CONTROVERSIAL plans by a company to set up new allotments in a North Somerset village have got the green light after an almost year-long planning battle.

The plans by Roots Allotments for their new site in Abbots Leigh had faced fierce opposition from people in the village, who fear the allotments will be swamped by people from Bristol, across the nearby Clifton Suspension Bridge.

But Roots co-founder Christian Samuel accused objectors of being “a wild gang intent on destroying people’s right to grow food” in a dramatic meeting of North Somerset Council’s planning committee.

While giving Roots’ statement at the meeting on November 15, Mr Samuel unfurled a sheet of names covering the council chamber floor which he said represented those on the waiting list for allotments in Bristol and North Somerset.

He said: “Please, I beg, do not let these people down. Roots Allotments are one small part of the solution to a massive problem and deciding to block our legal right to grow food sets a very dangerous precedent across the country.”

He added: “We have built three separate sites across the UK with three other councils agreeing that this is legal, just like your council.

“We have been hounded online, doxxed, harassed, assaulted and chased to each new location we open by some of the people in this room.”

It was the third time Root’s application for a certificate of lawfulness for the allotments came before the committee.

Roots said they qualified for the certificate of lawfulness — which councillors have less freedom to refuse or control than a planning application — because they were only changing the fields from one type of agriculture to another.

Rory Stracey, representing the objectors, told the council that they had multiple legal grounds on which to refuse the development, but the council’s own planning officers warned that they did not.

Root’s previous attempt to get the certificate for the proposed 700-allotment site was deferred by the planning committee in July, who asked for more information about events that would take place on the site.

Roots responded, stating that no festivals were planned for the site but the certificate was then refused over the planned 80-space car parking at the site.

In the latest attempt, which removed the proposed car parking, ward councillor Jenna Ho Marris argued that the plans should still be refused and were worth fighting a potential appeal, even if the council would lose, to test the case.

She argued: “If the council loses an appeal, worse thing, the council pays the costs.”

But planning committee vice-chair Robert Payne warned: “I think we have got no choice but to grant it.”

Councillors voted 9-3 to grant the certificate of approval.

Chair of Abbots Leigh Parish Council, Simon Talbot-Ponsonby, said he was “bitterly disappointed” with the decision.

He warned that most people using the site would not be local.

He said: “They are from Bristol. They are not going to walk or cycle there. They are all going to come by car — there’s nowhere to park there!”

Mr Samuel said: “We are happy to be able to deliver allotments for the people of Bristol and North Somerset after fighting this for eleven months.”

Roots currently have sites in Croydon and Stourbridge as well as two sites near Bath, which cost more than council allotments — at £9.99 to £34.99 a month — but include seeds, courses, and access to tools.

600 people have already signed up for allotments at new Abbots Leigh site.