The Furrow Press Monthly Magazine Issue 3 October 2018
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Housing Land Supply Position Statement 2020/21 to 2024/25
www.eastriding.gov.uk www.eastriding.gov.uk ff YouYouTubeTube East Riding Local Plan 2012 - 2029 Housing Land Supply Position Statement For the period 2020/21 to 2024/25 December 2020 Contents 1 Introduction ............................................................................................................ 1 Background ........................................................................................................................ 1 National Policy .................................................................................................................. 1 Performance ...................................................................................................................... 3 Residual housing requirement ......................................................................................... 5 2 Methodology ........................................................................................................... 7 Developing the Methodology ........................................................................................... 7 Covid-19 ............................................................................................................................. 8 Calculating the Potential Capacity of Sites .................................................................... 9 Pre-build lead-in times ................................................................................................... 10 Build rates for large sites .............................................................................................. -
The Rural Economy of Holderness Medieval
!. ii' i ~ , ! The Rural Economy of Medieval i li i Holderness h i By D. J. SIDDLE HE student of the medieval landscape The plain of Holderness is the triangular is often confronted by apparently con- peninsula which forms the south-eastern ex- T flicting evidence. This fact is nowhere tremity of Yorkshire. The region is bounded better illustrated than in the plain of Holder- to the west and north by the dip slopes of the ness, one of England's smallest and most dis- Yorkshire Wolds, and to the south and east tinctive regions. The chronicler of the Cister- by the Humber estuary and the North Sea. cian monastery of Meaux (in the Hull valley), In the case of Holderness, the use of the word recording the partition of lands which fol- plain is deceptive. Within the limits of its lowed the Norman conquest, noted that the subdued relief, the region contains consider- new earle of Holderness inherited a land; able topographical variety. In the east are a "... which was exceedingly barren and in- series of arcuate moraines, extending from fertile at this time, so that it produced nothing north-east to south-east, representing various but oats. ''1 In his recent study of the Domes- stages in the glacial retreat. They often rise day material, Maxwell summarizes the Hol- to 25 ft, but are rarely above 5° ft. Much dis- derness returns in this way, "... in spite of its sected by post-glacial stream erosion, these marshy nature, Holderness was the most areas of boulder clay display little continuity, prosperous part of the East Riding in the especially in south Holderness. -
Allocations Document
East Riding Local Plan 2012 - 2029 Allocations Document PPOCOC--L Adopted July 2016 “Making It Happen” PPOC-EOOC-E Contents Foreword i 1 Introduction 2 2 Locating new development 7 Site Allocations 11 3 Aldbrough 12 4 Anlaby Willerby Kirk Ella 16 5 Beeford 26 6 Beverley 30 7 Bilton 44 8 Brandesburton 45 9 Bridlington 48 10 Bubwith 60 11 Cherry Burton 63 12 Cottingham 65 13 Driffield 77 14 Dunswell 89 15 Easington 92 16 Eastrington 93 17 Elloughton-cum-Brough 95 18 Flamborough 100 19 Gilberdyke/ Newport 103 20 Goole 105 21 Goole, Capitol Park Key Employment Site 116 22 Hedon 119 23 Hedon Haven Key Employment Site 120 24 Hessle 126 25 Hessle, Humber Bridgehead Key Employment Site 133 26 Holme on Spalding Moor 135 27 Hornsea 138 East Riding Local Plan Allocations Document - Adopted July 2016 Contents 28 Howden 146 29 Hutton Cranswick 151 30 Keyingham 155 31 Kilham 157 32 Leconfield 161 33 Leven 163 34 Market Weighton 166 35 Melbourne 172 36 Melton Key Employment Site 174 37 Middleton on the Wolds 178 38 Nafferton 181 39 North Cave 184 40 North Ferriby 186 41 Patrington 190 42 Pocklington 193 43 Preston 202 44 Rawcliffe 205 45 Roos 206 46 Skirlaugh 208 47 Snaith 210 48 South Cave 213 49 Stamford Bridge 216 50 Swanland 219 51 Thorngumbald 223 52 Tickton 224 53 Walkington 225 54 Wawne 228 55 Wetwang 230 56 Wilberfoss 233 East Riding Local Plan Allocations Document - Adopted July 2016 Contents 57 Withernsea 236 58 Woodmansey 240 Appendices 242 Appendix A: Planning Policies to be replaced 242 Appendix B: Existing residential commitments and Local Plan requirement by settlement 243 Glossary of Terms 247 East Riding Local Plan Allocations Document - Adopted July 2016 Contents East Riding Local Plan Allocations Document - Adopted July 2016 Foreword It is the role of the planning system to help make development happen and respond to both the challenges and opportunities within an area. -
