Are You Struggling To Get A GP Appointment In Warminster When You Need To?

Monday 16th February 2026

From the Facebook page of EBBRAG:

Are you struggling to get a GP appointment in Warminster when you need to?

Our local practice staff work so hard, but are just overwhelmed by the demands on them. Well, no wonder. There are just over 18,000 people registered at Avenue Surgery, but only 7 partners and 4 salaried GPs. That’s ONE GP for every 1636 residents!

If all the planned developments go ahead in addition to the West Urban Extension, the numbers of households will increase by a further 1200. At just two people per household on average, that could mean an additional 2,400 patients at least!

How many of you received Wednesday 11th February’s text from The Avenue Surgery stating that they could only offer emergency provision for the day?

And not for the first time!

Increased housing is only going to make the situation worse.

At present, there seem to be no concrete plans for significant additional health provision. Its not as easy as just saying recruit more staff as there is a recruitment crisis in the NHS.

Warminster needs YOU to find a voice.

As a resident of Warminster, you will already be aware of the huge West Urban Extension/Jubilee Gardens where 1000 new homes are currently being built, with another 500 due by 2042. Did you also know that a further approximately 700+ houses are at the planning stage?

  • Cley Hill View, 227 homes already approved and being advertised.
  • Ashley Coombe, 77 homes; planning permission applied for.
  • Westbury Road, 205 homes; rejected once in 2025, outline planning applied for again.
  • Home Farm, 135 homes; planning application expected imminently (the Neighbourhood Plan suggests 90 but the developer Bellway Homes would like 135).
  • Grovelands, 68 homes; building already started.

Are these homes ALL really needed?

Are they being planned in a responsible and sustainable way?

They are all eating up green areas, rather than using brown field sites.

What impact will these developments have on the lives of people already living in our town?

Despite what the Town Council would have us believe, a Neighbourhood Plan does not offer Warminster protection against these speculative development bids.

The whole premise of naming a potential site in the Neighbourhood Plan is to offer legal protection for the rest of Warminster for up to five years. Consider this example – Melksham Parish Council had an adopted Neighbourhood Plan, fully supported by local residents which excluded a site Snarlton Farm from designated building. On appeal, the developer has now gone to The Secretary of State for Housing, taking the decision right out of local hands.

And consider this – by the time the current draft Neighbourhood Plan is finalised, it is likely that all of the developments listed above will already have gone through the planning process and have been approved, not just the one they have named.

What can you do?

  • Register on the EBBRAG website. Our contact form is here : https://www.ebbrag.com/contact/
  • Make it known to our Town Council that you do not support any more large scale developments, in the absence of improved infrastructure and local services. You can email the council here. Email: admin@warminster-tc.gov.uk

How?

Flood Warning: Warminster To Wilton

Wednesday 11th February 2026

A flood warning has been issued by the Environment Agency.

Flood warning in force: Lower Wylye from Warminster to Wilton

Flooding is expected for: Heytesbury, Suffers Bridge, Boyton, Codford St Peter, Wylye, Great Wishford and Wilton.

High river levels are expected to cause flooding today.

Flooding is expected on 11 February 2026. River levels are expected to cause flooding.

River levels continue to rise due to the previous days of rain and high groundwater levels. The weather forecast looks unsettled and further rainfall is forecast over the next few days. River levels are forecast to continue to rise.

We are closely monitoring the rainfall and the river levels. Start acting on your flood plan if you have one and activate any flood protection products you may have.

We are closely monitoring the situation.

Take care and avoid walking, cycling or driving through flood water.

This message will be updated by 1:00PM on 12 February 2026 or as the situation changes.

Act now

You should: go to Check for flooding to see a map of the area and monitor up-to-date local flood information, and act on your personal flood plan if you have one. Follow the guidance in what to do before or during a flood. You can also read more about what flood warnings are.

Stay up to date. To get the latest flood information, you can: go to Check for flooding. Monitor local weather, news and travel updates. call Floodline on 0345 988 1188, using quick dial code 166057

Warning Of Ground Water Flooding For The Wylye Valley At Warminster

Wednesday 11th February 2026

From the Facebook page of Bill Parks, Cllr Warminster North and Rural:

Currently the Environment Agency – South and South West has a flood warning for groundwater flooding for the Wylye Valley at Warminster.

Please check the flood warnings and if your property is at risk, take steps now to protect yourselves and your property.

Full details https://orlo.uk/vDEgY

Flooding information https://orlo.uk/5lP07

Sign up for flood warnings https://orlo.uk/acWCc

www.facebook.com/BillParksWNR

An Ongoing Review Of Flood Behaviour Within The River Wylye Catchment Area Around Boreham And Bishopstrow

Friday 6th February 2026

A letter from the Boreham & Bishopstrow Flood Group to Wessex Water Planning/Developer Services Team:

Dear Wessex Water Planning / Developer Services Team,

I am writing on behalf of the Boreham & Bishopstrow Flood Group in relation to ongoing review of flood behaviour within the River Wylye catchment around Boreham and Bishopstrow.

We are currently engaging with the Environment Agency regarding cumulative flood behaviour.

Following a number of recent flood events, the group is seeking to better understand potential cumulative drivers affecting river loading and downstream flood risk. As part of this work, we are reviewing whether wastewater infrastructure and discharge patterns may contribute to baseline flows within the catchment.

We would therefore be grateful if you could provide general clarification on the following points:

  • Whether wastewater networks or treatment works serving the Boreham / River Wylye catchment operate under known hydraulic constraints;
  • Whether surcharge conditions or storm overflow activation occur during peak rainfall or flow events;
  • Whether additional development within this catchment would typically require reinforcement or capacity assessment of existing wastewater infrastructure.

This enquiry is intended to support a catchment-level understanding of system-wide pressures rather than assessment of any individual site.

We appreciate that detailed responses may depend on specific proposals, but any general guidance or direction to relevant published information would be extremely helpful.

Many thanks for your time and assistance.

Kind regards,

Jeremy Kelton
On behalf of the Boreham & Bishopstrow Flood Group.

Do You Love Warminster But Hate What’s Happening Around Our Town?

Friday 6th February 2026

From the EBBRAG Facebook page:

Do you love Warminster but hate what’s happening around our town?

Are you appalled that greedy developers are wrecking our countryside forever by building more and more massive housing estates?

Are you concerned about the lack of infrastructure and the difficulties with obtaining vital community services?

Are you worried about your home flooding or the problems with the sewerage system and sewage if extra houses are built?

Do you know the River Wylye is crucial to Warminster’s drainage and the pollution threat is real?

Are you keen about wildlife?

Do you want to protect our local heritage?

If you’ve said ‘yes’ to any of the above, you can make your voice known by joining EBBRAG.

EBBRAG is free to join and it’s easy to register your interests.

Go to: www.ebbrag.com/contact/

Your details will be added to the EBBRAG database for regular email updates.

EBBRAG is actively consulting and listening to the people of Warminster and taking positive action.

EBBRAG is all about improving Warminster and is therefore against detrimental proposals.

EBBRAG has highlighted flaws in the Warminster Neighbourhood Plan 2, which is currently out for public consultation. The Plan includes the allocation of unsustainable housing sites even though public opinion is not in agreement.

At a recent Town Council meeting, members of EBBRAG raised their objections and concerns about housing allocation being included in the Neighbourhood Plan.

These concerns appeared to fall on deaf ears. None of our Town Councillors replied and they had nothing to say on the matter.

In the Warminster Journal, Thursday 29th January 2026, a spokesperson for the Town Council is quoted as saying:

“It is important to understand that legislation does not allow Neighbourhood Plans to simply prevent development.”

