Peterborough Shop Relocation Prompts Highway Alterations

08:07 Thursday 28th November 2013
BBC Radio Cambridgeshire

[P]AUL STAINTON: Peterborough could soon have a city centre to be completely proud of. That’s the view of the chairman of the Civic Society, Peter Lee, after the City Council unveiled a radical redevelopment of one of the city’s most iconic roads, Bourges Boulevard. They’re planning to turn it into a pedestrian and cycle friendly route, which will also allow access both ways for car users in and out of the station. The work will cost £4.5 million, and it’s part of the continued improvements to the centre of Peterborough. Our reporter Johnny D has been telling us all about the plans this morning.
JOHN DEVINE: I’m here on Bourges Boulevard, which is currently like any other dual carriageway you’d find in any city up and down the country. But plans have been unveiled to turn this area into a pedestrian and cycle friendly tree lined boulevard. Thirty London plane trees, each 15 metres tall, will be planted along a widened central reservation. Two 10 metres wide pedestrian crossings will be put in between the Crescent Bridge roundabout and the Bright Street roundabout to improve access to the city centre for pedestrians and cyclists. The schemes will support the redevelopment of the station quarter, and the recently announced plans for North Westgate. £4.5 million of roadworks will also enable traffic from the station to turn right out of Station Road for the first time in history Paul, with traffic lights introduced at the junction. At the moment, if you want to head back into the city, motorists have to turn left onto the dual carriageway, go all the way up to the next roundabout and then come back.
PAUL STAINTON: The plans have also been warmly welcomed by Peter Lee, who’s chairman of the Peterborough Civic Society. He said Peterborough was closing the gap on Cambridge when it comes to having the most attractive city.
PETER LEE: Those people who say, oh I don’t go into Peterborough any more, it’s about time they did. Go into Peterborough and have a look round. Have a look in Bridge Street. Have a look in St John’s Square, Cathedral Square, Cowgate. It’s coming along a treat, and I think that’s great. If I’ve got one concern, it would be that Cambridge’s land values are so high that they can afford to be pretty fussy about new developments, and demand the highest standards of design. Peterborough has always been worried about its ability to command good design.
PAUL STAINTON: Well is the gap really narrowing, architecturally, between Peterborough and Cambridge? Well David Jones is the author of Hideous Cambridge, A City Multilated. He says a spate of overdevelopment and thoughtless architecture has ruined Cambridge.
DAVID JONES: There’s a lot that’s happened in the last six years which can’t be undone now. And if you go up Worts Causeway, for those who know Cambridge well, and up to the start of the Roman Road, there’s a field gate there. Look back down over the city and see what damage has been done to the skyline, most of that within the last decade. It’s appalling.
PAUL STAINTON: Well Marco Cereste of course is the Leader of Peterborough City Council. He’s with us this morning. Marco, morning.
MARCO CERESTE: Hello Paul. How are you?
PAUL STAINTON: I’m very good thank you. Ambitious plans for Bourges Boulevard. I had a look at them yesterday. And we’re going to get a tree-lined boulevard, we’re going to get a narrower dual carriageway, and all sorts of improvements to what is essentially a concrete monstrosity built in the ’70s.
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Peterborough District Hospital Site Sold For Housing

08:25 Tuesday 26th November 2013
BBC Radio Cambridgeshire

[P]AUL STAINTON: It’s been derelict for more than two years, but now the former Peterborough District Hospital site has finally been sold. Since the new PCH site opened at Bretton, Peterborough and Stamford Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust have been trying to sell the site to plug a huge shortfall in the budget. Interim Chief Executive Dr Peter Reading explained why the sale had taken so long to go through.
(TAPE)
DR PETER READING: Well two reasons really. One is the collapse of the property market caught the Trust cold several years ago. They originally were planning to develop it themselves in a joint venture, and the collapse in the property market really wiped that option out. They then went down what was a bit of a blind alley, looking at a particular deal that was put forward by a developer by an unusual route, and then eventually decided that actually the best thing to do was to go to the open market and get an open market price. The Hospital, which has been a bit of an eyesore and a bit of a risk for three years since we closed it, will now be demolished, and between 300 and 350 new homes and a school will be built on that site.
(LIVE)
PAUL STAINTON: Now the new owners planning that housing development are Lands Improvement Holdings. The NHS will receive £7.75 million up front from the sale of the land, which is just a fraction of the debt owed by the new Peterborough City Hospital. Joining me now is MP for Peterborough Stewart Jackson. Stewart, morning.
STEWART JACKSON: Good morning Paul.
PAUL STAINTON: Now you’ve called for this to be hurried up and get the sale moved on over and over and over. It’s been a long time coming, hasn’t it?
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Confusion Surrounds The Planned Closure Of Peterborough’s Children’s Centres

07:39 Monday 25th November 2013
BBC Radio Cambridgeshire

[P]AUL STAINTON: Are plans to redevelop children’s centres already in a spot of bother? There have been attempts to call in the consultation into the proposed closure of several centres in the city. The City Council plans would see the creation of a network of super centre hubs they’re calling them, using four of the Council’s fifteen centres to offer a wider range of services to a much larger area. .. We’re joined now by Labour councillor Ed Murphy. Ed Morning.
ED MURPHY: Good morning.
PAUL STAINTON: Now you’ve tried to call in this consultation. What are your problems?
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Stewart Jackson On Political Engagement

