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Annual Litter Pick In Warminster

Saturday 7th March 2026

An annual community litter pick will return to Warminster as part of the Great British Spring Clean on Saturday 14th March from 10am to 12pm.

All equipment will be provided, and all volunteers will receive a free hot drink with the event jointly organised by Sustainable Warminster and Warminster Town Council.

Anyone interested in volunteering can meet at Warminster Civic Centre (Sambourne Road, Warminster BA12 8LB).

Warminster Town Council is asking people to notify them if they feel there is a road or area that would particularly benefit from litter picking.

The Great British Spring Clean has been running since 2016, with more than 4.5 million bags of litter pledged to be picked during that time.

To sign up or to suggest an area that needs cleaning email admin@warminster-tc.gov.uk or phone 01985 214847.

Man Arrested At Swaledale Road, Warminster

From the Facebook page of Warminster Police:

A man in his 40s has been arrested on suspicion of being concerned in the supply of Class A and Class B drugs in Warminster.

Police carried out a warrant in Swaledale Road earlier this morning.

He was also arrested on suspicion of possession of a cannabis and remains in custody for questioning.

If you suspect crime is taking place in your community tell us. You can report through our website, by calling 101 or 999 in an emergency or by calling Crimestoppers.

www.facebook.com/WarminsterPolicingTeam

EBBRAG Update

Monday 2nd March 2026

EBBRAG Update

While there has not been a recent update, the EBBRAG team has been working hard behind the scenes on the draft Neighbourhood Plan. Further details will be shared shortly.

Please find attached a list of infrastructure impacts if all known, planned, and speculative housing developments are built by 2038. Note that the number of houses has increased compared to the earlier EBBRAG email of 11 February 2026, as additional planning applications have been identified. We have included a breakdown of known developments below so you are aware of the site locations.

While many support developing brownfield sites within the town, EBBRAG remains very concerned about the number of houses proposed for greenfield sites coming to Warminster and the additional residents, traffic, and pressure on services without clearly planned supporting infrastructure. Developers often make commitments during the application process; however, delivery does not always reflect those assurances. The Town Council has stated that services will increase in line with population growth, for example, that NHS provision will expand if the population increases. but you may be aware that, due to recent staff sickness, Avenue Surgery is already struggling to support the current population.

Current Known Planned Housing for Warminster to 2038 (by site)

  • Jubilee Gardens, up to 1,550 houses to 2038 (1,000 by 2026) (approved) (Greenfield)
  • Cley Hill, 227 houses (approved) (Greenfield)
  • Grovelands, 68 houses (approved) (Greenfield)
  • Brick Hill Farm, 9 houses (in process) (Greenfield)
  • Masons Arms, 6 flats + 2 houses (Brownfield)
  • John Barleycorn, 9 apartments (Brownfield)
  • 3 High Street, shop + 11 apartments (Brownfield)
  • 1 Copheap Lane, 4 bungalows (Brownfield)

Total Known Speculative / Draft NP2 Housing for Warminster to 2038 (by site)

  • Ashley Coombe, 77 houses (speculative application, not yet approved) (Greenfield)
  • Westbury Road, 205 houses (speculative application, not yet approved) (Greenfield)
  • Home Farm, 90/135 houses (Neighbourhood Plan/developer speculative figures, not yet approved) (Greenfield)

This makes a total of 2,258 possible new-build houses by 2038 (using the draft NP2 figure for Home Farm rather than the developer’s higher estimate).

Please also note that the former Warminster Prep School site is currently for sale through Savills for residential development. This is a large site, including playing fields, and could accommodate a significant number of additional homes.

Additional Points

(i) Impact on the River Wylye

  • The River Wylye is a globally recognised rare chalk stream, hydrologically linked to the River Avon (a Special Area of Conservation), and is already highly phosphate- and nutrient-sensitive.
  • The draft NP does not demonstrate that a clear solution is in place to address this issue, nor that wastewater systems can cope with the additional 713,000 litres per day that could be produced. This figure does not include infill and brownfield development.
  • The draft plan also does not clearly show how legal environmental protections will be met.

