Vale Game Pest Control Services wished to develop a space for dog owners to work out and train their animals in the land north of Banny Hill Farm in Baulking.
But Vale of White Horse District Council turned down the strategies.
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The authority said the website’s rural area would motivate personal car usage.
No appeal has actually yet been lodged by the family-run bug control business.
The not successful application, which was released in June, would have changed making use of the triangular turf paddock by the train.
The candidates, who live at Banny Hill Farm, traditionally utilized the land to graze sheep and produce hay.
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But, in their preparation letter, they said the “withdrawal of subsidies and increased input costs” implied this plan was no longer possible.
They rather prepared to develop “a dedicated space for local people to exercise and train their dogs in a safe and secure environment” confined by a 6 feet dog evidence fence formed of wire mesh.
It would have been run in daytime hours with 50-minute reservation slots.
But case officer Nathaniel Bamsey advised versus the strategies in his report, and the council declined preparing authorization on Thursday, August 10.