• 2 days ago
Locals in England's longest village are in heated row with their local council - over the removal of an "iconic" toilet block.

Parish councillors in Meopham, Kent last month voted to remove a loo facility built in the 1950s - a decision residents have labelled a "scandal".

They say the village - which measures seven miles in length - needs the toilets, for walkers and visiting delivery drivers to use.

More than 30 villagers rallied at the toilets to protest the Meopham Parish Council's decision on Friday (January 24).

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Transcript
00:00Villages are at war with Meppin Parish Council after its decision to demolish a public toilet.
00:07It wants to replace it with a single unit unisex loo, but people living in the village
00:12are in uproar.
00:13Those toilets were built in 1959, they are solid, there is nothing wrong with those,
00:20we don't need a unisex toilet, a lot of the older population around here just wouldn't
00:24want that anyway.
00:26The council just shut them without any consideration and any conversation with the local population,
00:33but unfortunately the council are now rather unwilling to reconsider opening them and properly
00:41talk about what can be done.
00:43It's an iconic building within Meppin, two, it serves our parish and probably more importantly
00:51it serves visitors to our parish, such as walkers, day-of-ears, van drivers, bus drivers,
00:58postmen, delivery men, everybody that serves our village needs to use these facilities.
01:04We're quite upset really about the fact that the toilets are closed because sometimes we
01:10need to go and it is vital for not just us but everyone in the community.
01:16Meppin Parish Council says it has structural concerns about the facility and that it is
01:21unfit for purpose.

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