Please read an up-to-date summary of our position.

Here is our mission statement:

We believe that Newbury should have a football facility
to be proud of, to inspire our children to play sport and to allow our senior
men’s and women’s teams to compete at the highest level

What are we trying to do?

• We want to protect and improve our community
football ground, this means we have to stop the current plans to demolish it
and build flats

• The existing ground has a grass pitch, stands,
changing rooms, floodlights and a clubhouse. Our plans are to build an
all-weather pitch (3G) and new facilities, to allow even greater access to all
of Newbury’s football community, 7 days a week, all year round.

• The Council’s own evidence states that Newbury’s
football ground is not needed as housing land. Put simply: football not flats.

How do you know we need it?

• A petition by NCFG against the destruction of the
Ground was signed by nearly 7,000 people

• The Football Association conducted a survey of West
Berkshire and highlighted the area was 4 full size 3G pitches short to meet
demand of the West Berks community.

• Newbury is home to over 45,000 people and is set to
grow by about 6,000 over the next 10 years.

• All of the evidence concludes that sporting
facilities are indisputably essential to maintaining a healthy community.

• We wholeheartedly support the vision to improve the
London Road Estate. As part of this vision, our proposal to improve the
Community Football Ground with state of the art 3G pitches for all ages and new
clubhouse facilities enhances the public-realm and is in harmony with Victoria
Park.

Did you know?

Newbury Community Football Group

How the ground looks today
How it could look in the future

• That the Faraday Road
football pitch and associated facilities such as the club house, floodlights,
stands etc. is listed by WBC as an Asset of Community Value – which is unequivocal
evidence of demand for use and essential value to the community.

• A 3G pitch is an artificial
pitch that be used over 100 times more a week than a grass pitch. NCFG has
submitted a planning application for a state of the art 3G pitch and new
clubhouse facilities at Faraday Road which can be used 7 days a week, in the evening
and all year round

• The Football Association
conducted a survey of West Berkshire and highlighted the area was 4 full size
3G pitches short to meet demand of the West Berks community. The FA also
identified the Faraday Road pitch and ground as an exemplary facility.

• A survey by NCFG in May
2017 received over 200 responses from 37 local teams and leagues concluded that
there are insufficient well-maintained grass or artificial pitches in Newbury
and there is massive support for a new 3G facility that can be used by all ages
all year round and in the evenings.

• Newbury’s senior Ladies
team is hugely successful but now the team has to play cup games at Lambourn because
Newbury’s Football ground has been closed by the council. This places a glass
ceiling on their ability to progress.

• The biggest drop-out rates
for Youth Football is 16 -18-year olds, which is a vulnerable age-group. After
many years of successful involvement and since 2016 Newbury can longer enter
teams in the local youth floodlit league because our Council will not provide
the tenure agreement required.

• Hungerford Town and
Thatcham Town can play in senior leagues such as the National League South and
the Evo-Stik league South. Newbury’s ground allows a Newbury senior team to
play in similar leagues but the Council’s refusal to give security of tenure
for the last several years is the sole reason that Newbury’s senior men’s team
have been successively demoted.

• After the senior men’s team
were evicted from Newbury football ground by our Council they now have to play in
Brimpton, a village with a population of just 616 and play teams such as
Wrightchoice, Unity Sports and Wraysbury Village. Newbury is twinned with
Braunfels in Germany (population 11,000), Bagnols-sur-Cèze in France
(population 18,000) and Eeklo in Belgium (population 21,000) – all have football
grounds.

• According to Government
research, every £1 spent on sporting facilities produces a return of £7.63 and
enhances educational attainment amongst the young.

Who are NCFG?

• NCFG was formed, in late 2015, as a direct response to
West Berkshire Council’s “vision” to demolish the town’s main football ground
and stadium as part of a larger land redevelopment in the London Road Estate
area without any commitment to provide a replacement.

• NCFG consists of members which represents the voice of
the football community in Newbury. It has a broad base of members that
represents senior men’s football, senior ladies’ football, boys & girls
club football, youth and development football and representative primary school
football.

• NCFG represents well over 500 players and volunteers
in and around the Newbury area.

