Campaigners urge government to reject Gatwick plans
Campaigners are calling on government to "say no" to Gatwick Airport's plans to bring its northern runway in to regular use. The airport submitted a development consent order in 2023, which is currently being looked at by the Planning Inspectorate. Gatwick wants to bring its second runway, usually used for taxiing planes and in emergencies, in to regular use. A spokesperson for Gatwick said its Northern Runway Project was considered to be "nationally significant" and was "thoroughly scrutinised by the Planning Inspectorate". Sally Pavey, from Communities Against Gatwick Noise Emissions (Cagne) said the group, which has more than 5,000 members across Kent, Surrey and Sussex, wants to see Gatwick "go away and apply correctly for a new runway". She told BBC Radio Surrey the group had "seriously questioned" the new runway fitting in to government policy at hearings about the application. "We would like government to say no. This is not policy. This is not making best use of existing runways," Ms Pavey added. The Planning Inspectorate is expected to make a recommendation to the Secretary of State for Transport by the end of November. The final decision by the Secretary of State is due in February 2025.<br/>
https://portal.staralliance.com/cms/news/hot-topics/2024-09-26/general/campaigners-urge-government-to-reject-gatwick-plans
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Campaigners urge government to reject Gatwick plans
Campaigners are calling on government to "say no" to Gatwick Airport's plans to bring its northern runway in to regular use. The airport submitted a development consent order in 2023, which is currently being looked at by the Planning Inspectorate. Gatwick wants to bring its second runway, usually used for taxiing planes and in emergencies, in to regular use. A spokesperson for Gatwick said its Northern Runway Project was considered to be "nationally significant" and was "thoroughly scrutinised by the Planning Inspectorate". Sally Pavey, from Communities Against Gatwick Noise Emissions (Cagne) said the group, which has more than 5,000 members across Kent, Surrey and Sussex, wants to see Gatwick "go away and apply correctly for a new runway". She told BBC Radio Surrey the group had "seriously questioned" the new runway fitting in to government policy at hearings about the application. "We would like government to say no. This is not policy. This is not making best use of existing runways," Ms Pavey added. The Planning Inspectorate is expected to make a recommendation to the Secretary of State for Transport by the end of November. The final decision by the Secretary of State is due in February 2025.<br/>