Rooster 147 July 2007
Number 147 The Roos Parish Newsletter July 2007 The Rooster Severe flooding hits Roos Parish For a week earlier persistent rain had saturated the fields and filled the dykes. Then on 25th and 26th June unprecedented heavy rainfall caused complete havoc. Lakes stood in the fields and many roads were impassable because of the depth of water. Communities were cut off. Low-lying properties were inundated. Furniture, equipment and valued personal possessions were ru- ined. Much of the debris, in skips and stacked pathetically in gardens and on pavements, still awaits visits by insurance assessors, though it is said that some properties were either uninsured or under- insured. In the parish as a whole at least 52 dwellings were affected, 10% of properties in the parish. Many householders were distraught. Their recovery – financial and emotional – may take years. All our settlements suffered Personal reports and photographs are incomplete but some residents suffered in all parts of the parish. Outlying settlements Owstwick Mr & Mrs Collinson of Field View, Fitling, had their ground floor flooded and had to evacuate horses and livestock from out- buildings. Hilston Three properties were affected. Another three properties were marooned. Some residents tried to reach Roos over the fields in a four-wheel drive but risked being bogged down : water in the pud- dle lapped half way up the driver`s side and they had to re- turn home defeated. Photo provided by Mr L Lewis Tunstall In This Issue David Craggs reports that Tunstall did not suffer too badly, though Southfield Lane was Pages temporarily impassable and a car was stranded for two days. -
Small to Medium Sized Flood Alleviation Works
SMALL TO MEDIUM SIZED FLOOD ALLEVIATION WORKS The Council has completed an extensive programme of minor flood and drainage schemes in the East Riding. These important schemes which span across much of the East Riding are complement the larger major schemes detailed on the webpage. The value of the below works ranges from just a few thousand pounds to seven figure sums, funded through a combination of Council capital and revenue funding, Defra grants such as Flood Defence Grant in Aid (FDGiA) and Local Levy funding. For more information about these works contact us at: [email protected] The following table details the minor schemes completed since 2007 and the accompanying map shows the location of those schemes: Map no. Scheme name Summary description Approx. value range 1 Beck Lane/Barnards Drive, South Cave Flood reduction £10,000-£100,000 2 Roos Village Highway drainage improvements £10,000-£100,000 3 Ellerker Flood reduction & highway drainage improvements £10,000-£100,000 4 Creyke Beck, Cottingham New screen structure £10,000-£100,000 5 Snuff Mill Lane, Cottingham New screen structure £10,000-£100,000 6 Mill Beck, Cottingham New screen structure £10,000-£100,000 7 Willerby Low Road, Cottingham New screen structure £0-£10,000 8 Megginsons Turnpike, Hutton Cranswick Drainage improvements £0-£10,000 9 A1079 Deepdale, Bishop Burton Highway drainage improvements £10,000-£100,000 10 Hornsea Groundwater telemetry installation £10,000-£100,000 11 Eadon Place, Snaith New soakaways £10,000-£100,000 12 King George V Playing Fields, Cottingham -
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of people visiting the area and 15% said What about the visual impact of wind East Riding of Yorkshire Council visitor numbers had increased, whilst turbines? County Hall only 1% thought visitor numbers had Beverley A significant proportion of the British decreased as a result of the wind farm East Riding of Yorkshire ROOS NEWS 3 population finds wind turbines attractive (BWEA 2006). HU17 9BA to look at. Great care is taken in site Q&A Tel: 01482 393939 selection and design to minimise visual impact. At the end of their design life of Fax: 01482 393375 Why build wind farms onshore, when February 2009 25 years – unlike fossil and nuclear Withernsea Library there are other opportunities such as power generation – wind turbines can offshore wind, tidal or wave power? Queen Street be quickly removed. Withernsea In this section, we provide answers to So far, onshore wind is one of only a few As part of the planning consent for a East Riding of Yorkshire many of the most commonly asked renewable technologies to have become wind farm, a condition or agreement is HU19 2HH questions about wind farms. To lodge economically competitive with normally put in place to cover the costs Tel: 01964 612537 your own questions or comments please conventional supplies. It is commercially of turbine removal and re-instatement Roos Wind Farm update get in touch using the contact details ready to start meeting our targets and of the site. Beverley Library In 2006, RES submitted a planning application to erect 11 turbines, on land around provided in this newsletter or log on to international obligations right now. -
