Neighbourhood Planning Bill Committee (2nd Day) 2.00 pm
Relevant document: 15th Report from the Delegated Powers Committee.
The Deputy Chairman of Committees (Baroness Garden of Frognal)
(LD) My Lords, if there is a Division in the Chamber while we
are sitting, the Committee will adjourn as soon as the Division
Bells are rung and resume after 10 minutes. ...Request free trial
Neighbourhood Planning Bill
Committee (2nd Day)
2.00 pm
Relevant document: 15th Report from the Delegated Powers
Committee.
Moved by
14: After Clause 5, insert the following new Clause—
“Permitted development: change of use to residential
Where the Secretary of State, in exercising the powers conferred
by the Town and Country Planning Act 1990, makes a general
permitted development in respect of change of use to residential
use as dwelling-houses, the developer must apply to the local
planning authority for a determination as to whether the prior
approval of the authority will be required as to—(a) transport
and highway impacts of the development;(b) contamination risks on
the site;(c) flooding risks on the site;(d) noise impacts of the
development;(e) minimum space standards for the
dwelling-houses;(f) in cases where the authority considers the
building to which the development relates is located in an area
that is important for provision of particular services (for
example, offices), whether the introduction of, or an increase
in, a residential use of premises in the area would have an
adverse impact on the sustainability of the provision of those
services;(g) whether the location or siting of the building makes
it otherwise impractical or undesirable for the building to
change use to a use falling within Class C3 (dwelling houses) of
the Schedule to the Town and Country Planning (Use Classes) Order
1987;(h) impacts of air quality and noise on the intended
occupiers of the development; and(i) the impact of neighbouring
buildings and their uses on the intended occupiers of the
development.”
-
(Lab)
My Lords, I declare my usual interests as this is the first
time I have spoken in Grand Committee today. I refer the
Committee to my registered interests and specifically
declare that I am a local councillor in the London Borough
of Lewisham and one of the many, many vice-presidents of
the Local Government Association who will declare their
interest in the course of our proceedings today.
Amendment 14 in my name and that of the noble Baroness,
Lady Cumberlege, seeks to provide the local community and
planning authority with a degree of influence in
developments that have been approved by way of permitted
development rights in respect of a change to residential
use. The amendment sets out those matters for which the
developer has to apply to the local planning authority for
a determination as to whether they require prior approval.
If not dealt with properly, all the matters listed in the
amendment could lead to inappropriate development or
development that is not sustainable and does not enhance
the area, potentially causing significant problems for the
local community.
On subsections (a) to (e) in the proposed new clause, I
hope the Government will agree that issues such as
contamination risks on the site are matters that should be
considered by a competent authority. We can all think of
former industrial areas that may now be desirable, having
been converted from working buildings to offices. However,
before development proceeds, there should be a requirement
to look at the operations that have taken place there to
ensure that there are no consequences for health and other
matters. Equally, matters such as space standards are
important. Subsections (h) and (i) raise matters for
consideration including the level of air quality and noise
on the intended occupiers. We have all seen reports in the
media on poor air quality, its effect on people’s health
and the number of premature deaths that it can lead to.
Locating dwelling houses in an industrial area may not be
the best thing for the occupiers. Subsection (f) raises the
important issue of the area being a place where businesses
operate. Such an area could have considerably more vehicle
movement and have services operating early in the morning
or late at night. It has been desirable to keep these areas
well away from residential areas, and the introduction of
homes can lead to complaints and pressure around the
matters that we have highlighted. It can also put into
question the viability of businesses in the area.
I grew up in Southwark. At one time, it had a very busy and
extensive economy around the docks. Look at Jacob’s Island,
Canada dock, Greenham dock and Surrey dock. Today, these
places are residential, but at one time they were home to
big industries—at the time of Dickens or the two world
wars. When they were industrial sites, there was very
little housing in the area because the work that went on
would not have combined with people living there. The
industries have now moved away and those areas have become
quite desirable. It is important to understand, however,
that you cannot have a wharf building with people living on
one floor and, on the floor below, all sorts of activities
taking place, such as the trading of goods and services.
That would not have worked at all due to all the issues I
have talked about—vehicle movement, health issues and all
the other problems. The amendment seeks to give the
authority the opportunity to consider whether a conversion
to residential use would have an adverse impact.
Amendment 44, also in my name and that of other noble
Lords, seeks to give the power to a local planning
authority to publish a cumulative impact assessment. This
assessment would look at the impact on the environment and
the sustainability of particular services that results from
the incremental impact of the action which is taking place
under permitted development. By doing that, it would bring
in an element of scrutiny. This gives the authority the
power to produce the report, look at the evidence and
publish it, and see whether it needs to suspend those
permitted development rights because they are causing
problems. The report is available to the public and the
authority retains the right to review it and change its
decision at a future point. Both these amendments give
local planning authorities many important rights that they
need in order to look at these developments. I beg to move.
-
(Con)
My Lords, I also declare an interest. I have interests
listed in the register and I have a pending legal case
concerning a planning application. I have taken advice from
the Clerk of the Parliaments and have been told that the
sub judice rule does not apply here. I support Amendment 14
and I have been asked by the noble Lord, , to introduce his
Amendment 44.
On Amendment 14, I am not opposed to imaginative reuse of
buildings: it is sometimes a very good way of preserving or
conserving them. In my area a huge mental asylum has been
turned into housing. It is of modest architectural merit
but it provides homes for people, and those people,
fortunately, do not know its distressing and disturbing
past.
I can also think of redundant churches, some of real
architectural distinction, that have been preserved by
being transformed into homes. I am sure noble Lords know
lots of other examples. However, I share the caution of the
noble Lord, Lord Kennedy, and other noble Lords, that
changes of use should not be given without careful
consideration of the consequences. There should be a
requirement for a community impact assessment.
There are many short-term financial gains to be made by
turning employment sites into housing, especially if it is,
as the noble Lord, Lord Kennedy, has said, large-scale
development. That can, however, have a detrimental effect
on a whole area, and very long-term implications. I think
back to the multi-storey office blocks, built for another
purpose: it is appropriate for them to be occupied by staff
during the day, but they may not be suitable places in
which to live.
We have learned from the mistakes of the past, such as the
badly designed tower blocks with broken lifts—places of
misery and centres of crime. Now they are loudly cheered as
they are demolished and come tumbling down. They were
recognised as unsuitable places to live in and proved not
to be socially beneficial. New tower blocks, however,
appear almost daily, crowding the skyline. Presumably,
considering the stringency of building regulations, they
are good places to live in.
I wonder, however, whether converting office tower blocks
of concrete and glass is an appropriate thing to do. We are
in the middle of a housing boom right now. Booms do not
last for ever, which is why the rush for numbers may be
expedient now but not necessarily a solution for future
housing needs. We have to be very careful, therefore, to
get the balance right between homes that are desperately
needed now and the long-standing impact on a local area. I
think of my own business. I certainly could not run it on
the hoof: my staff and I need a base. We are
technologically pretty able but we still need a base. So we
must look at the employment opportunities in an area before
giving them up.
I move on to Amendment 44. The noble Lord, , has asked me to speak
to this amendment on his behalf because unfortunately he
cannot be here today; he is speaking at the District
Councils’ Network conference in Warwick. The noble Lord,
, would have told the
Committee that permitted development can be a useful way of
speeding up building the homes, infrastructure and
communities that are needed. Councils should, however, have
powers to consider the impact that new developments are
having across an area. Many areas, particularly in London
and the south-east, are concerned about the rate at which
office space is being converted to residential sites. This
could have a very negative impact on local employment and
economic growth. The British Council for Offices has
estimated that between 3 million and 9 million square feet
of office space were converted in England in one year. From
April 2014 to September 2016, there were nearly 9,000
applications for prior approvals for office-to-residential
permitted development; nearly 3,000 of those did not
require prior approval and an additional 4,000 were
granted.
The Local Government Association and local councils have
expressed their concerns about this issue, so in an attempt
to address the problem a number of councils have introduced
Article 4 directions to remove the permitted development
rights for office-to-residential conversions. However,
there have been limitations to the scope of the Article 4
directions in places and they will in many cases be
restricted to certain areas within the local authority
boundary. There are 17 local authorities that have
individual buildings, roads or zones within their local
area that are exempt from the rights until May 2019,
including the City of London and Manchester city centre.
I share the concern of my noble friend and the noble Lords,
Lord Kennedy and , that local planning
authorities and their communities should have a greater say
on the cumulative impact of new development falling within
existing permitted development rights that affects their
local area. I am saying this rather than my noble friend
, but local authorities
should have the right to ask: “Is this desirable housing or
are we providing the slums of the future, with all the
social problems and attendant costs that poor-quality
housing brings?”.
-
(LD)
My Lords, my name is to Amendment 44 and I would certainly
have been happy to add it to Amendment 14 as well, which I
support. I first declare my interest as yet another
vice-president of the Local Government Association. An
interest in many ways more relevant to this debate which I
no longer have to declare is that until May 2014, I was for
40 years the local councillor for a town centre ward in a
south-west London borough. We debated the effect of
permitted development rights, particularly the conversion
of offices to residential development, during the passage
of the Housing and Planning Bill less than a year ago. In
Committee and on Report, we had some spirited debates led
by the even more spirited noble Lord, . I think that he was
speaking more in his capacity as leader of Richmond
Council, another south-west London borough. Sadly, both
debates were very late at night and inevitably therefore
curtailed.
I will not repeat all that I said a year ago but this issue
has had, and continues to have, a devastating effect on the
town centre ward that I used to represent. It has
particularly affected the town centre. I cited nine months
ago the figures I had had from my local authority, showing
that in the 18 months between the coming into effect of the
prior approval permissions and being able to obtain an
Article 4 direction to cover that area, the town centre
lost 28% of its office space. This was just in that
18-month period. Many people assumed that those were vacant
offices but they were not. Sixty-two per cent of those
offices were then currently occupied and the businesses
occupying them were, politely or impolitely, asked to
leave. Employment was directly lost from the town centre,
with an inevitable effect on its economy—not just the work
that goes on in the offices, but all the commerce that is
brought by the people working in them. Some businesses were
able to move elsewhere; others, sadly, have gone out of
business, with a consequent loss of jobs.
2.15 pm
In connection with the Bill, I have inquired what has happened
since then, and it is fair to say that the Article 4 direction
that covers the town centre has had some effect in slowing down,
but not stopping, that process, although more offices are being
lost from the town centre. Now all the offices in the district
centres, where there is no Article 4 direction, are also going.
It is becoming increasingly difficult for those needing small
office premises, in particular, to find them. That is causing
significant problems to the local economy. Already, the local
authority sees that it will not meet the projected long-term
demand for offices in the area.
We come to the question of offices against homes. I have heard
the Housing Minister—who, incidentally, is an MP in the next
borough, and I suspect would be saying different things were he
still a Croydon councillor —say that the need for more homes
overrides all the permitted development right problems. I
understand why a Housing Minister, charged with an ambitious
target—which we all accept and wish him every success with—might
say that, but it is not good enough for us as legislators. We
want not just more homes but more of the right sort of homes in
the right places, meeting the demand with the highest possible
quality of design and sustainability.
That is not what is happening in any of those respects under the
PDR office-to-homes conversions in town and district centres. The
designs are poor and the housing provision is not at all what is
needed in the area. It is largely providing one-bedroom or studio
accommodation as pied-à-terres, with no contribution to the local
community—certainly none to the local economy, or indeed the
council.
More importantly, particularly in London, it is making absolutely
no contribution to affordable housing. In my view, that is the
biggest effect in London—not just in my borough but right across
London and, I am sure, in other parts of the country. It is
making no contribution to affordable housing. It may just help
with the number count, but not with the actual demand for the
homes that people need in places where they need them—where their
children can go to good schools and where they can obtain good
employment.
This is having a very serious effect. I know it is not the case
in all parts of the country—our debate on the then Housing and
Planning Bill was replied to by the former leader of Trafford
Council in Greater Manchester, and she said that the conversion
from office to residential was having a beneficial effect in that
part of the world. That is good and I welcome it, but surely we
should recognise that different places have different
requirements. We used to call it localism, but I think that that
is no longer the buzzword. Is it not common sense that local
authorities should have the power to determine what is necessary
in their area? If conversion of redundant offices to residential
use is desirable—I would say, with sufficient safeguards to
ensure that it is the right sort of residential development,
which ought to apply everywhere—it must be a good thing, but in
outer London, generally in London and in other cities, it is
having a devastating effect and really should not be allowed to
continue. That is why I am happy to support either or both of
these amendments.
-
(Lab)
My Lords, I support the amendments and thank noble Lords
for what they have said because, although I thought this
was a serious issue, I was unable to take part in debates
on the then Housing and Planning Bill. It is clearly very
important. Permitted development is a useful tool when used
proportionately. It has been able to free extra capacity to
build housing, in many cases, very appropriately. When the
National Policy for the Built Environment Select Committee
was doing its Building Better Places report, this came up
as a formidable problem. The noble Lord, , has described it. It
is to do with the scale and the concentration in particular
areas. I will be very grateful if the Minister has any
figures that show how much conversion of office space to
residential there has been and a geographical breakdown
that shows some notion of the scale. We are getting housing
development outside the normal planning provisions. Once
that happens, essentially none of the planning rules
applies. One of the things that exercised the committee was
that the casual conversion of office space to residential
space was compromised because of the absence of space
standards and, I think, normal building regulations. I
would be grateful if the Minister will state the official
position on the lack of acceptable agreed building
standards in buildings that are being converted.
There are two social impacts of casual conversion. One is
on the nature of the living accommodation that is being
created in this era of desperate demand for housing. What
sorts of lives are people living? The other impact is that
with 28% more housing instead of office space, the demand
on services is quite different. Therefore paragraphs (a) to
(c) of the proposed new clause are extremely important.
Does the department have any assessment of this? Has it
done any work on the impacts that can be measured? What is
the Minister’s judgment about that? We need more
information and to know more about what the department and
local authorities know about the way this is working.
Amendment 44 raises an important principle. The point about
planning changes is that single changes are manageable and
have a useful, and often positive, effect, but cumulative
change can be very different. Cumulative change is what the
noble Lord, , raises in his
amendment. The noble Baroness, Lady Cumberlege, represented
him very well and spoke about development rights and the
impact on sustainability overall. The only analogy I can
make—and I hope it would be contained in Amendment 44—is
with conservation areas. In conservation areas, you have
permitted development rights. You may be able to advise
individual householders to put in wooden windows rather
than plastic windows or not to put a porch over the front
door, but after a while control and discipline slip and the
character of the conservation area can be completely
compromised. One has to be extremely careful about the
nature of the slope when one embarks on permitted
development rights. The notion of cumulative impact is very
important.
I do not know whether there is anywhere in planning law the
concept of a cumulative impact which could inform the way
this amendment could be very usefully attached. If there
is, there is something to be gained from thinking
intelligently about how Amendment 44 might be pursued. It
is obvious that local authorities ought to have more
control over what happens in the exercise of permitted
development rights, and this is very timely because we have
now had five or six years of accelerated deregulation, of
which permitted development rights are probably the most
conspicuous aspect. It is time that we step back and look
at the impact of that in relation to local authority
competence.
-
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department for
Communities and Local Government and Wales Office
My Lords, I thank noble Lords who have participated in the
debate on the amendments in this group. Before I respond to
some of the specific points that have been made on the two
amendments, let me say a little about permitted development
generally.
Permitted development rights have long been a part of the
planning system and have been recognised as a beneficial
way of simplifying the need to secure planning permission.
The current permitted development rights for England are
set out in the Town and Country Planning (General Permitted
Development) (England) Order 2015 and provide flexibility,
certainty and reduce planning bureaucracy. The noble
Baroness, Lady Andrews, asked about the number of
additional homes that have been delivered by permitted
development rights. I am particularly proud that
development rights in the latest year for which we have
figures, 2015-16, delivered an additional 13,800 homes. We
are looking to see if we have a geographic breakdown of
that, and I will certainly pick up on it.
-
Are those 13,000 homes generated by the conversion of
offices?
-
I believe that this is all permitted development rights
conversion to residential.
-
It would be useful to have a breakdown of the number
generated by the conversion of offices.
-
I suspect that that forms the bulk of them but I shall
endeavour to get that information.
Permitted development rights are making a real difference
in providing homes in town centres, rural areas and
brownfield sites, supporting our housing delivery ambition.
We should welcome that permitted development rights provide
that opportunity.
I thank the noble Lord, , and my
noble friend Lady Cumberlege for Amendment 14, which seeks
to prescribe those matters which must be considered by the
local authority as part of the prior approval process in
any future permitted development rights that allow change
of use to residential. When new permitted development
rights are designed we work to ensure that any matters that
we think require the consideration of the local planning
authority are included in the prior approval contained
within that right. Certain criteria have to be considered
in this prior approval process for the change from office
to residential, and these include some of the matters
contained in the proposed amendment.
Four matters that have to be considered on
office-to-residential prior approvals are: transport and
highways impacts of the development; contamination on the
site; flooding risks on the site; and the impact of noise
from commercial premises on the intended occupiers of the
development when it shifts, as is proposed, to residential.
So they are tailored to consider those specific points. We
recognise that in all cases of change of use to
residential, the prior approvals that are set out are
important. However, this is not necessarily true of all the
other proposed prior approvals in the amendment.
The current approach to permitted development certainly
simplifies matters—it cuts out some of the bureaucracy and
helps in relation to costs for the applicant and the local
authority. Amendment 44 covers some of the same territory
but is wider. It was tabled initially by the noble Lord,
of Spalding, who is not
in his place, but was ably spoken to by my noble friend
Lady Cumberlege and supported by other noble Lords. In the
Government’s view the proposal is far too wide. There will
be exceptional circumstances where a national permitted
development right is not appropriate in a particular
location. This is why an effective process to allow local
planning authorities to remove permitted development rights
already exists. The noble Lord, , referred to this and
said that it had made a difference. To be fair, he said
that he had hoped it would have gone further but that it
has made a difference. As noble Lords will acknowledge,
this is true in some of the areas that are hardest hit.
