.
.
  • See you in June 2020!! Pevensey Dog Show: Report to Pevensey Parish Council outlines success of first event held with council support

  • Pevensey mini history festival planned for August

  • WEEKEND FEATURE: First South Downs National Park Local Plan is adopted: Download and read

  • Lost engagement and wedding ring on beach in Pevensey Bay

  • Major new ITV drama being filmed on location in Normans Bay: All star cast includes Imelda Staunton and Russell Tovey

  • BUSINESS BRIEFINGS: Vines Flowers: Space to hold craft classes

  • BUSINESS BRIEFING: The Smugglers Inn, Pevensey: £88 raised through our prize raffle for You Raise Me Up

  • WEEKEND FEATURE: Westham Evening Womens Institute

  • Pevensey Scarecrow Festival 2019: Please note change of email address

  • the Aqua Bar Ethos: Pevensey Bay: Event programme 2019: Latest updates

  • Pevensey Scarecrow Festival: 6 July to Saturday 20 July 2019

  • BUSINESS BRIEFING: Now We are Four: Ocean Bakery and Restaurant, Pevensey Bay

  • Pevfeast takes a step forwards with commission of logo

  • BUSINESS BRIEFINGS: Local business, Activity Days Mobility, celebrates success: The days just disappear

  • BUSINESS BRIEFINGS: Royal Oak and Castle Inn, Pevensey: Tenants respond to rumours about their departure

.

THIS WEEK Tuesday July 9: BBC Antiques Roadshow comes to Battle Abbey


COMMUNITY Pevensey Dog Show: Report to Pevensey Parish Council outlines success of first event


BUSINESS New single release from local Pevensey Bay based musician, Peter Barron

hailsham-waste-1

A COUPLE who turned their residential property into an unauthorised ‘scrap yard’ have been hit with a court bill of more than £4,000.—East Sussex County Council, 14 December 2016

John Mallows, 66, and his wife June, 65, allowed scrap metal, other waste and cars to be deposited and stored at the rear of their property in London Road, Hailsham.

The pair denied breaching the requirements of an official planning notice issued by East Sussex County Council prohibiting them from using the property to store waste materials.

However, in a trial at Eastbourne Magistrates’ Court on Friday (9) they were both found guilty and sentenced to a joint fine of £2,000 and ordered to pay £2,250 in costs and a £200 victim surcharge.

Cllr Carl Maynard, East Sussex County Council lead member for transport and environment, said: “The condition of the area at the rear of the property, which is within a residential area, was appalling and prompted numerous complaints to be made to the council.

“Formal enforcement action is always a last resort but unfortunately in this case we were left with no option as despite repeated attempts to resolve the situation, the couple failed to clean up the mess.

“This sentence should send out a strong message that we will not tolerate people who continually and flagrantly breach planning control on waste matters to the detriment of the locality.”

The court heard the Mallows had been issued with a planning enforcement notice by the county council in December 2014 prohibiting them using their land for the importation and storage of waste.

However, after initially complying with the notice, the couple lapsed into their old ways and the junk began to pile up again, prompting the council to initiate court action.

The pair were warned that if they did not clear up their land and stop using it to store waste there, they could be liable to further prosecution.

Picture caption
- Some of the rubbish dumped at the rear of John and June Mallows’ house in London Road, Hailsham