Stop Unchecked Change of Use at Mary Morris House, Demand Proper Planning and Safeguarding

Recent signers:
Ashley L and 19 others have signed recently.

The Issue

The proposal to convert Mary Morris House, Shire Oak Road, from student accommodation into a 250-bed hostel raises profound concerns for the Headingley community.

This building sits within three minutes of a nursery and primary school, directly adjacent to elderly housing at Hinsley Court, and within the Headingley Conservation Area. The surrounding area is already under pressure from late-night activity associated with the Otley Run.

Introducing such a large, high-density institutional use without proper safeguards risks destabilising this balance. At present:

  • No safeguarding plan has been published to address proximity to schools, nurseries, and vulnerable residents.
  • No risk assessment has been shared on impacts for local services, healthcare, or policing.
  • No management commitments have been made on 24/7 staffing, community liaison, or occupancy limits.
  • Without these measures, both the existing community and future residents are left vulnerable.

 
Why the Current Process Is Wrong
The Home Office is seeking to push this through using a Certificate of Proposed Lawful Development (CPLD). This is the wrong process. A CPLD bypasses democratic consultation, strips out safeguards, and cannot impose enforceable planning conditions.

The planning history confirms this is not a like-for-like use:

  • The 2015 permission (Ref 15/01919/FU) was explicitly for student accommodation (PBSA), not a generic hostel.
  • The Plans Panel Committee Report (Sept 2015) considered impacts solely through a student lens and required student-specific mitigations: a Student Management Plan, Section 106 contributions (£20,000 TRO, £30,501.95 greenspace, £2,500 Travel Plan), and changes to layouts to avoid student parties.
  • The sensitive location was appraised on the assumption of PBSA, with the balance of harms judged accordingly.
  • Moving from PBSA to a 250-bed asylum hostel is a material change of use, creating:
    • Different patterns of daily presence and movement.
    • Different service demands and safeguarding needs.
    • Higher management risk without published controls.
       

What We Ask Leeds City Council To Do

  • Refuse the CPLD on the grounds that this is a material change of use.
  • Require a full planning application so that residents have a voice.
  • Ensure enforceable safeguards including a published management plan, comprehensive risk assessments, and updated Section 106 obligations proportionate to the impacts of a hostel use.

Why This Matters
This is not about rejecting asylum seekers. It is about protecting everyone—new residents and the existing community—by ensuring a change of this magnitude is properly planned, managed, and democratically scrutinised.

379

Recent signers:
Ashley L and 19 others have signed recently.

The Issue

The proposal to convert Mary Morris House, Shire Oak Road, from student accommodation into a 250-bed hostel raises profound concerns for the Headingley community.

This building sits within three minutes of a nursery and primary school, directly adjacent to elderly housing at Hinsley Court, and within the Headingley Conservation Area. The surrounding area is already under pressure from late-night activity associated with the Otley Run.

Introducing such a large, high-density institutional use without proper safeguards risks destabilising this balance. At present:

  • No safeguarding plan has been published to address proximity to schools, nurseries, and vulnerable residents.
  • No risk assessment has been shared on impacts for local services, healthcare, or policing.
  • No management commitments have been made on 24/7 staffing, community liaison, or occupancy limits.
  • Without these measures, both the existing community and future residents are left vulnerable.

 
Why the Current Process Is Wrong
The Home Office is seeking to push this through using a Certificate of Proposed Lawful Development (CPLD). This is the wrong process. A CPLD bypasses democratic consultation, strips out safeguards, and cannot impose enforceable planning conditions.

The planning history confirms this is not a like-for-like use:

  • The 2015 permission (Ref 15/01919/FU) was explicitly for student accommodation (PBSA), not a generic hostel.
  • The Plans Panel Committee Report (Sept 2015) considered impacts solely through a student lens and required student-specific mitigations: a Student Management Plan, Section 106 contributions (£20,000 TRO, £30,501.95 greenspace, £2,500 Travel Plan), and changes to layouts to avoid student parties.
  • The sensitive location was appraised on the assumption of PBSA, with the balance of harms judged accordingly.
  • Moving from PBSA to a 250-bed asylum hostel is a material change of use, creating:
    • Different patterns of daily presence and movement.
    • Different service demands and safeguarding needs.
    • Higher management risk without published controls.
       

What We Ask Leeds City Council To Do

  • Refuse the CPLD on the grounds that this is a material change of use.
  • Require a full planning application so that residents have a voice.
  • Ensure enforceable safeguards including a published management plan, comprehensive risk assessments, and updated Section 106 obligations proportionate to the impacts of a hostel use.

Why This Matters
This is not about rejecting asylum seekers. It is about protecting everyone—new residents and the existing community—by ensuring a change of this magnitude is properly planned, managed, and democratically scrutinised.

Supporter Voices

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