Duncan, a member of the East Thame Residents Association, has kindly provided a summary of resident views in response to the meeting and consultation regarding the Thame Neighbourhood Plan.

Residents voiced concerns over the new Thame Neighbourhood Plan at a Council meeting last week.  Reservations were expressed over the lack of consultation with residents and the recommended sites for development.  Residents also raised concerns over the potential placement of industrial buildings close to homes and a lack of provision for new green public space.

Thame Town Council is now working on a 2nd Thame Neighbourhood Plan (TNP2), which will need to identify additional land for development.  South Oxfordshire District Council’s Local Plan states 339 new homes need delivering in Thame, along with a minimum of 3.5 hectares of employment land as well as space for new retail uses.

Duncan Nickless from East Thame Residents Association reminded councillors that neighbourhood plans were introduced to give local communities a greater say in how their local communities develop but highlighted the unfortunate lack of public engagement and transparency for the new plan in contrast with the original Town Plan.  He also expressed great concern from residents about recommendations to allocate business/industrial sites along Howland Road and directly opposite residential housing.  This will negatively impact residents through additional noise and traffic and is completely unnecessary given land could be used further from residential areas.

Bob Denton also raised concerns about additional noise and disturbance new industrial building could have on residents.  Bob described the noise and disturbance he and other residents already experience from the Windles site which runs a 24 hour operation leading some residents to complain to the company and district council.

Reg Koster from Thame Runners, reminded Councillors that the original Town Plan identified a deficiency of 15 hectares of public space across the town.  This shortfall has not yet been addressed and means events such as a regular ‘Park Run’ can’t be hosted in the town as there isn’t a park large enough.

Following these representations the Town Council went into a ‘closed section’ to further discuss the Thame Neighbourhood Plan.

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  • Thame resident Laura Fellows is the owner, main editor and general dogsbody at Thame.net. Laura has a background in Marketing and a passion for supporting people. So Thame.net came her way in 2020. In 2021 Laura invested significantly and Thame.net was relaunched with a new brand, website, infrastructure and a lot more behind-the-scenes stuff. Outside of Thame.net and mum life, Laura still wears her marketing consulting and copywriting hat but is hoping to hang that up soon to continue mentoring people back to positive health and confidence by combining science, psychology and 20 years of experience.

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