I have been listening carefully. There are issues relating
to change from office to residential which have had an
impact in some communities on the availability of
commercial premises. That is undoubtedly true. The noble
Lord, , spoke of his personal
experience and made reference to the experience of my noble
friend , who is not in his
place, who raised this issue in relation to Richmond.
Article 4 provides part of the answer but obviously
fairness demands that those affected are given an
opportunity to be heard, that they are given notice and
that they are compensated where necessary. However, I am
pleased to offer the reassurance that the Article 4 process
gives planning authorities the flexibility to withdraw
rights in exceptional circumstances, while ensuring the
fair treatment of those affected if they are not able to
pursue the development. I accept that there is a concern
more generally about these issues, and although I believe
that these amendments—particular Amendment 44—go far too
far in requiring consideration across the board without
being properly targeted, I acknowledge that there is an
issue that should be looked at. That point was well made.
However, as I said, these amendments go far too far.
I am not sure about the point that was raised concerning
cumulative impact, and I suspect that that will be very
difficult to define. I do not think it is recognised in
planning law but I will investigate that. I think that
challenges of cumulative impact would arise depending on
how large the area was and so on, but I do not think that
it would be easy to tackle.
I would like to reflect on what has been said in Committee
today and, without prejudice to the outcome, to go away and
perhaps speak to other noble Lords who cannot be here, such
as my noble friends and , as well as others. I
shall be very happy to have an open door to discuss this
matter but, in the meantime, and with the reassurance that
I have given, I ask the noble Lord, Lord Kennedy, to
withdraw the amendment.
2.30 pm
-
I thank the Minister. Before withdrawing the amendment, I
would like to raise one or two points with him. The Article
4 direction is not widely used and is not that easy for
local authorities to use. The Minister said that Amendment
44 goes far too wide. I thought that it was for the
Government to set the broad parameters of policy and then
for local authorities to apply it locally. I would not
expect the Government to be very specific but I do not see
why they would not want to give a wider power, with an
authority then looking at how it applies locally and
impacts locally. I would welcome further comment on that.
On Amendment 14, I am very pleased that the Minister was
able to respond in respect of the first four items in
paragraphs (a) to (d) and I thank him for that. However,
there are the other items listed in paragraphs (e) to (i),
and I do not know whether he can comment on those. I draw
his attention, in particular, to paragraph (h), which
refers to air quality. Deaths from poor air quality are now
regularly reported on in the media, and that is a
particular problem in London and elsewhere. If development
were to take place on a former industrial area, that could
be an issue.
Paragraph (e) refers to minimum space standards. One
development that I know of is Lewisham House in
Lewisham—the old Citibank tower. It is not the most
attractive building in the world—I do not know whether the
Minister knows Lewisham town centre. Apparently, at some
point in the future it is going to be converted into
largely one-bedroomed properties but I do not know what the
minimum standards will be. I suspect that the plan will be
to have something like 230 one and two-bedroomed properties
there, and they will not be particularly big. The whole
question of space should be of concern to the noble Lord
and to the Government in general. I hope that the days of
rabbit-hutch developments are long behind us, but that is
something that the noble Lord should certainly look at.
There are a number of other places that I know of where I
do not know whether the developments have taken place.
Lewisham House has not been developed yet—it is sitting
there waiting for that to happen. However, we would not
want rabbit-hutch developments if we could possibly avoid
them.
-
I thank the noble Lord for that. In answer to the question,
“Do I know Lewisham?”, I have certainly visited it on
occasion but, through the noble Lord, I feel I know it
better than just from the two visits I have made there
fairly recently.
In relation to the points he is making, there has to be a
balance in what we do here, and I think that noble Lords
would accept that Amendment 44, talking as it does of
giving the power, seemingly unchallenged, to local
authorities to suspend permitted development rights
indefinitely, goes too far. I have offered to go away and
reflect on this but I have made it absolutely clear that we
cannot accept that amendment as it stands.
Article 4 directions are open to boroughs and other areas
to use. In fairness, this is one area where they try to
look at the cumulative impact. So, contrary to what I have
just said, there are areas where we try to assess
cumulative impacts, which is part of the Article 4
consideration. But, as I say, I accept that there is an
issue to look at here. I want to go away and reflect on
this, so I do not want to get down into too much detail on
the position of the different London boroughs or elsewhere.
However, I am happy to go away and have a look at it,
without prejudice. I hope that noble Lords will take up
that offer.
-
I thank the noble Lord, and of course he is very welcome to
visit my ward in Lewisham any time he likes. I can show him
one or two places that I have mentioned in our debates as
well as other problems I have. I am quite happy to show
him. It might actually help us in our debates over the next
few weeks. I thank him for his response and am happy to beg
leave to withdraw the amendment.
Amendment 14 withdrawn.
Amendment 15
Moved by
15: After Clause 5, insert the following new Clause—
“Land use following lapse of planning permission
If planning permission lapses, the local authority may direct the
use of that land for purposes relating to priorities in the local
development plan or neighbourhood plan.”
-
My Lords, this amendment, which is in my name and that of
the noble Baroness, Lady Bakewell of Hardington Mandeville,
seeks to find a way of dealing with the problem when land
is just not being used—where planning permission has been
agreed but nothing happens and the planning permission then
expires. The amendment would give power to the local
authority to direct the use of the land for the priorities
as detailed in the local development or neighbourhood plan
and in line with the priorities set out in the local
process we discussed in our previous sitting, and in
keeping with the NPPF.
We have a serious problem with land not being used,
especially in London where there is a particularly high
demand for homes. Again, I can give many examples from my
own ward where there are small sites with signs saying
“planning permission for X number of houses”, but not much
is happening and people are waiting for the land value to
increase. Communities and local authorities already have
some powers to get things moving, such as the community
right to reclaim land, which has been on the statute book
for many years. That power enables public bodies to dispose
of land. There is also the community right to build so that
communities can propose site developments in their area,
and which also gives local authorities additional power to
get things moving locally.
I hope we will receive a positive response from the
Government today. Maybe these matters will be dealt with in
the White Paper, I do not know; but we need to get these
sites built on. They are an eyesore. Leaving things as they
are, with permissions but nothing ever happening, is a
problem. We have often talked about the number of
permissions already agreed in London but with nothing ever
seeming to happen. We need to get things moving. I beg to
move.
-
(LD)
My Lords, as this is the first time I have spoken in
Committee I draw the Committee’s attention to my entry in
the register of interests.
I fully support the noble Lord, Lord Kennedy, in this
amendment. The problems he has listed are those relating to
London and other urban areas. However, they are not
isolated to just those areas. Those of us in rural areas
suffer significant frustration when planning permission has
been applied for and given but nothing happens. Land is
often left untouched for many years when it could have been
productively used for key priorities in local development
or neighbourhood plans.
Occasionally, spoiling tactics are employed. A local
authority can identify a particular use for a parcel of
land which does not meet with the approval of either the
owner or those living in close proximity. As we all know,
anyone may apply for planning permission on any piece of
land; they do not have to own it. It certainly helps the
process if the applicant is the owner, but this is not a
requirement. Spoiling applications are submitted, appear to
be in accordance with the local plan and gain approval.
Thereafter, nothing is done to the site and those objecting
feel their mission has been accomplished.
In such cases, and those listed by the noble Lord, Lord
Kennedy, I support the local authority having the right to
direct the use of the land in order to fulfil the
priorities in the local plan or neighbourhood plan. After
all, both plans will have taken a great deal of time and
effort to be completed; they will have gone out to
extensive consultation and been thoroughly examined before
being adopted. It is therefore only correct that the aims
of those plans should be implemented as far as is possible.
I believe this clause would help achieve that aim, which is
in the general public’s interest. I look forward to the
Minister’s response.
-
My Lords, I thank the noble Lord, Lord Kennedy, and the
noble Baroness, Lady Bakewell of Hardington Mandeville, for
moving and speaking to Amendment 15, which is in group 9.
This amendment, tabled by the noble Lord, would allow local
planning authorities to direct the use of land upon which
planning permission has expired for the purposes of its
priorities, as set out in a local development plan.
Authorities should normally take decisions on development
proposals within their area in line with the priorities set
out in the development plan, together with the other
policies of the plan. That principle is already enshrined
in the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 and set out
clearly in the National Planning Policy Framework. Both the
Act and the framework are clear that applications for
planning permission must be determined in accordance with
the development plan, where its policies are material to an
application unless material considerations indicate
otherwise. Thus where planning permission has lapsed, any
new proposals for development which require planning
permission must be determined on that basis.
The planning history of a site, including any recently
expired planning permissions, may be a material
consideration when considering any fresh proposals. The
weight to be attached to any earlier permissions will be a
matter for the local planning authority but the importance
of the plan remains unchanged. I appreciate and support the
intention of the new clause proposed by the noble Lord,
Lord Kennedy, and supported by the noble Baroness, Lady
Bakewell. However, I do not believe it is necessary at the
moment. The noble Lord mentioned the forthcoming White
Paper, which we hope will be forthcoming very soon. It will
cover this issue, as I have mentioned many times before in
the Chamber and elsewhere. This is an issue that we must
confront and not just for London and urban areas. I fully
accept what the noble Baroness alluded to there.
Perhaps I may bring the Committee back to this legislation,
which is designed to streamline processes and deliver more
houses. We should not lose sight of that. We all say that
we are wedded to it but we must be careful to ensure that
it remains a central feature of the thrust of the debate,
and of the legislation. If that much land is held by
developers, they have fewer excuses for land-banking. I say
gently that if that land were developed more quickly,
although it would not crack the problem in its entirety, it
would go some way to doing so.
I thank the noble Lord, Lord Kennedy, very much for the
invitation to Lewisham, which I look forward to
fulfilling—not necessarily on a day when Millwall is
playing at home but on some other day. With the knowledge
that this issue will come forward in the White Paper and
that we will have a longer process of having a crack at it
in a deeper dive—along with that friendly reciprocation of
his invitation—I ask him to withdraw his amendment.
-
(LD)
My Lords, I want to speak briefly to Amendment 15, which my
noble friend Lady Bakewell has spoken to. I know that
Lewisham is closer to this place than some places are, but
if the noble Lord is issuing a general offer to visit wards
that some of us sitting here represent on local
authorities, he might have a few letters in the post. But
he would be welcome indeed to come to Colne any time he
wishes and I would be happy to show him some of the
problems we have that are different from those in Lewisham
and other parts of the south-east.
Having cheekily said that, there is something behind this
amendment about what happens when a planning permission
which has been given, perhaps in detail, then lapses and
that permission is no longer in line with a local plan. For
example, if there has been a local plan and the permission
has been given, a neighbourhood plan may then be adopted
which does not have to accord exactly, as I understand it,
with the local plan on site allocations but has to be in
general conformity with it. If a neighbourhood plan for a
village says that a piece of land which has planning
permission for housing is not the most suitable while a
different piece of land can be allocated—one which local
people would prefer to be allocated under the neighbourhood
plan—and if that keeps the same number of new houses built
in that area, or even more, what then happens?
There is a wider issue: developers and planning
committees—planning officers—tend to assume that if a
planning permission has previously been given, for example
for a change of use, and has not been taken up, and the
same application is put in again after four or five years,
it ought to be granted, on the precedent that it has been
granted previously, and yet circumstances may have changed.
There is a very important issue here relating to detailed
applications which, at the moment, do not always result in
the most satisfactory outcomes because of the assumption
that although planning permission has lapsed, it is really
still there and all you have to do is fill in the forms,
pay the fee and everything will be okay.
2.45 pm
-
My Lords, I will seek to reassure the noble Lord, , on both points.
First, if the planning permission has lapsed, a fresh
application has to be put in for the use of the land, and
it must conform to the local plan at the time, including
any neighbourhood plan that has become part of the local
plan in the meantime. Secondly, in planning law there is no
presumption that permission should be given in relation to
an application with a lapsed permission. That would not be
the case. The committee might want to take into
consideration the fact that a lot of work has been done and
look at it, but there is no presumption in law that it
should be adhered to. I do not think that planning
authorities are under that misapprehension but if they are
we need to make it clear that that is not the case.
-
My Lords, I thank the Minister for his response. I am
pleased by his comments and am looking forward to the White
Paper and these issues, hopefully, being addressed. I have
put Questions down in the House before, and there is an
issue with getting houses built in certain areas. The noble
Lord, , is right: there
may not be a case for granting permission in certain areas.
I accept that entirely. However, in certain areas there is
pressure for building and the frustrating thing is that you
have given permission to build on the site, then you drive
past every day and nothing has happened. It is very
frustrating.
I hope that the White Paper will address that. I hope also
that the Minister will visit my ward; his predecessor, the
noble Baroness, Lady Williams of Trafford, visited my noble
friend’s ward while she was in his job. He may consider
that too. If the noble Lord ever comes to Millwall I can
assure him of a very warm welcome. As the noble Lord, Lord
Young, knows, planning permission and compulsory purchase
are big issues down there at the moment. I beg leave to
withdraw the amendment.
Amendment 15 withdrawn.
Amendment 16
Moved by
16: After Clause 5, insert the following new Clause—
“Reviews of neighbourhood areas
After section 61I of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990
insert—
“61IA Duty of local planning authority to review neighbourhood
areas(1) A local planning authority must from time to time review
the neighbourhood areas within its area with regard to—(a) the
number and distribution of such areas in the authority,(b) the
proportion of the authority covered by such areas,(c) the
progress made in the creation of neighbourhood development plans
in those areas,(d) the proportion of such areas in which the
qualifying authority is a parish council or a neighbourhood forum
respectively, and(e) the extent and effectiveness of the
promotion of neighbourhood planning within the authority.(2) A
local planning authority must consider the review undertaken
under subsection (1) and in doing so consider—(a) how it may
become more effective in promoting neighbourhood planning and
adopting neighbourhood development plans,(b) whether to review
its statement of community involvement in relation to its
policies on advice and assistance in relation to neighbourhood
plans in its area, and(c) whether to carry out a local governance
review in any part of its area that is unparished.””
-
My Lords, Amendment 16 is about a review of neighbourhood
areas and is particularly focused on the importance of
existing parish and town councils as a basis for
neighbourhood planning. It is a very important amendment
and I am grateful, in promoting it, to the National
Association of Local Councils for finding a way of getting
it onto the agenda of the Neighbourhood Planning Bill. I
should declare an interest as vice-chair—I think—of the
APPG on Local Democracy.
One-fifth of the population of England is parished,
according to the NALC. I was looking for the statistic—I
have it somewhere but did not find it—on exactly how many
neighbourhood plans are in parished areas. Perhaps the
Minister can help me there. It is certainly over
four-fifths. The great majority of neighbourhood plans have
been promoted by the town or parish council, which is the
qualifying authority in those areas. We know that 1,800
neighbourhood plans have been started, are under way or
have been finished. In all of them, there is a clear
relationship between the neighbourhood planning process and
the town or parish council, but only a fifth of the
population is covered by parish and town councils. The
fundamental question behind the amendment is: what are the
Government doing to set up more parish councils? Clearly,
that must be with the agreement of local people, not
imposed, but a lot of principal local authorities do not
want any more town councils around the place and are not
being very helpful.
I do not know what proportion of the population of the
country is covered by neighbourhood plans, but it might be
something like 5%. If that is the case, everything that we
are talking about in earnest is very much a minority
interest out in the country. If only one in 20 people in
England is covered by a neighbourhood planning process of
any kind, either neighbourhood planning is not for most
people or, as I would suggest, it is not being sufficiently
promoted to get more people involved.
Some planning authorities not only do not like parish
councils, they are not very enthusiastic about
neighbourhood plans. Clearly, if you are working on a local
plan, you may not want to devote additional resources to
neighbourhood plans. Although the responsibility for
drawing them up lies with the neighbourhood planning
group—either the forum or the parish council—it requires
time and effort from local planning officers to ensure that
it fits with the local development plan, planning law
generally, and will work.
Most big urban areas have not got on with neighbourhood
planning yet. Most neighbourhood plans are in rural
villages or suburban villages. Some areas are
pioneering—the noble Lord, Lord Clarke, will tell us about
his—but there are not many in the big urban areas. However,
it is not just the big urban areas that are a problem. If
my noble friend Lady Scott of Needham Market were here—I
think she is occupied in the Chamber—she would be talking
about a town in her area that wants to get on with having a
parish council and neighbourhood planning, but is being
blocked by the local authority. So it is not just the big
urban areas: unparished areas are missing out on
neighbourhood planning.
I come back to the reasons why parished areas are taking
the lead on this. First, the fact that there is a parish or
town council means that there is a focus in that community
to discuss and promote such a plan. There is an existing
body of local councillors who are used to considering and
acting on local issues and problems and giving their view
on planning applications. Some of them turn up at planning
committees for the principal authority to give oral
evidence on behalf of their parishes, but send in their
views in writing. Parish councillors are used to
considering proposals and schemes by principal councils and
government legislation. People ask them whether they want
to take part, and they discuss it. In many parts of the
country, including mine, they are taking part in community
transfers, taking over land, property, facilities and
services from district councils at parish council level, so
they are used to this kind of thing.
Secondly, as well as being focused, they are a source of
resources. They are not huge resources, but they have a
clerk, to start off with, and perhaps some other staff who
can do the initial things that need doing to get a
neighbourhood plan steering group going and are used to
dealing with correspondence, reports and all the rest of it
in legislation. The other resource that parish councils
have is money. They can use some of their precept money to
supplement grants from the Government towards the
neighbourhood planning process. On our previous day in
Committee, we discussed how much the grants are and whether
they vary, and I do not have any further information on
that. Whether or not they are the same for all parishes,
whether big or small, in most cases government grants for a
neighbourhood plan will not be enough to carry out that
plan. In some cases, the grant will be nowhere near enough.
Parish councils are one source of local funding. They are
not the only one, but they can do it.