(ii) Loss of Green Space

  • The draft NP 2 emphasises protecting green spaces; however, site selection appears inconsistent with this objective For example, Home Farm, the principal site selected, is a historic rural site outside the settlement boundary and is not required based on current Wiltshire housing need figures of 90 houses.
  • It is also believed that the medieval village of Boreham was founded on Home Farm fields.
  • With the fencing of Kingdown playing fields, East Warminster has no remaining green spaces other than Home Farm, in contrast to those identified to the west and south of Warminster by the draft NP 2.
  • Development would permanently affect countryside views, wildlife, recreation, and wellbeing for residents of East Warminster.

(iii) Highway Safety

  • The proposed Home Farm access is located just beyond a blind bend on Boreham Road (leaving Warminster), which raises safety concerns. Several accidents have occurred nearby in recent years.
  • A similar access proposal was rejected by both Highways and a Planning Inspector in 2019, with additional comments that a significant heritage asset wall would need to be demolished.
  • This would have a detrimental impact on the historic character and vista of Boreham Road.

(iv) Concerns About the NP 2 Process

  • The process to date has raised concerns regarding communication with residents (for example, awareness of the informal survey), the apparent disregard of earlier survey results (61% of respondents opposed inclusion of Home Farm), limited engagement with major local employers (Bishopstrow Hotel and GEA), and reliance on an external consultant at public expense, estimated at £33,000 to date (£16,000 funded through Warminster Council tax) according to the Town Clerk but believed to be significantly more.
  • EBBRAG believes that the housing site selection element of the NP is profoundly flawed and that the inclusion of Home Farm as the only significant site for development compromises the NP 2 as a whole. EBBRAG have repeatedly tried to engage with the Council on these issues and so far they have failed to provide evidence that demonstrates the process of site selection has been both fairly representative of our community and democratic. EBBRAG’s intention is to continue to raise these vitally important concerns with the Council and if needs be, at the appropriate time, with Wiltshire County Council.

Requested Actions

As a member of EBBRAG, please consider taking the following actions:

(i) Complete the draft Neighbourhood Plan survey by midnight on 23 March 2026.
To access the survey, please use the following link:
https://www.smartsurvey.co.uk/s/3KNZGD/
Please ensure you include the wording: “Remove Home Farm from Site Selection.

(ii) Write to the Town Council Steering Group by midnight on 23 March 2026, using the attached updated information to raise concerns about the inclusion of Home Farm and the lack of supporting infrastructure.

Address:
Warminster Town Council Steering Group
Warminster Civic Centre
Sambourne Road
Warminster
Wiltshire BA12 8LB

or Email: civiccentre@warminster-tc.gov.uk

Please also copy the local MP, Dr Andrew Murrison, at: andrew.murrison.mp@parliament.uk

(iii) Sign the open letter on the EBBRAG website:
https://www.ebbrag.com/letter/

It is very important that as many residents as possible complete these actions. Please not only complete the three actions yourself but also encourage partners, relatives, friends, and neighbours to do the same.

If each person encourages ten others to participate, the collective response will carry significant weight when the Town Council reviews submissions at the end of March 2026.

Thank you for your continued time and effort.

EBBRAG

Tytherington Bake Shed Coming Soon

Saturday 28th February 2026

A message from Tytherington Bakehouse:

Something sweet is coming to the village of Tytheingt0n.✨

Tytherington Bakehouse is nearly here!

From gooey brownies to chunky cookies and homemade cakes, we can’t wait to share our bakes with you all.

Keep your eyes peeled for more details coming very soon.

www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100063165672859

Warminster Needs A Place To Party Again

Saturday 28th February 2026

An anonymous post on the Facebook page Spotted In Warminster Town:

I just wanted to put this out there because I really feel like Warminster is missing something big when it comes to nightlife.

