Energy Project: 16 – 23 Jan 2016

The second “Stakeholders’ Forum” was held on Monday evening. Some old ground was covered, but a few new matters emerged which I’ve summarised here:

  • It was confirmed that there will be temporary car parking for affected residents at the JR and Churchill hospitals. Temporary visitors’ permits will also be issued on request to any resident while access to their property is blocked. You can already apply for these. Old Road residents who park in Stapleton Road will be able to use the Churchill car park.
  • Vital Energi are still taking legal advice over the City’s requirement for the street works to have planning permission. The suspension of work is voluntary on their part. They met with City planners as early as August 2013, when they say that Michael Crofton-Briggs, then Head of City Development and the City’s chief planning officer but now retired, told them they needed permission for the above-ground works within the hospital sites, but not for the roadworks.
  • Highfield Residents will be pressing for a full traffic management plan covering the relevant road closures. They want to see traffic calming measures in Lime Walk, which will take the brunt of the diverted traffic, and a full assessment of the impact on cyclists and people on foot as well as motor vehicles, with measures to mitigate the disruption and increased risk to all road users. Vital said they will raise this with the County, but residents and councillors are expecting to include it in their representations under the planning appplication.
  • There was support for the idea of producing a letter to staff and patients at the Churchill telling them about the road closures and asking them to consider alternative ways of getting to the hospital rather than driving.
  • A sub-group to deal specifically with access issues in Latimer Road as the work progresses will be set up.
  • The detailed engineering drawings showing the roadworks and how access problems will be dealt with will be included as part of the “letter drop” to all affected properties.

You can read the Trust’s notes of the meeting here.

The planning application for the pipeline roadworks (ref 16/00101/FUL) went online on Wednesday. The deadline for submitting comments is 12 February. As I write, none have been posted.

Work on the rest of the project continues. Here the Trust reports on the installation of some of the new equipment to replace the old boilers at the JR.

Another planning application, this time for a temporary car park in the JR, has been submitted but is not yet online.

I have added a link to Vital’s civil engineering conractors CPC Civils to the Energy Project links page.

Headington Headlines #249

Your weekly round-up of local news for 11 – 17 January.

It was a quiet week on the heatpipe front, at least in public. My round-up is here. All my posts about the project are under the ‘Energy Project’ tab in the main menu, and there’s a page of links and contact details here.

The City Council is running a consultation with the people who own the leasehold of their properties in the Northway and Wood Farm tower blocks (and Cowley too) over the costs of the improvements the Council has announced (see HH 244 for original story). Cllr Mike Rowley has explained the Council’s position here.

Meanwhile, Oxford East Tories, led by aspiring council candidate Mark Bhagwandin @markb_gt, have sponsored the formation of an Oxford Towers Leaseholders’ Association to fight the Council over the charges.

Police raided a flat on Underhill Circus, Barton on Friday in a search for illegal drugs. They found cannabis and crack cocaine, and two people, both from Barton, were arrested.

The Ronald McDonald House Charity which provides accommodation for families of children in hospital has announced plans to build a 62 bedroom ‘hotel’ in the grounds of the JR. The charity currently has a 17-room unit on the top floor of the children’s hospital. The new building will be on the site of the tennis courts opposite Sandfield Nursery, currently being used for storage by Vital Energi. A planning application is expected in March.

An Extraordinary Board Meeting of Southern Health NHS Foundation Trust was held on Monday, but despite the serious criticisms of the Trust’s record none of the board members resigned. The following day Monitor (the national health regulator) announced they will appoint an expert to improve the way deaths are investigated, particularly those involving people with learning difficulties or with mental illnesses.

Back in August 2014 (see HH 175) a planning application to build a care home for dementia patients at 1 Pullens Lane was turned down by the East Area Planning Committee. Now another developer – Frontier Estates (they of the Latimer Road student accommodation proposals) – has put in a new application (ref: 15/03611/FUL) for a 55 bedroom care home on the same site. The Oxford Mail report is here.

East & South elevations
East & South elevations (East faces Pullens Lane)

 


Location map

I noted in HH 245 that Purple Zone, which includes Barton, had won the Blue Bin Recycling League prize in December. As a result, the Thrive project @thriveteams has received an award of £400 to support their work with young people on the estate.

Friends of Stansfeld @FofStansfeld joined twitter.

My favourite Headington-related tweet of the week:

Active posts on the Headington & Marston e-democracy forum this week:

  • Headington Post Office
  • Radio story Foxwell drive green space
  • Pothole – Marston flyover slip
  • City Council agrees energy pipe needs planning permission

All quiet on the heatpipe front

After last week’s burst of activity and then non-activity, this week has been quieter as action shifted away from the streets and into the offices.

On Monday 11 January the planning application was received by the City’s planning department. It will be checked and then put on the Council’s website, at which point it will be open for public consultation over a three week period. As I write, the application is not yet available.

On Wednesday 13th the Hospital Trust’s Board met and their Chair, Dame Fiona Caldicott, gave an apology on behalf of the Trust for the Trust’s failure to communicate with local people. Oxford Mail reporter Joe Gammie was at the meeting and wrote

OUH chairman Dame Fiona Caldicott admitted the trust should have listened and spoken to neighbours earlier about the Hospital Energy Project. She told a meeting of the board of directors yesterday that it had not been handled well.

Dame Fiona added: “We are aware of the huge difficulty and consternation experienced by residents about our energy project. This has not been handled as well as we could have done given we didn’t start to address the concerns of the residents early enough. I want to make an apology to the residents from the board and to assure them we will liaise as much as we can.”

The full article is here. Dame Fiona’s words don’t seem to have been added to the Trust’s website yet.

On Thursday 14th Vital Energi’s Project Development Director issued a statement. The full text is on the LibDem Councillors’ website. He says at one point

“District heating is an emerging technology and has differing requirements from utilities and statutory undertakers which is not well understood in relation to these applications to Heat Networks; planning permission requirements are not always evident.”

Meanwhile the work goes on within the JR grounds.

Heatpipe work outside Sandfield Nursery in the JR grounds, 14 Jan
Heatpipe work outside Sandfield Nursery in the JR grounds, 14 Jan
Sandfield Road entrance to the JR site - pedestrian access only (14 Jan)
Sandfield Road entrance to the JR site – pedestrian access only (14 Jan)