On the other hand, forums are ad hoc and random, and they
depend on somebody turning up and taking the initiative or
a local group learning about it. There is no one in the
community who will automatically consider whether to have a
neighbourhood plan. This amendment states that local
planning authorities must review their neighbourhood areas
and look at how many there are, where they are, what
proportion are parished, the progress that is being made
and, in particular, the unparished areas that are missing
out on neighbourhood planning and must consider how to
promote neighbourhood planning better. The amendment puts
the onus on planning authorities that are not terribly keen
on neighbourhood planning to get keener on promoting it in
their area. Finally, if places which are not parished ought
to have neighbourhood planning, the amendment requires
local authorities to consider undertaking a local
government review to consider, with the local population,
whether to start the process by setting up a parish council
or a town council which would have the ability and
resources to produce a neighbourhood plan. It would also be
able to do everything else that parishes and towns do. I
live in a borough which was mostly not parished when it was
formed 40 years ago but is now wholly parished and the
process has been almost entirely beneficial. I beg to move
-
(LD)
I apologise for arriving a little late. Trains from the
West Country are operating rather badly because of bad
weather and the London Tube is operating really badly just
because it is the London Tube, but it is a delight to be
here now. Before I speak, I should draw attention to one of
my interests which I have previously declared. I am the
president of the National Association of Local Councils,
and I will be speaking on an issue that it has raised. It
is reflected in some of my noble friend’s comments.
It is clear that the great majority of neighbourhood plans
that have been brought forward are in parished areas. I
have represented a local community for many years, and I
continue to live in one, and I have chaired a neighbourhood
plan process initiated by a parish council. It is very
obvious that parish councils, in communities where they
exist, are very successful in moving things forward in
representing community interests. In the context of
neighbourhood planning, they provide an essential vehicle
for initiating a plan, ensuring there is proper
accountability to the wider community and, in the absence
of sufficient funding for some of what happens, providing
funding. In the case of our own neighbourhood plan, we
initiated at a point where there was no government funding
at all for the interregnum because the old fund had run out
and the new one had not been established. The parish
council, although a very small and poor one, was able to
step into that breach.
3.00 pm
Therefore, I think that it is really important both for
neighbourhood planning and for planning more widely to establish
parish councils wherever possible. They are not always welcome to
the district or county authorities in which they operate, because
they can run counter to an individual council’s views or a more
general council view, but that is a healthy tension and one that
should be in place.
I wanted to use this amendment as a hook to say to the Government
that I think that efforts should be made to see parishing not
only across all rural areas but across equivalent democratically
accountable bodies in urban areas at the local neighbourhood
scale. As I said, this is something that the National Association
of Local Councils has argued for.
I want to say something else on which I am not sure whether the
national association agrees, so I am definitely not speaking on
its behalf. My own view is that every so often there should be an
intelligent review of the borders of parishes and the forms they
come in. The truth is that historically they were established for
very different purposes and very different reasons based on the
church boundaries. For the purposes in which they now operate,
that can often be deeply illogical.
Taking my own neighbourhood plan as an example, it was a very
defined community for the most part and it made a lot of sense.
However, one essential area—the Victoria Business Park on the
edge of the A30—has a parish boundary running right through the
middle of it for no particular reason. It clearly relates to our
parish and the A30 is on the other side of it, so it relates not
at all to the neighbouring parish. The boundary reflects the
historic A30 and not the new dual carriageway. In any case,
having a boundary running down the middle does not necessarily
make sense if there are things on either side of it.
Similarly, our parish extends right to the edge of Bugle. This is
a village in the next-door parish and it has grown in a form that
has taken it into our parish. Frankly, it made no sense that, in
theory, our neighbourhood plan dealt with things that clearly
belonged primarily to another community and had no impact on
almost all of those in our parish.
Therefore, although I understand the sentiment around historic
boundaries, I believe that a relatively simple process for
review, particularly when development growth of one sort or
another materially changes the nature of the settlement patterns
and how they relate to the parishes, would be useful. I just
wanted to take the opportunity to say that and to prompt the
Minister to comment.
-
(Con)
What the noble Lord, , said strikes a
chord with me. I always represented very urban areas in the
House of Commons. I remember rather similar problems,
particularly from my time as the Member for Orpington,
which was in the middle of the borough of Bromley in south
London, not too far from Sutton. The idea of neighbourhood
planning is, frankly, a serious joke. It simply does not
exist. In fact, it is worse than the noble Lord, , described it. He
said that there was a vacuum and that essentially only a
very small number of people, largely in rural areas, had
neighbourhood councils, and that is true.
Planning for a neighbourhood in an urban area such as
Bromley simply does not exist. In fact, it is worse than
that. Orpington was historically a district council and had
all the appurtenances of a district council. Indeed, the
late , who was the MP for
Orpington, was a district councillor when there was a
district council for Orpington, and the council was used to
making plans for Orpington. Under the Heath local
government changes, it then became part of the London
Borough of Bromley. When councillors for Orpington put
forward schemes for Orpington high street or whatever for
the benefit of the local residents, inevitably when they
went to the planning council in Bromley they were promptly
overruled by the councillors for Bickley or Chislehurst,
who had no knowledge whatever of the Orpington situation.
That was to the fury of people in Orpington, who thus
became convinced that Bromley was fundamentally an
anti-Orpington organisation, and the sooner they got rid of
it the better. They went back to Kent, where they had some
power as a district council, but they had no power inside
the London Borough of Bromley. Their fury was evident to me
on many occasions.
It will please the noble Lord, , to know that when
briefly it was under Liberal Democrat/Labour control during
the early part of the noughties, as they are called, when
the Liberal Democrats were more of a power in the land than
they are today, it attempted to meet this problem by
forming ward committees—putting wards together and having
committees which would consider planning issues on a level
more local than the council level. It was a sensible
initiative. Sadly, it did not attract much support from the
local population. They thought it was another piece of
bureaucracy which did not work, cost money and so on. It
fizzled out but it was a brave idea, which I supported at
the time. It would have given large boroughs such as
Bromley—the largest borough in London, with areas such as
Biggin Hill on the one hand and Orpington on the other,
each with distinct personalities—some kind of local say in
a way which the amorphous Bromley council, as such, has
difficulty in giving it.
There is a real problem here. When one thinks of
neighbourhood councils, one attaches to them an almost
merry England kind of picture of lovely little parishes
such as Grimsargh in Lancashire. I take my title of
, of Grimsargh,
because that is where I was born. It has a beautiful
set-up, with a parish council and local church, and it
works wonderfully. However, such a set-up has no meaning
whatever in most urban areas, and yet it is in urban areas
that we need it. I now live in Fulham close to the old
Imperial Gas site, an area of pollution with a great deal
of bad land, gasometers, gas works and miscellaneous
offices. It is now Imperial Wharf, with Berkeley-built
homes sold mainly to foreigners for a lot of money. You
walk down there and find that there is no one on the
electoral register because they are all foreigners and that
all the languages are not English. It is a great tragedy
that it has happened in that way. Obviously I am pleased
that it has ceased to be a polluted site and is no longer
used for the supply of gas—that is delivered by other
means—but the way in which it has been developed has been
of no benefit to the people of London or the people of
Fulham. There was a need to look at that development from
the local area point of view as well that of the overall
Fulham and Hammersmith Council.
There is a problem here which I do not know how to solve.
It is certainly the case that neighbourhood planning is
lacking in most of our major urban areas, and I do not know
how to deal with that problem.
-
My Lords, to follow the noble Lord, , I should perhaps
start by reassuring him that the London Borough of Sutton
is still under Liberal Democrat control after 32 years and
still has six area committees—and area committees are not
the same as neighbourhood forums, let alone parish
councils.
-
I was referring to Bromley, which has no Liberal Democrat
presence at all.
-
I know there is a temporary cessation, but give it another
year or two.
I strongly support what my noble friends have said in
proposing the amendment. However, there is a particular
problem, as my noble friend said, in all larger
urban areas—and Greater London is the largest urban area of
them all. The problem is exacerbated because until
comparatively recently Greater London was not allowed by
law to have any parish councils. Since that became
permissible under law—I think a little less than 10 years
ago; I cannot remember exactly—there has been only one
parish council formed in the whole of Greater London and no
others. I do not know how many neighbourhood forums there
are in London, and I do not suppose the Minister has this
information at his fingertips, but, if it is available, I
would be interested to know how many neighbourhood plans
have been formed, or are in the course of being formed, in
Greater London. Perhaps that will serve to illustrate—or,
praise be, to deny—the point that the noble Lord, , and I are making. It
is a difficult problem, and while I agree with my noble
friends that parishing and parish councils are particularly
useful and beneficial to neighbourhood plans, if we are to
wait for the whole of Greater London to be parished then
neighbourhood plans will be a very long time coming.
Clearly, that is not the answer. It is a problem in other
places too, but particularly in London.
In London, neighbourhoods are often named after former
villages. So we know what a neighbourhood is, but it is a
heck of a sight more difficult to decide where the
boundaries of those neighbourhoods are. They are most
certainly not the ward boundaries, because the wards,
particularly in London, are based on arithmetic and not on
community at all. For administrative convenience, a
neighbourhood forum is likely to adopt ward boundaries, at
least in part, but they are not necessarily the historic
neighbourhoods. That is a particular problem in London.
I have supported parishing and parish councils all my
political life, but while it may be desirable, it will not
happen quickly enough for the purposes that we are debating
today. Therefore, I would be very interested if the
Minister is able to say something about the particular
issues and problems in London, to which the noble Lord,
, and I have referred.
-
(LD)
My Lords, I hope the Minister will understand that this is
a very important issue. The reasons for that have been
extremely well explained in the speeches that have been
made so far. The noble Lord, , made an extremely
helpful and important point, as did others, about the
problems that exist. In a nutshell, those problems can be
explained as follows. On the first day of Committee, my
noble friend pointed out that
emerging neighbourhood plans are showing a greater appetite
for more housing, precisely because they have more say in
the way in which they build their community. In other
words, it is in all our interests to promote neighbourhood
planning. However, the second problem is that only around
one fifth of the country is engaged in neighbourhood
planning. As we know, in those places that do not have
parish councils, it is a slower process. But as we also
know, you do not have to have a parish council to undertake
the neighbourhood planning process.
I hope the Minister will be willing to look at this issue
between Committee and Report, because we will be coming
back to this at Report. The Bill says that neighbourhood
planning is important and must become more important. But
as a consequence of that, local planning authorities must
do more to promote neighbourhood planning. It is for them
to decide whether that is through the creation of more
parish councils under the review procedures that exist or
through the other means that exist. This is a very
important issue. It is not going to help the Bill if we
simply end up with not many more people engaged with the
process.
-
My Lords, I have only a few brief remarks to make on this
amendment. To go back again to my own ward, in Crofton
Park, we have a neighbourhood forum and are tempted to set
up a neighbourhood plan. We are one of the places in London
that is trying to do this. It is a difficult process, but I
certainly see the value of it. My fellow councillors and I,
along with community members, are working towards that. We
hope to get it approved and to put it to a referendum among
local residents.
The noble Lord, , is right: there is
only one parish council in London, and it is the Queen’s
Park parish council in Westminster. It was set up in 2014
after a referendum, and it is based on the Queen’s Park
ward of Westminster City Council, which is a Labour-held
ward—there are not that many Labour-held wards in
Westminster—but it is non-political. I do not think that
parties contested the election there, so it very
non-political, and by all accounts it works very well and
is a very good thing.
The noble Lord, , was right in what
he said about parish councils and neighbourhood plans. They
are largely in more rural areas. I know the east Midlands
well, and I have come across the Deeping St James Parish
Council in Lincolnshire very close to Peterborough. I have
many colleagues and friends who are involved in that parish
council, and it works very well. They certainly look at
their rural area and are very conscious of the planning
that takes place there. I accept that in many cases it is
as the noble Lord described.
The only issue I have with the amendment is that this is a
new duty for local government and perhaps funding should be
addressed as well. Perhaps the Minister will address that
when he replies.
3.15 pm
-
My Lords, I thank the many noble Lords who have
participated in the debate on this amendment. Before I turn
to the specific amendment, I shall make some introductory
remarks which I hope will set the matter in its context.
Community members have said that a local planning
authority’s input and attitude can make a significant
difference to neighbourhood planning progress. We have also
heard during our discussion of the importance of
neighbourhood planning groups being able to access
technical advice and support and financial support. All
parts of the committee have spoken of the importance of
ensuring that we promote neighbourhood planning, which is
something to which all parties are committed. I am sure
that that will make a difference. It is clearly beginning
to make a difference, although I accept there is much
ground still to cover.
I shall say a little about the advice available through the
Government’s support programme for communities preparing a
neighbourhood plan before we turn to the specific role of
local planning authorities. The Government’s £22.5 million
support programme has been accessed by communities across
the country and has made more than 1,800 payments since it
was launched in March 2015. The support available now is
very different from that which may have been available to
some of the early pioneers of neighbourhood planning. All
those wanting to prepare a neighbourhood plan can apply for
grant of up to £9,000 to help them do so. Those that fall
into certain priority groups can apply for up to a further
£6,000. I am not sure that that is widely known. I think
there is work to be done to make sure that it is more
widely known.
We have reflected on the experiences of early pioneers and
responded to new challenges that groups have faced. For
instance, specific toolkits and technical support are now
available to help groups establish neighbourhood forums in
unparished areas, which are usually urban areas, as the
noble Lord, , said, to assist
with assessing local housing needs and to support those
wishing to allocate sites for development. Any group
wishing to modify its existing neighbourhood plan can also
apply for support in the same way as any other group can on
initially setting up. I applaud the work being done by
those who are setting up neighbourhood forums or parish
councils. Although there is only one parish council in
London, there are neighbourhood forums in London and many
work across boroughs, such as the Kilburn Neighbourhood
Plan Forum which works across the boroughs of Brent and
Camden on specific projects.
The Government have also established a national network of
132 neighbourhood planning champions. These volunteers are
drawn from local planning authorities and neighbourhood
groups and provide advocacy and peer-to-peer support. We
are continuing to support them across England through
further training and local networking events. Last year,
the Government launched a national advertising campaign to
promote take-up of neighbourhood planning, targeting 81
local authority areas through adverts in local press, local
radio, online and on-street posters. I shall endeavour to
provide more information on that. Perhaps it can be
disseminated to particular councils that noble Lords will
be familiar with so that we can share some of this
information more widely because that would be appropriate.
If I have not said this already, and I do not think I have,
I will write again. The letter regarding the first day of
Committee is in the process of being finalised, and I would
like to write another one to pick up points that I do not
cover or fully cover in the course of today’s debate. So
once again there will be a write-round.
I turn specifically to Amendment 16. I thank the noble
Lord, , and others who
have contributed to the debate. This is an important area.
Already, communities in over 70% of local planning
authority areas have taken up the opportunities offered by
neighbourhood planning, but I fully acknowledge that that
does not capture the fact that there are massive gaps. In
other words, there are groups throughout the country but it
needs to permeate much more widely. There is much more to
do, as noble Lords have rightly said.
Local planning authorities have a legal duty to give such
advice or assistance as they consider appropriate to
facilitate neighbourhood planning. As set out on Tuesday in
response to a point raised by the noble Lord, Lord Kennedy,
these duties are funded by my departments under the new
burdens doctrine. I can confirm that that funding will
continue into the next financial year, and the amount of
that will be released ahead of the new financial year so
details of it will follow.
Planning guidance sets out the Government’s expectation for
local planning authorities to take a proactive and positive
approach, working collaboratively with those preparing a
neighbourhood plan to ensure that neighbourhood plan
proposals have the greatest chance of success. Building on
this, Clause 5 requires authorities to set out in their
statements of community involvement their policies for
providing support to their communities. That requirement
applies irrespective of whether there is any existing
neighbourhood planning activity in the area and will bring
transparency to the support that authorities provide,
leading to more informed and equitable discussions.
The Government have set out, in the document entitled
Further Information on How the Government Intends to use
the Bill’s Delegated Powers, our intention to require
statements to be reviewed at least every five years. While
it will be for authorities themselves to decide whether the
document should be revised, should an authority consider
change unnecessary then they must publish their reasons why
they are not updating the statement. The Government have
also tabled an amendment to the Bill that would allow the
Secretary of State to specify by regulations the content of
those statements, and I think we are coming to those later.
Local planning authorities are also required to publish a
map setting the designated neighbourhood areas in their
authority area. Regulations also require authorities to
publicise on their website, and by other means, when they
designate a neighbourhood area or a forum, together with
the progress of individual neighbourhood plans or
neighbourhood development orders.
I turn to the part of the noble Lord’s amendment concerning
community governance reviews, which are the reviews
undertaken to decide whether new parish councils should be
established. The Government have already taken steps to
make it simpler for neighbourhood forums to request that
new parish councils are created for their communities, and
have supported communities up and down the country to set
up new parishes through a £1 million investment over the
past three years.
I can therefore reassure noble Lords that current
requirements alongside measures in the Bill, together with
government amendments that we have tabled, proactively
promote neighbourhood planning and, as I have said, that we
are seeking to publicise the benefits of neighbourhood
planning.
I would like to cover some of the points that were made by
noble Lords, if I can pick up those that I am in a position
to answer. Those that I cannot, I will identify and write
on later. We understand that around 90% of neighbourhood
plans are in parish areas, a point that I think was made.
I was asked about the number of communities that have
neighbourhood planning. I can say that over 2,000
communities in England have at least started the process of
neighbourhood planning. If I am able to give a more
detailed breakdown on that, I will do so when I write.
The noble Lord, Lord Taylor, raised the specific issue of
the need occasionally, or perhaps more than occasionally,
to change the boundaries of parishes that may be quite
historic, and it may therefore be appropriate if that is
revisited at times. At the heart of the neighbourhood
planning process is the principle that it is for
communities to decide what they plan for. Therefore the
boundary of a neighbourhood area does not need to comply
with administrative boundaries, and neighbourhoods can
bring plans forward.
Specifically on changes to neighbourhood areas, I direct
the noble Lord to Clause 4, which sets out some of the
procedure. I appreciate that he was aiming more widely—in
the sense of how to tackle the problem—but the procedure is
covered by Clause 4. If there is anything else I can pick
up on that in the write-round, I will do so.
The noble Lords, , and—I think—, also raised the
issue of how we tackle London specifically, and perhaps it
relates to a wider area. I will consider that. There are
quite a few neighbourhood forums in London, but no parish
councils. I accept that, and I will see whether there is
anything that we can usefully contribute on that.
I think that those are the main issues that were raised. If
I have missed anything I will pick it up in correspondence.
