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What qualifies as a trigger event, preventing registration of a green?

Following widespread concern that the town and village green system was being used to prevent development to which there were no planning objections, the Government enacted the Growth and Infrastructure Act 2013. The legislation prevents applicants from applying to register land as a green where a “trigger event” has occurred – ie where land is the subject of a planning application or permission, or has been identified for potential development by a local authority.

The question that the Court of Appeal had to consider in Wiltshire Council v Cooper Estates Strategic Land Limited [2019] EWCA Civ 840 was: what does it take to identify land for potential development in a development plan document? The land in question was a triangular shaped area, comprising some 380m2, which was situated near a housing estate on the edge of the settlement boundary in Royal Wootton Bassett. It became the subject of an application for registration in 2016 and was subsequently registered as a green on the ground that it had been used by local residents for many years – for barbecues, street parties, cricket, football and other recreational activities.

The landowner sought to have the registration quashed. It claimed that the land was ineligible for registration because it had been identified for potential development in the development plan. It cited Core Policy 1, and Core Policy 2, in particular, of the Wiltshire Core Strategy Development Plan Document 2015, which created a presumption in favour of sustainable development in the market towns named in the plan, which included Royal Wootton Bassett.

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