“Due to national and regional housing targets, a Neighbourhood Plan cannot simply say ‘no’ to any more houses being built.”

EBBRAG speaks for many people when it says that unsustainable housing site allocations being placed in the Plan are bad for Warminster.

EBBRAG is offering its members advice and tips on how they can get housing site allocation removed from the Neighbour Plan before it is finalised.

EBBRAG wants to hear from you if you are against development on Home Farm, Ashley Coombe and Westbury Road.

email: info@ebbrag.com

website: www.ebbrag.com

An Update From EBBRAG For Completing The Warminster Neighbourhood Plan Survey

Wednesday 4th February 2026

Sent to members and supporters of EBBRAG, from the EBBRAG Committee:

Please find below a new update from EBBRAG. It concerns the latest process for the Warminster Neighbourhood Plan (NP). We apologise for the length of information contained but we believe it is necessary for you to complete the Town Council NP survey. 

Note once completed and submitted you can not resubmit or change the content, so take care before submitting!

Regards EBBRAG.

Neighbourhood Plan Consultation – Why Your Response Matters

The draft Warminster Neighbourhood Plan (NP) has been approved to enter the next stage of the NP process, called Regulation 14. This requires the Town Council (TC) to ask residents to comment on the draft NP through an online survey.

EBBRAG attended the extraordinary TC meeting on 19 Jan 26 where the next stage was approved. EBBRAG wrote to each councillor before the meeting objecting to the inclusion of Home Farm & The Yew Tree pub (called site selection) in the draft NP and asked for their withdrawal from the plan.

During the meeting, four EBBRAG members raised further objections based on fact and logic. All the councillors (including 3 East Ward councillors) approved, without debate or question, the draft NP’s move to the next stage.

EBBRAG apologies for the length of this update but its contents are important for you to understand.

TC draft NP Survey dates

You can complete the survey from Monday 26 January 2026 until midnight on Monday 23 March 2026.
You do not have to answer every question, nor do you need to provide detailed comments to submit a response. A simple yes or no is sufficient per question.

Key Issues You May Wish to Consider

You are, of course, free to complete the TC survey using your own views. EBBRAG has, however, compiled the following facts and topics that you may find relevant and helpful when answering the questions if you wish to. It is important, however, you register your insistence that Home Farm and Yew Tree are removed from the draft NP.

1. Scale of Development Coming to Warminster

Current known developments planned for Warminster to 2042 (recently increased from 2038) include:

  • Jubilee Gardens (WUE): up to 1,550 houses (initial phase 1,000 to 2026)
  • Cley Hill View (Not part of the WUE): 227 houses
  • Ashley Coombe: 77 houses (speculative)
  • Westbury Road: 205 houses (speculative)
  • Home Farm: 135 houses
  • Grovelands: 68 houses
  • Total: 2,262 new houses
    (This does not include small developments or infill.)

2. Population Impact Office of National Statistics (ONS) average household size in 2024 was 2.35 people. Therefore:

  • Current population of Warminster: 18,000
  • 2,262 homes = approx. 5,300 new residents
  • This represents  almost a one-third increase in Warminster’s population.

Where are the new residents coming from?

3. Traffic and Cars Based on 2024 National Travel Survey data, 100% of new households represent 34% with two or more cars, 44% with one car and 22% with no cars.

The conservative estimate is Warminster by 2042 will have to contend with an estimated 2,525 additional cars.

Traffic congestion is already severe at peak times, especially:

  • East Street
  • Boreham Road
  • Woodcock Road
  • Westbury Road
  • Weymouth Street
  • Particularly around school opening and closing times

4. Education Capacity Department for Education averages show 2,262 new houses generate:

  • 566 new primary school places
  • 294 new secondary school places

No clear plan exists for where or how these places will be provided.

5. Medical and Other Infrastructure There is no confirmed plan showing how increased demand for:

  • GP, dental and medical services (Although note the Avenue Surgery is extending into the old Boots Pharmacy apparently)
  • Schools
  • Roads and traffic management
  • Emergency services
  • Shops and employment

will be met. Responsibility is repeatedly deferred to external county or national bodies, without evidence of delivery, cost or completion.

6. Water, Sewage, and Flooding Based on 2024 ONS averages, 5,300 new residents will require:

·       Over 791,000 litres of additional water per day

·       Which produces over 713,000 litres of wastewater per day.

·       Pumping stations in Warminster are already at capacity and discharge into the River Wylye during high-flow events.

·       Flood storage areas downstream are already operating beyond capacity.

 7. Impact on the River Wylye

The River Wylye is a globally recognised rare chalk stream that is hydrologically linked to the River Avon (a Special Area of Conservation) and is already highly phosphate sensitive.

Despite this, the draft NP does not demonstrate that there is a solution for the problem, that mitigation will be in place and wastewater systems can cope with the additional 713,000 litres of wastewater per day produced. This does not cater for infill and brownfield development.

Further, the draft plan fails to show legal environmental protections are being met.

8. Loss of Green Space

The draft NP emphasises protecting green spaces, yet site selection directly undermines this.

For example, Home Farm, as the principal site selected, is a historic, beautiful, rural site outside the settlement boundary and is not required based on current the Wiltshire housing need figures of 90 houses published in September 2023. It is also believed the medieval village of Boreham was founded on Home Farm fields.

Development would permanently affect countryside views, wildlife, recreation and wellbeing for those in East Warminster.

9. Highway Safety

The proposed Home Farm access is just after a blind bend on Boreham Road (leaving Warminster), which is highly dangerous and many accidents have occurred in recent years close to the proposed entrance.

For this reason, the same proposed access was rejected by both Highways and a Planning Inspector in 2019, with the additional comment that a significant wall will need to be demolished. This in turn would have a detrimental effect on the historic vista of Boreham Road.

10. Concerns About the NP Process

The process to date has raised concerns regarding poor communication with residents (who knew of the survey?), ignoring earlier survey results (61% of respondents opposed Home Farm inclusion), limited engagement with major local employers (Bishopstrow Hotel and GEA) and reliance on an unaccountable consultant at public expense costing an estimated £33,000 so far (£16,000 from Warminster Council tax!)

Are we, the residents, getting value for money from our council taxes?

Finally If You Are Short on Time

If you do not wish to answer every question, you may also wish to include a statement such as:

If the draft Neighbourhood Plan continues to include site selection, which I am strongly against, I will consider whether the Town Council has genuinely listened to residents. This in turn may well affect my support for the Plan at referendum.

To access the draft Town NP please highlight, then right click and open with this link.  

To access the NP survey, please highlight the following link, then right click and open with  https:www.smartsurvey.co.uk/s/3KNZGD/.

As David Attenborough has stated on his recent programme: Make space for nature and a greener town is a healthier town.

Any problems, confusion or concerns don’t hesitate to contact us.

EBBRAG.

info@ebbrag.com
www.ebbrag.com

Housing Site Allocation Must Be Removed From The Draft Warminster Neighbourhood Plan or EBBRAG Will Encourage Warminster Residents To Vote Against The Plan

Tuesday 27th January 2026

From the EBBRAG website and Facebook page:

A message from EBBRAG –

Housing Site Allocation Must Be Removed From The Draft Warminster Neighbourhood Plan or EBBRAG will encourage Warminster residents to vote against the Plan

Several EBBRAG Committee members attended the Town Council (TC) Extraordinary Full Council meeting on 19 January 2026, where councillors voted to move the draft Neighbourhood Plan (NP) to the next stage of consultation (called Regulation 14).

This stage invites residents to comment on the draft plan through a public survey, which was released yesterday. Completed surveys must be submitted by midnight on 23 March 2026. Your response matters — this is one of the few opportunities for residents to influence what happens next. The survey close date allows a more measured response.