We take this issue seriously, and I will seek to address in
correspondence some of the specific points raised in
particular by the noble Lord, , in introducing
this valuable amendment. With that reassurance, I ask the
noble Lord to withdraw his amendment.
-
My Lords, I am very grateful to the Minister for the
positive and constructive way in which he responded to this
amendment. It gives some hope that the Government might, in
addition to letting us know what they are doing, put a bit
more oomph behind this process. Before I comment on the
Minister’s response, I have one or two comments for other
noble Lords—and I thank all noble Lords who took part.
My noble friend talked
about changing parish boundaries. Since responsibility for
local governance review passed to the local authority and
no longer requires the heavy-handed involvement of the
Boundary Commission—I am not sure when it was—the process
has been quite easy. If a local authority wants to review
parish boundaries it can do so through the local governance
review, which sets out exactly how it should take place. It
can do it for the whole authority area or for just one or
two parishes—to tackle a particular problem, such as the
one my noble friend mentioned. It does not, therefore, need
a new process, just for the local authority—in this case
presumably Cornwall unitary council—to agree to do it.
The noble Lord, , reminded me of the
only time I have been to Orpington. It was an extremely
long time ago, and the first time I ever knocked on a door
was on behalf of a Liberal candidate: Eric Lubbock, in the
by-election of 1962. Before his sad death last year he was,
of course, for many years, . I remember it
well. I would not claim to be an expert on Orpington but I
would have thought that Orpington and perhaps some other
communities there, such as Biggin Hill—where I remember
traipsing around on unmade roads—would be an ideal place
for a parish council. It ought to happen.
I am a member of an authority and was heavily involved in
setting up area committees about 20 years ago. It is
important for area committees on a local authority to be
given real powers and not just be talking shops. We have
had area committees with real powers. In fact the political
job I most enjoyed in my life was chairing the Colne and
District area committee for a number of years—again, quite
a long time ago.
My noble friend said that we knew what
neighbourhoods were but drawing boundaries was always
extremely difficult. I think people bring that up as an
excuse for not doing it. Drawing boundaries is not
difficult if you know what community you want to define,
and its core. Then you have to find a way to draw the
boundaries with the consent of the people who live on and
around them. It is usually quite possible. People know the
part of the borough, or whatever, that they live in and, if
they do not, a sensible decision has to be made. However,
in most cases, drawing boundaries is not difficult.
The important, and more difficult, job is deciding what the
core community is to start off with. Sometimes it is the
local authority ward. If the local authority ward has been
long established—I was about to say “and has been there a
long time”, which would be tautologous—because of the
activity that has taken place on a ward boundary basis and
because that is what the councillors represent, then those
boundaries, which initially were pretty arbitrary, take on
meaning over the years. That is the case with some of the
new authorities that were set up in 1974. In some cases,
wards are perfectly reasonable places but, again, it is a
question of judgment. In other places where the wards have
recently been redrawn, that has resulted in complete
nonsense for neighbourhood and community purposes, and
things have to be done differently.
3.30 pm
I apologise to the noble Lord, , for having
called him the wrong name. I am a northerner and all these
Londoners sound the same to me, so there we are. He talked about
the new duties for local authorities. I would say that the sorts
of things set out here are things that the principal
authorities—the borough, district or unitary authorities —should
already be doing. I do not think that they are terribly onerous,
although as a principle I very much take the point that he keeps
making.
I am very grateful to the Minister. He said that much of the
amendment and much of what I said concerns the local planning
authority’s input and attitude. I was very grateful to him for
setting out the position statement on behalf of the Government. I
think that the Government are very positive on neighbourhood
planning. As someone who has spent more time than I would have
liked looking at all the stuff about neighbourhood planning on
the web, I can say that it is very good. The Government are doing
a good job in helping people who want to get to grips with this
process. I do not always say that the Government are doing a good
job but in this case I think they, and indeed their advisers, are
doing a very good job in providing information and support of
that nature.
What I am really saying is that more active promotion is needed
at local authority level. It is no coincidence that the big urban
areas have very few parish or town councils. One or two have them
for historic reasons but in most cases the metropolitan
districts, London and other big urban councils have very few, and
that is because there is a lack of interest and a lack of will on
the part of the members and officers of those councils. That is
where change is needed and that is the purpose of the
amendment—to persuade the members and officers of these big
councils that having parish and, where appropriate, town councils
in their areas would assist in the processes of local democracy
and in the delivery of local services.
Having said all that, I am very grateful to the Minister for what
he said and I look forward to receiving his letters. I beg leave
to withdraw the amendment.
Amendment 16 withdrawn.
Clause 6: Content of development plan documents
Amendment 17
Moved by
17: Clause 6, page 5, line 27, at end insert—
“(1CA) The development plan documents must contain references
to—(a) a threshold for social and affordable housing in the
area;(b) the impact of the proposals in the documents on energy
efficiency in dwellings and infrastructure in the local area;(c)
flood protection for the local area;(d) the impact of the
proposals in the documents on air quality in the area; and(e) the
provision of green spaces and public leisure areas.”
-
(Lab)
My Lords, I refer again to my interests as a Newcastle city
councillor and a vice-president of the Local Government
Association. My noble friend Lord Kennedy referred to
Queens Park. Perhaps I should declare an interest, given
what their Rangers did to my team last night. However, I do
so not to wish Queens Park Rangers well.
Turning to this group, Amendment 17 stands in my name and
that of my noble friend Lord Kennedy and the noble
Baroness, Lady Cumberlege; Amendment 18 is in my name and
that of my noble friend; and Amendment 17A is in the names
of the noble Baronesses, Lady Finlay of Llandaff and Lady
Watkins, who do not seem to be in their places, although I
assume that somebody will speak on their behalf.
The amendments in this group flesh out the Bill’s
prescription of matters that must be included in
development plan documents. Amendment 17 includes five
substantive issues that ought to be addressed, and on which
current government policy is either non-existent or
inadequate. The first relates to the provision of social
and affordable housing. As noble Lords are aware,
affordability appears to be a pretty elastic concept for
the present Administration, exemplified by the definition
of affordability in relation to rented housing, as 80% of
private sector levels, and the definition of starter homes
for purchase, as up to more than £500,000 in London. A much
more realistic approach is required, but the principle
should at least be explicitly acknowledged in development
plans, which should, as exemplified in the other areas
covered in the amendment, be designed to provide not just
“development” but communities.
Despite President Trump’s refusals to acknowledge them,
energy efficiency and flood protection issues are
increasingly important areas of concern given the growing
evidence of the damage that climate change engenders. So is
air quality, as underlined by the recent appalling
revelations of school children suffering from the effects
of vehicle emissions while they are at school, just a
couple of miles away from where we are today—my noble
friend Lord Kennedy referred to that issue. Clearly, the
provision of green spaces and public leisure spaces should
help in this context, as well as being an obvious
requirement for any development, new or old.
Noble Lords will no doubt recall the famous picture of
and the husky in his
green days, proclaiming that a Conservative Government
would be the greenest Government ever. Well, he shot the
husky—metaphorically speaking—and the green agenda became,
in his less than elegant phrase, “green crap”. Now is the
opportunity for the Government to return to that agenda
and, in particular, to ensure that it is embodied in this
Bill.
Amendment 18 seeks to ensure the provision of a minimum
number of dwellings in any development plan, after
consultation locally. In that context, it will be important
for locality not to be confined to the area where
development might take place, and to ensure that the need
for housing in the wider local area is taken into account.
The experience of Stevenage, hemmed in by its surrounding
county and district areas and without developable land of
its own, should not be repeated.
The amendments do not include reference to an issue that I
have repeatedly raised; namely space standards, which my
noble friend touched on. As noble Lords will recall, in
recent years, space standards have fallen substantially
below those in Europe. Perhaps when moving his amendment
concerning guidance on the housing needs of the elderly and
the disabled, which we very much welcome, the Minister
could indicate whether this too could be included alongside
those matters.
Clearly, we endorse the suggestion in Amendment 17A that
the education, health and well-being needs of the
population are also reflected in the development plans. I
beg to move.
Amendment 17A (to Amendment 17)
Moved by
17A: Clause 6, after paragraph (e) insert—
“(f) the education, health and well-being needs of the
population.”
-
My Lords, in the absence of the noble Baronesses, perhaps I
can speak to the amendment. This is completely spontaneous,
but I feel quite strongly about it. The issue is one that
surfaced very conspicuously in the Select Committee on the
Built Environment; that is, the absolute necessity of
planning places that essentially support and nurture the
health and well-being of the whole community. Plans must
explicitly include designs for such spaces, rather than
spaces that, at their very worst, encourage criminal
activity because they are small and narrow and do not allow
for sufficient activity. It is very interesting that Milton
Keynes, in its 50th year, has been praised for the quality
of its environment and its particular ability to promote
well-being through its green spaces. We can all agree that
education and health are part of the fundamental
infrastructure of our communities. Good schools, good
health services and good health opportunities are part of
what makes a community successful. I will leave it at that.
The amendment deserves a longer debate, but in the absence
of the noble Baronesses, I want to put my comments on the
record.
-
My Lords, I thank the Minister for tabling Amendment 19,
which lies in this group and derives from a lengthy debate
in the other place. It seems extremely important to address
specifically the housing needs that result from old age or
disability, so I hope that the amendment will secure
support. Regarding the other amendments in this group, a
number of these issues are very important and will be
debated elsewhere in our consideration of the Bill in
Committee. But some of them will also depend on what is
actually said in the housing White Paper, which will be
published at the beginning of next week. In that sense, we
have to reserve our positions with a view to waiting for
Report.
-
My Lords, my name is attached to that of the noble Lords,
and , on
Amendment 17. It is quite right that we should set our
priorities in these documents so that the community knows
exactly what is in our minds. Its provisions as set out in
paragraphs (a) to (e) are really important.
First, Amendment 17 refers to affordable housing. In an
earlier debate I think it was the noble Lord, , who said something
quite true: that very often the conversion to offices does
not allow for affordable housing. Some of the units being
built really do not accommodate family-sized residences for
people who want to live there, so affordable housing is
critical.
Secondly, the amendment refers to,
“energy efficiency in dwellings and infrastructure”,
and we certainly want warm homes. Since I first got
involved in planning, the building regulations have become
very interesting. We built an office near to us and found
the other day that the amount of insulation and everything
that we have to put into it because of building regulations
was really encouraging. We need to ensure that that
continues.
Thirdly, the amendment refers to,
“flood protection for the local area”.
We sit between two towns. They were both seriously flooded
and that caused anguish to those involved, so that is
really important. More than that, when we design the sites
and think about where housing will go, flooding really must
be a consideration because to build on the flood plain is a
disaster, as we have seen in these two towns. We should
avoid it.
Lastly, the amendment refers to,
“green spaces and public leisure areas”.
In towns and cities, the green spaces are very often
described as the lungs within an area. They allow people to
breathe. I think of children desperate to get out of their
houses and kick a football around or play, or do whatever
they want. That also applies to young people and people of
a certain age. It seems important that they also have that
opportunity, so I strongly support this amendment.
I pay tribute to my noble friend Lord Bourne, who really
has listened carefully to what people have said to him. I
very much welcome his Amendment 19. I also thank very much
the noble Baroness, Lady Andrews, for coming in on the spur
of the moment to move Amendment 17A for the two noble
Baronesses who are unable to be here. She is absolutely
right that we need to ensure that what we build is healthy
and will improve the quality of life for the people in
those areas. It is important that we see the thing in the
whole, not just bricks and mortar. I very much support
these amendments.
3.45 pm
-
I would quite like to speak to the other amendments, if I
may, and welcome the Minister in the name of my noble
friend. What we are looking at in these amendments is
something rather more radical than somebody tacking on to
the development plans some fundamental issues such as
housing affordability and so on. It invites us to revisit
the local development plans. The point about the elements
that have been identified, including flood protection,
which is more and more of an issue, is that they are
exactly the elements that should inform and drive the shape
of the local development plan. They are not accidental
outcomes—they should be shaping the quality and priorities
and the relationship between the local development plan and
the local economic plan, led by the LEP. So those
additions, as identified, would give us a better
opportunity to imagine the sort of communities that we want
and give us proper inputs to create a more robust as well
as more creative local development plan, which at the
moment is very remote from most people. So the only people
who tend to get involved in this protracted and complicated
process tend to be those who already know the process and
have something specific that they want to say.
I turn to Amendment 19 in the name of the noble Lord, Lord
Bourne, to say how much I welcome it and say a few more
things, if the Committee will bear with me. This is a
really important step forward, but I have some concerns
about it, which I want to raise with the Minister. I may be
wrong, and I would be happy to be corrected, but this is
the first time when the challenges of ageing in terms of
housing needs for elderly and disabled people have been
recognised in primary legislation. Many of us have been
working to that end for quite some years, and seeing it in
this Bill is extremely welcome. I look forward very much to
following it through with the noble Lord. I would be
interested to know why it is felt to be the right move at
this time.
My concern is whether it will meet the challenges of an
ageing society. I am anticipating much of what the Minister
may say, I suspect, but my caveats start here. One of the
most predictable things in policy-making is demography; we
have known about the demography of the ageing society for
30 or 40 years and known about the impacts. What we have
done essentially is to fail to plan for it, because it is
in the “too difficult” box—and now it has caught up with us
and it is pretty monstrous. We were told in evidence to our
Select Committee on the National Policy for the Built
Environment that in 20 years’ time, by 2037,
“the number aged between 70 and 80 will grow from 4.5
million to 7.5 million”.
That is another 3 million elderly people. This winter we
have seen just in the past three or four months the impact
of winter on A&E and the health service in general, and
it is clear to me and to many others that we have a model
for funding and organisation of the health service that is
unsustainable.
The resources that we have, and the conversations that must
lead to action, are the ones for housing. What we are
debating here is essentially not about housing but about
the front line of the health service, and how and where and
under what conditions elderly and disabled people live is
becoming a prime order question for healthcare and social
care policy and not just about finding a housing solution.
In another context, we know that 60% of total household
growth in England up to 2033 is expected to come from
households headed by someone aged 65 or over, and many of
them will have disabilities that come with age. Most people
want to age in place and live and die at home—and that is
part of the responsibility of government. Only 2% of the
country’s housing stock is in retirement housing.
In addition, the amendment reflects the responsibility that
the Government feel that they have to provide for children,
as well as adults with disability; it recognises those
needs. But it is really beyond time. We were told in our
Select Committee—I keep quoting it; I am conscious of
that—that,
“only 4% of the current housing stock met basic
accessibility criteria”.
That is a shockingly low figure.
In the context of the amendment and what I have just said,
does the guidance recognise that changes are required not
only in the amount of specific and specialised
accommodation across the range of healthcare and housing
needs for elderly people, but also in relation to the need
to plan for the housing of elderly people as a whole in
housing supply policy? I would argue that we are not
providing niche market housing. We should be planning as a
whole for an elderly and ageing society. That is the only
way to build in foresight and anticipate the needs of the
future, and it is the only way to create a national housing
policy.
Can the Minister therefore ensure that the guidance that he
is planning will make explicit the economic and social
argument across health and social care? Local authorities
have to know that this is an urgent need, but that it would
also help them to hit their other policy objectives. They
need to know that it is not only economically efficient but
also socially efficient, in terms of health and social
care. Frankly, if I were in charge of all this, I would
prioritise the handyman services, so that you could get the
adaptations—in the homes that need them—that keep people
out of hospital or get them home more safely and quickly.
Will he also recommend—and this is in the guidance—that all
new homes are built to lifetime home standards, so that
everyone has the chance to stay where they are? We were
working, in 2008, towards a mandatory standard. I
understand the political changes that have driven a more
deregulatory agenda, but we now have optional standards.
However, since 2004 places such as London have adopted a
universal lifetime home standard that has been extremely
successful. It is compulsory and has led to a significant
increase in provision, and there seems to be no evidence
that it is a deterrent because of extra costs.
My second set of questions—I will try to be brief—is also
about the context of this amendment. In relation to the
NPPF and local development and neighbourhood plans, I feel
that this is putting the cart before the horse. Although
the cart is very welcome, I would like to see the horse
involved. My fundamental question is whether we can count
on this planning guidance to achieve the changes that we
need in what local authorities are going to plan for and
secure. Current planning policy requires authorities to
plan for housing for older people. McCarthy and Stone—with
which the Minister will be familiar, and one of the biggest
builders of retirement housing in the country—told a CLG
Select Committee on housing in 2014 that 65% of planning
applications for buildings for older people are rejected
first time round by councils, and went on to say that
measures around the need for local authorities to plan for
demographic change were neither clear enough nor likely to
be powerfully enforced in their current form.
I am sorry that the noble Lord, , is not in his place
because he has been a great inspiration behind this. We put
forward a recommendation by the All-Party Group on Housing
and Care some time ago—I think it would be welcomed by
local authorities and providers—that the NPPF itself be
strengthened and made clearer in relation to planning for
an ageing society. That would be wise, because the
references in the NPPF are rather vague and insubstantial.
It says, in paragraphs 50 and 159, that local planning
authorities should,
“plan for a mix of housing based on current and future
demographic trends, market trends and the needs of
different groups in the community (such as, but not limited
to, families with children, older people, people with
disabilities, service families and people wishing to build
their own homes)”.
I do not think that that is enough in the light of what we
are facing and need to do. The Minister has an opportunity
to do it because the NPPF is under review. Can he tell us
whether the issue has surfaced in the review and the
consultations; whether the DCLG is looking at strengthening
those sections of the NPPF; and, if not, whether he will
commit to looking at how it might be done? There will be no
better opportunity.
I have a final comment on the next stage, the local
development plan. In relation to the earlier amendments and
the identification of things that might go into local
development plans, which I support, the point is that this
is guidance. It would be entirely logical for it to be in
the development plan, so that the guidance had some
attachments to it: for example, to set ambitions for
lifetime homes. Would the Minister be prepared to meet me,
with his officials, to talk about whether this is a
possibility and how it might be done?
Turning to the guidance, I have some specific questions.
