Updated checklist and account of Bexley Dragonflies and Damselflies published as season gets underway

‘Bexley Wildlife’s’ guide to Dragonflies and Damselflies in the Borough, and where to see them, has been updated to mark the start of the flight season – during which the adult insects metamorphose from their unobtrusive aquatic larval stage, take to the air, seek mates and breed.  Read or download here. Bexley is currently home to 18 of the UK’s 43 resident and regular migrant species. With two new species recorded at Erith Marshes (Crossness) during 2015, this fabulous site goes top of the league with 16 species, one ahead of Foots Cray Meadows. The Lamorbey list was doubled from 5 to 10 last year, and with new species colonising the country, largely through East Anglia and the Thames estuary, and heading our way, there is much still to discover and learn about these fascinating insects in Bexley.

As is usual the first adult of the year was a Large Red Damselfly, recorded in east Kent on 1st April,  according to the British Dragonfly Society website. This can be seen at a number of sites in Bexley, including Danson Park.

Download the PDF file .

 

Male Broad-bodied Chaser Dragonfly. (Photo: Ralph Todd)

Male Broad-bodied Chaser Dragonfly. (Photo: Ralph Todd)

 

Posted in Bexley, Crossness, Danson Park, Dragonflies and Damselflies, Erith Marshes, Recording | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Wildlife surveys at Woodlands Farm

Woodlands Farm has announced a further series of wildlife survey events as follows:

Pond Survey – Friday 29th April, 11am

Bumblebee Survey – Fri 13th May, 2pm

Pond Survey – Wed 18th May, 3pm

Pond Survey – Thurs 26th May, 2pm

Pond Survey – Tues 7th June, 2pm

At some point the Farm will also be doing their bluebell survey, date to be confirmed. The bluebells have started coming out so it may be Wednesday next week.

Hannah Ricketts, Education Officer, The Woodlands Farm Trust. 331 Shooters Hill, Welling, Kent. DA16 3RP. Tel: 0208 3198900.

Website:  <http://www.thewoodlandsfarmtrust.org/>

 

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Volunteer with Animal Days Out at Keats Road, Welling

Animal Days Out logo

Animal Days Out

Animal Days Out (ADO) was setup as a Community Interest Company (C.I.C.) in 2011 with the aim to provide interactive, educational and recreational opportunities for children, young people and adults with a wide theme of animals, wildlife and nature. We have successfully developed a wide range of animal encounters, experiences, outdoor learning activities and after school activity clubs, supporting and participating in many community events across London, the Home Counties and the South-East.

In addition to these services, ADO also provides equine and horticulture therapy to children and adults at one of our sites in Welling – Keats Road. This large site is the perfect setting for both educational and therapeutic activities but we need your help to expand its potential!

Animal Days Out site at Keats Road, Welling. Joanne Bradley

Animal Days Out site at Keats Road, Welling. Joanne Bradley

What are they looking for?

ADO are looking for enthusiastic volunteers to join us on Friday mornings 10am – 12pm to get stuck into a whole range of tasks such as fence building, woodwork, planting, landscaping and gardening. As part of the Keats Road work force you will play a key role in helping to create a fun, therapeutic environment for people to enjoy and learn in.

Animal Days Out site at Keats Road, Welling. Joanne Bradley

Animal Days Out site at Keats Road, Welling. Joanne Bradley

If you have experience in any of these areas or just want to give it a go, please email Joanne –joanne@animaldaysout.com

Gloves and tools will be provided but please come dressed for the weather!

We look forward to seeing you there!

Posted in Allotments, Keats Community Farm, Welling | Leave a comment

Crayford Rough – still time for a quick objection. Suggested text provided …

The good old internet means there is still time for lots of the people reading this to make a quick and easy objection to the proposal to build on wildlife land of London importance at Crayford Rough, since Bexley Council accepts comments up to the day of the planning meeting. Some pre-prepared bullet points are suggested below.

Simply send an e-mail to developmentcontrol@bexley.gov.uk

on or before Wednesday 13th April, quoting Planning application 15/00830/FULM in the subject line, and giving your name and address at the end.

Then say ….

Reference planning application 15/00830/FULM, I object to that part of the proposal that would see some 10% of the Crayford Rough Metropolitan Site of Importance for Nature Conservation, which is outside of the existing industrial estate fenceline, built on. I request that the application be refused if this part of it is not rescinded. I am also concerned about the height and overall scale of the buildings given the proximity to the River Cray.

