Cheshire East council has deferred a planning application for two chimney stacks on Tytherington Business Park
More than 100 residents had objected to the application to build the 14m high chimneys at Peakside House on Tytherington Business Park so the former office building could be used for medical research.
Objectors questioned whether there could be health implications with the chimneys being sited so close to their homes and a children’s nursery.
Members of the northern planning committee shared their concerns. When planning officers said they didn’t know who would be occupying the building their concerns grew exponentially.
Wilmslow councillor Michael Gorman said: “I just don’t think we’ve got the information here to be secure on making a judgement.
“We don’t know what’s going to go up the chimney here. And why the secrecy?
“There are some really serious questions to be answered here.”
Ward councillor David Edwardes said that he had been trying to find out since April who the tenants of the building would be and what would come out of the chimneys – “I haven’t really received satisfactory replies . . .”
Cllr Steve Edgar said: “I’m having difficulty. I don’t know what the company is, I don’t know what they’re going to be putting in the fume cupboard. How can we approve this if we don’t know what’s going to go up the chimney?”
Cllr Michael Beanland questioned the air quality assessment which had been provided by the applicant which stated the predicted impact was ‘not significant’.
“Is there an independent assessment of that assessment?” he asked.
Planning officer Paul Wakefield told him: “Our environmental protection team have reviewed the air quality assessment and they’re satisfied with what has been submitted.”
But committee chair David Jefferay said: “I have the same concern that they’ve just taken the word of the applicant’s assessment.”
He later added: “I’ve got grave concerns about this being so close to the nursery and we haven’t got information on what’s coming out of it.”
Bollington councillor Ken Edwards proposed that the application should be refused.
“We’ve heard about this acetone, but we don’t know the acetone is the most dangerous substance,” he said.
“Fume cupboards presumably produce their fumes and they go into the chimney. Well if there’s a mixture of things, how do we know the way they combine and so forth and are distributed into the atmosphere?”
Cllr Nick Mannion said he thought the application should be deferred for more information rather than refused.
He highlighted a paragraph in the report which said the most hazardous substance to be used would be acetone and that, even in the worst case scenario of a spillage simultaneously in all fume cupboards, the impact would ‘negligible’.
“I’d like to hear that from our own in-house expert,” he said, adding: “We owe it to the local community to get the maximum reassurance possible.”
The committee was unanimous in its decision to defer the application on the basis there was insufficient information to make a decision, specifically on the air quality situation.
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