Resident tells Ealing Today about concerns for his neighbourhood
Locals are furious about a double-deck extension put up to accommodate more pupils at St John's School.
Dave Randles from Felix Road outlines his objections.
'''This is a complex problem which involves the entire regeneration of West Ealing and the 10 acre site currently occupied by the Green Man estate.
The area is an amalgam of rich and poor people trying to co-exist between BMWs, patio gardens, loft extensions, urine soaked stairwells and syringes.
Within
      the last 10 years several hundred flats have been built in the square mile
      surrounding St.John's School and the additional burden on the supporting
      infrastructure such as affordable housing, transport links,
      traffic management, schooling, policing, parking and the health service has
      so far 
      been completely ignored by Council and developers alike, partly through
      negligence, but mostly for budgetary reasons.
The extension to St.John's School is an unimaginative and dreadful piece of
  planning which, not only fails to meet the needs of the School, but is an
  eyesore to everyone around it. It has been built as an emergency stop-gap
  with total disregard to local residents and families alike. The true cost of
  the development is probably closer to half a million pounds and yet still
  doesn't 
  satisfy the needs of the community.
Council planning consent was approved under "delegated powers" which means that the matter was never debated by any elected members of the Council's Planning Committee.When questioned on this, I was advised that this is a regular procedure if there are no objections to a planning application. The Council say that they sent out 194 letters to local residents but received no replies - perhaps this isn't too surprising if, as we suspect, none of the letters were actually posted.
My family and I have lived opposite the School for well over 15 years and we
  are pleased to see how it has developed since the new headmistress arrived.
  Although the need for school places is clearly expanding, I understand that
  things are not that desperate at the present time and that the alternative
  would have been to build a more substantial single storey brick building
  similar to the one that they added a few years ago.
 It distresses me that
      the Council can make decisions of this kind, seemingly without any
      consultation or regard to the local neighbourhood or our quality of life - I
      guess we just have to accept that this is a poor area of the borough and 
      nobody cares. In reality this is however an area which is currently going 
      through a huge amount of change with the introduction of new flats, private
      dwellings, Waitrose and the proposed Crossrail. It is an up and coming area
      in which many people are trying very hard to shed the past images of crime,
      abandoned cars and drug dealing. 
Decisions like this do little to enhance
      the look of the area and encourage people to take a greater pride in their
      environment. How sad that the new extension has taken away the wildlife area
      and pond that used to be on the site - one of the last green spaces within
      the confines of the school.''
Dave Randles
  
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