LIBERAL Democrat councillors are urging Warrington Borough Council to submit  Peel Hall Park and other green spaces across the town for additional protection from developers.
Cllr Bob Barr, the Lib Dem spokesman on planning and the environment and new Poulton representative Cllr Sandra Bradshaw are putting a motion to next week's meeting of the full council.
The motion regrets that Warrington has not put forward any recreational spaces for the Queen Elizabeth II Fields Challenge - an initiative which aims to safeguard outdoor recreation spaces in perpetuity to mark the Queen's Diamond Jubilee and urges the council to submit Peel Hall Park for the Challenge.
The two councillor say the Challenge offers a way of improving parks and safeguarding them against development at some time in the future.
Local amenity group The Friends of Peel Hall Park have already criticised the council for its failure to put the park forward for the Challenge but the council has indicated that it was decided to apply to the Challenge because the council already had policies and procedures committed to protecting green spaces.
The Queen Elizabeth II Fields Challenge is operated by Fields in Trust and led by the Duke of Cambridge and is a campaign designed to protect playing fields across the country as a permanent "living legacy" of the  Jubilee - and also of the London Olympics.
It covers sports pitches, woodlands, children's play areas, gardens, bicycle trails, parks and other recreational spaces - and hopes to preserve 2,012 green spaces.
Developers have had their eyes on land near Peel Hall Park for years and want to build up to 1,400 homes in the area. But the council's policy is that the land should be retained as open, green space.
Pictured: Cllr Bob Barr and Cllr Sandra Bradshaw.