County council to hand over windmills to save cash
- Published
Eight of Kent's historic windmills will no longer be funded by the council.
Kent County Council (KCC) wants to save the annual £150,000 it costs to look after the structures by handing them over to special interest groups to run and maintain.
Labour councillor Barry Lewis put forward a recommendation to the environment and transport committee to keep hold of the windmills because he said the annual cost to do so was “chicken feed”.
The motion was defeated by eight votes to six.
The buildings were acquired by KCC as the so-called owner of last resort between the late 1950s and the mid-1980s.
But the council’s financial constraints - with £83m in savings needed in the financial year beginning in April 2025 - means it is looking to hand them over to special interest or heritage groups who can pay for day-to-day upkeep.
The eight windmills, which are are either Grade I or Grade II* listed, are:
Chillenden Mill
Union Mill, Cranbrook
Herne Mill
Draper’s Mill, Margate
Meopham Mill
Davidson’s Mill, Stelling Minnis
West Kingsdown Mill
Stocks Mill, Wittersham
Critics are concerned that offloading the buildings will threaten their futures.
Paul Allen, chairman of the friends of Chillenden windmill, said it would be too big a project for his group to take on.
But he fears a private owner would not provide the long term security the council has done.
He told BBC Radio Kent: "Once something has gone, it has gone forever.
"If it went into private hands, however good willing the person was, that might fail, that might end. His or her successors might change and have a completely different view."
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