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Our Ref:
Planning Appeals Secretary Cabinet Office Government Offices Buck’s Road Douglas IM1 3PN
Dear Sir/Madam,
Tel: (01624) 685950 Email: [email protected]
Date 06/08/2025
PA No: 25/ 90376/ B. Proposal: Installation of 4 telegraph poles to supply fibre communications. Address: 77-87 Eary Veg and 88, 97, 98 and 99 Cronk Liauyr Tromode.
Please find a statement that sets out the position of the Department in respect of the above planning application.
The application was determined by the Planning Committee on 30th June 2025.
This statement relies upon the Planning Officer’s original report which is online and forms part of the planning file and the minutes from the Planning Committee meeting which are provided at the end of this statement.
The enclosed statement comprises the following parts:
In the event that the appointed Planning Inspector is minded to recommend that the application be approved, then consideration to conditions included at 5.0 of the Statement of Case should be assessed accordingly.
Yours sincerely,
Jason Singleton
MSc | MCD | MRTPI | AssocRICS Principal Planning Officer Planning & Building Control Directorate | (DEFA) Murray House • Mount Havelock • Douglas • Isle of Man • IM1 2SF
Appendix 1.
STATEMENT OF THE Department of Environment, Food and Agriculture Planning & Building Control Directorate
Planning statement on behalf of the Department relative to:
Installation of 4 telegraph poles to supply fibre communications to 77-87 Eary Veg and 88, 97, 98 and 99 Cronk Liauyr Tromode PA Reference: 25/90376/B
Prepared on behalf of the Planning Department by Jason Singleton Principle Planning Officer
S(4) In dealing with an application for planning approval or an application under subsection
(3), the Department shall have regard to —
There is a statutory duty to take into account the above, and while it is recognised that weight to be given is a matter for the decision maker.
That being said, it shall be noted that the Development Plan and other Adopted Policies do not have primacy as they do in the UK. The Isle of Man is also different from the UK as there is no presumption in favour of development as set out in the NPPF, and there is no 5year land supply requirement.
In this application, the most weight has been given to the Strategic Plan 2016 and the Area Plan for the East 2020 as they have been through a statutory process, which includes evidence base and public consultation process, and are adopted by Tynwald.
It is not considered that the other material considerations outweigh that set out above.
The Planning Committee Standing Orders set out the circumstances in which applications must be referred to the Committee, and the Officers’ delegations prevents their determination of an application which should be referred (based on complexity and/or level of public interest). Around a fifth of applications are referred to the Committee, each with an officer recommendation.
The Committee is charged with the duty to determine the planning applications that are referred to them. Section 10(06) of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 provides that the decision maker(s) can grant approval, grant approval with conditions or refuse permission. The decision maker(s) shall have regard to the development plan, National Policy Directives or Planning Policy Statements that are relevant, and all other material considerations. When making a decision, the balance and weight attached to policies and material considerations is a matter for the decision maker(s). It is therefore perfectly reasonable for the Planning Committee to overturn officer recommendations.
In such circumstances the role of the Case Officer is to explain the Committee’s position to the Appeal Inspector (and of course help to answer any other questions).
On the basis of the above, this report is an updated version of the officer report originally presented to committee, amended to reflect their views and comments. The original report can be viewed online along with the application details and decision notice.
In accordance with the Standing Orders the consideration included: a presentation of the application by the Case Officer; comments from DOI Highway Services; comments from a representative of the objectors (who had registered to speak).
At the committee meeting, this application was heavily attended by residents of the application site and whilst the members deliberated the merits of the proposals, the members were reminded that public opinions is not a material consideration. However, members expressed concerns with the use of timber poles and their potential to create an adverse visual impact within the context of the dwelling houses and character of the streetscape noting how they would appear.
Following further discussion, the Committee unanimously declined the approval recommendation of the Principal Planning Officer and voted to refuse the application for the following reasons;
"The proposed installation of wooden telegraph poles would result in a narrowing of the footpaths, both the poles and their associated cabling amongst the street scene of detached dwellings due to the height, size and scale of the proposals would have a negative visual impact that adversely affects the character of the street scene and would be contrary to General Policy 2 (b, c & h) of the Strategic Plan".
