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Planning Reform Month

The rock and roll world of town and country planning is, as you know, Readers, fast-paced and ever-changing at the best of times, but it was especially fast-paced and ever-changing in December. This is an attempt at a recap, with a few initial reflections thrown in.  Planning Reform Working Paper: Planning Committees On 9 December a working paper was published on welcome proposals to modernise planning committees. The paper puts forward three reforms to “support better decision-making in the planning system”, which are: The introduction of a mandatory requirement for training for planning committee members; The creation of smaller targeted planning committees specifically for strategic development; and The introduction of a national scheme of delegation. The working paper can be found here and the MHCLG press release can be found here . When this emerged in the press under headlines such as “ property developers could bypass planning committees in bid to 'overhaul' process ” i...
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Where there is a will there is a way

I am finishing this blog at the start because as I dot the i’s and cross the t’s on something that I have been cogitating over for the last week or so the  Prime Minister  has today empathised that building 1.5 million homes before the end of the parliament is a key part of the Government’s ‘plan for change’. To that end, building 1.5 million homes I mean, I have read a few bits and pieces recently that lead one to wonder whether the obstacles to doing so are systemic, and so can be legislated or mandated away, or are perhaps more deep-seated than that. Many in the housing sector are hard-wired to oppose new owner-occupier housing or housebuilders themselves. The reasons are endless – design quality, landbanking, ecology, sprawl, profit, water, nutrients, heritage, traffic, doctor’s capacity, sufficient permissions already, etc, etc. So wrote Philip Barnes in a recent blog, within which Mr Barnes seeks to draw a line between Trapped , Daniel Hewitt’s podcast on the housing em...

Why has there not yet been an increase in applications for new homes?

One of the secrets to consultancy, I learnt, is to answer a question before it is asked and the release tomorrow by MHCLG of the net additional dwelling data for 2023/24, which Neal Hudson has already predicted does not look pretty for the South East (see below), may very well prompt Ministers to ask why there has not yet been an increase in applications for new homes. Were that question to be asked of me this is what I would say... Firstly, the proposed changes to the standard method and the Grey Belt proposition are, in my humble opinion, ‘game changers’. There is a sophistic argument to be had about whether the presumption has actually been strengthened pursuant to the 2012 iteration, but, regardless, it will be triggered in many more LPAs than is the case presently and Grey Belt, a tightening here and a clarification there, is a route to securing consent on sites years earlier than might otherwise be the case. Whilst the 50% affordable Golden Rule may have spooked some parties wit...

On modernising planning committees

If you are involved they are terrible, but if you are just observing they are terrific. That is how, way back in the day..., I introduced Episode 7 of 50 Shades of Planning. If you are reading a town planning-based blog then the chances are that you will have participated in a planning committee previously, will know immediately what I mean, and will have your own tales to tell. If you are not a planner though or have not been subject to this unique ‘cauldron of human emotion’ (which is what I called Episode 7) then you should watch Wokingham ’s planning committee take over an hour to debate the merits of a proposed communications kiosk in Woodley recently (I only knew about this because I saw somebody last week who had to sit through this discussion whilst waiting for the next application, but you could probably pick any planning committee at any council on any day of the year and see something similar). Yes, of course, not all planning committees are akin to putting the fate of a tr...

On Grey Belt

Picture the scene. In the back of a taxi on the way to giving a speech about housing, a Minister, long-enough in post to have become sufficiently well-read on housing need and brownfield capacity, solicits ideas from their team on how to take the public on a journey that ends with the building of houses on land currently in the Green Belt. “Come on people! "We need something between ‘brownfield first’, which is clearly not enough, and protecting genuine nature spots, which is clearly a given." “ Grey Belt, Minister ?” “Go on...” “Well, poor-quality scrubland, mothballed on the outskirts of town, like that disused garage in Tottenham that Siobhan McDonagh keeps going on about*. We can prioritise ugly, disused grey belt land, and set tough new conditions for releasing it.” “Splendid...” That may or may not be how Grey Belt came into being (it is interesting to note that unlike the stock-based standard method and a national scheme of delegation it is not a concept that, as far ...