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Isle Of Wight Motocross Club Revs Up Appeal Against Enforcement Notices

“It is not an eyesore or a scar on the landscape” — that is the message from a motocross club fighting an enforcement notice which has stopped its activities.

In an appeal to the government’s Planning Inspectorate, the boss of MotoxIOW, Ben Collins, is trying to get a decision by the Isle of Wight Council’s planning department overturned as he argues planning conditions have not been breached.

Last year, a stop notice and an enforcement notice were served on the club, and the land it uses off the Military Road, as part of Marsh Green Farm in Brighstone, by the council — telling the club to remove anything relating to its activities.

Mr Collins, however, argues there has been no material change of use to the land nor any development which required planning permission.

He believes the notices have been wrongly served and is requesting a full explanation.

In the appellant statement, Mr Collins said the local planning authority believed the jumps, tracks and bunds were permanent features, therefore, the use of the land had changed.

The primary use of the site is agricultural, with temporary use of the land rented by MotoxIOW for 28 days a year to manage the riding of motorbikes on the site.

Since January 2020, the land has only been used twice by MotoxIOW and Mr Collins argues the mounds do not prevent the land being used for agricultural purposes, as alleged, but they are happy to and intend to, remove the mounds on the corners.

In the statement, he said:

“To describe the impact of riding motorbikes around a field on the sparsely populated Military Road twice a month as ‘significant’ is sheer exaggeration.

“The use is not for racing, timed events or practising for these, it is purely used as a safe regulated site for local residents and visitors to ride motocross bikes for pleasure.

“There is clear, overwhelming support for the club from all ages and backgrounds. The overarching opinion is that the council are allowing significant developments to proceed … yet are blocking other activities.”

Mr Collins said the national motocross body had ‘never experienced this level of obstruction’ from a local council.

Another issue the club has been facing is noise complaints — with the council saying they were minded to give a statutory notice if no mitigating actions were taken.

No abatement notice has been issued and while the council say it undertook detailed sound measurements in statements to the media, Mr Collins says the claims are untrue and the environmental health officer confirmed no measurements took place on the day they inspected the track and the proceedings.

In a letter to Mr Collins, the officer said he could hear the activity from nearby properties on Hoxall Land and Brighstone Road, which he described at the time as ‘interfering with the comfort and enjoyment’ of another’s home.

The officer also noted, however, a number of actions had been proposed by the club to reduce noise levels, such as dampening the course and splitting up groups.

Mr Collins argues nearby residents in Mottistone are not significantly impacted by the use of the land for motocross and found in noise readings taken near a cottage, the sounds from the motocross track registered at around 40 decibels lower than a standard lawnmower.

The appeal, which has been started, will be determined by the Planning Inspectorate.

By Louise Hill, Local Democracy Reporter

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