At sheringham paper, norfolk uk

@ Sheringham Community Paper - Issue 82 - 21 December 2007

Readers Letter

It wasn’t much to ask, was it? A spacious, well-stocked supermarket in Sheringham where families could fill a trolley without breaking the bank, and the elderly and less abled could shop with dignity without being jostled by other customers. At present shopping for groceries in the town must be an absolute nightmare for the disabled. The store would also bring extra local employment for all ages.

Once again the powers-that-be have moved their well-worn goalposts and say we can’t have the store. After asking Tesco to resubmit their application in April 2006 and promising to approve it, the JDCC have chucked it out once again. Now, if you can believe it, they want a store half the proposed size, which would make it about one-third the size of Fakenham’s Tesco, and it has to be in keeping with the architectural style of Sheringham’s only listed building, the Roman Catholic church, i.e. a tall red-brick building in the gothic style. As demonstrated for over a decade, the committee have never had any intention of allowing Tesco into the town, but that hasn’t stopped them wasting the taxpayers’ money by commissioning reports by our highly-qualified planning and highways officers only to reject their research and recommendations. Does this mean they consider their officers to be incompetent? Do you wish that other views and opinions had as much voice with the council as those of the aptly named SCAMrod, with a seemingly unstoppable propaganda machine? The leaders of this organisation are a handful of local business people with a vested interest in keeping competition out of the town. They have no relevance to my life, what about yours?

What it all comes down to again is that those with the means who want any choice and value for money in their groceries, will still have to spend their spare time and their money away from the town. Those who are restricted to the town will still have no choice but to negotiate their way crab-wise around the narrow aisles of Budgens, past other shoppers vainly searching for a wider choice or transfixed by some of the jaw-dropping prices. No offence to Budgens’ entrepreneurial endeavours but they've already come up with the best they can do. On a serious note, as pointed out by the Finance Officer, if Tesco win their appeal against the decision, NNDC will face enormous legal costs. These will have to be met by us in the form of higher taxation and/or cuts in services. Your local councillors are currently bathing in the glory of the publicity of a so-called victory for democracy. But it wasn’t democracy, was it? As was shown in the recent survey, more people voted yes to Tesco than voted no. If you were in favour of a Tesco in Sheringham and if you are at all dissatisfied with the way you have been represented by these councillors, then please get in touch with them and make your views known. They are obviously confident that the town is populated by families who don’t eat, and people who have always been blissfully unaffected by the cost of living and think supermarkets are vulgar. They have a duty to represent us all equally, not just the ones that shout the loudest. As they have demonstrated, they are one hundred per cent in favour of the anti-Tesco lobby.   Mrs W Norman

W. E. A. 10 WEEK COURSE IN SHERINGHAM

STARTING 11TH JANUARY 2008
THE ART & ARCHITECTURE OF THE NORMAN CONQUEST
TUTOR MARGARET FORRESTER
Was England in 1066 a cultural backwater or a treasure about to be plundered? Did joining Europe encourage the arts to flourish, or were they suppressed under the Norman yoke? Opinions are legion; we need to look at the art,the arguments and the evidence. This ten week course is on FRIDAY AFTERNOONS 2.30-4.00. ST ANDREW'S METHODIST CHURCH HALL.
The fee for the ten weeks is £42 (free to those on benefit). To enrol phone Nicki Diggle on 01263 825696

Readers Letter

At last a Council who stand up for what is right and aren't pressured into making the wrong decision by this large company. Sheringham is great as it is. We do not need any more shops, we have plenty of variety in the ones we have already. The most recent survey showed that only 53% were in favour of Tesco coming to Sheringham, which is a very small majority. Well done to the Councillors, and as one of them was heard saying before the meeting, it does not matter what it costs, Tesco should NOT come to Sheringham. KEEP THEM OUT! B Downes

Readers Letter

Great news about Tesco. Sheringham does not need a huge superstore, we are quite able to do our shopping in town and go to Cromer for the supermarket. It is lovely to wander around the local shops and stop and chat to the lovely people who work in them. It cheers me up even when the weather is gloomy as it is at this time of the year. Keep up the good work and say No to Tesco. B Warnes

POPPY LINE THE RUNNER-UP
FOR BEST NORFOLK ATTRACTION AWARD

In the race for the Berry Savory Best Norfolk Attraction Award, top prize in the EDP Tourism Awards, the Poppy Line was pipped at the post by Banham Zoo, a member of the three-attraction Goymour Group whose Dinosaur Park is a previous winner of the award.   The judges' citation for the Poppy Line said: "North Norfolk Railway has raised its game… their programme has been substantially developed to target a range of audiences."

The result is a well-deserved tribute to the unpaid volunteers who run the Poppy Line: over 90% of the jobs on the railway, from engine driver to station staff, are handled by a 400-strong roster of volunteers. By the end of the year, the line will have carried some 130,000 passengers since February.

Sherry'n'Ham, Sheringham, UK