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Dairy Farming
Accommodation on dairy farm
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<blockquote data-quote="Headless chicken" data-source="post: 6052986" data-attributes="member: 2582"><p>We got a second house passed here. When built we will have a herdsman moving into my old bungalow and me and the family into the new house. </p><p></p><p>Biggest things that swing the favour here was local employment, young family, welsh speaking or learning to speak welsh. </p><p></p><p>Other angles to push would be lone worker. If you live on farm then there is your family around too that may well save your life one day. AG has terrible accident rate and being lone workers is a massive contributor. </p><p></p><p>Renting is a dead loss and it pulls affordable rental accommodation off the market that someone else would be able to have if you had a house. </p><p></p><p>Temporary accodomdation not suitable due to adverse weather conditions </p><p></p><p>Increased traffic too and from the farm 6 times a day would be normal. More on some occasions </p><p></p><p>Due to your skill set and availability of land building a house would be considerably cheaper than buying. If buying you’d then be forced to buy affordable accommodation thus taking another house off the market at a time when they are crying out for more houses to be built. </p><p></p><p>Most importantly you need the support of the local members. Building on AG land is plain and simply against policy so very difficult for planners to go against this. Comity members atleast here in wales can over rule this with far less justification if they feel that’s it right to do so. In our instance they felt that the impact on the area was significantly less than what the addition of another house would bring in the form of bums on seats.</p><p>Rural communities are desperate for me people to keep things like schools from closing</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Headless chicken, post: 6052986, member: 2582"] We got a second house passed here. When built we will have a herdsman moving into my old bungalow and me and the family into the new house. Biggest things that swing the favour here was local employment, young family, welsh speaking or learning to speak welsh. Other angles to push would be lone worker. If you live on farm then there is your family around too that may well save your life one day. AG has terrible accident rate and being lone workers is a massive contributor. Renting is a dead loss and it pulls affordable rental accommodation off the market that someone else would be able to have if you had a house. Temporary accodomdation not suitable due to adverse weather conditions Increased traffic too and from the farm 6 times a day would be normal. More on some occasions Due to your skill set and availability of land building a house would be considerably cheaper than buying. If buying you’d then be forced to buy affordable accommodation thus taking another house off the market at a time when they are crying out for more houses to be built. Most importantly you need the support of the local members. Building on AG land is plain and simply against policy so very difficult for planners to go against this. Comity members atleast here in wales can over rule this with far less justification if they feel that’s it right to do so. In our instance they felt that the impact on the area was significantly less than what the addition of another house would bring in the form of bums on seats. Rural communities are desperate for me people to keep things like schools from closing [/QUOTE]
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Accommodation on dairy farm
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