Categories
Latest News Planning

Winchester Lib Dem Parliamentary Candidate opposes plan to rush through approval for Barton Farm

Kelsie and Martin check the new plans for Barton Farm
Lib Dem Council Group Leader, Kelsie Learney & Prospective MP, Martin Tod, discuss the new plans for Barton Farm

Responding to the new consultation on building on Barton Farm, announced by Cala Homes, and their intention to submit a planning application by the end of the year, Martin Tod, Liberal Democrat Prospective MP, commented:

“The last thing we need is a plan for Barton Farm rushed through in the dying days of the current Labour Government. Both the Liberal Democrats and the Conservatives have promised to get rid of central housing targets, so Cala appear to be trying to get approval while the local Conservative plans for Winchester are in chaos, and before Labour are kicked out. Whatever the merits of the proposals, now is not the time to be pushing them through. Building on green fields should be absolutely the last resort in the Winchester, not something forced through before an election.”

Categories
Latest News Planning

Lib Dem candidate deplores unnecessary proposal to build on green fields

Responding to the news that Winchester City Council’s Cabinet Meeting on October 14 will be discussing a proposal to release 3 green field sites for building – Pitt Manor, Francis Gardens and Spring Gardens – in order to cover a shortfall of 294 houses caused by the Conservative County Council’s decision to delay development of the Police Headquarters site in Winchester, Liberal Democrat Prospective MP, Martin Tod, commented:

“The appalling thing is that this plan calls for building on green fields when there are town-centre sites, such as the Police Headquarters, which could take the number of houses the Government is asking for.”

“The combination of Labour’s top-down planning system and the Conservative County Council’s decision to delay building houses on the police station site look set to condemn green field areas like Pitt Manor and Francis Gardens to be being built on – even though local people don’t want it.”

“The Liberal Democrats have wanted to scrap top-down housing targets for several years. But, despite the targets, we wouldn’t be in this position if the Conservatives running the County Council had moved ahead with their plan for the Police Headquarters as was originally promised.”

Categories
Environment Latest News

Prospective Lib Dem MP joins Winchester Friends of the Earth campaigning to fix the food chain

Liberal Democrat Prospective MP for Winchester, Martin Tod, joined Winchester Friends of the Earth campaigning to fix the food chain on Sunday, October 4th outside the Cathedral Close.

Loads of people are backing the campaign - more at http://www.fixthefoodchain.com -

Friends of the Earth are campaigning to get MPs to support an Early Day Motion which will encourage the use of local feed for livestock instead of soya produced by clearing areas of Amazon rainforest.
Over 200 local people signed up to back the campaign.

Martin Tod commented:

“Tackling climate change is one of the most urgent challenges we face – and fixing the way we get food is part of that. Certainly, if we can’t fix the food chain in this parliament, then we need to do it early in the next.

“The impact of livestock farming on climate change varies a lot according to the methods and feeds that farmers use and how far the resulting meat and dairy products have to travel. It makes a real difference to buy locally produced food reared with locally grown feed.

“Most of the farmers I’ve spoken to locally grow their own feed, or are buying their feed locally – and for as much of the year as possible, feed their livestock on good Hampshire grass. It’s this kind of farming we need to encourage, not intensive farming by big agri-business using soya grown by cutting down rainforest.”

Categories
Latest News Winchester

More than 950 students back Lib Dem campaign at Winchester’s Freshers’ Fayre

More than 950 students backed the Lib Dem campaign against tuition fees at the University of Winchester’s Fresher’s Fayre on Saturday.
Freshers Fayre photos
Liberal Democrat Parliamentary Candidate, Martin Tod, commented:

“This year was even better than last year. Every year, more students back our campaigns, sign petitions and sign up to the Liberal Democrats – and this year was no exception. We ran out of badges and nearly ran out of stickers. There is still enormous support for our campaign to scrap tuition fees and more students joined Winchester Liberal Democrats than ever before.”

Ray Love, local ward Councillor for St Paul’s added:

“I’ve helped run our stall at the Freshers’ Fair for many years now and this was our best year ever. We had queues of people wanting to sign our petitions.”

Categories
Education Latest News

Winchester candidate supports campaign for better sounding schools

Martin Tod, the Liberal Democrat Prospective MP for Winchester, has joined forces with the National Deaf Children’s Society (NDCS) in calling for the Government to ensure new school buildings are suitable for all children to listen and learn in.

As the Government spends billions of pounds on the schools rebuilding programme, NDCS warns that many schools are being built with poor acoustics that do not meet minimum national building standards.

New research shows that good acoustic classrooms improve learning, reduce disruptive pupil behaviour and decrease stress levels of teachers. Yet Freedom of Information data received this year by NDCS showed that only one in five of local authorities could confirm they had built new schools that met the government’s minimum acoustic standards.

At the Liberal Democrat party conference in Bournemouth, Martin Tod met with NDCS to find out what poor acoustics sound like for hearing-impaired pupils – including listening to the attached simulations of the impact that improved acoustics have for hearing-improved children. NDCS is running the Sounds Good? campaign to demand the Government take urgent action to ensure schools are built appropriately for hearing-impaired children, and that the acoustics are tested for quality before they are used.

Martin Tod explained:

“I fully support the NDCS Sounds Good? campaign, and I’m disappointed to hear that so many local authorities are neglecting their responsibility to ensure new school buildings meet national acoustic standards. I was alarmed when I heard the immense difficulties pupils with a hearing impairment face when trying to hear a teacher in a classroom with poor acoustics. We should not be putting children in classes in which they cannot learn. Barriers such as this must be broken down if we want to give deaf children the best chance of achieving their full educational potential.”

Brian Gale, NDCS Director of Policy and Campaigns, added:

“Being able to understand what the teacher is saying is essential to learning. Yet the Government is allowing billions of pounds to be spent on building schools that are unsuitable for children to listen and learn in, and in which deaf children experience particular difficulty. As the majority of deaf children now attend mainstream school, it is crucial that new schools don’t just look good, but sound good. We are calling on the Government to urgently introduce a mandatory test for all new school buildings to ensure they comply with government standards, to stop generations of deaf and hearing children from missing out on a quality education.”