‘Scandalous’ planners condemn Coulsdon’s chippy to closure

Croydon’s planners have condemned Glade Fisheries, a long-cherished Old Coulsdon business, to its doom without a peep from the local councillors or Mayor Jason Perry.

Doomed: Croydon planners signed off permission to convert the fish and chip shop into a flat

In March, KJC Architects applied to the council on behalf of the property’s landlord to convert the chip shop at the junction of Taunton Lane and The Glade into a single dwelling.

Using permitted development planning rules, they wanted to create new access for the existing first-floor flat and turn the ground floor into a two-bed flat.

Despite objections from a local residents’ association, more than 120 locals and the area’s MP, the council’s planners failed to refer the application to the planning committee and instead signed off on the proposal.

The secretary of the local residents’ association has described the council’s planning department’s actions as “scandalous” and “a disgrace”.

The ward’s councillors, Tories Margaret Bird and Nikhil Thampi, failed to call the application in for consideration by the planning committee. In the past, if a residents’ association objected, or at least 20 locals, the matter would have been placed before the committee. MP Chris Philp did submit an objection, which of itself outght to have been enough for the matter to be referred to the committee.

That did not happen in this case.

“Do we know who runs the council, the Mayor or the planning officers?” said one deeply unimpressed local.

“The Glade Fisheries has served the people of Old Coulsdon for over 70 years. It is well liked by locals and visitors,” Charlie King, the chair of the East Coulsdon Residents’ Association told Inside Croydon.

“This is another occasion in Coulsdon when planning officers have ruled without referring an important application to the planning committee.” King cites the case of the dialysis centre that was agreed in less than a week, before the public could object, and the remoal of parking restrictions at Aldi.

Maureen Levy, the secretary of ECRA, wrote to the association’s members: “So all the grand-standing about saving family homes from developers by Tory councillors and Mayor Perry hasn’t helped our popular Glade Fisheries from a selfish and greedy landlord.”

Levy is a former council planning official herself, having worked in Sutton. She describes “prior approvals”, where unelected planning staff use delegated powers to grant permissions, as “insidious”.

She wrote to ECRA members: “I understood that these type of applications would go through if there were no objections within 21 days… In this case, RAs objected and 127 other residents objected… Chris Philp MP objected. This should have gone to planning committee.”

Levy says she will discuss the matter with her other committee members, suggesting that they may submit a formal complaint to the council.


A D V E R T I S E M E N T


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This entry was posted in Business, Chris Philp MP, Community associations, Coulsdon, Croydon Council, Croydon South, East Coulsdon Residents' Association, Margaret Bird, Mayor Jason Perry, Old Coulsdon, Planning, Richard Howard and tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

5 Responses to ‘Scandalous’ planners condemn Coulsdon’s chippy to closure

  1. Jim Bush says:

    No hope of getting Croydon Council to stop “selfish and greedy” property owners when people at the council are too busy gorging themselves on the proceeds of the Local Government gravy train !
    There are stories around at the moment of the spiralling price of fish, and all other business costs (energy for heating, cooking, etc.) rising rapidly as well, which is not great for the takeaway sector, and retail is still struggling generally, so is there a vacant shop unit in Old Coulsdon (with a less greedy landlord) that The Glade Fisheries could move to instead?

    • Eve Tullett says:

      There’s a unit that’s been empty since 2011 on rhe row of shops adjacent to this one, problem solved all round.

  2. Tim Rodgers says:

    First ‘Crisis? What Crisis?’ And now ‘Who Governs?’. Throw in the forthcoming oil crisis and it’s the 1970s all over again!

  3. Did anyone contact Councillors Margaret Bird and Nikhil Thampi about their objections? If so, what was their response?

  4. Lin says:

    I believe the vacant shop you are referring to has an asbestos problem so could be very expensive to convert to a food outlet

Leave a Reply to Eve TullettCancel reply