Lively debate held about the local impact of a third runway
Tuesday night say over 150 people attend a meeting at Brentford Free church to discuss Heathrow expansion. Ruth Cadbury MP, Dave Waller of BASHR3, Maggie Thorburn of Friends of the Earth and John Stewart of HACAN were on the panel.
Dave Waller talked about setting up BASHR3 to fight noise pollution, the most frequently raised issue and air pollution which results not just from the planes themselves but also from the ground traffic to and from Heathrow.
John Stewart explained the long procedure before anybody starts building a third runway. Once the current consultation is closed the Transport Select Committee will look at the proposal this summer. Then the government will decide whether to proceed, followed by a vote in parliament. Currently the majority of MPs appear to be in favour. After a vote in favour Heathrow have to draw up detailed plans for a planning application which will go to a planning enquiry about 2019 which would not be decided until 2020-2021. So there's a long way to go. It's not a done deal by any means.
Ruth Cadbury MP, Maggie Thorburn, Dave Waller, John Stewart
Ruth Cadbury MP said she'd been campaigning with John for over fifteen years against various expansions at Heathrow. She believes that Heathrow can do a lot better without the need for additional flights and raised a number of issues:
Maggie Thorburn of Friends of Earth spoke last. She talked about the many voices coming together in opposition to Heathrow. They may differ in the details or their reasons, but everyone comes together to fight the pollution. There is a whole cocktail of pollutants that result from flying planes. Heathrow's promises to keep within limits are not realistic. There are currently high levels of nitrogen oxide and particle pollution that have health impact [see Clean Air in London's quick guide to air pollution]. It's not just the damage to us humans, but also to animals and the environment. Flights produce gas emissions that contribute directly to climate change. FoE argue strongly that pursuit of unrestrained growth is not a sustainable solution. Heathrow's sole plan for meeting air quality limits is for all other industry to become clean so they can carry on.
The panel then took questions from the audience, not all of which were answered.
What to do? Once you've responded to the consultation (which you can do on a postcard or a short email, no need to fill in the lengthy and complicated forum) encourage other people to do the same. Talk to your councillors. Cllr Guy Lambert said that no one had ever written to him about Heathrow. Email your councillors and your council leader and your MP. Join local groups like BASHR3. You can also complain about the format of the consultation. Ask Hounslow for a proper consultation that all residents may respond to.
Many groups have been set up to fight expansion who represent different areas in and around London, who are working together to oppose expansion and now part of the Stop Runway 3 Coalition.
See BASHR3 online: website, Facebook and on Twitter at @bashrunway3
Residents can get copies of the Government documents by calling 0800 6894968. There are 3 ways to respond to the consultation document:
Respond online or
Complete a response form and either email to
Runway Consultation@dft.gsi.gov.uk or write to
Freepost RUNWAY CONSULTATION. The consultation closes at 11:45pm on 25 May 2017.
Download the poster/leaflet from BASHR3.
March 24, 2017
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