect on the interest features of Basildon Meadows SSSI. However, we are aware that this application linked to the developer's aspirations to develop a much larger area of the golf course. The impact of this larger scale of the development, including the proposals within the current application, would be likely to result in significant adverse impact upon Basildon Meadows SSSI.. These impacts would include significant hydrological change as a result of landscaping and air pollution impacts caused by increased road traffic ."
The letter goes on to state that Natural England would object to the wider two-stage development.
"50. I can express my conclusions as follows:
(i) The fundamental provision in the 1999 Regulations is the prohibition in Regulation 3 on the grant of permission pursuant to an EIA application without taking into consideration the relevant environmental information. The other provisions of the Regulations should be read in such a way as to ensure that the planning authority is not required to grant permission without consideration of the relevant environmental information if it considers that the development is an EIA development and the Secretary of State has not taken a contrary view.
(ii) The screening provisions in Part II provide a procedure for determining whether a development is an EIA development and therefore whether an application is an EIA application. They are not, however, expressed to lay down an exhaustive procedure and specify the extent to which they are determinative for the purposes of the Regulations. By regulation 4(1) (3) a planning authority's screening opinion to the effect that a development is EIA development (a positive screening opinion) is determinative in the absence of a contrary screening direction by the Secretary of State. A screening opinion to the effect that the development is not an EIA development (a negative screening opinion) is not said to be determinative even in the absence of a screening direction by the Secretary of State. By contrast a screening direction by the Secretary of State is said to be determinative either way, i.e. as to whether development is or is not EIA development. It seems to me that the difference as between the position of the planning authority and that of the Secretary of State cannot be explained simply by the overriding nature of the Secretary of State's screening direction, since that consideration applies equally to positive as to negative screening of opinions. In my view the regulations have left deliberately open the possibility that the planning authority, having given a negative screening direction, may subsequently determine that the development is nonetheless an EIA development.
(iii) There is, however, no power to adopt a further screening opinion in the absence of a request from the proposed developer. The procedure is for an opinion to be adopted in response to a request under regulation 5, with a possibility of a request to the Secretary of State under regulations 5(6) and 6 for a screening direction if the planning authority fails to adopt an opinion or adopt a positive opinion. The Secretary of State is also given the express power by Regulation 4(7) to make a screening direction without a request. Existence of that express power tells very strongly against the implications of the corresponding power for a planning authority to adopt a screening opinion without a request.
(iv) Regulation 7(1) does not apply where a negative screening opinion has already been given. ..
(v) Regulation 7(2), however, can apply whether a negative screening opinion has already been given. Since the negative screening opinion is not determinative, it is open to an authority to form the view that an application before it is an EIA application notwithstanding an earlier negative opinion, and to notify the Applicant that an environmental statement is therefore required. A change of mind would be at risk of challenge on ordinary public law grounds in the absence of good reasons for it (although the applicant would have the alternative avenue of requesting a screening direction from the Secretary of State). But in an appropriate case a change of mind might be justified by change in circumstances since the date of a screening opinion .
(vi) By Regulation 7(3), however, any notification under Regulation 7(2) must be made within three weeks from the receipt of the application or such longer period as may be agreed in writing with the Applicant
(vii) Whether or not I am right in relation to the applicability of Regulation 7(2), the power of the Secretary of State under Regulation 4(7) to make a screening direction without any request from the developer provides a fallback position, as I think all parties accepted. It means that, if the Council took the view its negative screening opinion was no longer appropriate, it was at least open to it to seek the making of a screening direction that the development was EIA development.
(viii) Accordingly the negative screening opinion was not necessarily the end of the matter. One way or another the council did have the power to do something about it if, in the light of further information, it took the view that the development was after all an EIA development.
(ix) I do not consider, however, that the Council was under any duty to consider the matter further. The matter had already been given express consideration at the time of adoption of the screening opinion. There was no express duty under the Regulations to reconsider it at the time of determining the planning application, and in my view there is no need to imply such a duty: the circumstances differ from those in which an implied duty of Secretary of State was found in Barkeley v Secretary of State [2000] WLR 429H -430D. Further there is no request by anybody for the matter to be reconsidered, nor any suggestion that the development was after all an EIA development. The circumstances were not materially different from those at the time of the negative screening opinion. If the matter was as obvious as the Claimants now contend, then it is remarkable that it was not raised by any of the objectors at the time.
(x) In circumstances where the Council adopted an unchallenged negative screening opinion and was under no duty to reconsider it, I do not think that it is open to the Claimants now to challenge the substance of the Council's view that the development was not an EIA development "
Ground 2
"1 .
2. The following classes of operations and uses of land are prescribed for the purposes of paragraph 1(1)(j) of Schedule 1 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990:-
(a)(i) the use of land;
(ii) the carrying out of building, engineering or other operations; or
(iii) the erection of plant or machinery used or proposed to be used, wholly or mainly for the purposes of recovering, treating, storing, processing, sorting, transferring or depositing waste;
(b) the use of land or the carrying out of operations for any purposes ancillary to any use or operations specified in paragraph (a) above, including the formation, laying out, construction or alteration of the vehicular access to any public highway."
The fact that the operations described in the Regulations are prescribed under paragraph 1(1)(j) of Schedule 1 to the 1990 Act means that the relevant planning authority for the purpose of determining a planning application is the county planning authority.
" . could not have rationally formed the conclusion on the basis of its understanding, or lack of understanding, of events. Any such decision was in the circumstances perverse or irrational."
Conclusion