MP slams Spurs' stadium plans

MP slams Spurs' stadium plans

Published Jan. 11, 2011 1:16 p.m. ET

Spurs are among those who have put themselves forward to take up the lease of the site after the 2012 Olympics, with a preferred bidder due to be announced later this month and a confirmed agreement drawn up by the end of March. If Spurs are given the green light, it would see them abandon plans for a multi-million pound redevelopment of White Hart Lane, their home for 111 years, and relocate from north to east London. Such a possibility has outraged the MP for Tottenham, David Lammy, who has called on the Government to intervene in the naming of the preferred bidder in order to safeguard the future regeneration of his constituency. Speaking during a debate in Westminster today, Lammy said: "Can it possibly be fair that Tottenham's legacy from the Olympics is for the largest private employer to be allowed by this government to depart? "The Olympics were meant to bring a unique experience to the doorsteps of ordinary Londoners. "In N17, that experience will have a particularly bitter aftertaste should Spurs leave as a result. "Never did I imagine our successful Olympic bid would mean that residents of Tottenham, and those of Enfield, Waltham Forest and the whole of the Upper Lea Valley would have the heart and soul ripped out of their communities. "What kind of an Olympic legacy would that be?" Club officials are due to meet with Lammy and Andrew Stunell MP, the Minister for Regeneration, later this month.

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