THE people of Shipley and Queensbury will be consulted over controversial plans to consider two parks as possible sites for crematoria.

The decision was made after councillors, acting as trustees of the parks, decided it would be unfair to move ahead with the proposals without speaking to the people who the parks were intended for.

Earlier this month it was revealed that Bradford Council was planning to include Littlemoor Park in Queensbury and Northcliffe Park in Shipley on a list of five possible sites to build two new crematoria, to replace existing, ageing facilities at Nab Wood and Scholemoor.

The other three sites are privately owned, and the Council says it would prefer to build on one of these private sites.

Both parks are held in charitable trusts, to be used solely for the benefit on the people of their respective areas.

Bradford Council is sole trustee for both parks, and this afternoon members of the Council's Regulatory and Appeals Committee were asked to sit as trustees to decide whether the Council should ask the Charity Commission to allow the parks to be considered as crematoria sites.

Although members had been asked to move ahead with the council's plans, they instead voted to investigate how any sale of part of the park would benefit the people of Queensbury and Shipley.

They will now ask for more information about how much money would be raised from the possible sale of land from the parks, thought to be around 20 per cent of Littlemoor and between five and 10 per cent of Northcliffe. And the residents of these areas will also be asked their opinion on what they would want the money spent on to benefit their area.

For both parks to be included in the Council's list of possible sites, the Charity Commission would have to give the authority the go ahead to proceed, and at yesterday's meeting members were advised to approach the charity commission to do that.

Councillor Simon Cooke (Cons, Bingley Rural) said the report before them hadn't made clear how going ahead with the proposals would benefit the people of Queensbury and Shipley.

He said: "I can't go ahead with this unless that point is made clear, at the moment it looks like it is being done more for the convenience of Bradford Council.

"As a trustee I have to ask in the best interests of the trust. A group has come and spoken to us, and would look to give us lots of money in exchange for some of the park. It would be wrong for us as trustees to just dismiss that - we have to look at all options presented to us."

Councillor Riaz Ahmed (Lib Dem, Bradford Moor) raised concerns that the people of the towns, who the parks were meant to benefit, had been "bypassed" in the decision

Councillor David Warburton said: "If we don't know what benefits the beneficiaries of this trust will get from this, we can't make a proper decision."

The committee, entering its ninth hour of sitting, voted to start a consultation with the inhabitants of Queensbury to gather their opinions on selling part of Littlemoor park and using the money from the sale to benefit the village elsewhere.

They made a similar vote for Northcliffe Park, and will consult the people of Shipley and Heaton wards.