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Seeing red over threat to our greenbelt



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Published Date: 24 January 2008
IT is true that Edinburgh suffers from an acute shortage of low-cost homes and family housing ("Goodbye greenbelt", January 22). It is also true that the farmland to the west of the city has already been pillaged for development over the last 20 years.
But none of these things mean that the proposed 650 house development – the "West Craigs scheme" – should simply be waved through.

For one thing the shortage of family housing is mainly in the inner urban areas – in these areas, primary schools a
re under threat from falling rolls.

These are the areas where we should be trying to develop medium-density family housing. Greens have argued the "colonies" model developed in Edinburgh in the 19th century can provide attractive homes, with gardens, for families while still providing enough homes per hectare to offset absurdly high land values.

The sites are available and I know of at least one architect who is convinced it can be made to work. As regards the low-cost element, I noticed that it is unclear whether that is to be for rent or shared equity. If the latter, there is nothing to stop the homes rapidly increasing in price after the initial purchase and very quickly becoming the preserve of the better-off. What we risk being left with, then, is another out-of-town car- dependent dormitory (despite promises of cycle lanes and public transport), with little interaction with either neighbours or the surrounding countryside.

So much for a sustainable city! We really can and must do better.

Councillor Alison Johnstone, Convenor of Green Group of Councillors, City Chambers, Edinburgh


M&S lorries won't help environment

MARKS & Spencer set out their green credentials (News, January 18) when they bought 60 adapted Mercedes lorries.

The lorries' engines are "fitted with a system that allows faster, smoother and more reliable gear changes". This it seems will reduce the emissions count.

This claim sounds very like that made for upgrading a road to allow traffic to move more smoothly. How much effect will this have on emissions in either case?

My advice to M&S would be to rationalise their transportation strategy and eliminate wasteful journeys where lorries travel empty. Alternatively, they could look, at using rail freight where convenient. In itself a train is less polluting than the equivalent number of lorries, even with diesel traction. With such a transfer – from road to rail – there would be victors all round. The reduction in HGVs, which so irritate car drivers by holding them up, would also reduce the accident rate.

David G Guild, Grange Road, Edinburgh


Free up lanes and keep traffic moving

COUNCILLOR Phil Wheeler is right when he says "Greenways and bus lanes play a vital part in keeping the road network flowing as freely as possible by giving buses priority over other road users during peak times" (News, January 21).

Can Cllr Wheeler explain why at non-peak times, some bus lanes continue to ban other road users, even when there may be a bus only once an hour? Surely the road network can be better utilised by restricting the use of all bus lanes to only peak hours, so keeping the road network flowing as freely as possible at all other times.

L Smith, Drum Brae Park, Edinburgh


Elderly need help after shop closes

WHY do none of the bus companies provide a shopping service for the elderly and disabled in the East Craigs housing scheme?

Surely, now that the local supermarket, Somerfield, is due for closure (News, January 15) their need for transport to the Gyle is all the more urgent.

PC Grey, East Craigs, Edinburgh


Swinney doesn't speak for all Scots

FINANCE Secretary John Swinney claims Scots do not want nuclear power. I would like to know what right Mr Swinney has to speak on my behalf about nuclear energy or any other subject.

It is about time the SNP remembered they are a "minority" Scottish Government. The "majority" of clear-thinking people reject their separatist views. And what about Alex Salmond? No wonder he goes about grinning like a Cheshire cat, who's getting three wages and probably three pensions. Out and out greed. Not to mention his pal Sean Connery and the things he did for England as James Bond. Why is he not living here and paying his taxes like the rest of us?

J Thomson, Tyler's Acre, Edinburgh


John's critics have a right to be heard

I AM not accustomed to writing to newspapers but I feel compelled to say this to Helen Martin, why should John Gibson be allowed to have his "critical" views on other people published and not have the same done to himself? I would not call what was said of him "hate mail".