What concerns us:

The draft plan includes site selection for new housing on top of the significant further development in Warminster without the necessary infrastructure in place.

Wiltshire Council’s own document, Planning for Warminster (September 2023), states that only 90 additional houses are required up to 2038, due largely to phosphate pollution affecting the River Wylye.

Despite this, the draft plan supports building more homes. Why not accept infill of 10 houses a year until 90 have been achieved rather than decimate a beautiful, unique and historic rural area on the outskirts of Warminster and outside the settlement boundary?

What happened at the meeting:

Before the meeting, EBBRAG sent a detailed letter to every Town Council member, setting out logical reasons why site selection should be removed from the plan. Unfortunately, the letter was not referenced at all during the meeting.

During the meeting, councillors asked few meaningful questions concerning the content of the plan and did not debate any aspect.

The Steering Group lead made the following claims, which we believe are misleading:

The plan will stop speculative development for five years.

This does not address what happens after five years, nor does it explain how ongoing or proposed speculative developments including Ashley Coombe, Westbury Road, Cley Hill View, Groveland’s + Jubilee Gardens (totalling around 2,144 homes) will be controlled.

The Town Council Clerk has confirmed that speculative planning applications submitted to Wiltshire Council fall outside the Neighbourhood Plan and will be considered through the normal Wiltshire Council process, not the Town Council.

The Town Council can impose conditions on selected sites.

In reality, the Town Council has no power to enforce these conditions. Past experience in Warminster shows that when developers fail to meet conditions, enforcement often falls away. The draft plan for Home Farm even mirrors the layout and access point of a planning application that was totally rejected in 2019 by a Government Appointed Planning Inspector.

What EBBRAG is doing:

EBBRAG is preparing guidance to help residents complete the survey effectively and will share this shortly. You are, of course, welcome to complete the survey independently, but we believe that using the evidence we have gathered can help strengthen your response.

EBBRAG has made contact with residents from Ashley Coombe and Westbury Road, with the intention of combining our objections to further development without supporting infrastructure into a very strong opposition.

Please feel free to contact us through our website www.ebbrag.com or through the EBBRAG Facebook page www.facebook.com/groups/389576351110879 or Instagram www.instagram.com/ebbrag_warminster/ if you have any concerns or worries. You can also email EBBRAG: info@ebbrag.com

Our aim:

Our goal is simple: to remove site selection from the draft Neighbourhood Plan, preventing further large-scale development until adequate infrastructure is in place. In addition, phosphate pollution and flooding are taken seriously and controlled or mitigated.

While we cannot advise residents how to vote in any future referendum, and we firmly believe there is much good in the plan, if site selection remains in the plan, EBBRAG may encourage residents to vote against it.

EBBRAG

email: info@ebbrag.com

website: www.ebbrag.com

“Political Charade” – Warminster Town Council Extraordinary Meeting

Friday 23rd January 2026

From the EBBRAG website – www.ebbrag.com – EBBRAG’s report of the Full Council Meeting of Warminster Town Council, last Monday evening, which saw the launch of the Warminster Neighbourhood Plan 2 for public consultation:

Warminster Town Council Extraordinary Meeting, Monday 19th January 2026

“Unfortunately last night’s Town Council meeting was no more than the political charade we could have expected it to be. Blind and ill-informed compliance by most of the councillors to an agenda set by an influential few, is how it came across to me.” – an angry comment from a member of the public after the meeting.

Warminster Town Council held an Extraordinary meeting on 19th January 2026, to vote on progressing the Neighbourhood Plan to Regulation 14. In plain English this means a discussion of whether the current process moves to its next phase of a formal public consultation on the draft plan document.

You may have missed the widespread publicity of this meeting, as there was none! They put the agenda on their Council agendas/minutes page one week ahead but that was all, they didn’t publicise that the meeting was taking place. So that’s why only 17 adult members of the public attended. Could it be the Town Council didn’t really want any public there?

Nick Parker, spoke as someone who has lived in Warminster for 28 years. He highlighted the exceptional level of housing development Warminster is undergoing and how the further 90 houses at Home Farm are not justified and indeed against Wiltshire Council Planning documents for Warminster. Warminster is already meeting its housing requirement and needs a coherent strategy for infrastructure to catch up. Will the inclusion of unsustainable housing development on the fields of Home Farm and elsewhere be the single issue which causes residents to reject the Plan altogether?

Tania Peacock also spoke about factual errors the Council had made regarding land in the Cannimore/Folly Lane area owned by her family, which has been classified as Local Green Space within the plan. She highlighted how the plan does not even get the name of this area correct, due democratic process has not been followed, there are spurious claims that there is public support for this land to be open space from a survey which was for a totally different purpose, the space is in fact a private fenced field and not as claimed an open space and the Council claims to have agreement from the landowner which is disputed and which the Council cannot evidence ever happened.

Alastair Wright flagged how there is a legal requirement for Wiltshire Council to produce more detailed flood risk assessments before they allocate any houses in Warminster outside of the West Urban Extension but this has not been done. There are sewage overflows currently on Woodcock Road and Boreham Road which suggest the sewage system in that area is at capacity, but this is not recognised within Warminster’s flood risk assessments. Mr Wright also highlighted problems with the classification of the open spaces and rural buffer corridors within the plan. Finally, he highlighted that the Home Farm site is outside the settlement boundary and as the maps cut off at this point, the important historic setting in that area is also excluded.

Jeremy Kelton, who has lived beside the river Wylye for 14 years, also highlighted issues around flooding and how building on Home Farm would remove its ability to act like a flood plain in winter and force the groundwater elsewhere. He reminded the council that we have had two “once in a generation” floods in a decade in 2014 and 2024.

Nick Tilt who lives near to the proposed entrance to the Home Farm site and whose family have lived in Warminster for over 60 years, outlined how the inclusion of Home Farm would be contrary to a number of national planning policies. In particular 109 which relates to road safety given the development’s need for a westbound right turn ghost lane on a road which is already too narrow at that point. The resultant damage to several mature trees, a length of unique historic wall and removing the rural character with suburban lighting. The harm to Bishopstrow Conservation Area also being contrary to 135c in the NPPF.

But the Councillors seemed not to be listening. They didn’t appear to want to listen. They were determined to proceed with Regulation 14 and put the draft out for consultation, yet they know it has flaws and contains things unnecessary and not wanted. They must know the flaws put acceptance of the Plan in jeopardy and if the Plan is rejected it will cost £1,000s in taxpayers’ money.

One EBBRAG supporter commented afterwards, “I was of a view our Councillors didn’t take on board the speeches from the public, particularly the selection of Home Farm for housing allocation, and it seemed not one of the Councillors had anything to say about the matter.

They could have called for a postponement, held a discussion, and then said they would pull things out or make amendments before putting the Plan out for consultation. They didn’t.

Even though the speakers raised many issues and in some cases calling out major flaws in the process, the Council made no comment or held no proper debate among themselves about what was said. Councillor Andrew Davis (who is not only a Warminster East Ward Councillor but also a Wiltshire Councillor) put several questions to the Mayor, Cllr Andrew Cooper who was chairing the meeting but I don’t think anyone present fully understood what Councillor Davis was trying to say. It was notable that when speeches from the public were being made, at least one Councillor seemed more occupied messing about with his phone than listening to voters.

When the Chair asked Councillors to speak, there was a deadly silence to begin with. Only a couple of Councillors commented and their comments were really questions. The speeches from the public made important points about the river Wylye and raised serious concerns with how flood risk is being dealt with in Warminster. Flooding is not being recorded at a Wiltshire level. Even though some Councillors have professed an interest in this area, they had absolutely nothing to say at this meeting.

