One of the great things about this site is the posting of links to related articles and books. Some of the reading is truly fascinating and thought provoking. Many thanks to those who post them.
The following comment from ousted committee chair Ford (David Tepper's link) is particularly interesting:
"The past two weeks have certainly not been pleasant. This has tested relationships. Democracy has not been damaged yet, but it still could happen. Clearly the end result of a properly dealt with planning application is I am no longer chairman of the planning committee. That is a strange combination."
From what has been reported, there is clear, large local majority support for the project. The fuller council by nearly a three to one margin voted to move forward with the application. Mr. Ford's own small committee was deadlocked until he cast the deciding vote against.
If the language is to have any meaning, and one of the main principles of a democracy is majority rule, to have let Mr. Ford's vote stand as final would be truly damaging to democracy. Mr. Ford may have voted his honest convictions and interpreted existing planning rules with minimum personal bias, but was he representing his constituents? I think not.
It is a real shame that we can't get past all this class hatred. Life is much easier if we leave out demonstrably false populist notions and analyze what's on the table. Money is no less important to those who don't have a lot than to those who do. Change that. It is likely much more so.
Really, envy is not very becoming. The now famous hold-out "fisherman" (who has caught one salmon and one trout over the last several years) doesn't oppose golf courses or housing on the site. He just doesn't want it to be housing for the "Rich". So, even if the project is a huge economic winner for the area, turn it down anyways because rich folks might enjoy it? Perhaps the news has not gotten there that without these hated rich (and market economies), a large majority of us would be living at subsistance levels.
Regarding these purported inviolate development rules the Against crowd uses to pound the table, I am assuming that they came into being through many iterations over time. Though not closely analogous, in Los Angeles, speed limit signs are thought of as "suggestions". Planning and zoning codes change all the time due to changes in needed uses as well as in the political will.
The SSSI issue is an important one. I am assuming that since these are politically designated, that politicians can change what is and isn't (an SSSI and the permitted uses) based on other issues, new information, different needs, etc. The reality of the matter is that if it were up to many environmental activists, no new development would take place and the earth would be depopulated over time to what some believe is the sustainable level of 1 billion. Despite all the evidence to the contrary, Malthus is alive and well in the heart of the environmental movement. How it is noble to love the earth yet not its children is well beyond by ability to reason.