Then include any or all of the following points as you see fit:

  • I note that the application proposes building more than twice as many flats as set out in the Council’s ‘Crayford Strategy and Action Plan’ (2005)
  • All habitat on the Rough is not equal for all species, and the part that would be lost is the most important for orchids, which are rare in Bexley, the nationally scarce Yellow Vetchling and reptiles, which are Biodiversity Action Plan priority species.
  • The application is contrary to national, regional and Bexley biodiversity conservation policies, and neither the developer nor the Council has presented any evidence that the proposed ‘mitigation’ adequately offsets the negative biodiversity impacts.
  • Constructing a six storey block of flats next to the Green Belt/Metropolitan Open Land boundary will deleteriously affect its character.
  • If Bexley Council approves destruction of part of a Metropolitan SINC, the highest grade of nature conservation site in the borough, this sets a very damaging precedent, and casts severe doubt on its claim that it can pursue its ‘growth strategy’ whilst protecting those features of the Borough that we place a high value on.

If you visit the Rough, please do say what you value about it personally.

Crayford Rough. Google Earth image showing  the area proposed to be built on, which 10% of the whole MSINC and is important for wildlife and outside of the old industrial estate fenceline.

Crayford Rough. Google Earth image showing the area proposed to be built on, which 10% of the whole MSINC and is important for wildlife and outside of the old industrial estate fenceline.

For more detail (including why we’ve only brought this to everyone’s attention so late in the day)  see:

http://www.bexleywildlife.org/now-bexley-council-officer-recommends-building-on-10-of-crayford-rough-a-wildlife-site-of-regional-importance/

Thanks!

Chris Rose. Vice-chair, Bexley Natural Environment Forum

Posted in Bexley Council, Crayford Rough, development threat | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

Now Bexley Council officer recommends building on 10% of Crayford Rough, a wildlife site of regional importance.

The onslaught against the most valuable wildlife sites in Bexley is set to continue this week as the planning committee meets on 14th April to consider an application to redevelop the old Electrobase industrial site between Hall Place and Crayford town centre. This would be acceptable in principle were it not for the fact that the proposal includes destroying a prime part of the adjacent Crayford Rough Metropolitan Site of Importance for Nature Conservation. Bexley Council’s case officer has recommended that the whole plan – which would see more than twice as many flats built as agreed in the Council’s own Crayford town strategy – be approved. As usual absolutely no data or peer-reviewed evidence is presented to support the implicit pretence that this will not have a deleterious effect on the range or populations of the species of particular conservation concern that are present, or the Borough’s biodiversity as a whole or that the so-called ‘mitigation’ proposed will adequately ‘offset’ those impacts.

In our opinion the officer’s report, which is one of 145 documents about this planning application, the one most likely to be read by councillors, and the one that will shape their reading of any of the others, is insufficiently explicit about the loss of MSINC land. It leads with ‘the proposal will reuse a former brownfield site in a relatively sustainable location on the edge of the Crayford District centre.’ and goes on to say ‘The western area of the site abuts Crayford Rough a designated SINC which is largely grassland and woodland.’ A casual or hurried reading could well leave the impression that the Rough itself will not be directly affected. Whilst a part of the National Planning Policy Framework is quoted, it is not the part about biodiversity considerations.

Bexley Natural Environment Forum will be objecting and has requested a  speaker slot at the meeting. Bexley Civic Society has also objected on both environment grounds and the size and density of the proposed ‘development’.

Crayford Rough. Google Earth image showing  the area proposed to be built on, which 10% of the whole MSINC and is important for wildlife and outside of the old industrial estate fenceline.

Crayford Rough. Google Earth image showing the area proposed to be built on (yellow hatch), which is 10% of the whole MSINC, is very important for wildlife and is outside of the old industrial estate fenceline.

BEXLEY’S ‘GROWTH STRATEGY’: CRAM THEM IN AND LOSE MORE VALUED OPEN SPACE

The applicant proposes building 359 residential apartments in 5 and 6 storey blocks. This should be compared with the ‘up to 150’ agreed as acceptable for this site in the Council’s ‘Crayford Strategy and Action Plan’ (2005), which went through another of its famous public consultation exercises. We note that the officer explicitly links this more than doubling in numbers, and the loss of a significant part of the Rough, to the Council’s ‘growth strategy’. The ‘strategy’ has yet to be agreed, and there is no electoral mandate for its core policy of increasing the borough’s population by one fifth, as previously revealed on this website. There is also a passing reference to what is in reality Boris Johnson’s ‘densification’ plan, which sees Bexley as a prime building site to help serve his ambition of a 3 million increase in the population of London as a whole.

