Dame Maria Miller (Basingstoke) (Con) I am grateful for having
secured this debate, and even more grateful that the Minister for
Housing, Planning and Building Safety is here to respond. In
December, the Government announced significant changes to their
house building planning policy, giving new powers and freedoms to
local planning authorities, such as mine in Basingstoke and Deane,
through changes to the national planning policy framework to vary
their planned house...Request free
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Dame (Basingstoke) (Con)
I am grateful for having secured this debate, and even more
grateful that the Minister for Housing, Planning and Building
Safety is here to respond. In December, the Government announced
significant changes to their house building planning policy,
giving new powers and freedoms to local planning authorities,
such as mine in Basingstoke and Deane, through changes to the
national planning policy framework to vary their planned house
building numbers away from the standard method, among other
things. The Secretary of State rightfully attached to these new
powers and freedoms a single, clear and unambiguous
condition:
“With these changes secure, there is now an added responsibility
on local government to deliver.”
That responsibility on local planning authorities to deliver at
their own plans is what I will focus on today. For too many
years, some planning authorities have relied on Government for
their house building figures, choosing the path of least
resistance and doing what the standard formula told them, in the
absence of having asked council officials to collect evidence, or
perhaps for fear of being challenged if they actually challenged
the standard method and had to allocate more people to their
planning departments. However, those days are over. Just a month
after these significant changes, many local authorities will
still be digesting what they mean for them. I hope that this
debate and the Minister’s response will help to explain the
breadth of these new freedoms to challenge and the new
responsibilities that local authorities have.
My local authority, Basingstoke and Deane, published papers to
approve its updated local plan, with new planned levels of house
building, for public consultation on exactly the same day as the
Government’s new policy changes. I am sure that behind the scenes
officials and elected councillors will be agreeing how their
proposals need to change in the light of the Government’s new
policies, which so readily could deal with the concerns about
high levels of house building expressed by thousands of my
constituents. At this point, let me pay particular tribute to the
residents’ groups in my constituency, particularly Clean Air
Green Environment, or CAGE; and Save Our Lodden Valley
Environment, or SOLVE. They have worked so hard to make the case
to cut house building in our borough over many years. These new
Government policies are a powerful tool to help achieve that
aim.
The Secretary of State’s statement makes it clear that the
extensive changes that have been made to the NPPF must be taken
into account by the planning inspectors. Of course, all the
changes apply to all of the country, but certain changes are more
important to certain local authorities. For Basingstoke, which,
as the Minister knows, has built homes for more than 150,000
people since 1960, the most relevant change is the one to the
standard assessment model—the formula used to determine house
building rates. It is now an advisory starting point, not a
mandatory end point.
In places such as Basingstoke, where we have a unique set of
factors, the standard method has generated house building numbers
in the past that are both inappropriate and unachievable. As a
result of the changes that the Minister introduced, the local
authority is now able to consider varying more widely from that
standard assessment, having looked at “exceptional
circumstances”, to ensure that house building in our community
better reflects the nuance of our individual situation.
I have been campaigning since I was first elected—I think you can
remember that, Mr Deputy Speaker—for house building that reflects
local need, not a formula. I did so when I called for “No more
tower blocks and gridlock” in the 2005 election; in my first
Westminster Hall debate; and when working with local
environmental groups and residents’ groups. It is what we
advocated for at the last planning inspector’s review of our
current local plan. It has also been the subject of a recent
petition presented to the local authority, which is supported by
thousands of residents. We want to see house building levels cut
to reflect our local need, not a standard method formulated in
Whitehall.
(Somerton and Frome) (LD)
Local authorities are best placed to ensure that the right homes
are built in the right places, so does the right hon. Lady agree
that we need to protect the voice of local communities in the
planning process?
Dame
It is as if the hon. Lady has read what I am about to say—she is
completely right. Cutting house building in Basingstoke will
better reflect the situation we have in our community, and that
is what my residents want to see, not those numbers continuing to
be set from Whitehall.
(Strangford) (DUP)
The right hon. Lady has outlined the way house building impacts
her constituency, but does she agree that while planning policy
must protect and enhance our environment, it must also focus on
the needs of an area? Planners must give material consideration
and weighted concern to economic development and job
creation.
Dame
The hon. Gentleman is absolutely right. Each of those
considerations is different in our individual constituencies, so
rather than taking a sledgehammer and telling each of our local
authorities how many houses to build, they should reflect the
nuance that the hon. Gentleman mentions.
As the Secretary of State set out when he announced the changes
to the national planning policy framework, it is for local
authorities and their councillors to use the new powers. In
Basingstoke’s case, that means Basingstoke and Deane Borough
Council and our councillors. They have to take responsibility for
using the new NPPF. They have the new powers to use and they
understand the pressures that have been put on services,
especially the NHS, by exceptionally high volumes of house
building in Basingstoke. Councillors must use the new powers to
cut house building, at least until the NHS has caught up and, I
would argue, until they find a way to further increase the
capacity of our roads, which is technically very difficult.
