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veggie
Registered: 07/25/04
Posts: 17,504
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Can mushrooms save a reservoir? [UK]
#6376178 - 12/16/06 07:19 AM (17 years, 3 months ago) |
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Reservoir legal challenge heard December 16, 2006 - BBC
An environment group will have to wait until the New Year to hear if luxury housing at two reservoirs in Cardiff can be stopped by rare mushrooms there.
A legal challenge has been mounted against the claims that Lisvane and Llanishen reservoirs are Sites of Special Scientific Interest (SSSIs).
Western Power Distribution claims the Countryside Council for Wales' decision is "premature, arbirtrary and unfair".
A High Court judge reserved judgement and his ruling is expected next year.
Lawyers for the Countryside Council for Wales (CCW) urged judge Mr Justice Andrew Collins not to quash its decision to protect what is claims is an "internationally important" fungi population on the banks of the reservoirs.
It follows a long campaign against the proposed development, which was first put forward in 2002.
Landowner Western Power Distribution wants to reduce the 60-acre Llanishen reservoir in size, and build luxury homes on its banks.
Western Power has asked the court to quash the SSSI decision and order the CCW to have the matter reconsidered
CCW counsel John Howell QC argued that Western Power's challenges were "misconceived".
Mr Howell claimed the reservoirs were designated an SSI for their "diverse assemblage of grassland fungi including over 25 species of waxcap Hygrocybe", the decline of which has been reported in the grasslands of northern and central europe.
Mr Howell said; "Outside the UK, the best waxcap grasslands are found in Scandinavia, though even there, with a longer history of intensive recording, Denmark and Norway have only one site each with 28 or more Hygrocybe - the number which this site has."
He said the Llanishen site was recorded as having the highest number of waxcap fungi species in the area, the joint fifth highest in Wales and the 10th highest in Great Britain.
He said: "The opinion that the site is special by reason of the diverse assemblage of grasslang fungi, it is know to support, is one CCW was entitled to hold having regard to the specialist advice available to it."
Mr Howell said that if any further information came to light that indicated that the site was not of special interest, then it may be denotified.
He added that the notification was confirmed by the CCW because it was considered to be of specail interest, not because of any threat from development.
He argued that any claim on predisposition on the part of CCW was "misconceived legally and factually".
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Drewwyann
Slayer of ticks
Registered: 10/30/06
Posts: 4,077
Loc: Atlantis
Last seen: 10 years, 5 months
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Re: Can mushrooms save a reservoir? [UK] [Re: veggie]
#6376294 - 12/16/06 09:30 AM (17 years, 3 months ago) |
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go fungi!
-------------------- Anyone need a glass pipe? : http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100002435158931 Love powerfully
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veggie
Registered: 07/25/04
Posts: 17,504
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Re: Can mushrooms save a reservoir? [UK] [Re: veggie]
#6499303 - 01/26/07 01:25 PM (17 years, 1 month ago) |
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Judge backs rare fungi protection January 26, 2007 - BBC
An environment group is celebrating after winning a High Court battle to protect a home to rare mushrooms, which is being proposed for new housing.
Luxury homes have been planned at two Cardiff reservoirs but grassland fungi there led to them being named Sites of Special Scientific Interest (SSSIs).
Landowners Western Power Distribution lost its challenge to the Countryside Council for Wales (CCW) decision.
But a High Court judge ruled that it was an "important site".
The decision means the plans to develop Lisvane and Llanishen reservoirs for housing have effectively been blocked, although the final decision rests with the Welsh assembly government, who are overseeing the planning process.
The CCW designated the site on the embankments of the reservoirs to protect what they claim is an internationally important population of fungi.
But Western Power Distribution claimed the CCW had acted in a way which was "premature, arbitrary and unfair."
However on hearing the evidence, Mr Justice Collins agreed with the CCW.
"The decision was in the end based on the acceptance that the number of species found in Llanishen justified the notification," he said.
"Whether or not it was the best site was not the issue. I have no doubt that the CWW was entitled to conclude as it did.
'Importance'
"There was ample evidence before it that the number of species made this an important site."
He said the site was of international importance because of the large number of fungi species on it.
Earlier in his judgment he commented that the reservoirs which were created between 1860 and 1880 were no longer needed and that the owners, Western Power, now wanted to build houses there.
However, the court had been told that the CCW decision to designate the embankments as an SSSI was based on their view that the site was the sixth best for grassland fungi in Wales and as such a site of "international importance."
They had identified 28 species of Hygrocybe (or 'waxcap') fungi on the site. This put it over the benchmark for international importance which is set at more than 22 species.
Proposals
However, Western Power said the CCW had acted too quickly in protecting this site and failed to follow the correct process.
But, the CCW argued that the site was special by reason of the wide range of grassland fungi it is known to support.
It said that if further information came to light indicating that the site was not of special interest, then it could be de-notified but until then it should be protected.
And it added that the site had been designated because it was considered to be of special interest, not because of any threat from development.
The ruling has "delighted" campaigners who have been fighting the plans to develop the area into housing, which was first put forward in 2002.
Landowner Western Power Distribution wants to reduce the 60-acre Llanishen reservoir in size, and build luxury homes on its banks.
But local people have been campaigning against the plans and city planners also rejected the proposals.
Ted Thurgood from Llanishen Reservoir Action Group said: "There will be great celebrations in north Cardiff tonight but this is not the end of the battle and we will be fighting on."
Western Power declined to comment.
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daih
Stranger
Registered: 01/27/07
Posts: 1
Last seen: 17 years, 1 month
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Re: Can mushrooms save a reservoir? [UK] [Re: Drewwyann]
#6501835 - 01/27/07 09:39 AM (17 years, 1 month ago) |
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What a joke. If you look at the plans the developers plan to keep the areas where the fungi grow and build elsewhere on the site, and although they also build houses they do create a really cool wildlife area on most of the site - so its just a bunch of nimbys using the mushrooms to keep the notsomiddleclass out of the area...
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