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mendicity: the condition or activities of a beggar.
mendacity: untruthfulness
Could they be waiting to ensure no legal challenge is addressed to the high court before issuing this decision. A period of six weeks is allowed for this and can only refer to a point of law, so unlikely.
It will be considered by the committee on the 12th
Simply the officers are recommending to the committee that the application be approved.
It has worked for me in the past so if the same rules apply, yes.
Two applications are allowed with the application fee already paid. If this was the first application it may be expedient to immediately submit an identical application for consideration. The clock will then be ticking and with officer approval could be dealt with in a month. The Local Authority cannot reconsider the already submitted application as they have refused it and only the planning inspectorate can reverse that application which should be left running to maintain the pressure.
The local authority will be liable for the cost of the appeal and do not want to go that far. Hence, they have conceded now and will be anxious to obtain the appellant's agreement to stop the process.
An appeal should not be stopped until a formal agreement has been reached or a permission granted, this will take a little time.
Recently it has been suggested that, in the phrase "get down to the nitty-gritty" the word once referred to the detritus left after a slave ship was emptied.
This can scarcely be true, since there was no evidence of its use either in the slavery years or for many decades afterwards.
Frank Jessopp:
I believe a RNS has to be approved by the nomad and as ours has changed with the boardroom alterations this will no doubt cause some delay in one being issued.
Exactly, these are engineering reasons for the refusal and can be rectified. The LA should then be unable to refuse permission! This is typical posturing of councillors on planning committees.