Tolkien and the Zeppelins
Journal of Tolkien Research Volume 11 Issue 1 Article 1 2020 Tolkien and the Zeppelins Seamus Hamill-Keays none, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://scholar.valpo.edu/journaloftolkienresearch Part of the Military History Commons Recommended Citation Hamill-Keays, Seamus (2020) "Tolkien and the Zeppelins," Journal of Tolkien Research: Vol. 11 : Iss. 1 , Article 1. Available at: https://scholar.valpo.edu/journaloftolkienresearch/vol11/iss1/1 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Christopher Center Library at ValpoScholar. It has been accepted for inclusion in Journal of Tolkien Research by an authorized administrator of ValpoScholar. For more information, please contact a ValpoScholar staff member at [email protected]. Tolkien and the Zeppelins Cover Page Footnote I am immensely grateful to those who have helped in the preparation of this article: Dr Nancy Bunting for her encouragement to write it, Ruth Lacon for her extensive knowledge of RNAS airships, Ian Castle for permission to include an extract from his website, Helen Clark of East Riding Archives, Dr Rebecca Harding of the Imperial War Museum Duxford, Willis Ainley for the photograph of Roos Post Office and the many others whose diligent research listed in the references provided me with details that support this article. This article is available in Journal of Tolkien Research: https://scholar.valpo.edu/journaloftolkienresearch/vol11/iss1/ 1 Hamill-Keays: Tolkien and the Zeppelins TOLKIEN AND THE ZEPPELINS Seamus Hamill-Keays Squadron Leader, Royal Air Force (Retired) 1.Introduction The tumults in the killing fields of the Great War died away over one hundred years ago, yet the Western Front still echoes in memories in Britain and Ireland. -
The Development and Role of Women's Meetings in the Early Quaker Movement
Quaker Studies Volume 9 | Issue 2 Article 4 2005 'The nfeI rior Parts of the Body': The evelopmeD nt and Role of Women's Meetings in the Early Quaker Movement Gareth Shaw University of Hull, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.georgefox.edu/quakerstudies Part of the Christian Denominations and Sects Commons, and the History of Christianity Commons Recommended Citation Shaw, Gareth (2005) "'The nfeI rior Parts of the Body': The eD velopment and Role of Women's Meetings in the Early Quaker Movement," Quaker Studies: Vol. 9: Iss. 2, Article 4. Available at: http://digitalcommons.georgefox.edu/quakerstudies/vol9/iss2/4 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Digital Commons @ George Fox University. It has been accepted for inclusion in Quaker Studies by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ George Fox University. For more information, please contact [email protected]. 190 QUAKER STUDIES QUAKER STUDIES 912 (2005) [191-203] ISSN 1363-013X texts and the expansion of the American literary canon. She is co-editor of 'A Centre <?[Wonders': the body in early America (Cornell University Press, 2001) and is currently working on a book manuscript titled The Body as Testimony: Quaker womens prophesyings in early American culture and text. Michele is a member of Haddonfield Monthly Meeting in New Jersey. ' Mailing address: Department of English, The College of New Jersey, PO Box 'THE INFERIOR PARTS OF THE BODY : THE DEVELOPMENT AND 7718, Ewing, NJ 08628, USA. E-mail: [email protected] ' ROLE OF WOMEN S MEE TINGS IN THE EARLY QUAKER MOVEMENT1 Gareth Shaw University of Hull,England ABSTRACT This article is a study of the development and role of early Quaker women's Meetings during the second half of the seventeenth century. -
Rooster 163 November 2008
Number 163 The Roos Parish Newsletter November 2008 The Rooster Flooding Update I am pleased to report that to the south of the village, at the area of Dimples Cottage and Roseneath, a new pipe has been laid. This new pipe runs from the road going underneath the driveway of the property named the Paddock into the Roos Beck. Three new gullies have also been constructed which will hopefully alleviate the flooding problems in this part of the village. This particular project, now completed, is the fifth major improvement to the drainage system of the village. Projects at Sycamore Cottage, the entrance to Greenacre Park, a scheme at North End near to the houses of Mr Clark and Mr Kettle, and the storm overflow pipe at Dove Lane have greatly reduced the threat of future flooding to our village. However, complacency must not set in as there is other essential work still to be done. For example, a recent camera survey of the culverted parts of the Beck has discovered many areas that need urgent attention. Secondly, a scheme to improve the drainage at the entrance to the Beck in Lamb Lane has been discussed and hopefully progress will be seen in the near future. Finally many parts of the Taylor report have been implemented, particularly the short- term recommendations, but there still remains a lot of work to be done to ensure that Roos is free from any future flooding. The Parish Council is determined all efforts will continue to be made in order to improve the drainage system of the village and to protect all our residents. -