Janet Nicoll, Murrell Road, Aberdour, Fife


City snobbery is alive and kicking

I ENTIRELY concur with the recent views expressed by my old school acquaintance, Eric "Spike" Milligan. Snobbery in Edinburgh is as old as the Castle rock itself.

No more so than in its very own bastion, Morningside. Yesterday I visited this area for the first time in a number of years. The streets reeked of collective middle-class consciousness – from the designer 4X4 baby buggies containing the Olivias and Torquils of this world to the Chelsea Tractors, that would run you over at a moment's notice.

As I made my escape I could not help but notice a policeman was moving on a beggar encamped on a pavement. How ironic is this?

N Nisbet, Moat Drive, Edinburgh


Scottish classics left on the shelf

YOUR report that the BBC are to produce a lavish drama of Thomas Hardy's Tess of the D'Urbervilles (News, January 22) had me racking my brains to remember the last BBC drama made from one of the many classic Scottish novels.

After all we have recently seen BBC productions of English classics like Cranford, Sense and Sensibility and Oliver Twist. There is no doubt that England is well served by BBC Drama, but where are there series based on novels by Walter Scott, RL Stevenson and more modern writers like Iain Banks or Alexander McColl Smith?

The BBC long ago gave up covering Scottish sport. It now seems that they have also abandoned Scottish culture as well.

Sophie L Anderson, Marchmont, Edinburgh



The full article contains 1058 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 24 January 2008 10:23 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Erk!,

Perth 24/01/2008 12:11:44
These are not just any old lorries, these are M&S Mercedes Lorries!!
2

JamboChris,

Maastricht 24/01/2008 12:20:04
I agree that bus lanes should only be active when they are needed. However, even when they are not active you still get the numpties hogging the outside lane. If only people could read the activation times...
3

MWP,

Edinburgh 24/01/2008 12:27:54
N Nisbet - it seems you're the worst kind of snob. What exactly is your problem? A little jealous perhaps? I think so.
4

Road Raga,

EDINBURGH 24/01/2008 12:28:56
There are NO main roads in Edinburgh where there is 'only one bus an hour' !!
5

The ghost of Harry Lauder,

Edinburgh 24/01/2008 12:41:29
Cllr Alison Johnstone is spot on. Much of the piecemeal development on the greenbelt has nothing to do with the serious and pressing shortage of affordable housing in the city. It is pure megolamania, borne of a thirst to make Edinburgh bigger than Glasgow. When will Edinburgh's citizens be consulted about the kind of city they want to see: a compact modern European city or a sprawling conurbation, losing all its identity on the process?
6

The ghost of Harry Lauder,

Edinburgh 24/01/2008 12:50:24
No.5 totally right. I am as passionate about Scottish culture as anyone but that does not blinker me from appreciating classic writing (or television) from England. Besides, from my own memory there have been adaptations of "Kidnapped" on telly recently; Rebus is still around in telly form (not that I'd regard this as a classic). Banks' "The Crow Road" was a BBC series and "Complicity" made into a film. "The Last King of Scotland" has been a very successful film. I think Alasdair Gray is a brilliant writer but not obvious for film. Personally, I'd like to see "House with the Green Shutters" filmed.
7

Dragonlord,

24/01/2008 13:18:32
I'm Scottish and I don't want nuclear power stations. You want them so that makes it 50/50 then eh?
8

LUVMACITY,

IN THE LOBBY 24/01/2008 13:29:05
NO, NO N NISBET. WHAT YOU SAW IN MORNINGSIDE WAS NOT SNOBBERY BUT SIMPLY PEOPLE WORKING HARD FOR A LIVING & ENJOYING THE REWARDS. YOU ARE ANOTHER JEALOUS SOCIALIST.
9

Farky,

Edinburgh 24/01/2008 13:45:05
In response to J Thomson...

You are in favour of expensive and dangerously produced power - your choice!

