Blog Image

Stockport Council News

Cllr Angela Clark, Cllr Mark Roberts & Cllr Rachel Bresnahan.

LibDem Councillors, Padden Brook Posted on Tue, April 22, 2025 15:45

“The surrounding micro-woodland will be just the sort of area important to improve in the forthcoming SMBC Nature Recovery Strategy and so public access to appreciate it will also be important”. These LibDem buffoons stood idly by whilst it was destroyed.

Lazy and useless LibDem Councillors. They only deliver their political leaflets. They do nothing for local people.

Profile image for Councillor Angie Clark

Profile image for Councillor Rachel Bresnahan

Dear Mrs Oliver,

Public Question to the Council Meeting

I refer to your public question that you submitted to the 3 April 2025 meeting of the Council Meeting which was as follows:-

Temporary in planning terms is 28 days.  When will the scruffy trailer dumped on visual amenity land/Local Wildlife Site at Padden Brook be removed?  Local people have been asking the LibDems about this for many, many months and only received an incorrect answer in response tweezered out of them.

As you were not in attendance, it was agreed that a written response would be provided.

I have now been passed the following response which I have been asked to circulate to you:-

As previously advised by officers from the planning service, the trailer is on site to assist the landowner with clearance of detritus and we are advised that it will be removed once these works are completed.  The trailer is not development requiring planning permission and is not covered by the 28 day temporary permission, as this relates to the use of land.

We remain satisfied that the response you have been provided is correct.

                Cllr Angie Clark and Cllr Mark Roberts

Local Wildlife Site / Protected Amenity Land Considerations

Local Plans may have specific policies requiring additional scrutiny.

Activities that could harm biodiversity or visual amenity might still be controlled or restricted, even if they don’t need planning permission per se.

If the works involve heavy clearance, vehicle access, or risk to protected species/habitats, that could trigger the need for consent under environmental regulations, even if planning permission isn’t required.



Padden Brook

LibDem Councillor Mark Hunter, LibDem Councillors, Lisa Smart LibDem PPC, Padden Brook, Senior council officers, Stockport Council Meetings Posted on Mon, April 21, 2025 11:02

This protected amenity land/Local Wildlife Site, untouched since the 1960s, has been allowed to be destroyed by senior council officers Vicki Bates, Monitoring Officer, Michael Cullen, Chief Executive and Emma Curle, Head of Planning. The Local LibDem MP, Lisa Smart, and local councillors Angela Clark, Mark Roberts and Rachel Bresnahan – all lazy and useless – were begged for 220 days to act. They did nothing.

When they did finally respond the reply was all lies. The land was being improved and the rubbish was being tidied up. A planning application was allowed to proceed deliberately giving a false location. This sort of thing is fine in LibDem run Stockport. The LibDem Leader, Mark Hunter, in reply to a council meeting claimed the council couldn’t act on wildlife crime. He lied.

If housing is built on that site, it will signify corruption reigns supreme at Stockport Council, yet again. I shall be contacting the police if that happens. There are so many instances of Stockport Council’s planning corruption on this website already, most notably the appalling case of the still-gassing toxic waste dump school where lethal brown asbestos fibres were deliberately left in situ.

The protected land before it was improved and tidied up.

This is the planning refusal which confirms the land is protected amenity land.

Protected amenity land refers to land that has been designated or set aside for public benefit, often for recreational, environmental, or visual purposes.

Here’s a general overview of the legal position:


⚖️ Definition

Amenity land is land that enhances the value or enjoyment of a property or the environment, usually by providing open space, greenery, or visual relief. It often includes:

  • Grass verges
  • Public green spaces
  • Land around housing estates
  • Village greens
  • Play areas or parkland

🔒 Protected Status

Land can be protected in several ways, including:

  1. Planning Conditions or Section 106 Agreements
    • When planning permission is granted, conditions may be imposed requiring some land to remain open for amenity use.
    • Section 106 agreements (in the UK) can legally bind developers to preserve amenity spaces.
  2. Designation as Public Open Space
    • Local councils may designate land as public open space through local development plans. This designation limits development and ensures access and environmental protection.
  3. Statutory Protections
    • In the UK, land may be registered as a village green under the Commons Act 2006. Once registered, development is highly restricted.
    • Green belt land and land protected under environmental laws (e.g., SSSI, AONB) may also include amenity value and have additional layers of protection.
  4. Restrictive Covenants
    • Some land is subject to legal covenants that restrict development or use to preserve amenity for nearby residents.
  5. Ownership by Local Authorities or Charitable Trusts
    • Many amenity spaces are held by councils or trusts for the benefit of the public. These bodies may have legal obligations not to dispose of or develop the land.

🚧 Development on Amenity Land

Development or change of use on protected amenity land is typically subject to:

  • Strict planning controls – applications will likely face opposition and must demonstrate community benefit or exceptional justification.
  • Public consultation – especially if the land is publicly owned or widely used.
  • Judicial review or legal challenge – if the decision to develop is deemed unlawful or procedurally unfair.

🏛️ Case Law & Precedents (UK examples)

Some notable legal principles include:

  • Courts have generally upheld protections for land that has been used as open space or is under statutory trust.
  • In cases like Oxfordshire CC v Oxford City Council [2006], the courts confirmed strong protections for village greens.

✅ Key Takeaways

  • Protected amenity land has legal safeguards against inappropriate development.
  • Protections can stem from planning law, environmental law, local policy, or private legal agreements.
  • Attempting to develop such land usually requires extensive legal and planning justification and public engagement.

There is a covenant on the land:

I have a copy of a lease dated 24th of June 1964 between Hathelow Investments Ltd of 452 Manchester Road, Heaton Chapel (the Lessor) and Winchover Ltd of 5 New Brown Street, Manchester (the Lessee).

The Lease stated at 2. “The Lessee will not at any time without the previous consent in writing of the Lessor erect or suffer to be erected on the said land any mesuage  dwellinghouse building or other erection.”



« Previous