Plans for a 'controversial' egg farm in West Lindsey have been approved
and live on Freeview channel 276
P A Arden & Son submitted plans in November 2020 for a free range poultry unit to be built on 16 hectares of land at Naylors Hills off Newark Road.
However, a decision was delayed in February 2021 after more than 40 objections were received and a PETA petition with over 13,000 signatures to stop plans was submitted.
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Hide AdOn Wednesday March, 31, 11 councillors voted in favour of the new egg farm in West Lindsey District Council’s Planning Committee.
The unit is set to be 27m in width and 111m in length, with a maximum height of 7.35m. 1,000 trees, including oak, will also planted.
In 2019, a new agricultural access road was approved in preparation for the egg farm.
George Backovic, a planning officer for West Lindsey District Council said the application has “excited a considerable amount of interest beyond the district.”
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Hide AdCoun Jane Ellis said: “I am aware that this is a contentious application […] I’m also aware that animal welfare issues have been raised, but I realise this is not a material consideration. I understand this, but this is an emotional consideration.”
Coun Judy Rainsforth said: “We always get a lot of bother every time a poultry farm rears its head, yet the majority like to eat chickens and the eggs.
“I’m afraid a few chickens strutting around in a farmyard just isn’t going to do it, we need these places.”
The PETA petition was based on animal welfare concerns. It said: “Amid the Covid-19 pandemic, the last thing the UK needs is another animal farm. The proposed facility would likely be a breeding ground for bird flu and could pose an immense risk to public health.”
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Hide AdOliver Grundy, the agent for the application said: “The farming operation will be associated with our recipes to make freedom foods, which seek to promote the highest animal welfare standards.”
It was said in the meeting that more jobs will be created on site and existing jobs on the farm will be supported.
Previously, objectors said the proposals would cause smells and increase traffic, noise and pollution, ruining the character of the area.