The Council also failed to mention that one of the Neighbourhood Plan Steering Group has resigned, Could it be that this person cannot support a draft plan that allocates unsustainable housing development? Why hasn’t the public been told?

Our Councillors always say they are available to chat, but what do they actually do? the meeting was just an exercise for the Council to tick boxes and go sailing ahead despite the consequences.

We urge Warminster residents to vote against this flawed Neighbourhood Plan to show “the influential few” that Warminster has had enough of large scale over-development of our town.

Draft minutes of the meeting including text of the speeches submitted is on the Warminster Town Council Website. We include text of the speeches below. Al Wright spoke from his extensive knowledge of the issues without verbatim notes.

Nick Parker spoke as a resident of Warminster for 28 years.

While there is much that is positive in the draft Neighbourhood Plan, the site selection is a serious mistake. If left unchanged, it risks the Plan being rejected by residents, wasting public money and damaging the Council’s reputation.

Warminster is already experiencing an exceptional level of housing development including Grovelands, Cley Hill View, Ashley Coombe, Westbury Road and Jubilee Gardens. In that context, the proposed 90 houses at Home Farm and two at the Yew Tree are neither required nor justified. Their inclusion risks becoming the single issue that causes residents to reject the Plan altogether.

There are clear signs that supply has outpaced demand. Homes at Jubilee Gardens are not selling, with councils elsewhere now purchasing them for their own needs. This shows that Warminster is already meeting its housing requirement.

The scale of development is staggering, yet it is proceeding without a coherent strategy for infrastructure, roads, healthcare, schools and drainage. The Neighbourhood Plan is intended to prevent speculative development, yet it will not be adopted until the end of this year, leaving Warminster exposed in the meantime.

Wiltshire Council’s Planning for Warminster document of September 2023, on which this Plan should be based, clearly explains why housing numbers in Warminster were restricted. That reasoning remains valid.

The draft inclusion of Home Farm and the Yew Tree fails to address the reasons these sites were rejected by a Planning Inspector in 2020. Nothing material has changed since then, and housing need is being met elsewhere.

This decision rests with you. Local feeling about Home Farm has been seriously underestimated, and approving this Plan unchanged risks losing both a valued part of Warminster and public confidence in the Neighbourhood Plan itself.

We have already seen irreversible damage to the west of Warminster at Jubilee Gardens and Cley Hill View. Please do not repeat that mistake in the east, for development that is simply not needed.

Speech by Tania Peacock

Good evening. I am Tania Peacock. I am here because Warminster Town Council is at a crossroads between the law and a documented falsehood. You are now formally “on notice” that the evidence for LGS 1.1 Folly Lane is built on factual errors that cannot be carried into the 2026 Plan.

The Clerk previously stated that if errors were shown, the designation could be removed. I am presenting five fatal evidence failures:

  1. The Petition: The Council relies on 729 names as “support.” However, this petition was originally gathered to object to a separate housing development. To repurpose those signatures to tell a Government Inspector they represent real support for a Local Green Space designation is legally misleading.
  2. The Law: This site was never in the original draft plan. The Council bypassed the mandatory 6 week public consultation required to add it, meaning the public never had a legal window to object.
  3. The Consent: The previous Examiner was told the landowners agreed. Your own FOI response now admits the Council holds no records of contact with my father. You cannot claim “agreement” with a resident you never spoke to.he Description: The Council described a private, fenced field as “Rehobath open space for all by the water.” This was a factual inaccuracy regarding the land’s physical state, designed to meet criteria that the land does not fulfill.
  4. The Deeds: The Council calls this land “Rehobath.” I am handing over the Legal Title Deeds today which show the historical and legal identity of this site as Cannimore. Land Registry as “Land lying North of Cannimore”. The name “Rehobath” is a nickname for a neighbouring private house, it is not the name of this land. By simply “copying and pasting” a neighbour’s house name from the 2016 plan, the Council has failed in its duty of due diligence.

Furthermore, your 2023 survey is “Unsound.” Using data from people walking on a Public Footpath to justify a Green Space on a private field is a mapping error that no Inspector will accept.

It appears the Council has relied on the narrative of a third party that contradicts the Legal Deeds and the Official FOI record. A planning policy built on a neighbour’s house name instead of a Legal Deed is a Material Error of Fact.

Closing: No Independent Examiner will ignore these documented factual errors. If you vote to retain LGS 1.1 “Rehobath” Folly Lane tonight, you are knowingly adopting a flawed evidence base. To protect the integrity of the 2026 Plan and your own reputations, I ask that you remove LGS 1.1 tonight. I request that the minutes specifically record that the Legal Title Deeds have been handed to the Council tonight.

Speech by Jeremy Kelton

Although Home Farm is labelled Flood Zone 1, in reality it behaves like floodplain. In winter it holds water, it connects directly to the River Wylye, and it feeds groundwater into the river— which is how chalk streams flood.

Building here would force water elsewhere. Hard surfaces increase runoff and groundwater pressure, risks not shown on national flood maps but well known in Warminster.

All water from the town flows into the River Wylye. In 2024, residents saw the river completely change colour as phosphate-rich silt from the WUE entered this protected chalk stream.

We have now had two “once-in-a-generation” floods in a decade, in 2014 and 2024, and they are getting much worse due to climate change. In 2024 GEA’s factory in Watery Lane flooded, homes in Bishopstrow were inches from flooding, Park Cottages flooded, and Boreham roundabout became impassable to emergency vehicles and full of sewage coming down Woodcock Road.

Approving this without a full catchment-wide assessment would pass flood and pollution risk onto existing homes and a protected river.

Speech by Nick Tilt

This statement refers to the inclusion of Home Farm as a potential site for housing development within the Warminster neighbourhood plan.

There are significant highway safety concerns relating to the proposed location of the access road, required visibility splays and weight of traffic arising from the development of Home Farm.

This development would result in an unacceptable impact on highway safety, contrary to NPPF paragraph 109. Boreham Road is constrained rural road with blind bends and high vehicle speeds, carrying cars, buses, HGV and military traffic. There have been at least five recorded accidents in recent years within close proximity to the existing Home Farm lane.

The access depends on the creation of a westbound right-turn ghost lane on a carriageway that is already too narrow. This will necessitate carriageway widening into the conservation area, endangering the root systems of seven mature trees and a narrowing of the westbound lane at a bend further increasing risk at the most hazardous point of the road.

Achieving visibility standards would require a 30-metre splayed access cut through an existing 100-metre high stone wall, causing further harm to heritage assets which along with the road safety concerns have been key reasons for 3 previous government inspector refusals of earlier planning applications of this site.

The associated road markings and additional street lighting (the area is very dark at night reinforcing its very rural character) would result in a more suburban level of lighting which would fail to sustain or enhance the significance of the Bishopstrow Conservation Area causing clear harm to its setting and character, contrary to NPPF paragraph 135 section (c).

The above concerns relating to the development of Home Farm are not new and have been publicly available information for several years and should have been key considerations against site selection and allocation. On this basis, Home Farm should not have been included in the Warminster neighbourhood plan and any future development applications should, as they have in the past, be refused.

The scale of highway intervention required to make this access function would itself cause unacceptable highway risk and heritage harm, which is not outweighed by any public benefit.

Notes:

NPPF Paragraph 109 is the criterion used at decision-making to assess whether a proposal can be refused on transport grounds.

