Scottish housing secretary Màiri McAllan is urging the country’s planning authorities to exercise proportionality to avoid ‘unnecessary’ costs and delays to SME housebuilders.
Ms McAllan and public finance minister Ivan McKee have written to Scotland’s 34 local planning authorities asking them to only request crucial information and to consider when to do so.
“The preparation of assessments for planning applications generally incurs consultancy fees for SMEs due to a lack of in-house expertise, therefore requirements for the information should be essential.
“Timing of information being provided should also be considered carefully to support cash flow, given finance may not become available to an SME until planning permission is secured,” the letter said.
The ministerial letter highlighted the importance of SME housebuilders for developing new homes in rural spots and for the redevelopment of brownfield land.
“Through delivering on these typically smaller sites, they support diversification of homes available and help to meet differing local needs and support strengthening of communities,” it stated.
Homes for Scotland policy manager David Raines said his trade association had been pressing for policy and processes from planning to road bonds to be streamlined and accelerated for some time.
“A more proportionate approach can make the small, rural and brownfield sites more viable for SMEs and incentivise them to invest and build more homes.”
He added that a speedier and more consistent approach to helping SMEs with housing delivery would also free up local authorities to focus on “strategic sites, applications and planning”.
New consultation on speeding up housing delivery imminent
Brokers Hank Zarihs Associates said development finance lenders backed the government’s efforts to support SME builders by cutting back on red tape.
The National Federation of Builders, NFB, said it would like to see SME builders added to the Scottish government’s proportionality of assessment short life working group to lay bare commercial realities.
It pointed out that despite planning applications for fewer than 50 homes decreasing by a third in 2024-25 it was taking seven weeks longer than average decision times in 2019-20.
The government has pledged to accelerate housing delivery across all tenures by ten per cent over the next three years to lift 10,000 children currently living in temporary accommodation.
It has announced that it will shortly be publishing a new consultation document on methods to speed up and increase the volume of new homes with specific measures to help SMEs.
The government-funded Scottish National Investment Bank will be key to accelerating the housing pipeline through strategic partnerships and lending to SME housebuilders.
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