Infrastructure Study Update 2013
This document has been produced for the specific purpose of providing an infrastructure needs assessment to inform East Riding of Yorkshire Council's emerging Local Plan as well as other plans, policies and proposals Contact Details For further information please contact: James Durham Senior Planning Officer Forward Planning, Room FS32, County Hall, East Riding of Yorkshire Council Beverley, HU17 9BA E-mail: [email protected] Tel: 01482 391750 Or Caroline Grant Senior Planning Officer Forward Planning, Room FS32, County Hall, East Riding of Yorkshire Council Beverley, HU17 9BA E-mail: [email protected] Tel: 01482 391737 EAST RIDING OF YORKS HIRE INFRASTRUCTURE STUDY UPDATE 2013 ©2013. East Riding of Yorkshire Council. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior permission of the East Riding of Yorkshire Council CONTENTS Key findings and recommendations 1 Introduction 18 Flood Defence and Drainage 21 Electricity transmission and distribution network 43 Gas transmission and distribution network 52 Sewage and wastewater treatment 54 Water supply and distribution network 59 Health services 61 NHS GP services 62 NHS Dental services 65 Pharmacy services 67 Hospital services 68 Primary and secondary school education 69 Sports and leisure 81 Highway junctions studies 90 Corridor public transport improvements 94 List of appendices 96 KEY FINDINGS & RECOMMENDATIONS East Riding of Yorkshire Council (the Council) has completed an Infrastructure Study Update 2013. Together with the Infrastructure Study 2011 - 2026, it provides a detailed evidence base to support the production of the Council’s Local Plan, and in particular the Strategy and Allocations Documents. -
Through Yorkshire the County of Broad Acres
TH ROUG H YO RKSH IRE I I I H FO RCE TEE A E G , SD L T HRO UG H YO RKSHIRE T H E C O UN T Y O F B R O AD A C R ES G O R D O N H O M E L O N D O N 65’ T O R O N T O ° EN T O N L T D . J. M . D 69 S S M C M X X I I DA 6 7 0 \ ‘ / 6 L 75 b P R EF A C E IT is a deep j oy to writ e of the wonderful variety ’ of Yorkshire s attractiveness , and my pen would carry me into exuberance were I not reminded that many who pick up this little book may have yet to discover the beauty and glamour of the great county . I have , therefore , tried to keep my great love of this portion of ancient Northumbria within and bounds , have even reduced the title of the volume to such colourless words that I might almost be accused of writing for the scurrying traveller who is content to pass through a country and carry away such impressions as he picks up n i an a ssa t . a p This , however, would not be a f r criticism , for, small as this little volume may be , I have endeavoured to indicate where romance and beauty may be found , where associations with literature and great events of history are of enshrined , and where the great solitudes heathery moorland and grassy fell ca ll to the jaded town dweller . -
Offshore & Intertidal Ornithology
Hornsea Four Preliminary Environmental Information Report (PEIR) Volume 2, : Offshore & Intertidal Ornithology Prepared APEM Ltd, 01 July 2019 Checked GoBe Consultants Ltd, 02 July 2019 Accepted Eleni Antoniou, Ørsted. 31 July 2019 Approved Julian Carolan, Ørsted. 1 August 2019 Doc. no. A2.5 Version A Table of Contents 5.1 Introduction ...........................................................................................................................................9 5.2 Purpose ...................................................................................................................................................9 5.3 Planning, Policy and Legislative Context.................................................................................... 10 5.4 Consultation ....................................................................................................................................... 16 5.5 Study area ........................................................................................................................................... 22 5.6 Methodology to inform baseline ................................................................................................... 27 5.7 Baseline environment ...................................................................................................................... 31 5.8 Project basis for assessment .......................................................................................................... 42 5.9 Maximum Design Scenario .............................................................................................................