• NCFG is about protecting and improving the central
community football ground for ALL users.

•

Supporting notes / facts:

The following organised football teams are members of NCFG:

• Newbury FC,

• Newbury Ladies FC,

• AFC Newbury Boys and Girls,

• AFC Newbury Colts,

• Newbury District Primary Schools

• Pro-cision Football Academy.

The population for Newbury, Thatcham and Hungerford is calculated
by adding up wards as attached, from information on the Council’s website
https://info.westberks.gov.uk/population –mid-year 2016 estimate. 45k is used
in Newbury Town Plan – page 19, which also sets out that Newbury finds it
difficult to retain young people – which supports the need for enhanced
sporting facilities. Core Strategy states at least 10,500
new homes between 2006 and 2026, of which 5,400 (51%) will be delivered in
Newbury (Spatial Strategy and ADPP2 – Newbury). As at March 2016, 5,012 dwellings
had been delivered leaving about 5,500. Ave. population is 2.4 per house. The
housing site allocations DPD allocates land for more than 10,500 (about 11,300)
and focuses most delivery in Newbury. and the indications are that housing
delivery at a similar rate after 2026 (i.e. say, between 500 and 650 per annum,
or about 575.), 51% or more of which will be in Newbury. Therefore, Newbury
population will grow by between 612 and 795 per annum (say an average of 700).
At the lower figure, the population will grow by almost 5,000 by 2026 or over
6,000 in ten years.

Sport England

Sport England’s policy
is to protect all parts of
a
playing field, not just those which happen, for the time
being, to be laid out as pitches

In December 2015 the Government published Sporting Future: A New
Strategy for an Active Nation. It sets a bold and ambitious direction for sport
policy which has been widely welcomed. It looks beyond simple participation to
how sport changes lives and becomes a force for social good.

At its heart are five outcomes: physical wellbeing, mental
wellbeing, individual development, social and community development and
economic development.

What does Sport England seek to achieve through its engagement in
the planning system?

Building on its strategy Towards an Active Nation, Sport England’s
aim in working with the planning system is to help provide places that maximise
opportunities for sport and physical activity for all, enabling the already
active to be more so and the inactive to become active.

This aim is supported by three objectives:

PROTECT: To protect the right opportunities in the right places.

ENHANCE: To enhance opportunities through better use of existing provision.

PROVIDE: To provide new opportunities to meet the needs of current and
future generations.

Sport England will oppose the granting of planning permission for
any development which would

lead to the loss of, or would prejudice the use of:

• all or any part of a playing field, or

• land which has been used as a playing field and remains
undeveloped, or

• land allocated for use as a playing field unless, in the
judgement of Sport England, the

development as a whole meet with one or more of five specific exceptions

Exception 1

A robust and up-to-date assessment has demonstrated, to the
satisfaction of Sport England, that there is an excess of playing field
provision in the catchment, which will remain the case should the development
be permitted, and the site has no special significance to the interests of
sport.

Exception 2

The proposed development is for ancillary facilities supporting
the principal use of the site as a playing field, and does not affect the
quantity or quality of playing pitches or otherwise adversely affect their use.

Exception 3

The proposed development affects only land incapable of forming
part of a playing pitch and does not:

• reduce the size of any playing pitch;

• result in the inability to use any playing pitch (including the
maintenance of adequate safety margins and run-off areas);

• reduce the sporting capacity of the playing field to accommodate
playing pitches or the capability to rotate or reposition playing pitches to
maintain their quality;

• result in the loss of other sporting provision or ancillary
facilities on the site; or • prejudice the use of any remaining areas of
playing field on the site.

Exception 4

The area of playing field to be lost as a result of the proposed
development will be replaced, prior to the commencement of development, by a
new area of playing field:

• of equivalent or better quality, and

• of equivalent or greater quantity, and

• in a suitable location, and

• subject to equivalent or better accessibility and management
arrangements.

Exception 5

The proposed development is for an indoor or outdoor facility for
sport, the provision of which would be of sufficient benefit to the development
of sport as to outweigh the detriment caused by the loss, or prejudice to the
use, of the area of playing field.