FIELD OF FURY

Our leafy street is overrun by 15 lorries & tractors covering field in hardcore after farmer gave travellers green light

Pictures reveal extent of chaos caused by a dozen lorries along the road

VILLAGERS are fuming after a farmer gave travellers the green light to build on fields next to their homes - without planning permission.

Outrage was sparked among neighbours in Blythe Bridge, Staffordshire, after the peaceful street was overrun by lorries and tractors.

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Stafford Borough Councillor Alec Sandiford on Stallington RoadCredit: BPM Media
Roads have been bottlenecked with lorries and police carsCredit: BPM Media
The illegal works have caused chaos in the nearby peaceful roadsCredit: BPM Media

The heavy duty vehicles were called in on Friday to start work on a field in Stallington Road and have wreaked havoc since.

Pictures show the roads bottlenecked with lorries and police cars, causing travel chaos.

Nearby homeowners claimed tonnes of hardcore has been dumped on the greenbelt site over the weekend.

And shocked council officials blasted the illicit works as "stressful" and "worrying".

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Police responded to frantic calls from the community but admitted there was nothing they could do to stop construction because the landowner had granted permission.

Officers also referred to it as a civil matter, not criminal.

Stafford Borough Councillor Alec Sandiford told there is "no planning application".

He asked if the "unauthorised" work could be held off until the start of next week, but to no avail.

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"They’ve been bringing in tonnes of hardcore on lorries and tractors and rollers coming through," the councillor said.

"I’m not even sure the road itself can sustain the weight because it’s only a small road with no curbs or road markings."

Alec confirmed the council is trying to halt construction through enforcement officers until a planning permission application has been submitted.

He said one had previously been made for stables, but this was denied.

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They explained how from 6am on Saturday, until 8am on Sunday there had been around 15 trucks swarming the area.

Locals were told work would stop at 5pm and were disappointed the police couldn't intervene.

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The anonymous resident further alleged there were untaxed cars and trailers with no licence plates in the area.

“There are four schools within half a mile from here, it’s not safe for the community," they said.

"We’re surrounded by green belt land - about 80 percent is greenbelt - so they can’t really develop on that."

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They added how residents have found it difficult to get home improvements such as garages approved.

But now locals fear neither Stafford Borough Council nor Staffordshire Moorlands, who share authority of the land, will volunteer to tackle the problem.

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