(Tiverton and Honiton)
(LD)
The right hon. Lady is talking about services that support
communities in the Basingstoke area. On her point about building
resilient communities, the NPPF was somewhat lacking when it
defined such services in rather old-fashioned terms, such as
community halls, schools and churches. They are important, but
does she agree that we need to bring that up to date to reflect
such things as good broadband and fibre to the premises?
Dame
I am sure the hon. Gentleman’s point has been heard loud and
clear by the Minister. He is right that those are essential
services on which all our residents now rely.
The updated NPPF deliberately does not provide an exhaustive list
of the applicable exceptional circumstances. The NPPF now shows
that exceptional circumstances are not to be drawn narrowly,
which was too often asserted in the past by local authorities who
readily chose to interpret them from case law alone. It is now
clear that local authorities, including mine in Basingstoke, are
able to set out their case for exceptional circumstances for a
large number of reasons.
In Basingstoke, that could be the age demographics of our town.
We are the most rapidly ageing population in Hampshire, with the
number of over-65s growing by 77% in the last decade. The primary
and most compelling factor that makes Basingstoke and Deane an
outlier is our extraordinary levels of historic house building.
At the start of the second world war, our population was just
13,000. By 1961, it had grown to 25,000. Today, our population is
186,000, so we have grown from 13,000 to 186,000 in less than a
lifetime. Put another way, our population is now almost 1,500
times greater than it was in the second world war. Those are
exceptional circumstances that have a clear bearing on the
capacity of my community to absorb future high levels of house
building.
Not only is such accelerated house building affecting our natural
environment, especially our unique and irreplaceable
north-flowing salmonoid chalk stream; it is also putting an
unsustainable strain on public services, particularly our local
roads and the NHS. The Government have invested record sums in my
community, but we are fast feeling maxed out. There is to be a
brand-new hospital, but not until 2032, and £60 million is
expected on road improvements, but there is now no additional
capacity technically possible.
Residents are clear about this. Thousands want to cut house
building levels. They are living in a constant building site with
more than 1,000 new homes being built every year, green space
disappearing every day, and road works trying to squeeze the last
ounce of capacity out of every road and junction. Enough is
enough. Basingstoke and Deane Borough Council published its local
plan, which clings to the now outdated policy of standard method
as its end point, as if it continued to be set in stone. As a
result, the draft plan fails to slow down house building,
ratchets up building rates over time to dizzying levels and
completely fails to reflect our exceptional circumstances, which
I have just outlined.
(Warley) (Lab)
I thank the right hon. Lady for giving way. People also have to
live in those communities and be entertained. Does she agree that
music venues are enormously important for the cultural talent
pipeline? The agent of change principle sought to protect those
venues from neighbouring development. That is why it was
incorporated into the planning policy guidance. Does she
therefore agree that this now needs to be enshrined in law to
strengthen the protection for music venues and for our musicians
of the future?
Dame
The right hon. Gentleman may not know this, but I am the mother
of two musicians and I would have to agree with him—for fear of
the consequences if I did not. I hope that the Minister has
listened to him as well, as he makes a valid point.
I know from conversations that I have had on the doorsteps in
Basingstoke for many years that excessive house building is the
No. 1 issue for many residents. It is so disappointing that the
borough council has not yet exercised its new powers, especially
given all the hard work that the Minister has put into changing
the NPPF to better accommodate places with exceptional
circumstances, such as Basingstoke.
Some of my councillors have supported a short-term approach,
bagging the reduction in the five-year land supply to four years,
but surely they should also share my concern that they could
easily see further manipulation of developments being carried
forward to make that apparent gain evaporate quite quickly. What
we need is the long-term solution, not a quick fix.
None the less, I am an optimist. Basingstoke and Deane Borough
Council started its public consultation on 22 January and it will
run until 4 March, so that residents who are interested in the
local plan and in house building levels can take part, and also
perhaps support my petition at the same time, calling on the
council to use its new powers to make the case for cutting house
building levels to the planning inspector. Nothing is guaranteed;
that is obvious. Evidence must be presented, and the case—the
case that is right for the community—also has to be made. And
what is right for the community is certainly not continuing house
building at the current level.
I hope to embolden Basingstoke and Deane Borough Council to make
changes. I hope the Minister can answer a couple of questions to
help them on their way. First, will the planning inspector be
expecting new interpretations of “exceptional circumstance”
following the recent changes to the NPPF? Too often in the past I
have been told that it applies only to the greenbelt. My reading
is that that is no longer the case. Does he expect every local
authority to at least acknowledge the new NPPF policies in their
local plan? And would he share the surprise of local residents if
any local authority were to completely ignore the new NPPF
policies and act as if no changes had been made at all?