NPPF paragraph 135 section (c): provides the decision criteria against which proposals should be judged – including character, landscape setting, heritage, safety, and overall quality. c) be sympathetic to local character and history, including built and landscape settings.

www.ebbrag.com

An Open Letter To Warminster Town Councillors From EBBRAG

Friday 16th January 2026

An open letter written by Nick Parker, the Chairman of EBBRAG (the East Boreham Business And Residents Action Group), sent to Warminster Town Councillors on behalf of EBBRAG members:

16th January 2026

Extraordinary Town Council Meeting – Monday 19 January 2026

Good morning,

As a Town Councillor you are requested to attend an Extraordinary Town Council Meeting on Monday 19 January 2026, at which Members will be asked to approve the draft Neighbourhood Plan (NP) 2 for Regulation 14 public consultation.

We apologise for the timing of this letter; however, the issues raised are of critical importance to the ultimate acceptance of the Neighbourhood Plan by the residents of Warminster and warrant your urgent attention before any resolution is made.

East Boreham Business and Residents Action Group (EBBRAG) represents a rapidly growing body of residents opposed to development at Home Farm, East Warminster. At a public meeting held on Saturday 10 January 2026, 137 residents attended, with a further 20 apologies (including one from Cllr Davies). Dr Murrison, one East Ward councillor and two non-ward councillors were present and contributed constructively.

Since that meeting, EBBRAG’s database has expanded by 57 email contacts in a single day and continues to grow by an average of five new contacts per day. Engagement through social media has tripled in the past fortnight. The group’s membership now rivals the vote totals achieved by some councillors at the most recent Town Council election.

Opposition to development at Home Farm was unanimous. More broadly, there is overwhelming resistance to further speculative and planned development in Warminster in the absence of essential supporting infrastructure. In response, EBBRAG is now formally coordinating with other resident groups across the town who share these concerns.

While EBBRAG recognises and values the substantial work that has gone into the revised Neighbourhood Plan, the plan has been prepared in a context of limited community engagement, as reflected in the informal survey results. With 61% of respondents opposed to development at Home Farm, there is a clear and serious risk that inclusion of this site will lead to rejection of the Plan at referendum, potentially influencing wider voting behaviour.

The consequences of such an outcome would be significant both financially and reputationally for the Town Council and would undermine the considerable progress made to date.

EBBRAG firmly believes that the inclusion of Home Farm and the old Yew Tree public house is unnecessary. Warminster’s housing requirement remains relatively modest at 90 houses until 2038; the rationale for lower allocations is clearly set out in Planning for Warminster (September 2023), and housing commitments within the West Urban Extension continue to increase (for example, Cley Hill View’s 227 additional homes alongside Jubilee Gardens), with further windfall developments likely.

We therefore urge the Town Council, in the strongest but most constructive terms, to withdraw site selection from the Neighbourhood Plan review before proceeding to Regulation 14. This measured step would safeguard the integrity of the Plan and protect the extensive work already undertaken.

Removing site allocations now would also allow resident groups to focus on addressing speculative planning applications through the appropriate planning processes, rather than relying on a Neighbourhood Plan timetable that will arrive too late to prevent the applications currently emerging.

Taking this approach, consistent with the reasoning applied at Ashley Coombe, (which now faces a speculative application for 77 homes and where Westbury Road is understood to have re-emerged), would send a clear and positive message that the Town Council is listening to its residents and is prepared to act decisively in their best interests.

Thank you.
EBBRAG

Stop The Development On Home Farm ~ Public Meeting Hosted By EBBRAG

Saturday 10th January 2026

EBBRAG (the East Boreham Businesses And Residents Action Group) hosted a public meeting – Stop The Home Farm Development – at St. John’s Church, Boreham Road, Warminster, on Saturday 10th January 2026.

It was attended by 14 members of the EBBRAG Committee and 123 members of the public. There were 20 apologies.

The meeting was due to start at 2.30pm but there was a slight delay as the big number of people attending made a struggle for car-drivers to find somewhere to park. The line of cars stretched in both directions, some people having to park on the Boreham Road as far as to near the junction with Heronslade.

The meeting began with Nick Parker, the Chairman of EBBRAG, welcoming everyone before outlining the historical context of EBBRAG, what EBBRAG is trying to do, and some references to Bellway Homes, the developer who has a pre-application in processs for building houses on Home Farm.

This is what Nick Parker said:

Good afternoon.
Thank you for coming to this meeting today. My name is Nick. If my talk is not as polished as it should be please excuse me as EBBRAG received a copy of the draft Neighbourhood Plan around 1800hrs last night which has meant a rewrite of my notes into the early hours.

I would like to start by thanking the Parochial Parish Council of St. John’s for allowing EBBRAG to use the church as a community facility today – it is most kind and thank you.

I intend to give a brief time line of events, Home Farm land, what EBBRAG are trying to achieve, a bit on the developer and then after input from others and any questions, I’ll sum up with how you can help.

EBBRAG
East Boreham Residents Action Group was born in 1997 and played a prominent part to enable three Planning Inspectors to conclude Home Farm was unsuitable for development:
In 1997 when an Inspector selected Victoria Roadd rather than Home Farm.
In 2012 when Wiltshire Council and a Planning Inspector selected the Warminster West Urban Extension for development after rejecting Home Farm and confirming it was outside the town settlement boundary.
In 2016 the first Warminster Neighbourhood Plan was approved excluding this site, even after representation by a developer.
In 2020 a Planning Inspector concluded that the site should be removed from the Wiltshire Local Plan to 2038. The developer withdrew their application rather than have it refused.

The Inspectors main concerns were:

Access from Boreham Rd, including loss of ancient wall setting character for
Warminster.

Affect on Heritage designated and non-designated assets, including Bishopstrow House Hotel & Spa, Battlesbury Hill Camp, King Barrow, etc.

Surface and ground water contributing to phosphate pollution levels in the River Wylye.

Nothing has changed since that finding of three Planning Inspectors or the initial Warminster Neighbourhood Plan.

Bellway Homes started talking to Warminster Town Council about Home Farm in 2021, without the knowledge of local residents; and the Warminster Town Neighbourhood Plan rewrite started in 2022. The team to execute the rewrite comprised Town Councillors and volunteers from the community, none of whom have any qualification in planning. Because of their lack of knowledge, they rely on one planning consultant for advice (paid for by taxpayers’ money); no one qualified is checking the advice he gives. He advised that local landowners should be invited to register an interest in developing their
land. This was apparently to stop speculative development in Warminster for 5 years – ?

Fifteen sites came forward and three were selected – Home Farm, Ashley Coombe and old Yew Tree pub. I have to say the analysis of the three sites is very suspect. East Boreham Business and Residents Action Group was then resurrected to include local businesses, one being one of the largest employers in Warminster (Bishopstrow House Hotel And Spa).

Ashley Coombe was almost immediately withdrawn from the process as apparently “the developer” changed his proposal but no new site was selected to replace Ashley Coombe. A Council informal survey asked Warminster residents their views on the down selected sites. 61% of respondents stated “no”to developing Home Farm, with 18% as “may-be’s”. This provoked no reassessment of site selection and they continued in conversation to talk about Home Farm.

It is worthy to note at this stage Wiltshire Council through their own Planning for Warminster document (September 2023) only required 90 houses to be built in Warminster until 2038. Their main concern is the current inability to deal with phosphate pollution in the River Wylye. The river is a chalk stream and a designated Site of Special Scientific Interest which is the basic building block of nature conservation legislation. Close development is one of the major
sources of pollution.

Wiltshire Council also withdrew Home Farm as a possible future development site based on historical evidence.

Warminster Town Council and the Warminster Neighbourhood Plan rewrite group have not mitigated or understood either of these points – Why?

In mid-2025 Bellway Homes submitted a pre-application to Wiltshire Council to develop Home Farm with 135 houses. As yet, they have not submitted an application but at their recent Public Consultation they stated it will be soon, as they are frustrated with the time the Neighbourhood Plan process is taking. If it is submitted before the Neighbourhood Plan is ratified, which is highly
likely, it means it becomes a speculative development application.