Can the Minister give me some examples of the tone and
nature of the guidance, and the degree of detail that we
might expect? For example, would he include guidance on how
best local authorities might assess our present and future
needs, and the range of those needs? Will there be a
specific requirement to plan within the housing supply
targets at local and neighbourhood level? Will there be
specific guidance on how to assess the financial viability
of, and benefits from, investments in lifetime homes
standards? Where will local authorities go to get the best
advice? Will there be advice on how best to link planning
with social care and health, and achieve genuine
collaboration on setting targets? What provision will there
be for consultation with older people about getting a home
that they say is the right size for them—usually a smaller
home—since “right sizing” is a better term than
“downsizing”? Will the Minister ensure that the guidance
goes to those dealing with both local and neighbourhood
planning? And how will he ensure that this guidance is
followed and implemented, which is the only question that
really counts? Will he take advice from agencies such as
Age Concern, as well as from Habinteg, FirstStop, Berkeley
homes and McCarthy & Stone? There are lots of people
who know about how to deliver this properly.
I have gone on quite long enough and I think that the
Minister will get the message. I look forward very much to
seeing the guidance, and I wonder when we will have it. I
presume that in the housing White Paper, which we are
looking forward to so much and on which the Minister has
already given many hostages to fortune, we will have
something on this as well.
-
(Con)
My Lords, I too want to speak in support of Amendment 19,
which I welcome enthusiastically for two reasons. First, I
believe that it signals important progress for the
Government to propose their own amendment specifying that
the Secretary of State must issue guidance which requires
local planning authorities to,
“address housing needs that result from old age or
disability”.
This is surely common sense. On the one hand, as the noble
Baroness, Lady Andrews, has already argued very
persuasively, demographics show that we are an increasingly
ageing society. On the other hand, thanks to the Disability
Discrimination Act 1995 and subsequent disability rights
legislation passed by your Lordships’ House, disabled
people increasingly, and rightly, want and expect to be
able to live independently. The supply of more accessible
housing is essential to them realising that goal.
Therefore, it makes sense to plan for the future now, in
the present. This amendment simply reflects that reality.
However, in my view, it does more than that, which is my
second reason for welcoming it. It also has real
symbolic—even radical, as the noble Baroness
said—significance because it underlines the importance of
inclusion not just on paper but in practice and, crucially,
on an anticipatory basis.
4.00 pm
Noble Lords may know that I recently supported Amendment 173 to
the Policing and Crime Bill precisely because I saw it as an
ideal opportunity to uphold the anticipatory nature of the duty
to make reasonable adjustments enshrined in the Disability
Discrimination Act 1995. That amendment related to ensuring that
disabled people could access licensed premises. As noble Lords
will know, that amendment was rejected, but the Government’s
amendment to this Bill gives me hope that some Ministers none the
less recognise the importance of anticipating the need for
accessible environments—in this case, in housing—and, crucially,
ensuring that they are actually provided. I thank my noble friend
and the Minister in the other place, , for their commendable
combination of pragmatism and practicality in drafting the
amendment and for listening to , who has done brilliant work
on this issue in the other place.
I very much hope that the Secretary of State will involve
disabled and older people’s organisations closely in both initial
development and regular reviews of the guidance for local
planning authorities. I also hope that other departments may
follow the example of anticipatory action which the amendment
sets.
-
My Lords, I thank noble Lords who have participated in the
debate on this group of amendments. Before I turn to
non-government Amendments 17 and 17A, perhaps I may
highlight some important issues which deliver clear social
and environmental benefits. They are important matters that
should be addressed through a plan-led system.
Clause 6 puts beyond doubt the Government’s commitment to a
plan-led system: a system where all local planning
authorities have development plan documents in place to
ensure that sufficient land is allocated for housing in the
right places to meet needs, with roads and other vital
amenities required by communities. At Second Reading,
several Peers raised the frustration that many communities
face when their local planning authority has not put its
own local plan in place, or the policies in the plan are
out of date. The Bill makes clear the Government’s
expectation that all local planning authorities must have
up-to-date plans to deal with those issues.
However, as my honourable friend , the Minister for
Housing and Planning, outlined during discussion in the
other place, as long as authorities have policies to
address their strategic housing and other priorities, we
want them to have more freedom in the type of plan that is
most appropriate for their area. The Government have put
local and neighbourhood plans at the heart of the planning
system. We put local authorities and communities at the
forefront of shaping a vision for their areas and deciding
how to meet their development needs. The existing regime
reflects the understanding that local planning authorities,
together with local communities, are best placed to set out
future development for their local area.
I turn to non-government Amendments 17 and 17A. As the
Minister for Housing and Planning stated in the other
place, we need to guard against attempts to duplicate
matters which are already addressed in national planning
policy. Perhaps I may also address a couple of slightly
extraneous points made by the noble Lord, . I assure him that we
are certainly not following any of President Trump’s
policies. On climate change, which was specifically raised,
although it is not central to this legislation, I reassure
him that there is a very strong bipartisan approach which I
pursued with the noble Baroness, Lady Worthington. We
fulfilled our international commitments by signing the
climate change treaty—I know because I was there—and very
much follow the policy set out in the Climate Change Act
2008, passed by the then Labour Government, of setting
carbon budgets.
I move now to the specific points addressed in these
amendments. I thank the noble Baroness, Lady Andrews, for
moving Amendment 17A on behalf of the noble Baronesses,
Lady Finlay and Lady Watkins, who I know feel strongly
about these issues, and enabling it to be part of the
debate.
The matters addressed in these amendments relate to
affordable and social housing, energy, flooding, air
quality, green spaces, education, health and well-being.
All are clearly addressed through the National Planning
Policy Framework. I do not propose to read out all the
parts of the framework that cover each issue. However, for
example, paragraphs 99 to 104 of the framework require
local authorities to shape and direct development to
protect people and property from flooding, including
through strategic flood risk assessments. Furthermore,
paragraphs 120 to 124 require local authorities to
safeguard people from unacceptable pollution risks;
paragraphs 73 to 74 and 76 to 77 deal with the need for
local authorities to provide green spaces and public
leisure areas; and paragraphs 69 to 78 set out how local
authorities should use the planning system to create
healthy, inclusive communities. Noble Lords will be aware
that legislation already protects land registered as common
land areas.
Local authorities are already required by law to have
regard to national planning policy and guidance when
preparing their local plans. At examination, the extent to
which a draft plan accords with national planning policy is
one of the matters that the examining planning inspector
will check. The planning regime is already set up to ensure
that local authorities have regard to such important
matters as those raised in this amendment.
There is no doubt about the importance of the issues
raised, all of which help to create attractive and
sustainable places. However, specifying them afresh in the
Bill would lead to unnecessary duplication and
prescription. I therefore do not believe that Amendments 17
and 17A are necessary. They would also limit the freedom
for local authorities to choose the type of plan that is
appropriate for their area, contrary to the intention of
Clause 6.
I turn to Amendment 18, moved by the noble Lord, . I fully recognise the
importance of ensuring not only that housing is delivered
but that the appropriate number of dwellings for an area is
agreed at a local level. As noble Lords will be aware,
housing is a key priority of the Government and we are
clear that we must build more of the right homes, in the
right places. To achieve this, it is essential that local
planning authorities have an up-to-date plan in place which
identifies, as far as possible, the housing needs of their
local area. This provides the certainty communities deserve
as to the number and location of new homes that will be
built.
The very same concerns I expressed on the previous
amendments apply here. This issue is addressed more than
adequately in paragraph 47 of the National Planning Policy
Framework. Local planning authorities must identify and
plan to meet, as far as possible, the market and affordable
housing needs of their area. Failure to include this
information in a local plan may lead to the plan being
found to be unsound at inspection stage. We are clear that
local communities must be consulted during the plan-making
process, in accordance with both legislative requirements
and the local authority’s statement of community
involvement. Additionally, neighbourhood plans offer a
further opportunity for local communities to become
involved in planning for the development needs of their
area. Alongside this, the Bill includes further measures to
ensure that communities are involved from the outset in
wider plan-making activity in their area.
In short, I understand the concern that some local planning
authorities currently have no local plan, while others do
not have up-to-date plans in place. This has a negative
impact on the allocation of development sites. However,
measures introduced in the Bill will ensure that, in the
future, plans are put in place more quickly. Clause 6 will
ensure that local planning authorities set out their
strategic priorities, including housing.
On government Amendment 19, I thank noble Lords for their
warm welcome of this provision. Like the noble Baroness,
Lady Andrews, I, too, believe that this is the first time
that it has been recognised in this way in legislation. To
echo what my noble friend said, it is of
great symbolic importance as well as practical effect. It
sends out a powerful message, just as the Disability
Discrimination Act did in 1995. I am proud of the role of
my party and other parties in securing that legislation.
The important issue of the housing needs of older and
disabled people was raised in the other place, particularly
through my honourable friend . I appreciate that the
devil will be in some of the detail and we would not expect
all the detail to be in the legislation, but I am certainly
happy to meet the noble Baroness, Lady Andrews, the noble
Baroness, Lady Greengross—she is not in her place, but she
has been very interested in this legislation and has vast
experience through Age Concern—and other noble Lords to see
how we can take this forward in a meaningful way. I am sure
that the noble Baroness, Lady Altmann, will also have a
valuable contribution to make. It is important that we
secure sensible legislation and sensible policy moving
forward, as I am sure we can.
I reassure the noble Baroness, Lady Andrews, that there is
provision for this in the National Planning Policy
Framework, which we will look at. Also—another hostage to
fortune—I think that there will be something in the White
Paper to enable us to discuss it more fully. I am keen to
ensure that, having made this commitment, we get it right.
We have to deal with many challenges. Indeed, it is part of
the wider issue across government of health and social
care. The impact of an ageing population affects probably
every government department that you can think of—it
applies to DCMS, the Department for Education and other
areas—so there is something to be done across government,
which I hope we can take on board as well. As a bonus, the
aim is to do something for this part of the community. It
is important that we do that but it should have the effect
of freeing up some housing that this group is in. That,
too, is to be welcomed. As I say, I thank noble Lords for
their welcome of the amendment.
More specifically, there is already a structure in place
that recognises these needs. We have mechanisms through
local authorities, the National Planning Policy Framework
and building regulations. We need to build on those. The
Government have listened carefully to the concerns that
have been expressed by many Members in the Commons and the
Lords, across parties, about these issues.
Understandably, specific questions were raised. I will try
to pick up some of those details in responding by letter. I
hope that I have given a broad view of where we are going,
but I am, as I say, happy to engage with noble Lords on the
more detailed approach as we take the policy forward. With
that, I ask noble Lords not to press their amendments.
-
I beg leave to withdraw Amendment 17A.
Amendment 17A (as an amendment to Amendment 17) withdrawn.
4.15 pm
-
My Lords, I thank all noble Lords who have contributed to
the debate, particularly the noble Baroness, Lady
Cumberlege, my noble friend Lady Andrews and the noble
Lord, . My noble friend
Lady Andrews touched on the issue of the necessary
provision of suitable accommodation for the elderly. That
resonated strongly with me. Just in these last few days, I
have been contacted by a tearful lady whose elderly mother
is living in two-bedroom accommodation—a house rather than
a bungalow—where she is effectively confined to the ground
floor. Alas, the poor lady is incontinent and is finding it
almost impossible to manage in that accommodation. She is
applying to be rehoused, but we have very few alternatives
to her present accommodation. Over time, we have not
provided nationally for this kind of problem, which
unfortunately will grow, as she has made clear.
The Minister, in reply, suggested that everything we have
discussed today is already included in legislation covering
different aspects of planning and development, but Clause 6
specifically concerns the content of development plan
documents, and it seems sensible to bring together the
various strands in one place. He is gilding the lily
somewhat when he speaks as though everything is being done
to secure proper guidance in relation to the matters raised
in the amendments and our discussion, notably energy
efficiency and climate change. To be fair, I am not sure
whether it was the present Government or the coalition
Government who reduced the standards. Whatever the
standards are, they ought to be part of a development plan
so that everybody can grasp what is required of such a
plan, be they developers or those in the community anxious
to see proper development in their area.
I do not want to sound unnecessarily critical of the
Government in this matter, because they are moving broadly
in the right direction, but I regret that we cannot have
the whole picture reflected in what should be an important
development in planning policy. However, in the
circumstances, I beg leave to withdraw the amendment.
Amendment 17 withdrawn.
Amendment 18 not moved.
Amendment 19
Moved by
19: Clause 6, page 5, line 39, at end insert—
“( ) In section 34 of that Act (guidance)—(a) the existing words
become subsection (1), and(b) after that subsection insert—“(2)
The Secretary of State must issue guidance for local planning
authorities on how their local development documents (taken as a
whole) should address housing needs that result from old age or
disability.””
Amendment 19 agreed.
Clause 6, as amended, agreed.
Amendment 20 not moved.
Debate on whether Clause 7 should stand part of the Bill.
-
My Lords, I gave notice of my intention to oppose Clause 7
standing part of the Bill, which is grouped with my
intention to oppose Clause 8, and I will speak to them both
fairly briefly.
I am grateful to the noble Baroness, Lady Cumberlege, and
the noble Lord, , for signing up to
my opposition to Clause 7 standing part of the Bill. When
you read the clause, it is extraordinary to find it in a
Bill entitled the Neighbourhood Planning Bill. There is
nothing localist about it: nothing for local communities or
planning authorities to decide, it just assumes powers for
the Secretary of State to give directions. Perhaps it
should not be here, or perhaps the Bill’s title is
incorrect, but it is odd that it is in a Bill called the
Neighbourhood Planning Bill. On the one hand, the noble
Lord, Lord Bourne, says that the Government support
localism and neighbourhood planning and they want local
people and local councils to decide. On the other, we have
the Government taking all sorts of new powers to instruct
local authorities, councils and councillors.
Having said that, the most outrageous thing in the Bill is
Clause 38, which we shall get to next week. That is
something else. The first sentence of Clause 38 reads:
“The Secretary of State may by regulations make such
provision as the Secretary of State considers appropriate
in consequence of any provision of this Act”.
That is localism in one sentence, is it not? But we will
deal with that next week and, I am sure, again at Report.
I move on to Clause 8, which I again oppose, and am
grateful to the noble Lords who have signed up against it.
Again, it is bizarre. Where we have two-tier areas—a county
council and a series of district councils—I do not think
that there is any detailed planning expertise at county
level, so it is odd to take a power to allow counties to
take on those powers. Will the county then have to buy-in
those services, set up their own planning departments or
commission the district council to do the work? That seems
bizarre. I look forward to hearing the Minister’s response.
-
My Lords, very often when we discuss a clause not standing
part of a Bill, it is an opportunity to discuss broader
matters and the whole of the clause. I am concerned about
this clause because it gives me vibes that the Secretary of
State wants to micromanage some local planning issues. I
would like to understand the intentions behind this lengthy
clause and the Minister to explain whether it furthers the
cause of devolution of planning powers.
I agree with the noble Lord, Lord Kennedy: this is the
Neighbourhood Planning Bill and yet that is not mentioned
in all these clauses. Having been a Minister, I know that
it is often extremely hard to get some policies that you
feel keen about in the department into a Bill. I wonder
whether this clause contains all kinds of policies that the
department really wants to get legislated and that this is
a hook to hang it on. I hope that that suspicion will be
negated by my noble friend.
I am worried that the words “direction” and “direct” run
through nearly every sentence and clause of the Bill. That
says a lot to me. I have been trying throughout the Bill to
separate the powers of the Secretary of State—the overall
policy—from the local. As the noble Lord, Lord Kennedy,
said, this is not about localism but about the Secretary of
State having power to intervene in local issues.
I am also suspicious about whether this is a first step
towards getting local authorities to merge. I know that we
are talking about planning documents, but I wonder whether
this is a first step towards merging local planning
authorities. In my area, two planning authorities have
willingly combined their back office services. That is
fine: it works great, saves money and so on, and we, the
inhabitants of those areas, are quite content with that.
However, we would resist very strongly if two local
authorities were forced to merge because the Secretary of
State at that time felt that it would be a good thing to
do. That should be resisted, and we would resist very
strongly.
I wonder about the content of the clause. Even if it is
only about getting authorities to prepare joint planning
documents if they do not want to do so, is that a good
thing to do or is it a first step? To me, bringing about
mergers is about diplomacy, not autocracy. I fear that this
has elements of autocracy, but I hope my noble friend will
put me right. I am very concerned about this.
As to Clause 8—again I may be mistaken because it is a long
time since I was involved as a county or district
councillor—in my area of East Sussex, the county council
has devolved all the local planning it can to district and
borough councils. The county council makes decisions on
mineral extraction, waste management, schools, libraries
and roads but it does not do detailed planning. It seems
slightly odd to make it the default authority for local
planning if district or borough planners fail to live up to
expectations.
The Bill deals in detail with housing, sites, employment
and things of that sort which towns and parishes know a lot
about. I thought about what police authorities do when they
have problems in their local areas. Of course we get
problems in local authority areas. The police get another
police force from outside the area to look at the problem,
as it knows about policing. If we want a system whereby we
can bring together authorities and unpack some of the
difficulties that they are facing, would it not be better
to get a well-regarded local planning authority to come to
help? That seems a better choice. I may have misread both
these clauses, so I hope the Minister will put me right.
-
My Lords, I was a county councillor for 20 years and have
been a district councillor for eight years, so noble Lords
will not be surprised that I shall speak against Clause 8
standing part of the Bill. All local authorities are under
extreme pressure following many years of budget cuts, and
services are being squeezed. In county councils and unitary
authorities, children’s services and adult social care are
demanding more and more of their budgets. Are the
Government seriously proposing, at this critical time, that
county councils should take over the preparation and
execution of districts’ local plans?
In Somerset, all districts have local plans in place that
followed due process and were adopted. There are, of
course, other areas of the country where this is not the
case, but beating them over the head with a stick hardly
seems the way to bring them into line. Paragraph (b) of new
Clause 7B inserted by Schedule 2 refers to upper-tier
county councils being invited to prepare or revise the
development plan. This gives the impression that if a
district council has drawn up a plan with which the county
council has some disagreement, it can blithely take it over
and amend it to its own ends, regardless of how pertinent
and important the plan may be to the inhabitants of the
district.
