by DOUGLAS SHEPHERD
A decision by members of Scottish Borders Council to reject proposals for a 75-acre quarry in rural Peeblesshire because of its perceived harm to the landscape and the impact on a nearby Roman road is being challenged by the developers who claim the extraction of 1.4 million tonnes of sand and gravel is in the "public interest".
Agents for Forfar-based Stonepack Ltd. have lodged an appeal with the Scottish Government against last August's Borders planning committee decision. Councillors rejected the concept of a quarry which would have operated over a period of 15 years on South Slipperfield farm, close to the village of West Linton.
Local opposition to the plans was so strong that a special Quarry Action Group was formed. Its members were responsible for some of the 139 representations while there were only 18 submissions in support of the project in an area of special landscape value. It seems likely the group will be reactivated to oppose Stonepack's appeal.
Senior planning officers at SBC, Craig Miller and Ian Aikman concluded in a report to committee: "The application is considered to be in contravention of national objectives and Local Development Plan Policies on securing additional reserves and extraction of minerals, whilst ensuring that the environmental impacts are either acceptable with mitigation and/or outweighed by the demonstration of significant public benefit.
"The visual and landscape impacts within the Pentland Hills Special Landscape Area (SLA) and on local landscape character will be significantly adverse and incapable of being overcome through mitigation. Furthermore, there will be adverse cultural heritage impacts on the appreciation of the setting of the Core Path which adjoins the north-western boundary of the site and which carries, or immediately adjoins, the line of the Roman Road linking Inveresk with Crawford.
"All other material factors have been considered but do not outweigh the adverse impacts and contravention of Local Development Plan Policies aforementioned and could have been addressed by planning conditions and a legal agreement, had the application been supported."
But an attempt is made in the newly published Appeal Statement lodged by Edinburgh law firm Brodies to demolish the planners' reasons for refusal.
It is claimed in the 23-page statement: "This appeal should be allowed and planning permission granted, on the grounds that the Proposed Development would result in a broad range of benefits; demonstrates a high degree of development plan policy compliance and finds substantial support from Scottish Government policy.
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