Times of Tunbridge Wells 15th March 2017

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Local, National and International

OF TUNBRIDGE WELLS

WELLS CLOSE THE PLAY-OFF GAP DESPITE DEFEAT Page 71

PLAYGROUND SUPPORTERS SING FOR THEIR SUPPER Page 3

MEET THE MAN PUTTING THE TOWN ON THE MAP Page 3

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All the news that matters

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Wednesday March 15 | 2017

WOMEN WORK PROVES A MAJOR ATTRACTION

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CCTV cutbacks likely to have an impact on the fight against crime

POLICE have criticised proposals to end the active monitoring of CCTV cameras across the borough. The idea is being put to the Borough Council’s Cabinet Advisory Board next week to adopt a passive monitoring of the 39 cameras, in an attempt to save up to £100,000. Incidents will still be recorded, but there will be no one observing events as they happen. Currently, personnel monitor cameras 77 per cent of the time – 129 of 168 hours a week. Kent Police warned: “This will have a detrimental impact upon the ability to respond to live incidents, crimes in progress or any security concerns and deploy officers in the most appropriate manner. “There have been countless instances where the ability to monitor incidents or individuals by CCTV operators has provided police with crucial information to respond to a threat or crime in progress. “Without the opportunity to review a location in live time, a key tactical option will be lost to the police.” The council argue that CCTV does ‘not instigate a significant number of arrests’.

Brand

By Murray Jones

TUNBRIDGE WELLS is about to be immortalised in probably the world’s most famous board game through a special edition of Monopoly. With over 30 spaces to fill, the public are being invited to nominate what they believe should appear on the iconic board. The game’s maker predicts they will be ‘absolutely spoilt for choice’ of locations in ‘one of Britain’s most historic towns’. Full story page 3

Council turns down a major leisure plan Go-kart idea rejected because it would create the wrong type of jobs

By Jonathan Banks newsdesk@timesoftonbridge.co.uk PLANS to develop a £3.5million indoor electric go-karting track and laser tag centre near High Brooms station were rejected by the borough council last week partly on the grounds that the initiative would have created the wrong type of jobs. The Planning Committee at Southborough Town Council had given the green light to a scheme that would have created full-time and part-time jobs in leisure. The council wanted light industry workers. There was no objection from the Environment Agency, which noted the proposed project was a ‘low environmental risk’. The Federation of Small Businesses’

Development Manager, Alison Parmar, said: “Small businesses in general drive local jobs, therefore not giving planning permission because of the ‘class’ of job offered seems unhelpful.”

‘Small businesses in general drive local jobs’ The decision by Tunbridge Wells Borough Council’s Planning Committee to turn down the application came after the company behind the scheme, Markerstudy Leisure, refused to pay Kent County Council [KCC] £52,000 for road improvements. The building, in Chapman Way, has been empty since August, when it was sold by a printing firm. A Markerstudy spokesperson said:

“This is a disappointing decision in a town that is supposed to be working hard to attract and retain businesses. It sends out the entirely wrong message. “To suggest the 25 full-time and parttime jobs were not acceptable shows a degree of being out of touch that most people in the real world will find hard to understand. “These days, a job is a job, particularly if you are a young person looking for work. And these jobs would have appealed to young people.” The unit was previously owned by Kevin Stanton of Fox Print, who said: “This has always been a challenging site when it comes to light industry, and to the best of my knowledge businesses are not fighting to use the unit since we sold the building and moved the 30 staff to

our head office in Longfield Road. “Surely new jobs in leisure are better than no jobs at all?” The Markerstudy spokesperson said the group, which has invested £65million in the town in the last decade, will not appeal the decision and will withdraw the application. It had planned to invest a further £10million in local projects over the next year and a half. The company will now focus on investing in other towns in the South East. Ms Parmar further commented: “At the moment small businesses are facing a raft of challenges – auto-enrolment, National Living Wage and massive increases in business rates are just a few.

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Times of Tunbridge Wells 15th March 2017 by One Media - Issuu