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By: li xiao lixiao
Category: Health
Posted: Aug 27, 2010
Updated: Aug 27, 2010
Views: 57


It will create a huge cavern in beautiful green-belt countryside. I fear once the railway is built, companies will be left slavering over use of the land for other property ventures. There will be more pressure on the local people to fight to preserve this beautiful area of countryside.”

Her son Andy Hyland, 22, <a href="http://dvds-estore.com/ ">cheap P90x</a>questioned the need for the line, saying: “Great Missenden and the surrounding villages will be cut up by the track which is entirely unnecessary as there are already adequate travel links from London to the north.”

Others were worried about the impact on local businesses. Frances Parker, 64, who owns a bakery in Amersham, said: “I worry that the rail line will mean that the Chilterns is not such an attractive area for outsiders to experience the countryside any more, meaning that local businesses like mine will feel the knock-on effect.”

The overriding concern of many though is the likely effect on property prices and the ability of the government’s new £50m fund to compensate local people adequately. “The value of my property will definitely decrease,” says homeowner Lucy Worth, 35. “I’ve looked into the fund but I don’t meet the guidelines so I won’t receive anything despite the fact it’s extremely likely I’ll lose out.”

John Potts, 76, said: “The vast majority of people who will be affected are not going to see a penny and given the length of the track the money will be spread very thinly.”

Not absolutely everyone <a href="http://dvds-estore.com/p90x-c-14.html">P90X</a>; agreed though. Peter Wicklow, 28, a human resources manager who bought property in the nearby village of Little Chalfont four years ago, is fairly sanguine. “House prices here are consistently high, reflecting the demand for the area, so I think overall [the line is] unlikely to significantly lower prices in the long run.”

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