Horne Parish Council

Horne Parish Council Horne Parish Council

13/05/2026

📢 Horne Parish Council Annual Parish Meeting 🍷🧀

Horne Parish Council will also be holding our Annual Parish Meeting, followed by a Cheese & Wine Reception from 7.30pm, and all residents are warmly invited to attend.

The evening will begin with a short introduction from our Chairman, followed by a talk from a representative of Queen Victoria Hospital. Afterwards, there will be refreshments and an opportunity to chat with your Parish Councillors.

We have also invited representatives from the Police and our newly elected Unitary Councillors to join us.

If you would like to attend the APM, please RSVP to [email protected] so we can make sure we have enough cheese and wine for everyone!

We look forward to seeing you there.

https://www.facebook.com/share/1HEBhRSTjf/?mibextid=wwXIfr
22/04/2026

https://www.facebook.com/share/1HEBhRSTjf/?mibextid=wwXIfr

Communities across Surrey are facing a wave of unauthorised traveller sites, with new locations appearing at an alarming rate.

The playbook is simple. Purchasers buy a plot of land, often rural and on Surrey’s protected green belt. Over a weekend or a bank holiday they carry out rapid works like topsoil removal, laying hardcore and pulling up hedgerows. The site is quickly filled with caravans and large mobile homes. All done with complete disregard for the law and creating a huge amount of anxiety for local residents.

As Brits, we classically dislike those who push in and break the rules. When the rest of us want to make changes to our homes, we must navigate copious amounts of forms and applications. We may not always agree with the level of regulation, but we put up with it because we are citizens of good standing and value good community relations. To see others ignoring the law and getting away scot-free is infuriating.

Local authorities, overwhelmed and under-resourced, simply cannot deal with the explosion in the number of sites. Enforcement powers get bunged up in the courts, and retrospective planning applications tie councils in legal red tape. Caravans pile in unabated.

East Surrey is the unfortunate epicentre. The Tandridge district has seen an astonishing spike in unauthorised caravans on traveller sites in recent years. Residents tell me the identity of their communities has shifted rapidly. Fly-tipping, reckless motorbike riding and confrontations in once-peaceful neighbourhoods have all increased.

Smallfield – a small village in my patch – is at the coalface. Not only have the surrounding fields been purchased and caravans moved on, but noxious fires have also been causing serious nuisance to families. Just recently I visited a site where two caravans were set alight and completely burnt. On the face of it, the two issues seem to be connected, and both cause community relations to break down.

Worryingly, recent investigations by the police and local authorities have also uncovered a new business model. Rather than being occupied by members of the traveller community, caravans are being offered to undocumented migrants, some of whom are working illegally in the gig economy.

This adds to the whole raft of illegal activities allegedly occurring on these sites: disregard of planning rules, tax evasion and now housing undocumented migrants. Residents are rightly fed up and are demanding action.

To their credit, Tandridge District Council has acted with urgency, winning a court case this year to stop three unlawful sites. But with the current wave of development, national Government must step in to bolster local efforts.

That is why I have led a group of thirty MPs and written to the Home Secretary demanding the Government launch a National Task Force. The Conservatives did this with other policing emergencies which covered multiple crimes, and it worked to concentrate efforts.

Loopholes that allow retrospective planning applications to be granted must be removed, and the requirement for traveller sites in the National Planning Policy Framework should be looked into.

Without this support, communities overwhelmed by these sites will continue to feel powerless. This is about fairness, being all equal before the law and protecting our beautiful countryside from people trying to destroy it.

✍🏽 Me for the Surrey Mirror

Press release from TDCCandidates announced ahead of East Surrey Council elections Names of candidates standing for elect...
10/04/2026

Press release from TDC

Candidates announced ahead of East Surrey Council elections

Names of candidates standing for election in the new East Surrey Council elections on 7 May have been published.

In total 379 candidates are standing for 72 seats across 36 wards in the East Surrey Council Elections.

Details of those standing can be found on the Future Surrey website at www.surreylgrhub.gov.uk/elections, where electors can search for who is up for election in their area. Candidates standing in the Tandridge District are also listed on the ’Statement of Persons Nominated’ on Tandridge District Council's website at www.tandridge.gov.uk/EastSurrey.

