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A CAMPAIGNER fighting to save dozens of Liveprool homes from the bulldozer last night vowed to continue her battle despite being ordered to sell her home.
For almost three years Elizabeth Pascoe has battled through the courts against proposals to demolish homes in the Edge Lane area – including her own in Adderley Street – to make way for a new gateway into the city.
Along with dozens of other opponents, she was yesterday served with a new compulsory purchase order (CPO), issued to force homeowners to sell up.
The first attempt to issue a CPO led to a court challenge by Ms Pascoe which meant the entire £350m scheme to turn Edge Lane into an “urban boulevard”, had to be shelved.
Now she plans to launch a fresh challenge to the new CPO, which was issued by government agency English Partnerships.
“We will object to the CPO and there will have to be a second public inquiry, which means the original aim of having a new road by 2008 will not happen.
“Like EP we want to see progress and regeneration in our area, but unlike them we do not see the need to pull down our homes.
“We have learned a lot in the past three years and have gained much expertise as well as knowledgeable consultants as advisers.
“I fail to comprehend why the people behind this project refuse to even properly consider the alternatives we have put forward that will meet the aims of a new gateway while saving many of the homes.”
She predicted up to 50 residents and a number of businesses will lodge formal objections to the CPO by the August 6 deadline.
An inquiry is unlikely to be called until early in 2008, with no decision until at least the latter half of the year.
Ms Pascoe and her campaigners hope that the change at Number 10, and a new government team under Prime Minister Gordon Brown could also mean a shift in attitude to the removal of communities.
The new CPO affects around 400 homes, which EP says they need to knock down in order to press ahead with plans to widen Edge Lane and build a new community.
English Partnerships has said the CPOs are vital if the scheme is to go ahead.
Ian Hassall, chief executive of Liverpool Land Development Company, which is leading the Edge Lane Project, said most residents were behind the scheme.
Source:
Liverpool Daily Post
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