from the Argus
Stadium's start stalled
by Rob Hustwayte
The High Court appeal against the Falmer stadium plan is likely to delay the start of building work on the £50 million scheme, Albion bosses have revealed.
Chief executive Martin Perry said he had no idea when Lewes District Council's bid to force a Judicial Review against the 22,000-seat stadium planning permission would be heard by a judge.
He feared any prolonged court proceedings could delay the project and place the football club under further financial strain.
Mr Perry said no work could begin on site until the legal action had run its course.
He said: "We are proceeding with as much preparatory work as we can but until we get this matter resolved we cannot predict when we will be in a position to commence work on site."
The Albion had targeted October this year to start building the new arena but that timescale now looks uncertain.
Mr Perry said claims the court case would be heard in June were pure speculation:
"I do not know where this date is coming from. At this stage we still do not know when it will go to court or how long it will take.
"I have no doubt that the stadium will be built. We will get permission but it could be that by causing further delays, Lewes hope we will be unable to sustain further losses and the extra costs we will incur if the stadium is delayed.
"Is their real agenda to try to defeat the stadium by putting the football club out of business? All I can say is, having fought for the last eight years and with the support of our unbelievable fans, we are not going to let Lewes stand in our way, despite the obstacles they try to put in front of us."
Despite the setback the club is still targeting the beginning of the 2008/09 football season to move into its new home.
A spokeswoman for Lewes District Council denied using delaying tactics and said the timescale was in the hands of the court and the Office for the Deputy Prime Minister, which is the main defendant.
She said: "We are ready to go and we have asked for the earliest possible court hearing.
"As we understand it the court will issue a hearing date when it receives the defence papers from the ODPM. June is our estimate based on the time it generally takes for things to get to court once action has begun but that is by no means certain."
The ODPM said: "We are awaiting a hearing date from the court, after which we will exchange our skeleton legal arguments. Any delays in the process are not down to the ODPM."
BarrelofFun said:Brighton and Hove Albion serves the whole of Sussex. Lewes is our County Town.
Thanks a lot Lewes![]()
Hadlee said:Perhaps after this we should start a campaign to get Lewes thrown out as our County Town ?
Hadlee said:Perhaps after this we should start a campaign to get Lewes thrown out as our County Town ?
Even if such evidence existed, I don't think LDC would give a flying f*** it it was ever exposed. They didn't care about dragging this through the Public Inquiry (£250k of public funding), they don't care about taking it to a J R against the wishes of the vast majority of their constituents (basically an open cheque on public funds, they have no idea how much it could end up costing), and they didn't care about deciding to do it without consulting anyone else about it. The council leader has maintained a stony silence on the matter (save for a brief letter in the Argus a few weeks back which said nothing they hadn't already said in the original press statement they released).Tooting Gull said:I bet somewhere there is an internal memo, or a solicitors' letter, that suggests one way to win is to keep it going long enough to bankrupt the club, and the issue goes away.
If that was exposed, they'd get so much shit for trampling over Sussex's only pro club, they'd have to cave in. Over to Woodward and Bernstein on the news desk.
Tooting Gull said:But Baker and one or two others are throwing in the odd disingenuous curveball that they do care about the Albion, so some of them are at least aware that if they are seen to be the wreckers of the club, they will have to live with consequences that, shall we say, won't be favourable in the short or long term.
Their pathetic mealy-mouthed statements about "we agree the Albion needs a stadium and wish them well in finding a suitable site" etc etc is an insult to the intelligence - they clearly couldn't give a STUFF whether the club gets a stadium or not, as long as its not in their back yard (or in this case, several miles across the hills and over a f***ing great dual carriageway from their back yard). I wish De Vecchi and her cronies a slow, painful, miserable, lonely, undignified death from bowel cancer in the near future.Tooting Gull said:I agree with all of that Easy. They actually don't give a f***. But Baker and one or two others are throwing in the odd disingenuous curveball that they do care about the Albion, so some of them are at least aware that if they are seen to be the wreckers of the club, they will have to live with consequences that, shall we say, won't be favourable in the short or long term.
Tooting Gull said:I agree with all of that Easy. They actually don't give a f***. But Baker and one or two others are throwing in the odd disingenuous curveball that they do care about the Albion, so some of them are at least aware that if they are seen to be the wreckers of the club, they will have to live with consequences that, shall we say, won't be favourable in the short or long term.
BarrelofFun said:Brighton and Hove Albion serves the whole of Sussex. Lewes is our County Town.
Thanks a lot Lewes![]()
Curious Orange said: