Hi guys, thanks for your response. I guess its a bit of a strange one. The percolation area is in a different field and the original pp included about .25 acre of this second field instead of just getting a right of way to the percolation area. The 'site' area itself will be unaffected and its still quite a big site.
mwhich,
+1 what Guns N Roses and RKQ have posted, and in addition I note the following -
The percolation area is part of the site by definition, since the site suitability must be tested by an accredited and registered person.
It cannot be viewed in isolation, since there are minimum distances of percolation areas and reserve percolation areas from
- each other
- wells and sources of potable water
- legal boundaries
- your house
- other dwellings
- septic tanks, yours and others
- streams, rivers, field drains and ditches etc.
It would appear that you will therefore be materially in breach of your permission should you continue in this manner.
This strongly suggests a planning permission is required, and you may have gotten yourself into legal entanglements with increased costs which you could have avoided at an earlier stage by simply buying the requisite piece of land.
As part of the new planning application you will most like have to substitute an advanced treatment system for the one you have shown (assuming you have not got an advanced system already) to try to address the effluent with the areas you control.
As part of the new planning application you should also show the correct ownership outline, red for land you own and blue for other lands not part of the application and yellow for rights of way thereon, or as may be directed by the acts or regulations a amended or the local authority.
ONQ.
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All advice on AAM is remote from the situation and cannot be relied upon as a defence or support - in and of itself - should legal action be taken.
Competent legal and building professionals should be asked to advise in Real Life with rights to inspect and issue reports on the matters at hand.