Economic growth is still being constrained by a
planning system in England that is ‘too slow, under
resourced and unpredictable', according to a new
British Chambers of
Commerce (BCC) report.
The report, Planning for Business
and Growth,
says that while recent government reforms
signal the right intent, further urgent action is
needed. The BCC says there needs
to be a ‘fundamental reimagining of how planning
authorities operate and interact with the business
community'.
The report is calling on ministers
to
-
Go above and
beyond its target of recruiting 1,400
planners by the end of this
parliament.
-
Ensure employment is
given equal priority as housing in planning
policy and guidance.
-
Simplify and speeded
up the planning process for business, through the
introduction of National Development Management
Policies.
-
Publish clear, time-bound
implementation plans for each major element of planning
reform.
-
Introduce comprehensive
fast-track services for priority projects that deliver on its
economic growth objectives.
Today's report says business
investment thrives on certainty, but the planning
system in England is failing to
deliver that. The BCC says the task for policymakers is
to transform planning into a ‘strategic tool for economic
development' that actively helps investment and
innovation.
In the report, an SME in Yorkshire
says:
“The lack of funding and skilled
personnel in local authorities is preventing planning reforms
from having their intended impact, regardless of the
reforms' quality.”
While a small manufacturer in the
Midlands says:
“Policy change is welcome, but the
reality is unchanged: decisions are slow and firms can't rely on
timely planning outcomes”
The report highlights proactive work
being carried out by the business community to help improve
planning resources. The BCC Planning Skills Fund, supported by Aviva, is already training planning
students at universities across the UK, thanks to private sector
capital.
Kate Shoesmith, Director of
Policy at the British Chambers of Commerce
said:
“Rather than being an accelerator
for business growth, for too
long the planning system in England has
been acting as a handbrake on
investment.
“The Government has
rightly identified that reform
is necessary, and we welcome
the recent Planning and Infrastructure Act. But
businesses need to be confident that the new legislation
will deliver, and ministers need to go further and
faster.
“That means more planners on the
ground, clear timetables for reform and fast-track routes for
projects that support economic
growth.
“The business community is already
stepping up, including through initiatives like the BCC Planning
Skills Fund. Now government must match that ambition and turn
planning into a driver of growth rather than a drag on
it.”