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  • "Lukio, people don't move away just because of clothes shops and cinemas but they do move away because of the overall Herefordshire experience from a young persons perspective. This will include job prospects, educational prospects BUT also a choice of better leisure facilities, being able to have a 'treat me' day without having to travel to another city-a day of full retail choice based shopping combined with lunch at a recognised national chain restaurant, finished with a film where the choice is more than one film. It may also include things such as sports facilities (one average leisure centre in Hereford-no swimming pool etc). It may also include evening leisure and social scene such as bars, clubs, evening street cafes etc... Herefordshire has very few of these things! Are you suggesting that these things should remain the same and Herefordshire should allow the rapid exodus of young people? Can you tell me how Herefordshire attracts young people to the county on a permanent basis in a percentage proportionate way to other cities? What's your plan?

    I talk as someone who moved away for a combination of reasons, I'm proud of being a Herefordian but there was nothing there for me. I now live in Nottingham, play for a type of sports team that doesn't exist in Hereford, shop in one of 2 shopping centres which adjoin the thriving city centre. However I'm in a low paid job, would I leave here to come back to Hereford? Not yet no! The people grasp development opportunities with vigour and hence the growing young adult population, helped by all the things it has which Hereford doesnt! Had this development (and things like the city centre paving/eign gate improvements) been around when I was there my decision to leave would have been a lot harder! These developments may not be a deciding factor in young people staying but they will play a part!

    Finally, you say more fool those that leave for those reasons...well I say more fool you for judging an individual's reasons to leave for whatever reason they see fit, it's their business and none of yours!"
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An open letter urges Herefordshire Council to do the right thing on grid

AN open letter to Herefordshire Council leader Coun John Jarvis.

We the undersigned wish to point out that Britain is now in the midst of the worst double-dip recession for 50 years.

Economic forecasts – whether predicting changes in the UK, Europe or the whole world – are universally bleak.

British householders (especially pensioners) have never had to endure such straitened conditions in peacetime. There are now more than 200 charity food banks in the UK, with new ones opening at the rate of one a week.

The construction industry and its cousin the commercial property development sector are in the doldrums, with a virtual nationwide freeze on major city centre retail developments.

Yet Herefordshire Council, alone, plans to initiate its muchvaunted £80-million Edgar Street Grid shopping development on the empty site of the old livestock market, designed by Stanhope plc and funded by British Land.

Press reports and cabinet and council meetings over the last six months have recorded innumerable contractual changes which these developers have wrung from your council, from alterations to site boundaries to long-term purchasing options. It has been a one-way traffic in concessions.

Now we learn that Stanhope and British Land want you to lift the restriction against them encouraging established city centre traders to move to the Edgar Street Grid .

Here, they clearly have the bigname multinationals in their sights. This would, we believe, sound the death knell of High Town and the knock-on effect on traders in Broad Street and St Owen Street would be catastrophic.

Your cabinet is now under pressure to approve this major amendment.

The thinly-veiled threat by one of the developers, reported last week, makes chilling reading.

This would be an utterly foolhardy move, which the people of Herefordshire would never forgive you for and from which this city might take decades to recover.

The alternative – to refuse the developers’ latest demands (which, privately, many Conservative members of your administration probably know is the ‘honourable option’) – might result in the Edgar Street Grid being ‘mothballed’ for the foreseeable future. But Herefordians would applaud your candour and respect your integrity.

Now is surely the time for a responsible administration to be preparing realistic alternative uses for this highly-prized city asset.

This is Breadline Britain, Coun Jarvis, not Never Never Land.

NICK JONES, BRIAN AND MARY CALDICUTT, PETER AND MARJORIE COCKS, GERALD DAWE, JOHN FAULKNER, JANE GUTTERIDGE, ADRIAN HARVEY, ROB HATTERSLEY, KEITH JAMES, RAE JONES, STEPHEN KNIGHT, BRIAN MEE, MIKE MORLEY, LIZ MORAWIECKI, DAVID PHELPS, HUBERT PORTE, EDWARD PRITCHARD, REBECCA ROSEFF, JAQUI TONGE.

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