The green belt borders of Bromsgrove are under huge pressure to take thousands more houses under plans being drawn up by regional bodies.
The Wythall and Beoley areas face the prospect of thousands of new houses being built on green belt land which traditionally has formed the border between Birmingham and Bromsgrove and Redditch and Bromsgrove.
The threat comes from the Government’s Regional Spatial Strategy (RSS) which has been given the task of deciding where future houses will be built in the West Midlands having been informed by the now defunct West Midlands Regional Assembly as to how many new dwellings will be needed.
Their conclusions make disappointing reading for residents in the Wythall and Beoley areas who could find large new housing estates being built in their area with no democratic accountability for the decisions which have been taken.
Conservative Party MP, Julie Kirkbride is implacably opposed to these developments and will fight to protect Bromsgrove’s green borders.
Click here for more information and to register your concerns.
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Julie Kirkbride
Member of Parliament for Bromsgrove
Tel: 01527 872135 / Fax: 01527 575019 / House of Commons, London, SW1A 0AA.
Email: julie@juliekirkbride.com / Web: www.juliekirkbride.com
Julie was born in June 1960 and brought up in Halifax, the youngest of three children. Her father was a lorry driver who died when she was seven and her mother worked as a secretary at Rowntree Mackintosh’s. She went to local schools including the local grammar school, which at the time was known as The Highlands and is now the North Halifax High School, followed by Girton College, Cambridge to read economics and history. Whilst at university, she was Vice President of the Cambridge Union Society and active in Conservative politics.
Upon leaving university, she spent a year working for the House magazine in Parliament and then from 1982 to 1983 as a Rotary Foundation scholar studying journalism at the University of California in Berkeley. Between 1983 and 1986, she worked as a researcher for Yorkshire Television in Leeds, between 1986 and 1989 as a BBC News and Current Affairs researcher/producer in London, and from 1989 and 1992 as a producer/reporter for ITN’s Parliamentary Unit. In 1992, she became a political correspondent for the Daily Telegraph and in 1996 Social Affairs Editor on the Sunday Telegraph.
In November 1996, she was selected to fight the Bromsgrove seat which she won the following year. In August 1997, she married Andrew MacKay MP, the Conservative Member for Bracknell, and they have a son, Angus.
Julie Kirkbride’s Experience
Julie’s political career began when she joined the Young Conservatives in Halifax at the age of fourteen and she continued during her time at Cambridge University. When she started working for Yorkshire Television, and subsequently the BBC and ITN, she stopped an active political career due to the potential conflict of interests and likewise whilst she was a political correspondent for the Telegraph.
Her political career therefore resumed in November 1996 when she was selected for the Conservative held seat of Bromsgrove. As a Member of Parliament since May 1997, she has been a member of the Social Security Committee and now sits on the Culture Media and Sport Select Committee. She also sits as a member of the Commons Catering Committee. From November 2003 to September 2004, she was Shadow Secretary of State for Culture, Media & Sport.
Her interests in political issues range across the spectrum with perhaps her highest profile campaign so far being to encourage the Government to introduce single vaccinations alongside the MMR.





