Those living in areas covered by Elmbridge, Epsom & Ewell, Mole Valley, Reigate & Banstead and Tandridge councils will vote in the East Surrey Council Elections.

Electors will be able to vote for up to two councillors to represent their ward in these elections.

What the new councillors be responsible for

Councillors elected to East Surrey Council in May 2026 will serve for five years, until May 2031.

In the first year they will work as part of a ‘shadow’ authority. During this period, they will set budgets and council tax for 2027/2028, agree staffing structures and governance arrangements, adopt codes of conduct and members’ allowance schemes and prepare for the transfer of responsibilities from the existing councils in Surrey.

The new councils will then officially take over from 1 April 2027, providing all the local council services you rely on including education, waste collection, roads, housing, play areas, children’s services, adult social care and more.

Make sure you’re ready to vote

Mari Roberts-Wood, Chief Executive at Reigate & Banstead Borough Council and Returning Officer for the East Surrey Elections said: “I’d like to encourage you to see who is standing for election in your area and use your vote on 7 May. The election is your opportunity to choose who you want to represent you and the issues that matter to you in your local area for the next five years. Make sure you’re ready to vote in these important elections.”

Other local polls

Existing county and district councillors will continue in their roles until 31 March 2027, so there will be no elections to these councils except where there are by-elections for vacant seats in particular wards.

On 7 May, a Surrey County Council by-election for the Warlingham division will take place. Details of candidates can be found on the Council’s website at www.tandridge.gov.uk/warlingham. Caterham, Chaldon and Whyteleafe also has a Neighbourhood Planning Referendum.

Don’t lose your vote
To be able to vote in these elections, you must be registered to vote by midnight on 20 April 2026. If you’re not already registered, register now at www.gov.uk/register-to-vote.

To vote in person you must bring an accepted form of photo ID. These include a passport, a driving licence, or a concessionary travel pass, such as an older person’s bus pass. You can use expired IDs if the photo still looks like you. For a full list of accepted photo ID visit www.electoralcommission.org.uk/voterid.

If you don’t have an accepted form of photo ID, apply for a free Voter Authority Certificate (VAC) by 5pm on 28 April 2026 at www.gov.uk/apply-for-photo-id-voter-authority-certificate.

If you won’t be able to get to a polling station on election day, you can apply online for a postal vote or proxy vote at www.gov.uk/how-to-vote. Apply as soon as possible to make sure you receive your postal vote pack or proxy vote in good time. The deadline to apply for a postal vote is 5pm on Tuesday 21 April 2026. For a proxy vote – when a friend or relative you trust casts your vote for you – apply by 5pm on 28 April 2026.

Tandridge District Council News : Planning appeal inquiries and hearings starting in March A number of appeal hearings a...
23/02/2026

Tandridge District Council News :

Planning appeal inquiries and hearings starting in March

A number of appeal hearings and inquiries will take place in March at the Council Offices, Oxted RH8 0BT, starting at 10am. These are all open to the public and one can be watched online.

Tuesday 10 March
Appeal inquiry for Former Laporte Works Site, Nutfield Road, Nutfield is expected to last for eight days. This inquiry can be watched online. You can view the planning appeal documents on our website by searching reference 2023/1281.

Wednesday 11 March
Appeal hearing for Weatherhill Common, Smallfield is expected to last for one day. This is an in-person only event. You can view the planning enforcement appeal documents on our website by searching reference ENF/2025/46.

Tuesday 31 March
Appeal hearing for Lingfield House, East Grinstead Road, Lingfield is expected to last for two days. This is an in-person only event. You can view the planning appeal documents on our website by searching reference 2024/1079.
Appeal hearing for Land to the East of East Park Farm, Lingfield is expected to last for three days. This is open to the public and an in-person event. You can view the planning enforcement appeal documents on our website by searching reference ENF/2025/184.


https://tdcplanningsearch.tandridge.gov.uk/Appeal

The process
During these sessions, the landowners and the Council will present evidence. Once the session ends, the Inspector will decide whether the planning decisions or Enforcement Notice should be upheld, or whether planning permission should be granted or the Enforcement Notice quashed.

