A new pre-examination checklist for local plans goes live next month to help speed up approvals and avoid lengthy inspectorate examinations.
Examinations are conducted to address a plan’s deficiencies but often hold up approvals for several years. The average length of 65 weeks in 2016 for examinations has climbed to 134 weeks in 2022, according to government figures.
National Federation of Builders, NFB, policy and market insight head Rico Wojtulewicz said: “This is recognition that more work needs to be done to ensure targets are met and will create greater levels of certainty.
“We must remember that planning is not just getting a planning permission but all the policies and strategies which inform and enable it in practice.”
The checklist will help ensure essential evidence and documents are ready to be submitted, and the plan’s content and rationale are clear.
Housing minister Matthew Pennycook has said he wants to avoid the inspectorate ‘fixing’ deficient plans, leading to massive hold-ups.
“Pragmatism should not be used to address fundamental issues with the soundness of a plan, which would be likely to require pausing or delaying the examination process for more than six months overall,” he said.
National roll out of online appeals for all of England’s LPAs
In July the planning inspectorate continued a phased roll out of online appeals for all local authorities in England this year following a pilot in Barnet, Greenwich, Havering, Richmond upon Thames, and Bromley.
This followed changes to the planning appeal process in June, making it possible to only consider evidence submitted during the application, and not during the appeal. The new service offers a user-friendly dashboard for reviewing and monitoring cases and continuous improvement of the system based on user feedback
Planning inspectorate chief executive Paul Morrison said: “Every delayed planning decision represents potential delays to development and uncertainty for local communities. This change is a common-sense approach to planning that benefits us all by removing unnecessary administrative burdens and focusing on what matters: well-informed, timely decisions based on high-quality applications from the start.”
Brokers Hank Zarihs Associates said development finance lenders wanted to see speedier local plan adoption, as this would give builders a clearer picture about where to concentrate their efforts.
Planning consultancy Litchfield’s’ research reveals that currently 60 per cent of councils do not have up-to-date local plans – the blueprint for development in an area over the next five years.
Local planning authorities delayed submitting local plans after the then housing secretary Michael Gove made housing delivery targets advisory rather than mandatory in December 2023.
The change removed the incentive for councils to act allowing them to justify lower housing numbers and defer complex decisions, especially regarding green belt land.
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