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Grovebury Quarry Planning Application

An application has been made by Aggregate Industies to continue quarrying for a further 19 years with excavations coming within 150m of residences.  This will mean:

  • Significant noise and dust for many households
  • Removal of Green Belt land
  • No restoration of land which was due to take place in 2026/27

Below are details of how to object, if you should so wish:

How to Object                                                            

Online

1.  Website http://www.centralbedfordshire.gov.uk/planning-register

2.  Enter application number CB/24/00554/MW

3.  When viewing the application, submit comments by clicking on the application number (more details) - Consultation - and scroll down to Public Representations - Submit a public comment online.   

By Email

1.  MWApplications@centralbedfordshire.gov.uk                                               

2.  Quote application number CB/24/00554/MW

In Writing 

To:

Central Beds Council

Objection to Planning Application

Priory House, Monks Walk

Chicksands

Shefford   SG17 5TQ

Objection to Application CB/24/00554/MW.  

                                                                                                           

EVERY adult member in a household can make an objection.  

Do use different reasons – the same template signed by different people will not be registered/counted/considered.

The more objections the better.

                                                                                                                         Possible Objections

  • Broken promise to restore land by 2026 resulting in no access to lake, provision of water sports or club 
  • No Community Levy for Billington which could be used to provide additional facilities and benefits for the residents including replacing the old play equipment
  • Proposed excavations are too close to Billington - should be 200m from garden boundaries before start of excavation 
  • Loss of green space, openness and farm land
  • Loss of Green Belt
  • Impact on wildlife
  • Impact on highways (great increase in vehicle movements over next decades will increase traffic jams)
  • Increased noise
  • Increased dust
  • Impact on mental health
  • Impact on physical health
  • Question national importance of silica sand (used widely for leisure and export)
  • Operation hours should be 8am to 5pm not 7am to 6pm and not at weekends so people can enjoy their gardens

 

Deadline

15 April 2024

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Parish Councillor Vacancy - 

Would you like to help your local community by becoming a Parish Councillor?

Do you have a few hours you could spare to attend meetings and help with the running of the Council?   We meet every other month.

If yes, we would like to hear from you. This is a voluntary role - there is a lot of satisfaction to be gained from helping run local services for your fellow villagers.

For further details please contact:

Julie Todd

Clerk

Email:  bpc-bedfordshire@outlook.com

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Billington is a Parish in Bedfordshire approximately 2 miles from Leighton Buzzard. It comprises Gt Billington, divided by the B440 and Little Billington, a hamlet to the west of the parish. Billington is mentioned in the Domesday book in 1086 and was recorded in 1196 as Billendon (the "don", now corrupted to "ton" refers to the Hill or Down) and over the years has experienced many variations of this name.

On the top of Billington Hill, on the west side of the B440, is the attractive parish church of St Michael and All Angels, whose origins date back to th 13th century. An Iron Fort once occupied the site. The current Church was originally a small medieval chapel built of sandstone and limestone from nearby Totternhoe.

At the time, parishioners in the hamlets were expected to attend their Parish Church, which was All Saints in Leighton Buzzard. During the Winter, or in bad weather, this journey proved very difficult and the hamlets petitioned the Bishop of Lincoln (Billington was then in the huge Diocese of Lincoln) for permission to build themselves "Chapels of Ease" where Mass could be said, and in the case of Billington, Baptisms could take place when unable to reach All Saints. All marriages and burials had to take place at All Saints and there was no burial ground in Billington until 1806. It remained a Chapel of Ease until the late 1860's when the chapel was enlarged into a church and a rectory built next to it. This was when Billington was first recorded as a parish in its own right - 1869.

The bell turret of the church came to the church second hand in 1868, from St Barnabas in Linslade which was being enlarged. Inside this simple but pretty church, there was a small stained glass window in the west wall commemorating Edward Bradshaw, the first rector. The only medieval survivals are the blank west window and a piscina (small basin) inside which was used for washing the communion plate near the alter on the south side.

There are splendid views from its commanding position towards Leighton Buzzard and surrounding countryside, and in the distance, on the far side of the A505 bypass, new housing is being built on what were once green fields. 

Points of interest along the B440 include The Old School House built in the mid 19th centry which closed its doors in the 50's; The Cock Inn,  a picturesque thatched public house over 400 years old (now renamed), which finally closed it doors in the 1920s; Billington Manor built by Arthur Macnamara, which boasted a point to point course where Edward 8th - then Prince of Wales, broke his collar bone whilst horse riding and 16th century Walkers Farm - all now family homes.  

The area comprised farm land and coprolite fields. Many plum orchards existed then and to a smaller extent today. At that time they provided dye for the hat industry and jam or chutney for the population. 

At one time the village boasted two public houses, a post office and bakery - all now closed and converted to houses.

In spite of the lack of its own shop, school, public house or other amenities, the village has a thriving community life. In addition to the Church, a key community centre is the Village Hall - built in 1968, with its adjacent green and children's play area. Allotments were recently added and a wild flower meadow planted. 

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