Since Boston Shaker closed (which is totally understandable), there’s been nowhere local that really caters to people who just want to go out, dance, and have a proper night out. We’ve got some lovely pubs like the Anchor and Prestbury, and the band nights are always brilliant and lively as we love those! But they tend to close early and there isn’t always a consistent dance/disco vibe.

What Warminster is really missing is a proper place to party again. Somewhere with:

A big dance floor, cocktails, a bar where you can sit and chat, comfy seating areas and music you can actually dance to all night.

Not everyone can afford or manage to travel to Bath or Bristol every time they want a night out, and it would be amazing to have something local for people who love to dance and socialise.

Warminster has so much potential, and it would be great to see a proper club or late-night venue come back to town, not just small pubs, but a space made for dancing, partying, and bringing people together again.

Just putting the feelers out to see if anyone else feels the same.

Commentary By Adam Banks On The Warminster Neighbour Plan

27th February 2026

Interesting commentary posted by Adam Banks on the Warminster Town Council Facebook page after the Town Council yet again promoted the Neighbourhood Plan Consultation:

Most people will not read eighty plus pages of planning policy. That is not because they do not care; it is because they have jobs, families and limited time. That is precisely why decisions of this scale cannot hide behind the phrase “public consultation.”

The core issue is not whether Warminster will grow. Growth is already embedded in the Wiltshire Core Strategy, and we have no realistic ability to reverse that. What matters is how much further we go beyond what is strictly required, and what precedent that sets for the future.

We are being told that allocating additional housing sites is “defensive planning”. The argument is that it is better to choose a site ourselves than have one imposed through appeal. That logic only holds if three conditions are met: that the allocations genuinely limit further speculative development; that the housing number is not quietly increased in the next cycle; and that infrastructure is delivered before or at least alongside the housing.

If those conditions are not properly enforced, what we risk instead is incremental drift. We allocate slightly more than the minimum required and immediately shift the baseline. We establish a greenfield precedent beyond the existing settlement boundary, making it harder to defend that boundary in future reviews. We rely on viability arguments that can reduce affordable housing percentages at application stage. We accept “proportionate” infrastructure contributions, which are negotiable and rarely guarantee delivery before occupation.

Over time, roads become busier, schools stretch capacity and health services absorb additional pressure. When the next Local Plan review arrives, that expanded footprint is treated as the new normal. What was once described as an exception quietly becomes the starting point for the next round of growth. Once a boundary flexes once, it becomes harder to defend next time.

At the same time, if infrastructure does not genuinely keep pace, nothing fundamentally changes in terms of healthcare provision, school places or road capacity. Waiting times remain long, classrooms remain full and congestion remains daily reality. The lived experience for residents can worsen, while developers complete schemes, sell homes and move on with their offshore tax haven bank accounts creaking under the strain of their vast profits. That imbalance is exactly why the sequencing and enforceability of infrastructure matters just as much as the headline housing number.

There is also a wider economic reality that needs to be acknowledged. This Plan can never and will never solve the fundamental problem of local people being unable to afford to buy a home. Building more high value open market houses on the edge of town does not automatically make homes affordable for first time buyers on local wages. In many cases it does the opposite. It sustains high land values, reinforces the existing price structure and feeds a system in which those with capital accumulate more assets.

If a significant proportion of new homes end up in the private rental sector, whether through buy to let investors or institutional landlords, the effect can be to strengthen the rentier economy rather than broaden ownership. More public money then flows into housing benefit and rental support, effectively transferring funds from taxpayers to private landlords. Without genuinely affordable products that are protected long term, increasing supply at the upper end of the market does little to address the affordability crisis experienced by local families.