The District Councils’ Network opposes Clause 8 because:
county councils do not have the local planning expertise
required to discharge this proposed function, as the noble
Lord, Lord Kennedy, said, which could lead to further
delay; the expenditure incurred by county councils in
discharging this function could lead to further additional
costs, which would adversely impact on the existing
planning capacity of district councils; and there is a lack
of clarity about who will be legally responsible in the
event of a challenge to an adopted local plan if it is
approved through this route.
Surely the Government are not looking to burden county
councils with this additional work to replicate that which
has already been undertaken by district councils. Neither
level of local authority is looking for extra work at a
time when one is desperately trying to find the money to
care for the vulnerable and the other is desperately trying
to facilitate the building of much-needed homes in
accordance with the Government’s agenda. I look forward to
the Minister’s comments.
4.30 pm
-
I have some doubts and concerns about these provisions. How
does Clause 7 relate to combined authorities? How does it
fit with the devolution proposals if:
“The Secretary of State may direct two or more local
planning authorities to prepare a joint development plan
document”?
A number of areas are about to elect a mayor and become a
combined authority. Within that combined authority,
however, there will still be constituent local authorities.
How does the provision in Clause 7(2) apply to those areas?
Can the Secretary of State direct two or more of the
authorities within that area to prepare a joint development
plan document, when there is an elected mayor and a whole
new structure is being created?
Clause 8, on the county councils’ default powers, states:
“Schedule 2 makes provision for the exercise of”,
those powers,
“in relation to development plan documents”.
That assumes a straightforward situation of a county and
districts, but in at least one controversial area, I think
I am correct in saying that a court case is proceeding
about the proposals which affect some parts of
Nottinghamshire County Council and the Sheffield-led new
combined authority. That may not quite be its name but the
Minister will understand what I am talking about: the
mayoral authority that will encompass Sheffield and
adjoining authorities, to which I think two Nottinghamshire
districts wish to affiliate for some purposes. They will,
however, remain part of the county council for other
purposes—unless of course this is seen, as the noble
Baroness implies, as a step towards a back-door
reorganisation of local government. Some of us have
concerns about that.
How would these default powers affect that area, assuming
that the mayoral authority is created with these two
district councils? I think I may have said Nottinghamshire,
but Derbyshire is in fact involved in this, rather than
Nottinghamshire. There may be a similar problem in
Nottinghamshire. How would those arrangements be affected
by the provisions of Clause 8? I quite understand that the
Minister may not be able to answer that immediately but, if
that is the case, he will no doubt write to me.
-
My Lords, I shall be very brief but want to ask the
Minister four specific questions about Clause 8, which will
help us when we come to Report. Clause 8 was a late
addition to the Bill; it was not in the initial draft that
went to the House of Commons. It would help if the Minister
could explain why it was felt necessary to include it.
My first specific questions is: can a county refuse to
undertake the work and, in that case, what would happen?
Secondly, can a county subcontract the work to somebody
else, which would presumably include the use of
consultants? Thirdly, if it does, how is local knowledge
about the district in question going to be guaranteed in
constructing the plan? Fourthly, with reference to Schedule
2, it looks to me as though a county can charge a district
whatever it likes, so what action do the Government plan to
ensure that cost recovery is reasonable?
-
Before the Minister responds, on the point raised by my
noble friend about difficulties with
the Sheffield city region, my understanding is that it is
North East Derbyshire District Council and Chesterfield
Borough Council in Derbyshire which wish to join. I think
that Bassetlaw District Council in Nottinghamshire may also
want to join. The legal action is being taken by Derbyshire
County Council, which of course is partly comprised of the
north-east Derbyshire and Chesterfield areas. The problem
is with three districts in two counties, but one county
council has raised the legal action on the points that my
noble friend outlined.
-
I thank noble Lords for the debate on this part of the
Bill. I will try to take Clauses 7 and 8 in that order.
There were certainly some questions on which I will need to
write with fuller answers, but let me first turn in general
to Clauses 7 and 8.
These measures contribute to the Government’s objective of
ensuring that all local planning authorities across the
country have up-to-date development plan documents—the
documents that collectively form the local plan. In
particular, Clause 8 ensures that there is not a void and
that we have a local plan. We would have been heavily
criticised if we had left an obvious hole in the system
where no one was preparing a development plan, but I will
come to that.
The Government are committed to a plan-led system in
England. We have put communities at the heart of that
system, and I hope that I can leave no doubt in your
Lordships’ minds that we want communities to have
confidence in a system that takes account of their views,
while delivering the growth that the country needs.
I also want to kill one hare that was set running, which I
had not heard before. There is no agenda, let alone a
secret agenda, for mergers of councils. This legislation is
about neighbourhood planning. Until today, nobody had
raised with me that this is about a secret agenda to merge
authorities. It is not, it is to try to ensure that we have
a full pattern of what is needed for the planning of the
country. It is important, therefore, that where local
planning authorities do not have an up-to-date plan in
place, the Government should take action to resolve this
situation. We would have been roundly and correctly
criticised if we did not have such plans.
I turn first to Clause 7, spoken to ably by the noble Lord,
Lord Kennedy—I apologise for my short absence during his
speech—and my noble friend Lady Cumberlege. The noble Lord,
, the noble
Baroness, Lady Bakewell, and other noble Lords spoke more
widely about this.
We want to encourage collaboration between local planning
authorities so that strategic priorities, particularly for
housing, across local boundaries are properly co-ordinated
and clearly reflected in individual plans. The Local Plans
Expert Group which was asked by the Government to examine
what measures or reforms might help to ensure the efficient
and effective production of plans recommended that more
could be done to encourage local planning authorities to
work on joint plans. The Government agree with this
recommendation, and it forms the basis for the clause.
The idea of joint planning and working collaboratively with
neighbours is not new. We know of more than 40 local
planning authorities, right across England, that are
working on joint plans. There is no agenda about
encouraging or, even less, forcing them to merge. My
honourable friend the Minister for Housing and Planning
referred during debates in the other place to
representatives of Norwich City Council who told him about
how they were working with South Norfolk Council and
Broadland District Council districts to produce a combined
plan across the three districts. We are also seeing joint
plans being developed as a result of devolution deals, such
as the Greater Manchester spatial framework.
Authorities working jointly with their neighbouring
authorities can see that there are benefits to be had. For
example, there may be cost reductions to individual
authorities through working collaboratively on evidence or
through shared examination and legal costs. A joined-up
plan making process, where key decisions are taken
together, can also assist local planning authorities to
plan for housing.
We know that some areas across the country are having real
difficulties in addressing issues that require solutions
across geographic boundaries, such as planning for housing
need in areas with significant constraints, and
collaboration with neighbouring authorities may help to
resolve some of those issues.
Clause 7 inserts new Sections 28A to 28C into the Planning
and Compulsory Purchase Act 2004 and makes consequential
amendments. I wish to emphasise that this power can be
exercised only where the Secretary of State considers that
it will facilitate more effective planning of the
development and use of land in the areas of one or more
authorities. During the contribution of the noble Lord,
, I wrote down a
reference that he gave to Clause 7(2)(a), I think. I do not
think that there is a Clause 7(2)(a), but if we could
discuss it afterwards, I am happy to get a full read-out on
it and write to him.
New subsection 28A(5) provides that :
“The Secretary of State must, when giving a direction under
this section, notify the local planning authorities to
which it applies of the reasons for giving it”.
That is a clear provision which ensures that it can only be
used appropriately. Presumably, like other provisions of
statute, it will be subject to judicial review which, while
it is not something that we want to encourage, is a
backstop if people feel that any Secretary of State has got
it wrong, as may happen on occasion under any Government.
New subsection 28A(3) states:
“The Secretary of State may give a direction under this
section only if the Secretary of State considers that to do
so will facilitate the more effective planning of the
development and use of land in the area of one or more of
the local planning authorities in question”.
So it is to be used sparingly.
The noble Lord asked five questions about Clause 8. The
first question was about why it is needed. It is because we
need a plan if there is a gap. His second question was
about whether the county council is required to do it. No,
it is absolutely clear in Schedule 2 that it is an
invitation to the county council. The county council does
not have to take up the invitation. He raised several other
questions including whether county councils can subcontract
this. I suspect not, but I will correct that in the letter
if I am wrong. He asked how local knowledge is to be
guaranteed. That is specifically the reason this is needed.
The Government would look to intervene in this way if we
believed it was the only remaining lever to ensure that
there is a local plan. The alternative would be the
Secretary of State intervening directly, which would not be
very local. This is an attempt to get the vacuum filled by
the most local appropriate authority, otherwise it will not
be done. The most desirable outcome is that the district
council does it. The whole procedure can be prevented by
the district council doing it, and that is exactly what
will happen in the vast majority of cases. We would be
roundly criticised if we did not have such a provision.
The noble Lord, , raised some fair points
about the impact of this on combined authorities. Clause 8
supplements existing powers to invite the Mayor of London
or a combined authority to prepare a development plan, so
it is already in existing legislation for an authority in
its area. Again, I will take up that point in more detail,
but I think that is the provision.
The essence of this is that it is within the power of
district councils to ensure that the powers introduced by
the clause are never used. That is what we hope will
happen. I am of the view that it would be only in the
rarest of circumstances, where there is not a plan in
place, that this provision would be needed.
Questions have been fairly raised about the skills and
capacities of county councils and whether they can turn
down this role. We anticipate that there will be
discussions with them about what happens if there is no
plan. They are the next nearest directly accountable
authorities and have knowledge and understanding of the
development needs of the area. They are familiar with the
planning process and are already involved as statutory
consultees in the local plan’s process, and many work with
their district councils on cross-boundary issues.
As I said, we would be rightly and roundly criticised if we
did not have these provisions. They are needed in order
that we can cover the whole country. They are long-stop
provisions which I anticipate will not be much needed. They
are only on the basis—particularly in regard to Clause
8—that if there were not such provisions it would mean
direct intervention by the Secretary of State and the
department, which is not what we want in a neighbourhood
planning process.
-
I am comforted that there are no secret agendas for
mergers, and I thank the Minister for his assurance. As to
collaboration between authorities, my noble friend told us
that 40 authorities have agreed to provide joint plans.
Presumably that has been done without the clause in the
Bill. Are the plans likely to be more sustainable because
the authorities are working willingly together rather than
having joint plans imposed on them by the Secretary of
State? I take my noble friend’s point that the power will
be used sparingly. That sounds wonderful in debates in this
House, but when it comes to the actuality, if it is not
written in this document, people will have no recourse to
come back.
I am disconcerted by the way in which the clause is framed,
its extent and the words threaded through it about the
Secretary of State making directions and so on. It is not a
light touch but a huge amount of interference from the
Secretary of State in local matters, and that I resent.
4.45 pm
-
On that specific point, perhaps when the Minister responds
he can tell the Committee how the policy has arisen. Where
are the examples of the councils that do not have these
plans? Why do the Government think it so necessary to take
such a wide-ranging power, as the noble Baroness asked?
Clearly, there must be some very serious problems that the
Government want to address for them to take such wide
powers. I would love to be informed about what those are.
-
The Minister kindly answered three of my four questions.
The missing answer was on the right of a county to charge
whatever fee it wishes to. It is an important issue and, if
he prefers, the Minister can write to me, but in Schedule
2, lines 31 to 40 rather suggest that a county can charge a
district whatever it wishes.
-
I shall take up those points. In response to my noble
friend Lady Cumberlege, this power will be used sparingly,
and the Secretary of State will have to give reasons. In
preparing their joint plan, the authorities concerned can,
if they wish, reject the plan—they are not obliged to adopt
it. I repeat that there is absolutely no hidden agenda
here. As my noble friend correctly said, it is certainly
better where joint plans emerge. That is very much the view
of the Government and the Secretary of State. We anticipate
that that will be the case in the vast majority of
circumstances. We know that, occasionally, local
authorities do not necessarily have the capacity. There
will be cases—even if there are not, we still have to guard
against the possibility that there could be—in which the
Government will have to have a backstop power in relation
to these matters. That is what this is. The Secretary of
State has to give reasons. The authorities concerned can
turn down those reasons.
In relation to the point made by the noble Lord, , I am advised that
there is cost recovery for the work done. I hope that
answers his question. If I am wrong on that, I will correct
it in a letter.
-
I am happy for the Minister to write to me. Clearly, we
need to define what cost recovery is, because the
definition of necessary costs currently lies with the
county and not the district. There has to be a system that
everybody understands.
-
That is an entirely fair point. As I said, there is a
system to ensure that costs may be recovered, but I will
elucidate that, if I may, in my letter.
I apologise, but I have forgotten the point that the noble
Lord, Lord Kennedy, made.
-
I was asking for information on the councils that are
failing in their duties and so require the Government to
take on these powers. Perhaps there are no councils in that
position and the Government are taking the power
preventively— I do not know. If there are, which
authorities are they?
-
I am sure the noble Lord was listening very carefully to
what I said. I said that we need backstop powers in case
that situation arises. I hope that I did not indicate that
there is an existing list of authorities against which we
thought we were going to use this measure. It is a backstop
power. When the noble Lord’s party was in power, it was
responsible. I am sure that he would expect any succeeding
Government to be the same and to ensure that these powers
exist in case they are needed because an authority is not
stepping up to the plate.
-
That makes it a bit clearer: at the moment, there are no
councils against which the Government would need to think
about using this power; it is a backstop power. It is good
to have that clarified.
When the Minister responded to the debate on Clause 7, he
also said that councils will have recourse to judicial
review. I have never heard a Minister at the Dispatch box
suggest, in proposing legislation, that the backstop
measure is that someone can seek judicial review. Ministers
do not usually like that. I think it is an amazing thing to
do and I hope it is available for people. However, I am
slightly worried by the confidence the Government have in
their legislation when their immediate defence is to say,
“Don’t worry, you can go off and seek redress in the
courts”.
-
I must correct that very serious accusation. I was not
encouraging people to bring legal action. I was explaining,
in case noble Lords were not aware of the fact, that this
statute, just like any other, is justiciable on its
interpretation and that people will have rights at law.
That is the point I was making.
-
I was not suggesting that the Minister was encouraging
people to bring legal action. But he certainly said that
people would have redress through judicial review. It
seemed odd to hear that from the Dispatch Box while we are
discussing legislation.
-
My Lords, as a lawyer and somebody who sympathises when
somebody has a legitimate compliant, which they may do,
against any government department or local authority, I
think it is absolutely right that that right is put on the
record by the Government. That is all I sought to do. I do
not think there is anything improper or extraordinary in
that.
Clause 7 agreed.
Clause 8 agreed.
Schedule 2 agreed.
Clauses 9 to 10 agreed.
Clause 11: Statements of community involvement
Amendment 21
Moved by
21: Clause 11, page 10, line 17, at end insert—
“( ) Section 18 of the Planning and Compulsory Purchase Act 2004
(statement of community involvement) is amended as follows.”
-
My Lords, before I turn to government Amendments 21, 22, 23
and 130, I shall make some introductory remarks which I
hope will set the context for our discussion. We have been
clear that we want to see a more collaborative and
effective planning system. We have discussed the energy and
passion that many communities invest in the preparation of
neighbourhood plans, and we are committed to seeing that
number grow. We discussed that, particularly in relation to
the amendment so ably moved by the noble Lord, . We also recognise
that not all communities may wish to prepare a
neighbourhood plan. Some communities and their local
planning authorities are working collaboratively on the
local plan for their area, and we want to encourage that.
This is also a point we discussed during our first day in
Committee.
Clause 11 will clarify how communities can be involved in
decisions about the wider planning of their area. It
extends the matters to be set out by a local planning
authority in its statement of community involvement. This
will ensure that authorities include in these statements
their policies for involving their communities and others
in the preliminary stages of plan-making. Specifically in
relation to their functions under Sections 13 and 15 of the
Planning and Compulsory Purchase Act 2004, these include a
local planning authority’s survey function and the
preparation and maintenance of a local development scheme.
The latter must set out the development plan documents that
collectively make up the local plan for the authority’s
area, their subject matter and geographic coverage and the
timetable for their preparation and revision.
Including an authority’s policies for involving local
people in the work an authority will do to survey its area
will help local people understand and express views on the
changes that may be taking place in the local population,
which may influence the type of housing needed, for
example, or in the local economy, which may influence the
type of accommodation business may need. Changes such as
these will drive the development needs of an area that any
plan may need to address.
Requiring an authority to set out how it will involve local
people when taking decisions on the development plan
documents that it will prepare will encourage a discussion
between the local planning authority and its community on
whether communities may wish to prepare a neighbourhood
plan as an alternative to one or more of the authority’s
documents. The changes introduced by Clause 11 pave the way
for more informed and equitable discussions between local
planning authorities and their local communities about the
future local growth and development of their area and the
sorts of planning documents that will shape these changes.
Government Amendments 21, 22 and 23 will allow the
Secretary of State to produce regulations which set out
further matters which local planning authorities must
address in their statements of community involvement. They
will ensure that the Government can clarify further for
communities, including neighbourhood planning groups and
others, how they can play a role in the development of
their area. For example, the amendments will enable the
Secretary of State to require authorities to set out how
they will provide advice to neighbourhood planning groups
on the relationship between a neighbourhood plan and the
plans that the authority has prepared or is preparing. This
was an issue raised in the other place which my honourable
friend the Minister for Housing and Planning committed to
consider further. The amendment responds to that concern.
It will also ensure that we can leave communities in no
doubt that authorities will set out who they propose to
involve and when and how they can get involved.
Government Amendment 130 amends the commencement provision
in the Bill to ensure that the power to make regulations in
Amendment 23 comes into force with the passing of the Act.
I beg to move.
-
My Lords, these amendments are broadly welcome—I think. The
devil will be in what the regulations say, of course, but
if they are not as benevolent as the Minister is
suggesting, we will have a row then. Otherwise I think they
are all right.
-
My Lords, I am grateful to the Minister for enlightening
me, if not other members of the Committee, as to the
otherwise completely incomprehensible terms of Amendments
21 and 22. Not having been given a crystal ball to look
into, I could not really understand what they were about,
but he has partially explained them, for which I am
grateful.