Nothing is more important to me than ensuring that everyone in my
constituency has a place to live in—an affordable home. It is the
Conservatives who have made sure that, in my constituency,
affordable homes make up 40% of all new homes. However,
Basingstoke has for decades being making up for the lack of house
building elsewhere—in London, throughout the south-east and
beyond. The Government changes to the NPPF mean that now our
local planning authority, Basingstoke and Deane Borough Council,
can take responsibility for ensuring that its house building
plans reflect the exceptional circumstances that I have outlined
in Basingstoke, and indeed in neighbouring Oakley and other
surrounding villages, where the vast majority of house building
has taken place. The council must look again at its plans, which
were drawn up before these important new Government policies were
launched, and do what is right. I believe what is right is to cut
house building to a level that is appropriate for our community,
taking into account the sort of nuanced circumstances that the
Secretary of State talked about when he launched those new
policies.
7.30pm
The Minister for Housing, Planning and Building Safety ()
I thank my right hon. Friend the Member for Basingstoke (Dame
) for securing the debate and
for the excellent speech she just delivered on behalf of her
constituents. She clearly stands up for her constituents, and I
know they will have been listening tonight.
I know housing and planning is an important issue for the people
of Basingstoke and, indeed, many people across the country. That
is exactly why we took to update the national planning policy
framework just before Christmas. This Government want to build
more homes, but we want to build them in the right places. We
want to build them more quickly, beautifully and sustainably. The
right way to deliver that is through a reformed planning system
that works. We are clear that it is only through up-to-date local
plans that local authorities can deliver for communities, protect
the land and assets that matter, and create the conditions for
more homes to be delivered all across the country.
As the House knows, we consulted last year on a series of
proposals and received more than 26,000 responses, demonstrating
the interest in planning to so many communities up and down the
land. The resulting update of the framework builds on the
Levelling-up and Regeneration Act 2023 and delivers on the intent
set out by the Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and
Communities last year. It does so in a way that seeks to promote
building the right homes in the right places with the right
infrastructure, which will ensure that the environment is
protected and will give local people a greater say on where, and
where not, to place development.
(Oxford West and Abingdon)
(LD)
I thank the Minister for giving way and congratulate the right
hon. Member for Basingstoke (Dame ) on securing the debate.
On the issue of a local say, will the Minister expand slightly on
the placement of things like solar farms? It is the wild west. In
places such as Oxfordshire, we have a number of solar farms
coming forward, including possibly the largest one in Europe at
Botley West. For those that are over 50 MW, it does not feel like
local say has anything to do with it. Did he consider that when
the Government were creating this policy?
I am grateful to the hon. Lady for her comments. Many colleagues
in the House will have experienced solar farms, both on a
constituency basis and from a national policy consideration.
There is obviously a trade-off to be made here. The Liberal
Democrats are extremely keen on renewable energy, as we all are,
and there are implications to that. She is right to highlight
that this has to be considered within the appropriate boundaries
of the individual areas. That is exactly why the Government
amended the national planning policy framework and exactly why
the Conservatives are seeking to establish that balance. We will
continue to try to ensure that that balance works for
communities, while also getting us the energy we need, so that
when we switch on the lights in the morning, they work.
As I said, we consulted on a series of proposals last year and
received more than 26,000 responses. That demonstrates the
importance of planning for local communities. I understand the
concerns of my right hon. Friend the Member for Basingstoke that
Basingstoke and Deane district council has seen a high level of
housing delivery, including in recent years, in excess of that
set out in the adopted local plan in 2016. Indeed, the housing
delivery test results for 2022, published in December, show that
the district has delivered more homes than is required through
the test. As my right hon. Friend outlined in her excellent
speech, a number of measures were announced in the national
planning policy framework update, and I hope to highlight a
number of those that may assist the district council and other
local councils bringing forward their local plans.
First, as my right hon. Friend indicated, we have been
consistently clear that the standard method is a starting point
for local authorities in assessing what to plan for and that it
does not set a mandatory target. The framework now sets that out
in national policy. Local authorities should be in no doubt that
the outcome of the standard method is an advisory starting point
for establishing housing requirements through plan-making. Again,
for the avoidance of doubt, that means that local authorities can
put forward their own approach to assessing needs where certain
exceptional circumstances exist.
Dame
Can my hon. Friend confirm that there will be more types of
exceptional circumstances put forward in the future than there
have been in the past?
I am absolutely certain that there will be more cases for
exceptional circumstances put forward in the future, and I
encourage councils to consider them if they believe that they
apply. Logically, I would then expect more cases for exceptional
circumstances to be accepted by the Planning Inspectorate,
although that will also be for the inspectorate to determine on a
case-by-case basis. It is the Government’s intention to indicate
that cases for exceptional circumstances can be made, that local
authorities should weigh up making them and that, if they feel
that they have a strong case through the Planning Inspectorate
process, they do so for the good of the communities they seek to
serve.
