Campaigners to sue over plans for greenbelt homes

The 15-year masterplan for new housing and business developments in the region was signed off in March 2024.

Nine of the 10 boroughs in Greater Manchester have signed up to the plan, with Stockport opting out.

The number of new homes earmarked for greenfield land has been scaled back since the development plan began in 2014 but campaigners say around 20,000 houses are still planned for greenbelt areas.

Zoe Sherlock, chair of Save Greater Manchester's Greenbelt said there was enough brownfield land to build all the homes the region needed and insisted there was "no requirement" to use the greenbelt.

"We don't feel it's a done deal," she added, saying she was "hopeful" the legal challenge would be successful.

"This plan is the biggest in English plan-making history.

Mistakes can be made so we want to make sure this is the best plan for Greater Manchester."

The campaign group had issued a pre-action protocol letter to the authorities involved, confirming it would be taking legal action.

Campaigners are now fundraising to pay for the legal challenge.

The campaign group is trying to avert the kind of problem faced by Malcolm Wagner, 79, and his wife Jane, 69, who live alongside one of the proposed housing developments in Simister, Bury.

Their home and stables are close to a place where 1,550 new homes and a primary school are earmarked for greenbelt - the couple are set to lose stables and two acres of land.