Steve398 wrote: Fri Mar 27, 2026 4:45 pm
When I was growing up on the Island the local Council would not allow any of the large or chain stores across. Visitors would love the Island for exactly the reasons you stated, and that in turn attracted retired professionals to move there.
However, ‘quaint’ on holiday is not the same as day-to-day Island life, and our new residents became bored so gravitated to hold positions in the local Council, and also missing the choice that the big stores on the mainland offered they began to allow them footholds.
So Tesco/Morrisons/Asda/Next/etc.,etc., sprouted up. Now it’s like Anytown, Anyplace, UK, and the quaint character of the Isle of Wight (note spelling Doc

) has gone, never to return… which is why I won’t move back.
Same here is Selsey. Most of the holidaymakers think it would be great to live here. They forget what it's like in the winter months. You're not a local until you've lived here for 21 years plus.
We, too, have the retired professional types who move down here, get fed up and run the local council. I don't even know who they are. They can't see the whole picture, really, as they live in their snooty worlds. Don't get me wrong i learnt and worked for Oxford Uni for most of my life. I'm classed as a retired professional, but I've involved myself in the community. I came from a council estate background in South London. I speak with a common London accent.
There have been plans to add more facilities that the locals want, like a once a week food market by the sea front. This is a fishing village, and we don't even have a fishmonger in the high street. which would mean more jobs for locals( there are high numbers of unemployed youngsters in the village) and enjoyment for the communities, but as the council is all snobs, they won't allow it to go through. They say it will be too noisy and cause rubbish, but they have to remember we have the largest campsite in Europe on our doorstep that produces noise 10 months of the year.
I could go on forever about the subject.