Opposition leader Ralph Thorne has condemned the government’s land-use strategy, accusing it of prioritising housing developments at the expense of farming and proceeding with major projects without adequate public consultation.In his reply to the Budget in the House of Assembly on Tuesday, Thorne highlighted the acquisition of lands at the former Bullens Agricultural Station in St James as a prime example of what he described as reckless decision-making.“This government came in here and acquired lands at Bullens Agricultural Station…man and I got up and behaved bad in here. Not the kind of bad behaviour that would entitle the Speaker to put me out, but I protested,” he said. “I protested because I felt that too much of our agricultural land was going into housing. I predicted, I said no doubt they will put high-end villas down there because it’s just above the West Coast. I was laughed at and I overheard a voice from the other side saying, ‘he does not even know the houses gone up already’. That is what this government is doing.”Thorne took aim at what he sees as the administration’s tendency to proceed with major projects without proper public consultation: “This government is proceeding with its projects and then coming to the people after. That is what Holetown is about; the people in this country feel aggrieved that those negotiations were so advanced and that the people found out all too late.”He warned that the issue in Holetown—where the government has pressed ahead with plans to redevelop the Holetown Civic Centre site, awarding an $176m project to the Insurance Corporation of Barbados Limited (ICBL) for the construction of a 100-room hotel around the national monument to the island’s colonisation—was about more than just heritage concerns. He pointed to what he believes is an economic imbalance favouring wealthy interests at the expense of ordinary Barbadians.