Residents can attend to give their views. Anyone wishing to speak must arrive before the start and make the Inspector aware. They will need to give their name and may be asked questions either by the Inspector or the appellant.

Tandridge District Council

12/02/2026

Press release from TDC: High Court orders illegal encampments cleared after Tandridge District Council legal action

High Court orders illegal encampments cleared after Tandridge District Council legal action

Tandridge District Council has won High Court orders to stop unlawful works at land at Chelsham, Shipley Bridge and Horne.

The judges ruled all three developments are unauthorised and must stop. The courts also awarded costs to the Council.

At the Chelsham site, the judge has ordered that the land must be returned to agricultural use and hedging replanted and gates and fencing removed.

These outcomes mark a major success for the Council. The Council’s Enforcement Team will make sure the courts’ orders are followed and the sites are vacated within the legal deadlines.

Currently, the Council is pursuing 12 injunctions and continues to act decisively and promptly to protect Green Belt land, uphold planning law and respond to residents’ concerns.

Leader of the Council, Councillor Catherine Sayer, said: “We are taking decisive legal action to stop unauthorised development. Council officers have worked tirelessly often under very challenging circumstances to prepare cases, secure High Court injunctions and protect our countryside from unlawful harm. These latest judgments demonstrate our firm and proactive approach is working and we will continue to use every legal power available to us.”

COMMUNITY UPDATE – WEST PARK ROADYesterday an interim injunction was successfully secured on land at West Park Road, pre...
11/01/2026

COMMUNITY UPDATE – WEST PARK ROAD

Yesterday an interim injunction was successfully secured on land at West Park Road, preventing further unauthorised development and protecting the site from long-term harm.

This swift action was only possible thanks to residents promptly reporting activity, enabling close cooperation between the Parish Council, local residents group HRA, the Police and Tandridge District Council Enforcement.

Thank you to everyone who supported this action, including those who attended on site in very cold conditions. Your continued vigilance and engagement play a vital role in protecting our parish and community.

Keep up the amazing work!

21/11/2025

📢 Important Update for Residents: Article 4 Direction Issued on Croydonbarn Lane Land

Tandridge District Council has now issued an Article 4 Direction on the fields off Croydonbarn Lane, effective immediately from 18 November 2025 and running until 18 May 2026 (unless confirmed earlier).

This Direction removes key permitted development rights, meaning that certain works can no longer be carried out without formal planning permission, including:

1️⃣ Erecting or altering gates, fences, walls, or any means of enclosure
— This prevents rapid installation of partitions or fencing that could enable unauthorised use.

2️⃣ Creating or altering access to the highway
— No new access points, gateways, or trackways can be formed without permission.

3️⃣ Bringing temporary buildings, structures, machinery, or plant onto the land
— Stops portacabins, storage units, or other temporary setups that could quickly escalate into intensive or unauthorised activity.

🔍 Why this matters?

The land has been subdivided into small parcels, increasing the risk of unmanaged or fragmented development. The Article 4 Direction acts as an urgent safeguard—ensuring no sudden changes, fencing, access tracks, or temporary structures can be installed without council oversight.

This gives the community stronger protection during a heightened period of risk and ensures the land cannot be changed or used in ways that would alter its character without explicit planning consent.

Horne Parish Council will continue to monitor the situation closely and keep residents updated.

MP's warning over development of traveller sites
21/11/2025

MP's warning over development of traveller sites

Claire Coutinho is among 30 MPs who have written to ministers about land being built on illegally.

09/11/2025

📢 Parish Planning Update – Winnie’s Woodland

Dear Residents,

Horne Parish Council would like to update you on the recent planning application at Winnie’s Woodland. Following a detailed review by the Planning Committee, we’re pleased to report that retrospective planning permission was not granted.

Throughout this process, the Parish Council has been actively involved — working closely with a planning consultant and submitting detailed representations to ensure that the parish’s concerns were clearly heard.

We would like to extend our sincere thanks to everyone involved, including the Horne Residents Association and the Planning Committee members, for their valuable support and input.

Your engagement helped ensure that the issues surrounding this site were properly scrutinised.

We will continue to keep residents informed of any future developments.

Thank you for your continued support,
Horne Parish Council

Address

Horley
RH69HL

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