However, on Amendment 23, we are again in the business of
secondary legislation. I do not know whether the Government
have yet consulted at all on the regulations and whether
there is any chance of seeing any draft regulations before
Report, but it would be interesting to know whether they
had embarked on a consultation with the Local Government
Association, for example, about the contents of any such
regulations. Again, it looks like the Government imposing a
particular way of proceeding on local government, possibly
without any real exchange of views about how that might
best be achieved. As we know, other Committees in your
Lordships’ House have expressed great concern about the
increasing reliance on secondary legislation that all too
often emerges without any real evidence of effective
consultation about what it should contain.
-
I thank noble Lords for their participation in this debate.
I thank the noble Lord, , for his almost
wholesale welcome, and I hope to avoid the punch-up—
-
The provisional punch-up.
-
The provisional punch-up, yes. I will certainly seek to
avoid that.
I have some sympathy with the noble Lord, , about the rather
obscure, not to say Delphic, nature of the provisions; they
took me quite a while to get through as well. With regard
to more detailed information on policies and so on, we
supplied some supplementary information to the Delegated
Powers and Regulatory Reform Committee, which I will ensure
is circulated to noble Lords to provide more detail on the
thinking behind this.
We certainly want to ensure that we discuss the way forward
on the issue. This provision was widely welcomed in the
Commons, and it is our intention that it should be a means
of ensuring that communities are properly involved. I do
not think there is anything sinister here, so I am happy to
share what documents we have and use them as a way forward.
Amendment 21 agreed.
Amendments 22 and 23
Moved by
22: Clause 11, page 10, line 18, leave out from “In” to “after”
in line 19 and insert “subsection (2)”
23: Clause 11, page 10, line 19, at end insert—
“( ) After subsection (3A) insert—“(3B) The Secretary of State
may by regulations prescribe matters to be addressed by a
statement of community involvement in addition to the matters
mentioned in subsection (2).””
Amendments 22 and 23 agreed.
Clause 11, as amended, agreed.
Amendment 24
Moved by
24: After Clause 11, insert the following new Clause—
“Guidance on clustering of betting offices and pay day loan shops
(1) Before exercising his or her powers under section 41(1), the
Secretary of State must issue guidance to local authorities on
the granting of planning permission for change of use to betting
offices and pay day loan shops.(2) This guidance must set out the
manner in which policies in neighbourhood plans and local plans
about the number, density and impact of betting offices and pay
day loan shops are to be taken into account when determining
applications for change of use, in a way which prevents a
deleterious effect on the neighbourhood or local area.”
-
I am really disappointed: I thought we would have a long
debate on the technical amendment replacing “and 10” with
“10 and 11”, government Amendment 130, but perhaps we can
defer that pleasure.
Some of your Lordships may recall the almost holy alliance
that I entered into with the right reverend Prelate the
Bishop of Southwark and—I cannot read my own writing, but
two bishops—in connection with fixed-odds betting terminals
and betting shops, and the damage they were inflicting on
local communities. I referred to high levels of crime
affecting local communities and involving a great deal of
police manpower, exposure of staff to violence and the
facts that a large proportion of commercial crime occurs in
these premises, that they are generally aimed at relatively
poor communities and that they are a social menace.
The object of this amendment is to require the Secretary of
State to issue guidance to local authorities on planning
permission having regard to concerns expressed nationally,
not just in debate on the Policing and Crime Bill, when we
discussed amendments and the Government assured us that
consultation was taking place. Can the Minister tell us how
that is progressing and, if it is making progress, whether
the Government intend to use this Bill to provide measures
in the planning system that might help to deal with what is
a growing problem in many places?
A similar concern, although hopefully without any violence
involved, relates to payday lenders. I seem to recall
reading fairly recently in one newspaper that payday
lenders had more than one outlet in an area and people go
from one to another. The individual lender will have a
limit, but someone can go to three, four or five of these
places and take out loans. Obviously, they are usually
people in high financial need and very vulnerable. There is
potential to attack that problem, in part at least, through
the planning system, which is what the amendment is
intended to facilitate, without prescribing anything beyond
the fact that guidance should be issued. We are not asking
the Secretary of State to lay down and impose rigid rules,
but to offer guidance to authorities, which I think are
increasingly sensitive to this issue, especially, but not
only, in more deprived areas. I hope that the Minister will
undertake to see whether agreement can be reached or an
alternative proposal made when we get to Report. I beg to
move.
5.00 pm
-
My Lords, I support the noble Lord, , in his amendment. I
simply ask for the Minister’s guidance, either now, in
writing or at Report. I draw his attention to the Fixed
Odds Betting Terminals All-Party Parliamentary Group, which
launched a report earlier this week on the subject. It drew
attention to the London Borough of Newham, which has
succeeded in using cumulative impact assessments to curb
the development of new bookmakers. Broadly speaking, the
noble Lord’s amendment is about change of use and new
betting offices and payday loan shops. The APPG report was
about fixed-odds betting terminals, and I am not sure that
it directly related to the location of payday loan shops.
However, there is clearly a problem with cumulative impact.
Newham Council has adopted policies to curb the development
of new bookmakers. The APPG says that:
“While being a helpful mechanism to stop the expansion of
future bookmakers, this would not, of course, provide a
mechanism to deal with current bookmaker premises and
clustering”.
There is, therefore, a very serious issue here and it would
be helpful if the Minister could look at it before Report,
with a view to having a further debate at that point.
-
I will make a couple of brief comments before the Minister
responds, including one about payday loan shops. I should
declare in this context that I am a director of a credit
union—London Mutual Credit Union, which is based in London
and covers four London boroughs: Southwark, Lambeth,
Westminster and Camden. We are also the credit union to the
Armed Forces: a number of our members are from the Armed
Forces.
I was conscious that the most reverend Primate the
, and others,
encouraged the Government to take action in the previous
Parliament in respect of the interest rate, and that is
very welcome. There is, however, an issue—we certainly get
it because our main office is in Heaton Road in Peckham.
About 10 doors along is The Money Shop. We often get 50 to
60 applications to join the credit union but also people
walking in off the street. Often they have been to The
Money Shop and, because of difficulties there, people have
suggested that they go down to the credit union. They join,
and the first thing that we do is try to find out what
their problem is: how big their debt is—get it all out of
them. Then, if we can, we will find them a loan. We want to
pay that direct to The Money Shop, to end the problem
there, not just give it to the people themselves.
There is, however, an issue with a number of these high
street shops and how they operate. I would certainly like
to see more action—more ability for a local authority to
look carefully at its area and see whether there are enough
such shops. Unfortunately, as we have all seen, the problem
is not borrowing more money, it is getting a grip of your
finances and controlling them. Credit unions are one type
of organisation that can help with that, along with others
such as money advice services.
-
My Lords, I thank the noble Lord, , for his amendment, and
other noble Lords who participated in the debate, including
the noble Lords, and Lord Kennedy.
The amendment reflects the importance of planning at the
local level to address local issues. I was particularly
interested to hear from the noble Lord, , about the
all-party parliamentary group covering betting, the
experience of Newham and the local action that it has taken
on fixed-odds betting terminals in betting shops.
It may be helpful, first, to remind noble Lords of the
important planning changes we made in April 2015
specifically to allow local planning authorities to
consider the merits of any application for such uses, and
to provide the community with an opportunity to comment.
Prior to April 2015, the use classes order grouped betting
shops and payday loan shops with other financial or
professional services in the A2 use class. This meant that
any financial or professional service could change use to a
betting shop or payday loan shop without a planning
application. Now they would need such an application.
Additionally, under permitted development rights, new
betting shops or payday loan shops could be opened in any
property used as a restaurant, café, pub or other drinking
establishment, or hot food takeaway. These changes could be
made without local authority consideration.
Responding to concerns raised at that time about the
clustering of such uses on the high street, the Government
made changes to the Town and Country Planning (Use Classes)
Order. We took betting shops and payday loan shops out of
Class A2 and made them sui generis, or a class of their
own. This change was made precisely so that a planning
application would be required for any additional such shop.
This would allow for local consideration of any issues that
might arise due to the change to such a use in that area.
Local planning authorities, therefore, already have the
ability to manage any additional clustering through their
local plan policies. It is not for national government to
set out how many betting shops or payday loan shops there
should be, and where they should be.
Where a local planning authority is concerned about the
clustering of such uses, it should ensure that it has an
up-to-date plan with robust policies in place. We know, as
has been demonstrated, that some local authorities are
already putting in place detailed policies in respect of
betting shops and payday loan shops that reflect their
individual local circumstances, and setting out the
position in respect of the numbers and location of those
shops.
The National Planning Policy Framework provides local
planning authorities with the policy framework to plan for
a mix of uses, promoting the viability and vitality of
their town centres. Such policies should be based on sound
local evidence and tested at examination. Policies
contained in the local planning authority’s development
plan must be taken into account when determining any
application for a new betting shop or payday loan shop,
unless any material considerations indicate otherwise.
Noble Lords will be pleased to know that, as he committed
to do in the other place, , the Minister for
Housing and Planning, met yesterday with the Minister for
Sport, Tourism and Heritage, who has responsibility for
gambling. They were able to discuss the issues emerging
from the review of gaming machines and social
responsibility measures undertaken by the Department for
Culture, Media and Sport. As noble Lords would expect,
there was a positive discussion to consider how we can
continue to work together effectively to take forward any
proposals arising from the review, which I understand is
likely to report later in the spring. I have not as yet had
the opportunity to have a detailed discussion with my
honourable friend in the other place. If there is any
additional information, once again I will include it in the
write-round. There is, therefore, an agenda that will
continue to have our attention, recognising the concerns
that are widely expressed, and of course this goes much
wider than planning.
Although we consider that local planning authorities have
the tools they need, we will continue to work closely with
the Department for Culture, Media and Sport. However, it is
not for national government to set out in guidance how many
betting shops or payday loan shops there should be in an
area. The tools are already with local authorities. These
are local issues that should be dealt with through local
planning policies. Therefore, I ask the noble Lord to
withdraw his amendment.
-
I am slightly disappointed with the Minister’s reply. The
Government are not slow to offer guidance about a range of
issues when it suits them, but on this occasion they seem
to be something of a shrinking violet. If the Government
are concerned about this, I do not understand why they will
not take the opportunity to push for change—which is all
they would be doing—by offering guidance. They would not be
instructing local authorities as to how many such shops
there should be; they would be offering guidance in a way
that guidance is offered across a range of issues.
If the Government are taking this problem seriously—I am
prepared to concede that that may well be the case—I
encourage the Minister, in consultation with his
colleagues, to recognise that this Bill provides a way of
highlighting the issue and advising and supporting local
authorities in dealing with what is a growing social
problem. Otherwise, ultimately we may have to resort to
primary legislation, but goodness knows when that might be.
This could make a contribution at an earlier stage, and,
after all, I do not think that the Government would be
entering into a hugely complicated issue if they were to
accept the amendment. However, in today’s circumstances, I
am prepared to beg leave to withdraw it but I may wish to
return to this on Report.
-
I did not want to say that this was not an issue—that
certainly was not my intention. I wanted to say that we
have engaged with the Department for Culture, Media and
Sport. I await a detailed discussion with my honourable
friend as to how that meeting went, because I think that
there are broader issues. If there are specific planning
issues where I think we can make a difference, I shall be
very keen to look at those, but I think that the tools are
already there for local authorities and perhaps we need to
get that message across. However, it is a specific subset
of a planning class. They already have the powers and we
certainly do not want this to be an imposition. I am not
suggesting that the noble Lord was saying that; indeed, he
was saying the opposite—that it was directing them.
I shall be very happy to report back further on how the
discussions went, perhaps involving the noble Lord’s ally,
although I have some doubts about the security of an
alliance where you cannot remember the name of your ally.
-
If I had an ally at all, it would be the right reverend
Prelate the .
Amendment 24 withdrawn.
5.15 pm
Amendment 25
Moved by
25: After Clause 11, insert the following new Clause—
“Right to reject a second development application
A local planning authority has the right to reject a planning
application if the applicant, or any associated individual or
body, already has planning permission to build 50 or more homes
in the area.”
-
My Lords, first, I should say that I tabled this very much
as a probing amendment. We all agree that we desperately
need more houses for the next generation, and the Bill
attempts to loosen the planning system so that we get more
permissions to build more homes via improved neighbourhood
plans and curtailing the possibility of delays caused by
overprotectionist pre-commencement conditions. So far so
good, but improving the planning system will not
necessarily result in more homes being built. We need some
sort of incentive or leverage to make the builders build.
In this context, two bits in the early evidence sessions in
the Commons interested me. One was a question from
MP to Hugh Ellis of the
TCPA. He asked:
“On that point, is it possible for a developer to obtain a
large permission in an area, and then not develop it out,
and then challenge a refusal on another site in that area
on the basis that a five-year land supply has not been
fulfilled?
Hugh Ellis replied, “yes” and went on to spell it
out:
“Therefore, by being patient, they are able to blow a hole
in the land supply and get a permission that they otherwise
would not have done, and double up”.—[Official Report,
Commons, Neighbourhood Planning Bill Committee, 18/10/16;
col. 32.]
That merely confirmed what other people had been telling me
for some years. It was that short conversation that led me
to table this amendment as a possible solution. It is not
necessarily the only solution. It is worded in such a way
that the initiative remains firmly in the hands of the
local planning authority. It does not have to refuse a
second application from a developer or builder, but it is
to be hoped that if there is any hint that the developer is
playing speculative games, the local planning authority
should have the incontestable right to refuse him or her
permission, however suitable the second site may be. I use
the word “incontestable” advisedly, the point being that
local planning authorities have a duty to fulfil their
five-year land supply, which is as it should be, but they
need more tools in their toolbox than the current planning
system gives them.
To take an alternative approach, a little later in that
evidence session there was another conversation between
Hugh Ellis and the Minister, . Hugh Ellis said:
“You have signalled, Minister, that you are interested in
exploring how we can find new ways to challenge that”.
He is referring to the gap between planning permissions
granted and houses being built.
“The critical issue is that from 2019-20 onwards, the
private sector will probably go on building 150,000 homes a
year, almost for ever”.
A little later, the Local Government Association
representative added to the conversation:
“I will finish with an example from Croydon. If a planning
permission has not been taken up within three years,
perhaps a council building company … should be invited to
step in and start building the homes that somebody promised
they would build but did not”.—[Official Report, Commons,
Neighbourhood Planning Bill Committee, 18/10/16; cols.
37-38.]
So there is another possible solution to the problem:
giving local councils permission to build out an
undeveloped site. An alternative could be for the local
planning authority to divide the land up into smaller plots
and sell them off to other builders who can guarantee to
build them out within a given period of time. There was an
article in the Times today which hinted at that as a
solution.
Something has to be done. This amendment is entirely
probing: to test the Government’s enthusiasm on this issue.
There is no doubt in my mind that we cannot go on having
national, local and neighbourhood plans for housing
continually undermined by developers who do not develop. I
expect that the Minister will tell me that all this will be
in the housing White Paper, but I like to hope that he can
give us some indication of government thinking in this
area. I beg to move.
-
(LD)
I am speaking on behalf of my noble friend Lady Bakewell of
Hardington Mandeville, who is indisposed and has had to
leave. I draw attention to my interests as set out in the
register. I am another vice-president of the Local
Government Association and a councillor in the Metropolitan
Borough of Kirklees.
My noble friend wanted to say that, while some developers
submit planning applications and build the homes for which
they have been permission, not all of them do so. It is not
unusual for developers to gain permission but not to start
work on site or, if they do, for the work to be at a low
level and for the site then to be abandoned. This does not
help the housing crisis that the country is currently
undergoing. Local planning authorities and councillors
believe that there are sufficient planning permissions to
cover local housing needs, but they are thwarted when homes
are not built in a timely fashion. There is currently
little that they can do to encourage a developer to start
and finish. The amendment moved by the noble Lord, Lord
Cameron, would encourage tardier developers to take
seriously the permissions they already hold and to build to
meet the need. It is not intended to penalise the smaller
developer who may be having problems financing his work but
is aimed at those who have permissions for 50 homes or
more, and who could make a real difference to the housing
shortage by realising that these homes matter.
I turn now to Amendment 63. We have all seen sites around
the country that have received full planning permission and
where a digger has been on site and excavated a drainage
ditch, then the driver has packed up and gone home. Often
the digger is left on site. Perhaps metal barricades will
be erected around the ditch, but nothing else happens.
These sites can often be left for years before anything
further is done. There is a notorious site in my area which
was 40 years in development. As noble Lords can imagine,
many things have changed in that time, such as the road
network and all sorts of other things. It is a real issue
that needs to be addressed. The country is suffering a
housing crisis, and has been for many years. This will not
improve unless we get developers moving to fulfil their
obligations to build with the permissions they hold.
Encouragement does not appear to have worked in the past,
so we must turn to sanctions. In my amendment I have not
specified what “a reasonable time” for completion might be
or what the financial penalties should be. I believe that
these are best left to be determined by the size of the
site and the number of homes not completed in an orderly
fashion. The amendment appears to be all stick and no
carrot, but I regret that the country has reached the stage
where homes need to be built, and developers have to play
their part in making that happen. I look forward to the
Minister’s response.
-
The
My Lords, when I first saw the amendment tabled by my noble
friend Lord Cameron, I was not sure that I would be able to
support it. However, in his introduction to the amendment
he certainly clarified some points, and I agreed with a lot
of what he said. However, I see both good and bad points in
this short amendment, and would like to offer two comments.
First, I declare an interest as a landowner who has
recently benefited from a housing development planning
application.
On the one side, there are often planning circumstances in
which a housebuilder will submit a new, revised planning
application on a site where he already has planning
permission. This could perhaps be to squeeze in more
houses, to improve the layout or to take account of a
potential Section 106 condition. The real aim, of course,
is to increase profit on the scheme, which is often to the
detriment of the vendor of the land.
The disadvantages of the amendment arise where it talks
about the “area”. I am not sure whether there is a
definition elsewhere of the word “area”, but I take it that
it means the local authority area or the district council’s
geographical area. Large national housebuilders may have
various schemes on the go throughout an LPA, the aim of
which is to provide more houses of the type that we really
need, as we have already heard. The amendment could thwart
these types of concurrent developments, to the detriment of
aspiring occupiers. Therefore, I look forward to hearing
the Minister’s reply.
