Times of Tonbridge 24th October 2018

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Wednesday October 24 | 2018

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Minister says sorry about M26 closure for Brexit lorry park

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OF TONBRIDGE

INSIDE

FULL OF BEANS: The cast of this Christmas’s pantomime, Jack and the Beanstalk, cruise into town

HIGH STREET ART

THE Secretary of State for Transport has apologised for failing to inform residents about the closure of the M26 motorway to prepare a lorry park there in the event of a no-deal Brexit – and said that the plan is ‘unlikely to be needed’. The proposal is to hold freight there in case of delays at the border with the European mainland at the port of Dover or the Channel Tunnel. Chris Grayling and Roads Minister Jesse Norman told Tom Tugendhat, MP for Tonbridge & Malling, that ‘other options were preferable’. Mr Tugendhat has set up a debate in the House of Commons on the subject tomorrow [Thursday].

Reverse The 10-mile stretch of motorway is set to be closed at night from November 19 to December 21. The road will be shut from 10pm to 5am for the works – which were originally due to start at 8pm. It was blocked off for five nights from October 10-15 while Highways England carried out surveys. The contingency, called ‘Operation Brock’ – a similar strategy to Operation Stack – has been revived despite assurances to the Times by Highways England that it would not go ahead. The M26 serves a large swathe in the north of the borough including the villages of Wrotham, Borough Green and Ightham. Mr Tugendhat lambasted his Conservative colleague Mr Grayling in the House of Commons on the morning after the works started. He said: “It has come to a pretty pass when a member finds out that works have begun on a motorway to turn that motorway into a parking

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Creative hub aims to restore fortunes of retailers Page 2

FIGHT OR FLIGHT

Fears about Gatwick plans for emergency runway Page 4

Council tells devel0pers to make 40 per cent of houses affordable By Andy Tong andy@timesoftonbridge.co.uk THE council is prepared to fight developers to address the ‘significant issue’ of affordable housing in the Local Plan. The document, which dictates housebuilding policy up to 2031, is open for public consultation until November 12. The draft, which was approved by full council, dictates that 40 per cent of new homes across most of the borough, including Tonbridge, must be affordable. The council also hopes to resolve the problem of soaring rent by ‘pegging’ it to the Local Housing Allowance [LHA]. This standard nationwide calculation could in principle see rent lower than it is set for social or affordable housing, which is 80 per cent of local market rent. That figure is still regarded as being so high in the commuter belt that it prices

too many local people out of the market. According to new research by Ordnance Survey, Tonbridge & Malling has the second highest rent-to-salary ratio in Kent for young people, who spend 42 per cent of their pay on accommodation.

‘The developers should be in no doubt about what the requirements are’ The figure is higher than Tunbridge Wells, where adults aged 22 to 29 spend 39 per cent of their income on a onebedroom property. In Sevenoaks the burden is even higher, at 46 per cent. The average monthly rent in the borough is £788 – compared to £722 in Tunbridge Wells and £857 in Sevenoaks. Cheaper housing in the Local Plan will split up into 70 per cent social or afford-

able rent and 30 per cent ‘intermediates’ like shared ownership and help-to-buy. The council will build more of them in the ‘higher value area’ – the majority of the borough, including Tonbridge. Four in ten homes on developments of at least 11 houses or more than 1,000 square metres will qualify, while in the north-east the figure is reduced to 25 or 30 per cent because there is less demand. The Strategic Housing Market Assessment for the Local Plan identified a need to build 277 affordable homes a year. Between May 2013 and the end of this year, 505 affordable homes were scheduled for construction, though that figure includes assisted living sites. In Tonbridge there have been 103 new affordable homes over those five years, including 44 at Enterprise House on Avebury Avenue and 55 at Priory Works.

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THINKING PINK

Whole school shows support on breast cancer day Page 19

READ ALL ABOUT IT

Striker scores twice as Angels keep flying high Page 62


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