CRAYFORD ROUGH – A TOP LONDON WILDLIFE SITE

There are few Sites of Special Scientific Interest in London designated for their wildlife value, and none in Bexley. The Rough is one of only five Metropolitan SINCs in the Borough, the next highest ranking after SSSIs, as is the River Cray, also impacted by this proposed ‘development’. That means that after an objective assessment by experts, it has been identified as one of the best wildlife sites in the whole of London. The grossly delayed 2013 SINC review has confirmed this status. The SINC citation says that the site ‘has developed a variety of habitats supporting an exceptionally diverse flora and fauna.‘ There is no real recognition of this in the officer’s report, or understanding of the variation in habitat across the Rough, such that the ten percent that would be built on is a large part of the most valuable area of the Rough for protected reptiles and for the flora in question.

Crayford Rough. Part of the flower-rich area under threat. (Photo: Chris Rose)

Crayford Rough. Part of the flower-rich area under threat. (Photo: Chris Rose)

CART BEFORE HORSE WILL FAIL TO PROTECT FLORA 

By their own admission, the people who did the ecological assessment for the ‘developer’ only surveyed the site on ONE DAY. Rightly recognising the serious limitations of this they said:

7.16 It is recommended that a detailed botanical survey is undertaken between mid-May and the end of June to inform suitable mitigation and enhancement strategies.

but then spoilt it by saying this:

7.17 The protection and enhancement of the site for flora could be secured through a planning condition. Suggested wording:
‘Recommendations regarding flora should be adhered to, as outlined within Section 7 of the Lloyd Bore Ltd, Ecological appraisal (3162_RP_001 Ecological appraisal. Lloyd Bore Ltd. 2014). In
addition, details of the ecological mitigation strategy should be submitted and agreed to in writing before vegetation clearance, ground works or other preparatory works are commenced.’

Even the woeful National Planning Policy Framework says that planning permission should be refused if the damage is too great and cannot be mitigated. There has been no such thorough survey, so how can the Council determine whether this test can be met or not before voting on this application, which is surely part of its legal duty to consider biodiversity properly into account in all its decision-making? The answer is it can’t, so is this complacency, ignorance, ineptitude or sheer arrogance? Its recent antics point to the latter.

The survey such as it was identified a list of pretty common species, but not all of the rare species in the SINC citation. Whilst the nationally scarce Yellow Vetchling, and Pyramidal Orchid were noted, the obvious importance of this open part of the Rough for them and other key species, as opposed to the more scrubby and coarser grassed remainder, was not made clear.

Yellow Vetchling (Lathyrus aphaca) is nationally scarce. Apart from a small population at Erith Marshes, it is confined to this open part of Crayford Rough, where te biggest population is found, with lesser amounts at  Braeburn Park and by a ditch the other side of the A2. (Photo: Chris Rose)

Yellow Vetchling (Lathyrus aphaca) is nationally scarce. Apart from a small population at Erith Marshes, it is confined to this open part of Crayford Rough, where the biggest population is found, with far lesser amounts at Braeburn Park and by a ditch the other side of the A2. (Photo: Chris Rose)

Crayford Rough is perhaps the only remaining site for Pyramidal Orchid in Bexley (there may be some at Braeburn), and the only place in the Borough where any numbers of any Orchid can be found. It is found in, and requires the sunny open areas of which a large part would be destroyed by this 'development'. (Photo: Chris Rose)

Crayford Rough is perhaps the only remaining site for Pyramidal Orchid in Bexley (there may be some at Braeburn), and the only place in the Borough where the uplifting sight of any numbers of any Orchid can be seen. It is found in, and requires the sunny open areas of which a large part would be destroyed by this ‘development’. (Photo: Chris Rose)

VANISHING BEE ORCHIDS

The previous SINC citation stated that there was a very large population of Bee Orchid (Ophrys apifera). The words ‘very large’ have been removed from the 2013 version. BNEF’s own wildlife recording operations had found just a few flowering plants left, all in the area proposed to be built on. This information was furnished to Bexley Council’s Biodiversity Officer, the Nature Conservation Officer and the Environment Agency back in 2014, but is not mentioned in the planning documents.