There is also a financial dimension that should be spoken about openly. Having a Neighbourhood Plan increases the town’s share of Community Infrastructure Levy from 15 percent to 25 percent. For a development of around ninety homes, that uplift might amount to roughly ninety thousand pounds extra retained locally, depending on final build size and CIL rates. That is not insignificant, but nor is it transformative when set against the cost of preparing and reviewing a Neighbourhood Plan, which can run into tens of thousands of pounds in consultant fees, assessments and examination costs. The financial benefit is modest compared to the permanent physical change that allocated land represents.

We are also told that this strengthens our hand against developers. That may be true in theory. However, if Wiltshire fails its five year housing land supply, inspectors can still override local resistance on appeal.

So we should be honest about the gamble. This is not about whether development happens. It is about whether allocating greenfield land now makes resisting further expansion harder later. Many residents already believe Wiltshire Council and developers ignore local plans. That view does not come from nowhere; it comes from lived experience.

Consultations are posted online and documents run to dozens of pages. Very few people have the time to work through them line by line. A lack of detailed objections does not equal consent. Councillors need to listen actively and visibly, rather than relying on the absence of responses buried inside technical documents as evidence of support.

If the strategy is genuinely defensive, then the case should be set out clearly in plain language. Why this site. Why this number. How infrastructure will be guaranteed up front. How affordable housing percentages will be protected from viability reductions. How future boundary creep will be resisted.

Planning policy may be technical, but the consequences are physical and permanent. If the town is to expand, it should be because the case has been clearly proven and publicly understood, not because the system subtly nudges us towards accepting change without fully debating its long term impact.

Agenda For Sustainable Warminster Meeting, 11th March 2026

Thursday 26th February 2026

Agenda
Sustainable Warminster General Meeting, Wednesday, 11 March 2026, 7pm

Warminster Civic Centre, BA12 8LB

1. Welcome

2. Membership Update – Chris Walford

3. Minutes of the last meeting and matters arising – Amy Darbyshire/Rebecca Krzyzosiak

4. Update on Wildflowers, Amy Darbyshire

5. Update on Rivers and Waterways, Iain Perkins

6. Committee roles: Treasurer and Secretary, All

o   We are seeking a new Treasurer to join the Committee. More details can be found on Wiltshire Together: Volunteer Treasurer: Sustainable Warminster – Wiltshire Together

o   Additionally, we are looking for a new Secretary to join the Committee. More details can be found on Wiltshire Together: Secretary Role, Sustainable Warminster – Wiltshire Together

7. Treasurer’s report 

8. AOB

Toad patrol update – All

Two to sign on the bank account – Helen Martin

Recent communication from local businesses/organisations – All

Update on future events – All

We are also pleased to be collaborating with Warminster Town Council again this year, for an annual community litter pick, as part of the Great British Spring Clean on Saturday, 14 March from 10am to 12-noon. All equipment will be provided, and all volunteers will receive a free hot drink after the litter pick.
To sign up or suggest an area that needs cleaning, please email: admin@warminster-tc.gov.uk or phone 01985 214847. Attached is a flyer with more information. 

Best wishes, Rebecca and Amy.

Exciting News From Warminster Saddle Club

Thursday 26th February 2026

Exciting News From Warminster Saddle Club

Due to a recent reshuffle and the addition of some fantastic new instructors, we now have more availability for group lessons Monday – Thursday evenings!

We welcome beginners through to advanced riders, and cater for both children and adults. Whether you’re just starting your riding journey or looking to develop your skills further, we have a supportive and experienced team ready to help you reach your goals.

Small, friendly groups

Qualified, enthusiastic instructors

Safe and supportive environment

Fun and progressive lessons

Spaces are limited and evenings fill quickly, so get in touch to book your place or to find out more!

Message us directly via Facebook https://www.facebook.com/warminstersaddleclub

or email info@warminstersaddleclub.co.uk

Or contact us to discuss availability on 01985 213925

We can’t wait to welcome new and returning riders to the yard!

Warminster Saddle Club, Oxendean, Warminster, BA12 0DZ.

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