17:07 Friday 22nd November 2013
BBC Radio Cambridgeshire

[C]HRIS MANN: This hour we’re asking why do so few people vote or get involved in public life. Why are people apparently turning their backs on the idea of the Big Society? Is it apathy? And does anyone care? Is the answer that we should be able to do more on-line, like vote in referenda and elections? Yesterday there were local elections in the county, and about one in three bothered to vote. In the PCC elections a year ago fewer than 15% voted. And now the idea of neighbourhood panels has been scrapped here in East Cambs, because no-one it appeared was bothering to attend. So much for the Big vaunted Society the Prime Minister had put so much store by. Well earlier I asked Conservative MP for Peterborough Stewart Jackson what was in the theory, and what was it all supposed to be about?
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There And Back Again By Peugeot iOn

08:27 Friday 15th November 2013
BBC Radio Cambridgeshire

[P]AUL STAINTON: We are increasingly told that electric cars are the future, and we’re all going to be driving one soon, aren’t we, swapping our gas-guzzling cars for a green silent version. Well, as you may have heard on the Bigger Breakfast Show last week, in Peterborough there are six new electric car charging points went up in the city centre to encourage us to ditch our gas-guzzlers. But we were keen to find out how difficult or easy it was to use an electric car and get across the county, so we sent our reporter Waseem Mirza on a challenge. Can he travel from Huntingdon to Peterborough, Cambridge and then back to Huntingdon in a reasonable time? Well, first of all he had to get a car. He did, from Simon Atack at Anvil ESI. But as you are about to hear, it didn’t go at all well for poor old Waseem.
(TAPE)
SIMON ATACK: We’re here in the Peugeot iOn electric vehicle. It’s a 100% electric vehicle.
WASEEM MIRZA: OK. Well I’m very keen to find out how we do on this journey. We’re going to be going to Peterborough.
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Ross Clark On Wasted Aid

09:10 Wednesday 13th November 2013
BBC Radio Cambridgeshire

[A]NDIE HARPER: The Coalition’s commitment to increase aid spending to 0.7% of gross national income has come under fire in some quarters, so this morning I want to know what kind of overseas support you think we should be giving. The Cambridgeshire based writer and business journalist Ross Clark believes that objections to offering aid can seem petty. Ross, good morning to you.
ROSS CLARK: Good morning.
ANDY HARPER: Really good to talk to you. Thank you very much for joining us. Now we often talk about aid on this programme, because lots of listeners feel that we give rather too much to other countries whilst we have our own serious problems at home. Now this presumably is slightly different, isn’t it? Last week a lot of people getting hot under the collar about India. We give so much aid to India, although that is due to stop, and yet they can afford to send rockets to Mars. But surely the Philippine situation is hugely different.
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Peterborough Energy Park Debate Janine Machin Talks To Marco Cereste

18:35 Tuesday 5th November 2013
BBC Look East West

[J]ANINE MACHIN: Good evening. First tonight, “it’s full of flaws, subterfuge and a risk to the taxpayer”. What the Energy Minister has been told today about plans for a giant solar and wind farm near Peterborough. The accusation came from the city’s MP Stewart Jackson, who organised a special debate in Westminster. The Council’s plan is to turn nine hundred acres of farmland into an energy park. Emma Baugh reports.
(TAPE)
GREG BARKER: When I hear of monster projects which potentially can turn what is a popular, intuitive and increasingly affordable technology, to turn that into something that is unpopular, that is inappropriate, I become very very worried indeed.
EMMA BAUGH: Energy Minister Gregory Barker in Westminster today. And this is what he’s talking about. Peterborough City Council’s plans to turn this farmland into one of Europe’s largest solar farms. But today the city’s MP claimed this development could jeopardise the city’s finances.
STEWART JACKSON: There is a chance that this project will be a financial disaster and actually make a loss, and even bankrupt the City of Peterborough. But it’s the way they treated local people, frankly with disdain.
EMMA BAUGH: The City Council insists it is listening, and says the plan could mean fewer cuts. So while the energy farm is being planned for fields away from here, it will have a direct impact on services in the city itself. The Council wants to borrow more than £100 million to build it, and they say that will give them more than £30 million profit. And if it doesn’t go ahead, they’ll have to find that money from somewhere else.
EMMA BAUGH: In Peterborough today, the jury is still out.
(VOXPOP)
EMMA BAUGH: Meanwhile, the Government has said it could call in the plans if they’re given the go ahead locally, and may call a public inquiry. Emma Baugh BBC Look East.
(LIVE)
JANINE MACHIN: So how does Peterborough City Council feel about the MP’s public criticisms of its energy park plans? I asked the Leader earlier.
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Peterborough Council Solar Ambitions Debated At Westminster

07:07 Tuesday 5th November 2013
BBC Radio Cambridgeshire

[P]AUL STAINTON: The MP for Peterborough is raising the row over plans for a renewable energy park for Peterborough in the House of Commons. The City Council wants to build solar and wind farms on farmland it owns near Newborough and Thorney. The project will see the Council invest over £280 million, and could create over £30 million profit, which would be income for front line services. But MP Stewart Jackson is concerned about prime farmland being used for the project, and wants the Council to look at other options. His debate comes as local councillors and residents criticise the City Council for a lack of transparency with the plans. Let’s speak to some of those who are concerned right now. Mike Greene is part of the Newborough Landscape Protection Group and he’s with me this morning. Mike, morning.
MIKE GREENE: Morning Paul.
PAUL STAINTON: What are your prime concerns? We know what your concerns are about the solar farm. But what are your concerns about transparency, particularly from Peterborough City Council.
MIKE GREENE: It’s increasingly frustrating when we ask for information and we get half answers back, or when the team attended a scrutiny meeting, that they had faulty systems that meant that there wasn’t a full and complete copy of public records in effect.
PAUL STAINTON: There wasn’t a copy in public record of what was said.
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