A Bee Orchid flowering at Crayford Rough in July 2012. Only a few plants were found, all in the area proposed for destruction. (Photo: Chris Rose)

A Bee Orchid flowering at Crayford Rough in July 2012. Only a few plants were found, all in the area proposed for destruction. (Photo: Chris Rose)

There are only around half a dozen sites in Bexley with any Orchids at all, and the Rough is the only one with an impressive show. All the others have just one, or very few, plants.

BEXLEY COUNCIL’S WAR ON REPTILES CONTINUES

In 2014 Jason Steel, an experienced reptile surveyor with Kent Reptile and Amphibian Group, reported that he had seen about 50 Common Lizards on the now threatened part of the Rough, which was the largest number he’d ever seen, even though he had done a fair amount of reptile field work. Only this week he has confirmed the high importance of this part of the site for this species, and for Slow Worms.

CrayfordRough_ReptileMap April 5th 2016

Jason Steel, a surveyor for Kent Reptile and Amphibian Group, confirmed the importance for reptiles of this threatened section of the Rough on April 5th 2016. Not only might this be lost, but the rest would then be overshadowed by a 6 storey block of flats.

All UK reptile species are Biodiversity Action Plan priorities, meaning the objective is to increase the  number of populations and size of populations. In the past seven years Bexley Council’s response to that has been to approve building on three reptile sites, including Erith Quarry, where it seems to have agreed before any population estimate was available, that the ‘developer’ would be allowed to leave only 3.25ha of suitable habitat. The population density turned out to be such that twice that was actually required, but the blithely Council approved the plan anyway. It also oversaw a translocation, contrary to national guidelines, from another site, in which Common Lizards were moved to an unsuitable area of habitat which its own plans said was ‘insufficiently mature’ for them. Limited monitoring says very few have subsequently been found there.

In the case of Crayford Rough we are being told that the reptiles will be turfed out of the 10% onto the rest of the site, and that with a few log piles and a bit of rotational mowing Bob’s yer uncle. As with the destruction the other sites mentioned, no attempt has been made to determine the population of the affected site/area, or the population in the ‘receptor site/area before the planning decision is made, and there is no evidence presented by the Council’s Biodiversity Officer – or anyone else – to support the implicit contention that there will be no negative effect on the overall population after this happens. Nor is the Council proposing that there be any proper monitoring of numbers after the event. Nor, as usual, is there any attempt whatsoever to put this in the context of the overall conservation and survival prospects for these species in the Borough as a whole, which is thoroughly irresponsible.

Common Lizard at Crayford Rough, April 2016. They may have been ommon once, but they are now in decline, a situation reinforced by a series of recent Bexley planning  decisions. The Council has not thought it relebvantdoes not think it necessary to consider the size of number sof populations in the Borough before voting to cover their homes in concrete. (Photo: Jason Steel)

Common Lizard at Crayford Rough, April 2016. They may have been common once, but they are now in decline, a situation reinforced by a series of recent Bexley planning decisions. The Council has not thought it relevant get data on or to consider the number and sizes of populations in the Borough before voting to cover yet more of their homes in concrete. (Photo: Jason Steel)

All habitat at the Rough is not equal for reptiles, with much of the rest of it being too scrubby or having too coarse a grass sward. And since the Council voted to trash the fantastic Erith Quarry scrub habitat, no, we don’t want big swathes of the scrub here cut down ……. With a 6 storey block planned to abut what will be left of this currently highly reptile-friendly part of the site, there should also be an assessment of the ecological effect of the shading that it will have on this area. But there isn’t.

ROBBING PETER TO PAY PAUL

The one bright spot in all this is that ‘the applicant has now agreed in principle to them gifting the area of the Rough to Council with a commuted sum in the order of £204,000 for maintenance and enhancement of walkways in the Rough area along the river and across the Rough. This is similar to the transfer of the Rough that was historically in the ownership of J Sainsbury when they expanded their existing store into the former Homebase building a few years ago and will allow the Council to manage the overall area for the benefit of all existing and future residents of Crayford and the surrounding area. This will be in addition to the habitat enhancement works that will be undertaken by the applicant on the Crayford Rough prior to the handover of the Crayford Rough to the Council. This provision will be covered in the S106 legal agreement.’

