CONSULTANTS working with online retail giant Amazon met with local people to discuss the prospect of a massive fulfilment centre being built on farmland close to the M62 motorway at Scholes.

Scores of people turned up to see plans for the facility at a four-hour drop-in exhibition held at the Gomersal Park Hotel.

Campaign group Save Our Spen also had a table at the event.

An Amazon spokesperson said the company was “delighted to have the opportunity to share information regarding the proposed fulfilment centre”, and that more than 180 people attended.

Save Our Spen said they were “inundated with people wanting to find out more about the campaign and the planning application”.

The controversial plans, which were made public a year ago, involve the creation of a huge centre on fields sandwiched between the A58 Whitehall Road and the B6120 Whitechapel Road at Scholes near Cleckheaton.

The 59-acre site is close to junction 26 of the M62 at Chain Bar. As planned it would be a third of a kilometre long, 178m wide and 23m high and could result in around 2,400 jobs, which planners at Kirklees Council say is “acceptable in principle” even though it exceeds the development capacity outlined in the council’s Local Plan.

They said the number of jobs – suggested last year to be around 1,500, now around 900 higher – would contribute towards the council’s target of delivering 23,000 jobs by 2031.

An Amazon spokesperson said last Wednesday’s drop-in “went really well” with “lots of questions” being asked.

They added: “We were delighted to have the opportunity to share information regarding the proposed fulfilment centre, and answer questions about working at Amazon with more than 180 people from the local community. We were also pleased members of Save Our Spen were able to attend.”

A Save Our Spen spokesman agreed the event was “very well attended” and that it presented an opportunity for the group to speak directly with the individuals that had produced reports on air, noise and light levels as well as traffic reports which, they said, were “based solely on desktop modelling”.

The spokesperson added: “It is safe to say that the public had very little interaction with the Amazon representatives. However, we were inundated with people wanting to find out more about the campaign and the planning application.”

Save Our Spen conducted a straw poll that asked whether Kirklees Council should grant planning permission based on the current plans. Of 95 people that completed the poll, all responded “no”.

Among those that visited the drop-in exhibition was local councillor Kath Pinnock (Lib Dem, Cleckheaton), who is opposing the Amazon proposals.

She described the event as “fascinating” and said: “There were more people round the Save Our Spen table than in the rest of the room. I don’t think Amazon had a good evening."