Secondly, the revised NPPF now sets out that there may be
situations where higher urban densities would be wholly out of
character with the existing area, and that that could be a strong
reason why significantly uplifting densities would be
inappropriate. Thirdly, our changes to the five-year housing land
supply policy mean that up-to-date local plans should no longer
have to demonstrate a five-year housing land supply. My right
hon. Friend has articulated some of that already, and the
considerations going on within her Hampshire constituency, but
there is additional flexibility where local authorities are doing
the right thing in getting their plans in place and making sure
they are retained.
As someone representing a constituency that has suffered from
planning issues over many decades, I recognise there is always
difficulty around planning in individual local areas. I
understand that, and it is one of the reasons why I am so keen to
send a message that, while we are clear that we need more houses
in this country—we absolutely do—they have to go in the right
places. It would be incorrect, wrong and irresponsible of us to
say “no more housing” when we need people to get on the housing
ladder. We value the benefits to our society that a
property-owning democracy brings and we celebrate every
first-time buyer who gets on the ladder, because that opens up to
them the opportunities that gaining and accreting capital
provide.
At the same time, however, we have to accept that not every area,
every place or every landscape is appropriate for building on. It
is the responsibility of local councils to make sure that they
are weighing that up properly, getting ahead of what will always
be challenging decisions and having the conversations they need
to have with local communities at the earliest possible
stage.
Once again, I thank my right hon. Friend for securing this
debate. She ended with three questions, and I want to touch on
those before I conclude.
This is not just a question of housing; it is also about public
and private facilities and a community. As I indicated in my
intervention on the right hon. Member for Basingstoke (Dame
), part of that is about
entertainment and social areas, particularly music venues, which
are still under pressure. I do not expect an answer tonight, but
will the Minister take away the issue of enshrining in
legislation some strength for local authorities to protect not
only local amenities, but the pipeline of talent for our
enormously important cultural industries?
I will certainly take that point away, but I hope the right hon.
Gentleman will accept that there always a balance about what to
put in primary legislation. The law cannot mandate virtue, and we
have to find ways to ensure that our statute book does not get
too big and unwieldy—there is an argument that we are already
heading in that direction after 30, 40 or 50 years of incessant
legislating. However, I recognise the important point he makes
and I will certainly give it further consideration, although I
hope he hears my reticence to state automatically that
legislation is always required in all cases.
My right hon. Friend the Member for Basingstoke asked three
questions at the end of her speech. I hope that I have covered
the question of exceptional circumstances to some extent. It is
absolutely the case that local authorities should put such cases
forward where reasonable and proportionate, and where they have a
clear case. I would expect more exceptional circumstance cases to
be made, and it is for the Planning Inspectorate to determine
their outcome based on the merits or otherwise of their
individual circumstances.
Dame
On that point about exceptional circumstances, many local
authorities appear to be concerned that pleading exceptional
circumstances will land them with a big legal bill and that they
will be challenged in the courts. Can the Minister give some
comfort to those authorities that such cases will be looked upon
by planning inspectors as something that they expect?
My right hon. Friend highlights a continuing challenge with the
local plan-making process where other actors have issues and
considerations. The planning system will never be perfect and
give everybody the outcome that they want, but it is important
that local planning authorities representing their local areas
have the ability to fully consider the importance of planning for
their local area and to put forward their arguments in good
faith, whether about exceptional circumstances or just through
the conventional process, and have them discussed in interactions
with the Planning Inspectorate on behalf of the Secretary of
State. I encourage them to do so. Although the issue my right
hon. Friend raises is not a new one, that should not retard the
ability of people, organisations, councils and planning
authorities to have the debates and discussions that they need to
with local communities and the planning inspector.
On the second question, we absolutely expect local authorities to
take into account the NPPF. It has been clear that the NPPF is
extant from the moment that it was put in place. There are
transitional arrangements for some elements of it at the end, but
it is for local authorities to take that into account. I would be
surprised if local authorities were not doing that, because the
whole purpose of how they approach plans is to recognise
transitional arrangements and the fact that different local
authorities will be in different places and will have to work out
precisely how to consider them. It is vital that local
authorities take note of the national planning policy framework
and the update that has been made.
I know that planning is hugely important for local communities.
My right hon. Friend has articulated in great detail the
particular issues in Basingstoke. Indeed, as constituency MPs, we
all have such individual circumstances. She is absolutely right
to raise those points and highlight the changes that have come
and the opportunities that they provide. She is right to stand up
for her constituents. It is important that we get planning right.
Things will never be perfect, but by having these conversations
and making changes, I hope that we can make progress as a
Government and a country to build more homes, but in the right
places.
Question put and agreed to.
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