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Decision delayed on green burial ground for Angus/Dundee border

The site plan for the proposed natural burial ground.
The site plan for the proposed natural burial ground.

A decision over siting a natural burial ground on Angus farmland near the county’s border with Dundee has been delayed.

Angus development standards committee councillors had been due to consider the application for the site at Kellas Wood for what had been described as an “ecologically sound” alterantive to standard cremation and traditional graveyard burials.

Farmers T Kettles and Son had said the planned burial ground included within a half hectare site would be capable of accommodating around 500 occupants and would follow the creations of similar facilities in East Lothian, Ayrshire and at Turriff in Aberdeenshire.

However, despite a conditional approval recommendation from Angus Council planning officials, the proposal was withdrawn before it could be considered by councillors in order for further discussions to take place with the Scottish Environment Protection Agency in the wake of objections including flooding fears and the potential impact on the local water environment.

The innovative scheme drew almost seventy representation responses, 58 in support of the plan.

Angus Councils own parks and burial grounds service offered no objection, but said there was no evidence of either a shortfall or oversupply of burial provision in the area, with the nearest cemetery only 2.5 miles away within the city boundary.

In support of the plan, farmer Alan Kettles said the family firm believed the proposal would improve the current surface water situation through the establishment of permanent vegetation within the site, located just north of Kellas village at the corner of a junction leading to Murroes primary school.

The applicants have said they want to create a “peaceful conservation place for relatives to pay their respects and experience a more personal and bespoke end-of-life ritual.”

The burial ground plan would ban grave ornamentation apart from the opportunity to plant birch trees to fit in with the adjacent Kellas Wood, or leave small engraved boulders sourced from local quarries.

No firm date was set by the committee for the the proposal to come back before them.