Back to list East Anglia ONE North Offshore Windfarm

Representation by Richard Reeves

Date submitted
27 January 2020
Submitted by
Members of the public/businesses

? The new proposed compulsory purchase of land belonging to (Redacted), identified only at this latest stage of planning by the previously absent dotted red lines of demarcation around the newly proposed area, and the rented associated adjacent properties belonging to (Redacted), where I and my partner live, and directly adjoining the Wardens Disabled Peoples Centre, where vulnerable adults, children and young people are cared for has never been identified or suggested in any previous planning stages, and has not therefore been subject to any surveying, due diligence in planning, or notification to any of the affected or interested parties. Thus, no opportunity has previously been afforded to said parties to raise objections, ask questions, or provide feedback, and this new attempted land-grab cannot, at this stage, be suddenly included. Put simply, having collected feedback on other areas to be affected by the proposed cable-corridor route, SPR has added on an additional entirely new area to be affected without notice or warning. ? The new area referred to above crosses and will disrupt and bar access to both the properties identified above and the Wardens Trust Centre itself, preventing the delivery of vital local therapeutic and care service vulnerable children and adults. ? The cable corridor route itself crosses and will adversely affect, damage, and potentially destroy the Concerto heavy communications cable. I personally have extensive film and photographs of this vulnerable and vital communications medium dangerously exposed more than two feet above beach-level, for an extensive length of its passage across Thorpeness Point beach toward the provenly unstable cliffs SPR is proposing to undermine. ? As a particularly rich part of a nationally recognised AONB, the square KM surrounding (Redacted), including colonies of rare species of bat. ? The species listed below are occasional, common and very common migrants / visitors to the area. They can often be seen during a visit to Ness House and its surrounding habitats. Blackbird Blackcap Brambling Bullfinch Chaffinch Chiffchaff Crossbill Crow Curlew Collared Dove Coat Tit Blue Tit Goldfinch Greenfinch Jay Kestrel Song thrush Green woodpecker Fieldfare Grey Heron Great tit Long tailed Tit Linnet House Sparrow Dunnock Yellow Wagtail Grey Wagtail Magpie Nightingale Nightjar Mistle-Thrush Snipe Pied Wagtail Meadow Pipit Pheasant Grey Partridge Red Throated Diver Black Throated Diver Redwing Robin Rook Reed Bunting Pied Flycatcher Marsh Harrier House Martin Snow Martin Snow Bunting Swift Sand Martin Stonechat Sparrowhawk Swallow Little Owl Short-eared Owl Tawny Owl Twite Tree Pipit Whinchat Woodpigeon Woodlark Wheatear Willow Warbler Whimbrel Wren Yellowhammer Woodcock Cormorant Feral Pigeon Stock Dove Turtle Dove Cuckoo Long-eared Owl Great Spotted Woodpecker Skylark Black Redstart Redstart Siskin Ring Ouzel Black Headed Gull Brent Goose Canada Goose Mallard Common tern Lapwing Mute swan Shelduck Fulmar Great Black-backed gull Herring gull Razorbill Artic Tern Guillemot Red-breasted Merganser Common Gull Gannet Little Tern Oystercatcher Wigeon Red-necked Grebe Great-crested grebe Cory’s Shearwater Sooty Shearwater Spoonbill Little Egret Gadwall Pintail Shoveler Pochard Tufted Duck Scaup Eider Velvet Scoter Goldeneye Buzzard Osprey Moorhen Merlin Hobby Peregrine Red-legged Partridge Avocet Ringed Plover Golden Plover Grey Plover Sanderling Knot Purple Sandpiper Dunlin Black-tailed godwit Turnstone Redshank Greenshank Great Skua Mediterranean Gull Little Gull Lesser Black-backed Gull Iceland Gull Glaucous Gull Kittiwake Sandwich Tern Black Tern Little Auk Sedge Warbler Reed Warbler Dartford Warbler Lesser Whitethroat Garden Warbler Spotted Flycatcher Goldcrest Firecrest Jackdaw Starling Redpoll