Last night EBBRAG had first sight of the draft Neighbourhood Plan – Home Farm is included but the conditions of development and numbers of houses are very different to the Bellway Homes proposed development. EBBRAG has not had the time to analysis this draft plan fully.

Lastly, Ashley Coombe has now had a speculative development application submitted by Rubix for 77 houses. We are talking to the organisers of the Ashley Coombe development protest group to combine opposition.

This means that two speculative development applications are now possible despite the claims of the Town Council that allocating housing in the Neighbourhood Plan will prevent such things happening.


An application (Cley Hill View) near Jubilee Gardens off Victoria Road has just surfaced for a further 227 houses.

This makes a total of a further speculative 439 houses on top of the West Warminster Urban Extension of approx. 800+ houses making up to 1239+ new houses for Warminster. How many more are in the pipeline because of the invite to landowners?

At this point, Nick Parker, with the help of Nick Tilt, stepped into the nave to explain the illustrations and diagrams of the Home Farm site, referencing boundaries, land ownership, and access to the proposed development.

Nick Parker then returned to the lectern and the microphone, to say:

What is EBBRAG is doing?

a) Stop purely residential development in a uniquely rural part of Warminster, which is outside the settlement boundary and rejected by Wiltshire Council as a development site.

b) Stop development impacting on already groaning town infrastructure including traffic, medical care, schooling, emergency services – EBBRAG has used National Statistics calculations for most support services for 1239+ houses, e.g. cars per house, a further 1500 cars in Warminster; Education another 325 primary and 169 secondary places, i.e. a further 494 school places!

c) Stop development generating surface and ground water following routes from the hills to the River Wylye through Home Farm land and causing flooding in areas which already flood on a regular basis such as Bishopstrow Roundabout and Home Farm and Grange Lane. In addition, contributing to dangerous rises in theil river level downstream for housing.

d) Stop development through strengthening our arguments with facts by employing experts, e.g.

i) A Conservationist looked at the impact on heritage designated and non-
designated assets around Home Farm and the report has been sent to Wiltshire Council.

ii) We have completed an aerial Topographical Survey to chart water flow from
Battlesbury Hill to the River Wylye. This shows areas around Boreham/Bishopstrow prone to flooding including Bellways’ proposed entrance to the site.

iii) An expert in river management to show already polluted and high levels of water in the River Wylye which will get worse through Climate Change and massive close development. We have sent an initial letter to Wiltshire Council concerning flooding in the east of Warminster and had a response.

iv) A Highways’ expert to show the current proposed entrance is dangerous and non-viable just after a blind bend on Boreham Road. The entrance was rejected in 2020 by Wiltshire Highways’ Department – why are they looking at it again?

iv) Finally Planning experts to show additional houses, on top of the proposed West Warminster Urban Extension, are not needed. It is speculative greed not need!

Bellway Homes

In the 2025 Bellway Annual Report they state they have nationwide a total of 94,944 development plots (houses) with either planning permission, awaiting planning permission or sites held under option to build! Why do they need a further 135 houses at Home Farm? Warminster does not need more houses, but the call for development sites by our Council has awoken the greedy.

There is a Facebook page called Bellway Homes Unhappy Customers (Hellway Homes) with over 3000 members who are complaining about the quality of their new Bellway homes – leaking roofs, mould growing in the attics, failure of items such as stairs, loos, leaks, etc. We are talking to the organisers of the Facebook page. What are councils doing about poor-quality building? The Town Council /Wiltshire Council will claim it is not their problem after approval is given.

The UK is currently one of the world’s most biodiverse-depleted countries. Urbanisation is a known driver of the nature crisis. This means that the planning system, which regulates development in the UK, plays a crucial role in protecting nature from harm.

However, in the summer of 2024, 42 new developments across five local planning authorities were audited in England to see whether developers were complying with these ecological conditions on the ground. Only 53% of the ecological features that should have been there were actually present. When street trees were removed, this fell to only 34% of what a developer said they would do!

I raise this as Bellway Homes has faced significant fines recently due to various
infractions, including: £600,000 for destroying a bat breeding site in Greenwich, which was the largest fine ever issued by an English court in relation to a wildlife crime and a further total of £100,115 for illegal water connections at two development sites and for dumping contaminated
soil on a site in Northumberland.

The point is these fines are very unusual as Councils do not normally follow up on what developers promise and then do not deliver or check the quality of the finished article! Look at Boreham Mead! I leave you to make your own minds up about who our Council has been in communication with without our knowledge!

Nick Parker then invited Gwynfor Evans to give a short history of the Warminster Neighbourhood Plan Process as experienced by EBBRAG:

After climbing up the steps to the pulpit, Gwyn said:

The Neighbourhood Plan as we have experienced it

Good afternoon,
My name is Gwyn Evans, my wife Anne, and I live on Home Farm Lane. The character of our town is a product of its people, the built environment and the sheer beauty of its surrounding landscape and historic setting. Any changes to those key elements should be done in a carefully considered manner with the
avoidance of harm wherever possible. A neighbourhood plan ought to be an ideal vehicle to manage sustainable growth our town. We live in an age where we are frequently encouraged to express an opinion even if we have no
relevant experience or knowledge. I shall attempt to avoid that trap and share with you in an honest way, our experiences of our first encounter with a neighbourhood Plan.

Communication and consultation
My story begins with me seeing a post by a local resident expressing concern that a Warminster Neighbourhood Plan Consultation was live, with only two weeks remaining for residents to respond. Very quickly, my wife and I spoke to neighbours, the people running Bishopstrow Hotel and residents along Boreham Road, including Nick Parker, who we knew had been past Chair of EBBRAG. It was quickly evident that no-one we spoke to knew anything about this survey.

In a matter of days EBBRAG had reformed, designed a leaflet and distributed hundreds to residents living close to Home Farm. At this point, it genuinely felt like we were playing catch up! The Town Council had already had detailed discussions with land promoters and developers, and employed consultants who had assisted them in shortlisting sites for potential housing development. We were the last to know!

At this point an original FIFTEEN SITES FOR CONSIDERATION HAD ALREADY BEEN REDUCED TO THREE, HOME FARM being one of them.

Many good practice guides state that effective community engagement should be in place before public money is spent on the services of private consultants. Opportunity missed!

EBBRAG members have designed, paid for and distributed over 2,000 leaflets to our local community in Warminster, we have a website and a strong social media presence. Was a leaflet drop like Bellway’s not something the Town Council could have done?

Concerns over site selection
There are 14 members of the Neighbourhood Plan Steering group , comprising five Councillors and nine volunteers. To date, the Town Council has not been forthcoming about its framework and selection process for securing volunteers for such a pivotal role. My view would be that as far as possible, this group should be as representative as possible of a broad cross section of Warminster residents.

Site selection should be fairly straightforward in terms of a process:
Technical assessment criteria – a bit like buying a car. You apply the same criteria to each car you are considering, so that you can make a comparative
assessment to decide which model has the most to offer. This does not appear to have been done effectively during the site assessment process. The
same criteria were not applied to all of the sites under consideration, for example some sites were considered under one criteria which is not even referred to for another site, even though equally applicable.

It is also evident that some of the consultant’s advice was ignored for some sites, e.g. flooding issues were cited by the consultants in relation to Home Farm yet there is NO mention of it in the notes produced by the Steering Group!

Shortcomings in the democratic process/duplicity
EBBRAG were invited to a meeting in August 2025 to discuss the outcome of the informal survey of the three sites selected and to give us the opportunity to raise our concerns.

We were assured that the community would be consulted “at every stage” of the Neighbourhood Plan process.