Can you tell me why the tax payer should fund more of these dangerous power plants when we have spent billions on the ones we have already which have not even come close to being value for money.

You quite clearly don't understand much about democracy, do you. The SNP might be a minority government, but they are the "legitimate" government and so have the right to impliment their manifesto as much as they can. The SNP are an anti nuclear party! Nothing new there... They certainly have my support ragarding the nuclear power issue. Westmister are about to back a loser!

As for Alex Salmonds pay and pensions, He is entitled to everything he gets. And he deserves every penny, in my own humble opinion.



10

Sarah B,

Edinburgh 24/01/2008 13:54:51
(9) - I'm sure I read recently that films of the the Alexander McCall Smith No. 1 Ladies Detective Agency books are also due to be produced.
11

Amanda Huginkiss,

24/01/2008 14:15:26
Aren't there enough Gaelic programmes to keep the nationalists happy?
The rest of us just like good drama regardless of where the author came from.
12# I'm sorry Farky (apt don't you think) Swinney on his todd doesn't speak for the majority, that's why the SNP will always be a minority party.
12

Farky,

Edinburgh 24/01/2008 14:21:12
#14

I didn't say the SNP/John Swinney speak for the majority, I said as the "legitimate" government they have the right to impliment policy... Few (if any) governments around the world (except banana republics perhaps) have a majority. That's all I said.
13

Miss Jean Brodie,

24/01/2008 15:22:22
Build a wa’ frae Cramond tae Porty roond the by-pass, keep aw the Edinburgh Residents who are clear Crakpots anyway frae expandin any further ootward - a bit like Escape frae New York - and the wurld would be a better place !
14

calum,

24/01/2008 16:25:44
N Nisbet - Snobbery is certainly alive and well, particularly where Eric "Maroon Balloon" Milligan is concerned. Eric clings to Boroughmuir when he went to Tyncastle, he's so proud of Gorgie/Calder he doesn't live there but in Kingsknowe, he mooches invites to all the top socialite parties, he comandeered a police car with driver to take him to the fitba' at Ibrox (where is that incisive report into operational policing of fitba' that you promised, Eric?), he comandeered the polis pipe band for 4 days in Paris last March thus depriving the City of 18 polis ....... yes, I think you could say that snobbery is alive and well, particulaly where that pantaloon is concerned. Thanks for pointing it out.
15

James (1),

24/01/2008 16:39:54
#4 your right! There is also no main road in Edinburgh that needs to have the bus lane running all day!
16

Mike Giggler,

24/01/2008 17:01:07
N Nisbet,

The beggar you saw should have been getting spoken to by an Immigration Officer, not the Police.
17

Mikey,

24/01/2008 17:10:25
14, keep taking the tablets, for God's sake! You're gibbering like some sort of lunatic!
18

Graham P,

Edinburgh 24/01/2008 19:42:42
And can L Smith name a single bus lane (all-day or not) which is only used by one bus an hour? I can't even think of a single LRT route which is only served by one bus an hour.
19

Gavin Fleming,

24/01/2008 22:06:33
I think Sophie L Anderson makes a good point -

#9 The Crow Road was made years ago. Rebus is made by STV. The rest are films again not made by the Beeb.

So what WAS the last classic Scottish novel made by the BBC in the same vein as Cranford and the others mentioned?

Can't think of one can you??
20

Cabbage Patch Troll,

used to be Tory 25/01/2008 00:01:11
Councillor Alison Johnstone is talking a lot of sense in her letter.

Social housing, managed and maintained by professional housing associations, is vital to the future. And it must be ring-fenced from the "Right-To-Buy".

The colonies model needs to be adapted. People in Scotland aspire to the wrong type of home for the climate we live in.

Maybe Lord Provost Grubb should cancel his trip to Leningrad and, instead, take the good green councillor to the Netherlands? Just a thought. I'm sure "God" would approve.

 

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