An extract from the Planning Committee minutes (30th June 2025) is included at Appendix 4. The full Planning Committee minutes can be viewed in the following web link; https://pabc.gov.im/planning/planning-committee/agendas-and-minutes/
There appear to be three issues raised by the committee that resulted in a refusal decision;
FOLLOWING SECTION ADDRESSES THOSE ISSUES DIRECTLY
At the committee meeting, Members noted that the use of wooden poles for the provision of fibre internet was not evident anywhere else within the wider residential estate. It was noted, the remainder of the estate was likely serviced by an underground network of telecom ductworks which connects to each property. Members were concerned why these few properties could not be served by an engineering solution to have the cables underground like the remainder of the residential estate.
Members noted, the proposed telegraph poles will be visible on this street scene as individual telegraph poles and their cabling above, where at present there are no telegraph poles, and they will be read collectively when entering this part of the street given their placement.
Furthermore, the array of network cabling that would criss-cross out from the poles to the individual properties were considered a backwards step in service delivery and collectively would look out of place.
The height of the poles was raised as a concern and whether they would be dominant on the streetscape because they would be greater in height than the surrounding dwelling houses. Due to their size, it was considered they could have an overbearing impact on the residents given those poles would be within 20m of a primary window to a dwelling house that faces towards the highway and onto the poles.
On balance, the proposals were broadly considered to result in a harmful visual impact that would negatively affect the character of the street scene.
Whilst this was not included as a specific reason for refusal, but Gp2g would be reflective of the residents whom objected to the proposals and are against the use of above ground fibre broadband via poles and cables.
Their level of objection was recorded in the attached minutes of the committee meeting and their specific comments were summarised in the officers original report with full comments available on line here;https://pbc.gov.im/onlineapplications/applicationDetails.do?activeTab=neighbourComments&keyVal=SUE7S1IPKDK00
Consideration could be given to any adverse impact upon the neighbouring amenity and guidance on this is available within the residential design guide at “Section 7.0 - Impact upon Neighbours”. Further consideration could be given to whether there is any;
With regard to these proposals, consideration could be given to objectively assess where there is any “over –bearing” impact from the physical presence of the poles in the public interest and whether this would feel oppressive because of their installation within the pavements on this quiet estate road.
Should an “over-bearing” impact (be considered to) exist because the development is so close, it would need to be aligned whether this would affect any outlook from within an affected dwelling house, from their gardens and any outside domestic spaces immediately surrounding the house. Further consideration is needed whether this change of outlook would be acceptable or harmful to the occupants living conditions of any residential property when compared to the current situation where the proposals don’t exist in the streetscape.
5.0 Potential Conditions In the event that the Inspector is minded to recommend approval it is recommended that the following conditions (as set out in the original case officers report) are attached;
END.
| Item 5.02 Eary Veg Tromode Douglas Isle Of Man IM2 5LZ PA25/90376/B | Installation of 4 telegraph poles to supply fibre communications to 77-87 Eary Veg and 88, 97, 98 and 99 Cronk Liauyr Tromode Applicant : Manx Telecom Case Officer : Jason Singleton Recommendation : Permitted |
The Case Officer reported on the matter and summarised the key issues as set out in the report and with reference to the visual presentation.
The Highway Services representative confirmed there was nothing further to add to their report. The Objector [REDACTED] statement is summarised below: PC Minutes 30.06.2025
5
In clarification of the key issues the Members enquired as to:
The Committee unanimously overturned the recommendation of the Case Officer and the application was refused due to the following reason.
The proposed installation of wooden telegraph poles would result in a narrowing of the footpaths and their associated cabling amongst the street scene of detached dwellings due to the height, size and scale of the proposals would have a negative visual impact that adversely affects the character of the street scene and would be contrary to General Policy 2 (b, c & h) of the Strategic Plan.
It was decided that the following organisations should NOT be given the Right to Appeal: Douglas City Council - No Objection Highways Services - No Objection
It was decided that the owners/occupiers of the following properties should be given the Right to Appeal as they have submitted an objection that meets the specified criteria:
Eary Veg; No's 77, 78, 79, 81, 82, 84, 85, 86, 87, Cronk Liauyr No's; 98, 99,129 Sileau Dhoo; No's;124
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