But BNEF is getting fed up of hearing that the only way to look after area X of high wildlife value in the Borough is to flog off and/or allow development of high wildlife value area Y. Several important sites in Bexley are managed by volunteers, and will it cost £200K to look after some paths in what should be kept an informal area anyway?

We think this is a trade-off too far. The logic is that one day Bexley will want to concrete the penultimate green square metre of the Borough to ‘protect’ the final one. It can’t dispute this because it does not recognise or define any point at which it considers there will ever be enough ‘development’.

POLICY TESTS

BNEF also believes that the proposal to destroy 10% of the Rough fails the following policy tests and/or that no or inadequate evidence is presented to prove that it doesn’t:

Then National Planning Policy Framework 1.14 states that ‘When determining planning applications, local planning authorities should aim to conserve and enhance biodiversity by applying the following principles:

  • if significant harm resulting from a development cannot be avoided (through locating on an alternative site with less harmful impacts), adequately mitigated, or, as a last resort, compensated for, then planning permission should be refused;

The London Plan (2011, 2015), Policy 7.19 Biodiversity and Access to nature, says:

C: Development proposals should:

b prioritise assisting in achieving targets in biodiversity action plans (BAPs) set out in Table 7.3 and/or improve access to nature in areas deficient in accessible wildlife sites

c ….. be resisted where they have significant adverse impact on ….. the population or conservation status of a protected species, or a priority species or habitat identified in a UK, London or appropriate regional BAP or borough BAP.

E: When considering proposals that would affect directly, indirectly or cumulatively a site of recognised nature conservation interest, the following hierarchy will apply:

1 avoid adverse impact to the biodiversity interest

2 minimize impact and seek mitigation

Bexley Core Strategy policy CS18. Bexley Council’s policy is to protect and enhance biodiversity in the Borough. We take this to mean NET enhancement. Core Strategy policy CS18 c commits Bexley Council to ‘resisting development that will have a significant impact on the population or conservation status of protected species and priority species as identified in the UK, London and Bexley Biodiversity Action Plans;’ 

The Council’s ‘Crayford Strategy and Action Plan’ (2005) which set an upper limit of 150 flats for the site.

It also said that there should be ‘No residential development on the Rough within or at the expense of the character of the Green Belt.’

The Council is playing games around ‘within … the Green  Belt’ as a mapping anomaly means that the part of the SINC affected is inexplicably outside of the Green belt boundary, but since a whopping 6 storey block of flats would then be put up against the Green belt boundary, we suggest that this is at the expense of the character of the Green Belt.’ in this particular location.

APOLOGIES FOR THE ‘LATE NOTICE’ …..

BNEF has fallen down on this one, and only spotted a couple of days ago that it was going to planning committee this week. We had, however, put it in writing to the Council in May 2015 that we could support the development on the industrial site per se, but not on any part of the open Rough, and that we would also support a higher than usual density to achieve that outcome. Now it would appear that we have got the worst of both worlds. We had also written four times to the Council’s Biodiversity Officer, who sits in the planning department, asking for an update in response to our input, but can find no reply to the first three e-mails. A reply was eventually forthcoming last week, when the Nature Conservation Officer gave no hint that a decision was imminent. Given that we spent a long time in what we thought was constructive engagement on biodiversity matters, including this particular issue, we would have appreciated a ‘heads up’, We are also seeking an answer from the Council as to how it is that BNEF is a formal consultee over Crayford Marshes, but has not been treated as one on the Crayford Rough or the Borax Fields planning applications, which may have given us earlier warning.

Chris Rose. Vice-chair, BNEF.

Posted in Bexley, Bexley Council, Biodiversity Action Plan, BNEF, Braeburn Park, Common Lizard, Consultations, Crayford, Crayford Rough, development threat, Environment, Open spaces, Planning, Plants in Bexley, Reptiles and Amphibians, SINC, Slow Worm, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

February weather and climate report

Download the PDF file .

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Spring migration at Crossness and birdwalk 24th April

Download the PDF file .

Posted in Bird watching, Crossness, Crossness Nature Reserve | Leave a comment

Book early for Crossness spring bird walk!

With the Spring migration getting underway there will be a Bird Walk at Crossness at 9am on Sunday 24th April. PLACES ARE LIMITED, SO BOOK NOW!

