On Thursday, October 12th, 2006, National CPRE President, Sir Max
Hastings, gave Leicestershire Branch members a talk dealing with current
countryside protection issues. The talk took place at Leicester's
wonderful 14th Century Grade I Listed Guildhall.
In his speech Sir Max said,
"A few months ago, the Tory think-tank Policy Exchange published a
series of pamphlets arguing for the easing of planning controls, the
opening up of farmland to development, in terms that Gordon Brown and
Kate Barker would applaud. PE explicitly declared itself to be attacking
CPRE's view of the future.
CPRE has now produced a formidable rebuttal
of Policy Exchange's arguments. Our own document, published earlier
this Summer, shows that many of PE's claims are founded on
unsubstantiated assertions, and sometimes upon false or misleading
statistics."
Sir Max added,
"PE seems to welcome 'urban sprawl', the
progressive march of development into the countryside around our cities.
CPRE has campaigned for decades against this, because random
development blights countryside for miles around it... There is a great
opportunity here for the Opposition to distance itself from the
philistinism of present government policy. It will be a tragedy for the
countryside if an undeclared cross-party coalition of politicians
espouses policies which will do so much harm to the landscape future
generations will know."
After his talk Sir Max presented engraved bronze plaques to the four
winners of the 2006 Leicestershire CPRE Design Awards. The winners were
Grace Dieu Priory (Thringstone) The Sir John Moore School (Appleby
Magna) a group of sixteen new terraced houses ('Varipak' site in
Markfield) and the Burton-on-the-Wolds Plantation Scheme.