We were told that building on Home Farm land WOULD happen and our only option to effect positive change was “to get behind the Neighbourhood Plan”.

WAS this a democratic process? OR A FOREGONE CONCLUSION?
The outcome appeared to have already been decided before a range of democratic processes which are normally part of the overall process had been completed, i.e. public consultation once the draft plan is ready – pretty much where we are now

oversight by Wiltshire County Council

public referendum

This is the crux of our issues.

Question put to the Town Council:

“If the developer elected to play the system by submitting a ‘speculative application,’ would they then be outside the Neighbourhood Plan process?”

Response “I can’t really speculate on the scenario you have put forward.”

The Minutes of a Warminster Town Council meeting on 8th July, obtained through a Freedom of Information request, revealed that the Town
Council already knew Bellway were ready to submit a formal pre- application bid with Wiltshire Council. Yet they elected not to share that with us. It is obvious that the Town Council had knowledge of what Bellway were doing. At their “drop-in consultation event” Bellway were quite open about their involvement with the Town Council.

Nick Parker then invited Jonathan Walker, of Bishopstrow House Hotel & Spa, to speak about the implications of Home Farm development for Bishopstrow Hotel & Spa.

Jonathan said:

Good afternoon.
My name is Jonathan Walker, Managing Director of Bishopstrow Hotel & Spa, thank you for the opportunity to speak to you, I appreciate it. We have owned Bishopstrow Hotel for the past four and a half years, and today, as part of
EBBRAG, I am speaking on behalf of a local business that is directly affected by this proposal.

For those who may not know, Bishopstrow Hotel sits immediately adjacent to the proposed housing development site. Over the last four years, we have invested very heavily in Bishopstrow. We have refurbished the guest rooms, public areas and spa, and carried out extensive work across the grounds,
including the river garden. This has not been cosmetic investment — it has been a long-term commitment to the area.

When we purchased Bishopstrow, we employed 35 people. Today, we employ over 100 full-time and part-time staff, making us the third-largest employer in the town. The majority of our team live locally in Warminster and nearby towns such as Westbury and Frome. Bishopstrow is not just a hotel; it is a significant local employer and contributor to the local economy.

What we offer our guests is peace, tranquillity, and a true Wiltshire experience. Guests come to enjoy the historic Georgian house, the beautiful grounds, and the surrounding countryside. They come to walk the local landscape, to enjoy the views towards the hills and historic settlements, and to explore nearby attractions such as Longleat, Stourhead and Stonehenge. Many of our guests bring their dogs specifically to enjoy these walks and open spaces. This
sense of calm and connection with nature is central to why people choose Bishopstrow.

The spa is absolutely critical to our future. All of our spa members live locally. They use the gym, sauna, steam room and indoor pool — but what they value most is the outdoor spa experience: the external pool, the grounds, and the sense of privacy and quiet.

We are currently investing a significant sum to further develop these outdoor spa areas. This includes refurbishing the external pool, adding a hydrotherapy pool and an outdoor sauna.

Going forward, Bishopstrow will be even more strongly positioned as a place to reconnect with nature. On land directly next to the proposed development site, we plan to extend our art installations for guests and local residents to enjoy.
Importantly, our grounds are open to the local community. We actively encourage local people to walk through the river garden and explore the estate. Bishopstrow is part of this community – not separate from it.

Economically, our contribution goes far beyond direct employment. We bring visitors into the area who spend money in local shops, restaurants and attractions. We also make a deliberate effort to use local suppliers and contractors wherever possible.

Our concerns about this development are therefore very real and very specific.

First, our spa grounds sit next to the proposed construction access road. Construction traffic, noise, fumes, lighting and disruption would severely damage the guest and member experience – the very thing people come to us for.

Second, once built, the development would permanently affect noise levels, light pollution, traffic volumes and, critically, the views from the hotel and spa. These views are not incidental – they are part of the product we sell.

Third, Bishopstrow is a Grade II listed Georgian building set within historic grounds. The estate includes multiple Grade II listed structures, historic walls, and three protected scheduled monuments, including King Barrow. This is a heritage landscape of county importance.

It is also important to note that in the past, Bishopstrow Hotel and Spa was explicitly cited as a key reason why housing development at Home Farm should not proceed. We are a recognised heritage asset. We have not moved. We are still here. And we still object.

Let me be clear: I am not opposed to housing development in principle. I fully understand the national need for more housing. But I do believe in responsible housing, and I do not believe this proposal is responsible. The scale, location and impact of this development would cause lasting harm to a unique
rural and historic setting. We need our council to work harder to identify sites that do not undermine one of the most beautiful parts of our county.

Like others have said today, I also question the sheer number of houses being forced onto this area.

So, I oppose this development as a business owner, but also as a neighbour and a custodian of this landscape. Bishopstrow is a special place – one that I believe is being undervalued by local decision-makers. Once places like this are damaged, they cannot be restored. Once historic landscapes are lost,
they are lost forever. We have a responsibility to stand against irresponsible development – not just for ourselves, but for future generations.

Thank you.

As Jonathan returned to his seat the audience applauded. It seems there was a lot of love in the room for Bishopstrow Hotel & Spa.

Nick Parker then invited Nick Tilt, who lives adjacent the B3414 road at Boreham, in the long inhabited family home, to speak about highway concerns and traffic on Boreham Road, something he knows about very well.

Nick said:

There are significant highway safety concerns relating to the proposed access road, visibility splays,required for development on Home Farm, and prevailing vehicle speeds on Boreham Road, which is subject to blind bends and carries a high volume and wide mix of traffic including cars, buses, HGVs, articulated lorries, and military vehicles.

Although the speed limit at the proposed access point is 30/40 mph, observed vehicle speeds frequently exceed these limits in both directions. While a 2017 traffic survey concluded that accident patterns would not be affected by the proposed development, there have been at least five recorded traffic incidents in recent years in close proximity to the proposed access, including collisions involving military vehicles, parked vehicles, and vulnerable road users. These incidents raise serious concerns regarding the suitability of this location for a new vehicular access.

The proposed access would be formed at the existing Home Farm entrance and would require the introduction of a right-turn centre ghost lane to protect westbound traffic turning right into the development. This would materially alter the character of Boreham Road at this point through extensive road markings that would result in harm to the setting and character of Bishopstrow Conservation Area.

In accordance with UK highways ghost lane junction design guidelines, each traffic lane, including the ghost lane, must be a minimum of 3.0 metres wide, requiring a total carriageway width of 9.0 metres. The existing carriageway at this location is too narrow and would need to be widened southwards into the conservation area. This would likely result in unacceptable harm to the root protection areas of the seven magnificent mature trees along the southern boundary. It would also cause a severe narrowing of the westbound lane at the point it approaches the driveway and 100 year old beech hedge of 202 Boreham Road and the bend near Boreham ManorH ouse, further exacerbating highway safety concerns.

Compliance with visibility requirements would also necessitate the formation of a splayed access through the existing heritage stone wall. Based on Wiltshire highways previously accepted drawings, approximately 30 metres of this historic wall would need to be demolished and rebuilt to achieve the required visibility splays. The associated ghost lane would extend approximately 55 metres west and 85 metres east of Home Farm Lane, almost to the entrance of Bishopstrow House Hotel and would likely require additional street lighting along its full length, resulting in a significant level of urbanising of this sensitive rural and conservation area setting.

Finally, 2021 Census data indicates an average car ownership of 1.23 vehicles per
household, equating to approximately 170 additional vehicles accessing Boreham Road from the development. This would place additional strain on an already congested western approach to Warminster, particularly during peak periods, and does not account for additional traffic movements resulting from deliveries, visitors, taxis, or other service vehicles.