Ralph and Brenda Todd will be leading the walk for us, and we are proposing to start at the nature reserve and then head south for a walk through the Crossness Southern Marsh to look for passerines, before heading back to the nature reserve for lunch. Please expect to be on your feet for 3 to 4 hours, and there is a small stile to climb as we come back along the southern boundary path from Belvedere Road.

Next Generation - Ralph Todd shows a young birdwatcher how to use a telescope. (Photo: Karen Sutton)

Next Generation – Ralph Todd shows a young birdwatcher how to use a telescope at a previous event. (Photo: Karen Sutton)

If you are interested in attending this event, please book early, because we are restricting attendee numbers to a maximum of 20 to ensure a more enjoyable experience. There are many new members who might wish to take advantage of this introduction to the site. It’s free, and a picnic-style lunch is provided in the bird hide at the end of the walk. We will meet at the Protected Area of the nature reserve, and I will be opening the Norman Road gates (Norman Road North, Belvedere, DA17 6JY – gates half way up on the left, past the green shed) for vehicular access at 9am.

PLEASE DO BOOK YOUR PLACE via email/phone/text – thank you. Kind regards Karen Karen Sutton – Biodiversity Team Manager Thames Water Crossness Nature Reserve Crossness Sewage Treatment Works, Belvedere Road, Abbey Wood London SE2 9AQ Tel: 07747 643958. Email: Karen.sutton@thameswater.co.uk

Posted in Bird watching, Crossness, Crossness Nature Reserve, Erith Marshes | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Spring migration underway at Crossness, one of London’s top bird sites

Spring migration is underway at the Erith Marshes Crossness Nature Reserve site, with Sunday 3rd April seeing some early migrants. Our first, and earliest, Sedge Warbler, was captured as part of the Dartford Ringing Group’s bird monitoring activities for the national BTO scheme. Our earliest ringing record for Sedge Warbler prior to this was 13th April in 2009. Brent and Rainham also recorded Sedge Warbler on Sunday, so the Greater London area is certainly starting to see migrants dropping in.

A Willow Warbler also put in an appearance, singing in the Willow tree near the dipping platform in the Protected Area. There were a number recorded in the London area on Sunday, but the last time we had one this early, was five years ago, when a Willow Warbler was captured at Crossness on the very same day: 3rd April 2011.

Willow Warbler, an early migrant arrival at Crossness this year. (Photo: Ian Jackson)

Willow Warbler, an early migrant arrival at Crossness this year. (Photo: Ian Jackson)

The beautifully, elegant Wheatear are also back. Two were captured in a lovely photo by Ian Jackson at the weekend.

Wheatears have also dropped in at Crossness. (Photo: Ian Jackson)

Wheatears have also dropped in at Crossness. (Photo: Ian Jackson)

Other signs that spring has sprung include display flights of both Skylark and Meadow Pipit over the Cory Fields (under ‘development’ threat from Cory ‘Environmental’); 2 Little Ringed Plover on the West Paddock. Chiffchaffs, Greenfinch and Dunnock are singing, and the Canada Geese seem to be claiming their usual spot on the wader scrape island.

Little Ringed Plover on the west paddock. This species is at risk of beinglost from Bexley as a breeding species if Cory's plans to build on the Borax fields is approved by Bexley Council. (Photo: Ian Jackson)

Little Ringed Plover on the west paddock. This bird is at risk of being lost from Bexley as a breeding species if Cory’s plans to build on the Borax fields is approved by Bexley Council. (Photo: Ian Jackson)

Karen Sutton, Nature Reserve Manager

Posted in Bexley Council, Bird watching, Crossness, Crossness Nature Reserve, development threat, Erith Marshes | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Will Bexley council compensate local residents for fall in their property values?

With Government and Mayor of London research demonstrating a 5-7% premium for properties adjacent to parks, local residents will be facing a fall in their property values when Bexley’s Conservatives build on our parks.

What will Bexley Council do about this? Ignore residents again?

Two report given below proving the increased property values for houses near to parks. When the park goes, so will the premium on the property value.

If I lived next to a park that is being sold off I would be pursuing a reduction in my Council Tax (the band is based on a property value that would no longer apply) and be asking for compensation from the Council.

Download the PDF file .

 

Download the PDF file .

 

 

 

Posted in Bexley Council, Land sales, Parks | Leave a comment