This week, yet another leaflet came through my letterbox asking for views on a development of 2,000 homes to be slapped up a few minutes away from said letterbox, encroaching on green belt land.
Last month, it was a leaflet from a well-known German supermarket giant, asking for opinions on its plans to demolish an aquatics centre near-by and replace it with fish you buy for the dinner table, rather than ones for your tank, again a few minutes away from my front door.
I’ve also been catching up on comments from our local MP, Mark Francois, who was rightly bringing numerous planned developments in the local area to public attention and questioning how infrastructure can cope with the scale of what is being suggested.
He says 17,000-plus new homes planned by the local council is ‘insane’ and ‘utterly unacceptable.’
He said: ‘With our local roads already maxed out, and hospitals full to bursting there is absolutely no way on earth our semi-rural district could possibly accommodate 17,000 new houses, including a new town on the Rochford-Southend border.’
Say what you want about Mr Francois, but he speaks with passion about gargantuan local developments, and hopefully your local MP is equally as vocal.
Whether concerns raised by MPs have any impact is another matter.
Green belt: Across the country, there is increasing pressure to develop on green belt – and at vast scale
The leaflets talk a good game. The housing development harps on about a new school, health facilities, and rather ironically, green space – but crucially, there is no concrete plan to deal with extremely heavy traffic that already exists on the roundabout near-by, the only route to get onto the main road.
It’s unlikely anything will be done about it – and with another couple of thousand residents added to the fray, it will, in a word, result in even more gridlock.
That’s because it is too far to walk to the train station that ferries commuters into London, which will mean more people driving to get there via the one single carriageway road that goes through the town, already at breaking point.
This goes on top of another development well underway, where more than 1,000 homes are currently going up. I’m not sure how much more the town can cope, unless more services, facilities and roads are built, eating yet more green land.
The thing many don’t realise about large parts of Essex is the county is rural and semi-rural, the more so as you venture away from the capital.
This means plenty of green space to eye up to build on, but the plans often don’t take into account the already overwhelmed public services, amenities and transport networks.
And this is a scenario replicated across the country. I get it. Homes need to be built. I own a home, so I’m labelled ‘lucky’ – I wouldn’t be complaining if I was attempting to get onto the ladder, I know will be the cry.
But no doubt what will go up are houses crammed in next to each other with postage stamp gardens, no real identity and a failure to grasp what people need.
In my opinion, we need an increase in smaller one and two-bedroom bungalows in our area, to help people downsize. Will they be built? Nope. It’ll be four and five bed monstrosities costing three quarters of a million pounds or more to help maximise the bottom line of the developer.
I mentioned this to a friend the other day and he jokingly labelled me a Nimby – Not in My Back Yard.
This catch-all, and quite derogatory term, has been forced onto local people just because they care about the community, traffic, overpopulation and essentially, having concerns about huge soulless developments.
I wouldn’t label myself a Nimby. No, I’ve invented a new term: Cwibb. It stands for: I Care What is Being Built.
Us Cwibbs understand homes need to be built – don’t want new ones to be blocked entirely – but with care and consideration to those who already live near-by, alongside the quality required for forking out huge sums to buy said homes.
Is there anything wrong with that? Cwibbs know the area inside out – when the traffic is going to be bad to dodge it; how long it takes to get a doctor’s appointment; how oversubscribed the best local schools are; how easy it is to get a loaf of bread and pint of milk, and from where, at any time of the day.
We know more than the faceless developers, the people in government blindly sticking out building targets – we live and breathe the area, and fundamentally, we care about it.
But ultimately, our concerns, our thoughts put down via the little QR code on the leaflet, won’t count for anything.
What is a developer going to do?
Oh look, Mr Boyce has concerns about 2,000 homes going up, let’s not do it.
Oh, Mr Boyce says the roundabout is already a traffic nightmare, we’ll drop a few million quid (and the rest) to build a junction that will manage traffic flow better.
Oh, Mr Boyce says yet another supermarket isn’t needed as he can already get to a dozen within 10 minutes, so let’s not bother.
Will I fill in the feedback form? Of course I will, it’s my duty as a Cwibb. Will it make a blind bit of difference? I highly doubt it.
But us Cwibbs and Nimbys are important, no matter who wants to berate us for caring – and the country would be a worse place without local people trying to help shape what we believe is best for an area we have chosen to reside, to put down roots, to start families, and to live and die in.
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