For these reasons, the proposal raises substantial concerns in relation to highway safety, conservation impact, and the suitability of the access arrangement, and is therefore considered unacceptable. And it’s not just us who share these concerns!

In 2020, expert witness statements from Wiltshire Council (South) Conservation Officer and the Government appointed Planning Inspectorate concluded the following against the then proposed development of the Home Farm site and nothing has changed since their reports:

The wall has a “strong” street presence. A splayed opening (and associated highways works, including the creation of a ghost island and right turning lane) would create a much more suburban character and erode the attractive linear qualities of the wall as well as involve the loss of historic fabric. The current rural character is further reinforced by the modest number of street lights. The area is very dark at night, reinforcing the very rural character of the area. – Jocelyn Sage MSc, BSc(Hons), PG Dip TP, IHBC, Conservation Officer, Wiltshire Council (South).

“To provide access to the developable part of the site would require a new access off Boreham Road. This would include the loss of a significant stretch of an existing high wall that is important to the character of the street and setting of the conservation area. The access road would also need to run through the southern part of the site, potentially having a detrimental impact on the setting of heritage assets. Even if similar measures to those described for sites
H2.4 and H2.6 were considered, I am not convinced that the inevitable change in character would not result in unacceptable harm.” – Steven Lee BA(Hons) MA MRPTI, an Inspector appointed by the Secretary of State.

Nick Parker then invited the final speaker Jeremy Kelton, whose home is on a bank of the River Wylye, to speak about the River Wylye and flooding issues.

Jeremy said:

The stretch of the Wylye below Boreham Mill is where all the water flows from Warminster now end up. That stretch therefore picks up FULL effects of all the new building because of:

1. the loss of the floodplain
2. all the new hard standing which leads to fast run-off
3. domestic water brought into the catchment from elsewhere.

We believe that this BUILDING had a significant effect on flooding in Jan 2024 [river colour].

Also CLIMATE CHANGE is creating flooding:
The Govt can now measure the effects of climate change- critically, storms carry 15-20% more water.

The Government now says the number of properties at high risk of flooding could rise by 73% by mid century.

In January 2024 we witnessed floods:
1. The farm chemical factory in Watery Lane – flooded into their offices
A number of houses on river in Bishopstrow were inches from flooding.

2. Park Cottages by Boreham Mead flooded- we believe Boreham Mead was built up more, sending the water elsewhere.

3. Flooding on Boreham roundabout made it impassable to emergency vehicles.
The water was full of sewage coming down from overflows in the houses on Woodcock Road.

Also, the lack of capacity of pumping station on Boreham Road was a major factor.

HOME FARM WILL CONNECT TO THE SAME PUMPING STATION MAKING THE SITUATION WORSE.

THE REAL PROBLEM- Authorities still look at ISOLATED planning applications NOT THE CUMULATIVE EFFECTS OF ALL THE BUILDING.

WE BELIEVE THAT Wiltshire Council needs to commission a detailed study of the water movement and flood potential in Warminster BEFORE they make any planning decisions. The Environment Agency said this was necessary for any new build after the West Warminster Urban Extension, but it hasn’t happened.

Nick Parker then opened the meeting up to the floor, to allow anyone present to have their say or raise their concerns about the planning process, the Neighbourhood Plan and development on Home Farm.

Questions and comments could be summarised as:

If we need only 90 homes, why are there so many building
developments with hundreds more houses being proposed?

The developers at Jubilee Gardens are struggling to sell their
properties. Other councils are buying up properties to fill the
shortfall in housing stock in their areas.

By the time the Neighbourhood Plan is completed and
ratified, the five years’ protection against speculative building
will have almost elapsed.

Am I right in thinking we, the public, should have been consulted about the Neighbourhood Plan before the draft was written?

Westbury Road development is back on the table as it has
gone to appeal.

There are housing units on army land which could be included
in the figures for required housing allocation; increasing
military accommodation could well offset the need for more
housing (Dr Andrew Murrison, M.P.)

Does anyone know what the Labour Government’s future plans are for housing?

The Town Council does try to engage the public about local issues,
including the Neighbourhood Plan, with often disappointing
response. The Council only has a limited budget – £200,000 for the Neighbourhood Plan. I urge people to look at the Town Council and Neighbourhood Plan websites and to be “proactive”. I am against development at Home Farm (applause). When you object, you need to use “planning” reasons to underpin objections. (East Ward Town Councillor Chris Robbins).

People are not bothered until a development directly affects them.

61 homes+ have already been built in the East of Warminster, – why do we
need more?

Government policy is to blame – relaxation of the planning process. Harder to block development.

There is a huge tip in the ground underneath part of the proposed site which is full of cars and all sorts of nasty things – the land could be contaminated.

I live at The Dene and I’ve noticed lots of bats in our area.

There has been consultation about the Neighbourhood Plan. I stood with Nick Parker in the Three Horseshoes Walk, canvassing people about the Plan (Town Councillor Stacie Allensby).

Nick Tilt then stood up and made an impassioned plea: Warminster is a great place to live and bring up your children. If you are concerned about what we have raised and feel passionate about it, then you need to vote against the
Neighbourhood plan and get 10 friends/contacts who live in the are to do the same.

With the time now approaching 4.30 p.m. Nick Parker summed up the proceedings:

Nick said:

At present we need to play a waiting game as:

The draft Neighbourhood Plan process is slow and painful – at some stage we the residents of Warminster need to vote for a plan to be approved? A lot of good work has gone into the rewrite, but to stop Home Farm inclusion I will vote against its acceptance at the appropriate time – will you?

The Bellway Homes application – We need to wait for submission of application to Wiltshire Council and then react – some 13 weeks to react. EBBRAG will organise responses, including draft format of letters from residents and if necessary legal argument against the application.

We are still looking for experts with hydrology, planning, legal expertise to help save expense – if you know of anyone please get in touch.

And we will continue to update via the EBBRAG website, Facebook, and Instagram pages, and will email provided you have registered your address via the contact form on our website or through social media.

Funding
EBBRAG has now spent some £3,000.

Many of you have been very generous already and I appreciate that this time of year with the current cost of living crises mean every penny must be watched, but EBBRAG needs your financial help to employ the experts we need. There are 2 buckets at the entrance as you leave so any amount of cash however small is gratefully received.

You can also donate via the EBBRAG website: www.ebbrag.com

The EBBRAG Lloyds Business account is audited by an independent financial expert every 6 months.

Conclusion
It is worrying the Neighbourhhood Plan has not been community led, as you have heard, nor stopped speculative development in Warminster for houses not needed. Jubilee Gardens is slowing their house building, because they cannot sell houses. Why is our Town Council therefor looking at Home Farm and other sites for a further 439 houses when Jubilee Gardens can produce the perceived requirement? The Town Council said they want to stop speculative development for 5 years – this is a joke as they have encouraged it and are now powerless to stop it!

The Town Council enthusiastically applauded in spring 2025 a Planning Inspectors refusal of Barrett homes application to build on Westbury Road with the then Mayor stating “The proposed development is not in keeping with the stylistic context or scale of the local area” and “Residents had raised concerns over sewage management, public safety, and the character of the town potentially being distorted.”

What is different about these three new sites and why is this Council pursuing these plans in isolation without the supporting infrastructure in place beforehand?

Please register and monitor the EBBRAG media sites, local news, talk to neighbours and friends, write/talk to local councillors who should be representing your views, complain if you don’t get the response you think you deserve and react when EBBRAG sends out critical information.

Thank you for listening today I hope you are as fired up as we are.

As people left the church they made donations to EBBRAG.
£211.93 in buckets; and £50 via Sum Up electronic donation.

Further donations to fighting development on Home Farm can be made via the EBBRAG website: www.ebbrag.com/donate/