-
My Lords, I apologise to the noble Lord for missing the
first part of his speech moving the amendment. Like other
noble Lords, I strongly sympathise with the objectives but
I am not sure that the amendment as drawn is viable. The
noble Duke, the , has
identified one or two issues with it, notably what is meant
by “area”. We are not necessarily talking about a small
area or even a city. There are now unitary authorities—for
example, Durham and Northumberland in my part of the
world—that are geographically large counties. For them, 50
homes is neither here nor there.
The objective that the noble Lord seeks to pursue is
absolutely the right one, but the noble Baroness’s
amendment is a better way of dealing with matters. She is
looking amazed. I am always happy to congratulate the
Liberal Democrats on getting something right; it usually
happens in leap years, but not always. I think she has
identified a better way of approaching the matter than the
noble Lord, but what is important is that the noble Lord
has raised the issue, which is something that has been in
people’s minds for a long time.
I hope that this is an opportunity for the Minister to
indicate what, if anything, the Government are considering
doing to deal with what is something of a scandal. We
apparently have something like 500,000 or 600,000
permissions not acted upon, at a time of huge shortage. The
Government want to increase housing numbers, and there must
be ways in which developers can be persuaded to get on with
it or lose their permission. That could take a variety of
forms, and the noble Baroness’s suggestion may more
workable than the noble Lord’s. However, the main thing is
that the Government should accept there is a problem and
agree to do something about it in one form or another, in a
way that will help to incentivise the implementation of
planning permission and effectively remove the risk of
permission being outstanding for long periods with nothing
happening on the ground where it is most needed. I am
looking forward to a sympathetic reply from the Minister on
the issue, without his necessarily committing to either of
the two projects.
-
My Lords, I thank noble Lords who have participated in this
part of the debate, and in particular the noble Baroness,
Lady Pinnock, for so ably speaking to an amendment at short
notice. I wish the noble Baroness, Lady Bakewell, well and
I am sorry to hear about her indisposition. As the noble
Lord, Lord Cameron, said at Second Reading and reiterated
here today, there is one thing on which we are all agreed:
the fact that we need more houses. I thank him very much
for stressing that this was a probing amendment; I
appreciate that point.
Before us are two amendments that take separate approaches
to achieving essentially the same important objective of
ensuring that once planning permission is granted, the
development of the site should be taken forward as quickly
as possible. That is absolutely right. Of course there may
be circumstances that affect it, but I appreciate that it
can be taken care of in legislation. This is what local
authorities and the communities that they represent expect.
I therefore thank noble Lords and the noble Baroness for
putting forward the amendments in this group, which allows
to have an important discussion on the question of
developers making good on their permissions.
Amendment 25, tabled by the noble Lord, Lord Cameron, would
give local authorities the right to refuse to determine a
planning application if a developer already had a live
permission in that local authority’s area for 50 homes or
more. The amendment targets an issue that the Government
are determined to address: the gap between permissions
granted and the number of new housing units that are
completed. I agree with the noble Lord, , that the amendment as
drafted is not quite what is needed; to be fair the noble
Lord, Lord Cameron, said so too. It is a question of
degree—the number of 50, for example, and some of the
definitions that would be needed.
We have already taken important steps to tackle delays in
the delivery of housing development once planning
permission is granted. For example, a key point of concern
and delay for many developers is the time taken to comply
with planning conditions that can be discharged at a later
stage in development, something that this legislation of
course seeks to address. Issues with infrastructure can
also delay or prevent housing development going ahead. To
help tackle this problem, we have already launched the £3
billion Home Building Fund and a separate £2.3 billion
Housing Infrastructure Fund. The Home Building Fund will
provide loans to small and medium-sized enterprise
builders, custom builders and off-site construction, and
will unlock large sites throughout England. The Housing
Infrastructure Fund will provide investment funding to
local authorities to help support the development of
necessary site infrastructure, such as water, energy and
internet, to deliver up to 100,000 new homes.
5.30 pm
We are also continuing discussions with housebuilders to identify
ways of increasing delivery from existing sites and bringing
forward more sites, particularly for small builders. These
discussions build on the Home Builders Federation statement in
May 2016, which set out its plans for increased delivery by major
housebuilders.
I recognise that we must do more, not least to hold developers
more clearly to account for delivery of new homes on sites they
hold with planning permission. Having taken so many measures,
obviously the list of potential other reasons for delay is
diminishing. Therefore we look to developers to deliver on sites
where there is planning permission. That is particularly true of
larger developers. In this context, I fully appreciate what the
noble Lord seeks to achieve in this amendment and what the noble
Baroness, Lady Pinnock, seeks achieve in the amendment that she
has spoken to.
As I have indicated, I have fundamental concerns with this
amendment in view of the fact—noble Lords rightly anticipated
that I would again say this—that this matter will be addressed in
the housing White Paper. It needs a fuller discussion and the
housing White Paper is expected very shortly. I suggest that this
is not the appropriate vehicle for this issue: it needs a deeper
dive and a longer look. In response to a fair speech from the
noble Lord, , I can confirm that the
Government see this as a concern and are looking at ways to
address it. With that, I ask the noble Lord, Lord Cameron, and
the noble Baroness, Lady Pinnock, who so ably spoke to their
amendments, to withdraw or not move them on this occasion.
-
I am grateful to all noble Lords who have taken part in the
debate. As I said in opening, the amendment was seeking to
provoke the Government on whether they were addressing the
problem from our perspective. I am glad to hear the
Minister say that the Government are working on the problem
and that it will be looked at seriously within the housing
White Paper. As I said at the beginning of my speech, I
know this is not the right amendment. It is only a
provocative amendment to get some form of response from the
Government, so I am happy to withdraw it.
Amendment 25 withdrawn.
Amendment 26 not moved.
Amendment 27
Moved by
27: After Clause 11, insert the following new Clause—
“Public consultations
A local planning authority must extend accordingly the length of
any public consultations regarding a planning application if any
public or bank holidays fall within the consultation period.”
-
(Con)
My Lords, this is a simple amendment. As I understand it,
the position at the moment is that local authorities can
decide to extend a consultation period but they are not
obliged to do so. I believe that they should be obliged to
do so because Christmas and August bank holidays are
sacrosanct for families. It is a bit of a “slickie” if
someone can slip in their application around such times
—perhaps even by arrangement in less desirable cases—and it
goes through, and then people come back from their few days
away with their family to find that, suddenly, something
they would have very much opposed has been passed. That is
the reason for the amendment.
It is important that consultation should be carried out
properly on every aspect of planning. It is not just a
matter of time but also of the area where the application
is for. In my experience, many planning authorities do not
understand that in some streets in urban areas the houses
are numbered 1, 3 and 5 on one side, and in other streets
they are numbered 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5. Sometimes, they do not
seem quite sure which houses they should serve the notice
on. It is important that local people understand that
something is being considered, so that they can decide
whether it is good or bad for their area.
It is very useful in urban areas to put the notice on a
local lamp-post or telegraph pole. However, it is not so
useful when the next council officer who comes along sticks
up a removal notice for someone who is moving house and
obscures the previous notice. It is important that councils
should be aware of what they need to do to enable people to
understand local planning.
I went to a meeting in your Lordships’ House with , who had responsibility
for this. One of the big discussions was about just who
your neighbours are. If your house is on a corner, you can
have four or five neighbours in different streets all
around you. It really is important that the right people
are notified. Even if it is not 100% right, at least a
neighbour will say to you, “Have you seen the notice?”.
However, if there is nothing there, you are at a terrible
disadvantage. The first thing you know about it is when it
has all gone through and it is too late. That is the reason
for the amendment. I beg to move.
-
(Lab)
I would like to say what a sensible amendment this is. It
is impossible to overestimate the amount of cynicism that
there is around the whole issue of consultation. There is
too widespread a view that it does not make any difference
because the planners will do what they want to do anyway,
and that switches people off coming forward and
participating. A lot of work has to be done to build public
confidence in the consultation process. The very specific
matter raised in this amendment is important because it is
a real issue. I have come across it myself when people have
said, “For God’s sake, it’s Christmas. We didn’t know that
it was not exempt from the consultation period”. I hope
that the Government and my noble friends on this side of
the House will take the amendment seriously as a very
practical and human suggestion.
-
I shall speak to Amendment 27A standing in my name but,
before doing so, I want to say that it must be a relief to
the Minister to have what I think are three sensible
amendments all thrown at him at once at this late stage in
the afternoon.
I do not think that there is anything to object to in the
noble Baroness’s amendment. With the neighbourhood planning
process that I led locally, we happened to have a
consultation period over Christmas and new year, and I was
slightly startled to find that I was not under an
obligation to extend that period in view of the
circumstances. In fact, we extended our consultation period
well beyond what was required under the neighbourhood
planning rules, and I think it is a common courtesy to do
that in holiday periods. As that is not always a courtesy
extended by those making applications, perhaps the
Government should make sure that it happens.
In relation to Amendment 62, we had a similar need for
statutory consultees to respond to what we were doing in a
timely way, but they too are notorious for not always doing
that. Therefore, I hope that that amendment, as well as
mine, will get a positive response.
Turning to my amendment, in the previous planning Bill the
Government accepted proposals that I made for modernising
the process under the New Towns Act to make the way in
which local authorities bring forward proposals for a new
settlement—under what is now the garden villages programme
that the Government have adopted—easier and more modern.
There would still be proper scrutiny, but it would be a
process that could work effectively, and the Government
accepted that. Since then, they have had a response to the
national garden villages and towns programme that I think
has exceeded all expectations, as local authorities have
seen the opportunity provided by taking low-value land to
create really high-class settlements to meet housing needs
and which does not involve building around the edges of
historic communities in a way that often wrecks those
communities. Although people can be very dismissive of
nimbyism—the “not in my back yard” attitude—for a long time
I have said that that argument is often the right one. The
planning system was introduced precisely to stop urban
sprawl. As well as protecting the green belt, it was
associated with renewing our urban centres with brownfield
redevelopment, which is very important, and with the
establishment of new settlements. I am delighted that the
Government have gone down that route and that there has
been such a lot of interest in it right across the country.
I know that there are many more schemes still to come
forward, and they will mean that we can meet the housing
needs of our children, as well as the need for employment
facilities, in a way that we too rarely see with most
estate housebuilding at the moment.
The New Towns Act was drawn up in a very different era, not
an era of localism but one in which national government had
huge powers. When a new town development corporation is
established, although it is the local authority that brings
it forward—we are talking about relatively small
communities and garden villages meeting local needs—the
current statute says that the board, when established, is
appointed entirely by the Secretary of State, not by the
local authority that initiated it, and that all expenditure
has to be approved in detail, to the last penny, by the
Secretary of State. Given that these organisations acquire
all the planning powers for the area that is designated and
will make a huge investment in the community when that
happens, very few local authorities would wish to see the
Secretary of State take all those powers. Very few
communities would feel comfortable with that either. Most
importantly, a Government committed to localism would not
feel comfortable with it. To put it bluntly, the Secretary
of State probably does not have time to decide the last few
pennies of expenditure by a body developing a local garden
village.
The amendment is very simple. It says that where a local
authority requests the Secretary of State to delegate
powers relating to appointing the board and the financial
conduct of the organisation, and therefore in practice its
work, the Secretary of State should delegate those powers.
That opportunity is not currently in the hands of the
Secretary of State. I hope the Government will agree that,
given the support they have given this policy and given the
take up, it would be useful to make that change. I hope we
can get a positive response from the Minister on that
today.
-
My Lords, I shall speak again on behalf of my noble friend
Lady Bakewell of Hardington Mandeville. Amendment 62 is in
her name. As my noble friend Lord Taylor said, it is an
eminently sensible amendment.
For the past eight years, my noble friend Lady Bakewell has
sat on a committee that considers planning applications.
She is therefore painfully aware of the length of time that
some statutory consultees take to respond. Whether it is
the highways department or rights of way department of a
county council, the Environment Agency, the Highways
Agency, Historic England or the National Trust, some will
be consulted on a regular basis and perhaps all will be
consulted on some sensitive applications. Very often, their
comments will be of a minor nature, but on larger
applications their contributions will be critical to, for
instance, traffic flow and pedestrian safety, as well as to
ensuring that flooding considerations have been adequately
catered for and to the protection of the built environment
and flora and fauna.
My noble friend does not wish to name and shame those
statutory consultees that are tardy in the extreme with
their responses—she is very kind—but their silence, despite
frequent reminders, causes planning officers a number of
headaches. The applicant becomes irritated at being
frustrated in their desire to proceed with their
development and unjustly blames the planning authority for
not getting on with it. Members of the local community,
which may have been consulted by both the developer and the
planning authority, wonder what is going on and when they
might be able to attend the planning meeting and have their
say. The ability to express their view in public is
extremely important to neighbours and often to the wider
community. It is an integral part of the democratic
process. It can help protestors to see that there are
viewpoints other than their own, even if they do not agree
with them. It is not conducive to community cohesion for
residents to have to wait, often for very long periods of
time, before applications are considered in public as a
result of the local planning department, in turn, having to
wait for and chase consultees for their responses. The
Government and local planning authorities are keen to speed
up the planning process. This amendment would certainly be
one step towards achieving that aim. I look forward to the
Minister’s response.
5.45 pm
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My Lords, I agree with my noble friend in saying what a
sensible amendment this is, as moved by the noble Baroness,
Lady Gardner of Parks. The noble Baroness is very
experienced in these matters: she is a former councillor in
Westminster, she campaigns for leaseholders and she knows
this area very well. She has come to the assistance of the
House many times on these matters, and we are again
grateful to her today. It is right that public holidays
should be taken account of, particularly, as she mentioned,
in August and at Christmas. They are not, and it is unfair
that notices are slipped out when people are not around. I
hope that the Government understand that and give a
positive response to the issue raised by the noble
Baroness.
I am sorry that the noble Baroness, Lady Bakewell, has had
to leave the Grand Committee tonight. On her behalf, the
noble Baroness, Lady Pinnock, made the sensible and
important point that statutory consultees should be made to
respond in an appropriately reasonable time. I suspect we
all know who we are talking about when we talk about those
who do not respond—it is the same all over the place, and
we should do something about it.
We support the amendment of the noble Lord, . It
seems practical and sensible that the power to appoint
members of boards on new town development corporations
should be devolved to the local authority, along with
matters of financial conduct. I hope that we can get that
agreed.
-
My Lords, I obviously support both the amendments from my
noble friends, particularly the one from my noble friend
, which
deals with a very important issue. The other two amendments
in the group raise what some noble Lords might consider to
be fairly trivial issues, but they are actually very
important.
I make one further point about the issue raised by my noble
friend Lady Pinnock. If you are taking a major planning
application to committee towards the end of the 16-week
period in which the Government say it has to be
determined—for a new housing estate or industry or
whatever—and you have not received a response from
important statutory undertakers such as the Environment
Agency or the highways authority, or if you are a county
district and you are waiting for the county to wake up and
submit a consultation response, you have a choice. You can
either delay it beyond the deadline and take it to the next
committee, which might be three or four weeks later, or you
can determine the application without the specific expert
advice that you need but have not got within your own
authority. You will certainly not have the statutory advice
in your own authority. If you do that, it adds to the
delays in determinations. As we know, planning authorities
are in danger of being sanctioned by the Government and
having their ability to determine applications taken away
if they do not meet the Government’s deadlines. It is out
of their hands.
So what do we do? Do we pass an application that we think
is dodgy but for which we do not have the evidence to turn
down until we get the advice from the county or wherever,
or do we risk being sanctioned and delay it? There is a
serious issue here; it is not at all trivial.
The noble Baroness, Lady Gardner of Parks, raised another
issue. In all the years that I chaired committees with
development control powers—what used to be the planning
sub-committees, then the area committees—the greatest anger
among members of the public came from their belief that
they had not been consulted properly. They would be
concerned and very worried about the planning application,
but they would become angry because they had not been
consulted. That is the way it is. They would say, “The
notice you put up was too small”; “It was across the other
side of the field”; “The bull came and removed it”; “Why
did my neighbour get a letter and we did not get a
letter?”; “The article in the local newspaper came after
the deadline for sending in objections”, and so on. I used
to say to them, “For heaven’s sake, you have got five
minutes to tell us why you are against this—use your five
minutes. You are here. You knew it happened. The
consultation worked”. They would say, “No—you did not do
this and you did not do that”.
This is a very sensible proposal because one of the things
that people get most upset about is when a consultation
happens over Christmas or Easter. They sometimes even say,
“It happened in June when I was away on holiday and I
couldn’t do anything about it”. As an authority, we are
flexible. If objections come in after the deadline but
before the committee, they all get reported to the
committee anyway—we are not stupid like that—and people can
come to the committee. Even so, people get upset about this
issue. I do not think it needs primary legislation, it just
needs a change to either the development order or the
advice and guidance to planning authorities. The Government
ought to say to authorities “Do not include bank holidays
or holiday periods”.
-
The noble Lord, , has reminded me,
as a member of the planning committee in Lewisham, that we
rarely refuse applications —we always get advice on what we
can or cannot do—but on a couple of occasions we have
deferred applications on the basis that people have not
been consulted properly. Sometimes the worst offender can
be the council itself, if the housing department has not
consulted properly. Some people come to the meetings and
they are very cross because, as the noble Baroness said,
the notice has gone through the wrong doors. People find
out by rumour but those who should have been told have not
been told at all. If that is proved to our committee, we
will certainly defer a decision and allow a proper period
for public consultation on the application.
-
My Lords, I thank noble Lords who have participated in the
discussion on these amendments. I shall deal first with
Amendment 27 and then move to Amendment 62 as they relate
to consultation, and then come back to Amendment 27A.
On the amendment so ably moved by my noble friend Lady
, she has vast
experience of planning so one listens particularly
carefully to what she has to say. From what I can gather,
the vast majority of planning authorities exercise
discretion in going beyond the 21 days. Most would behave
in an exemplary fashion, as Pendle and Lewisham clearly do,
by being flexible where flexibility is needed. I have done
a deep dive in the department to see whether there have
been any complaints about this but I have not found any
malefactors or authorities that are not coming up to
scratch. This seems a sensible amendment, so I wonder
whether my noble friend will meet with officials if she has
evidence of bad practice—I am sure she does have—so that we
can discuss what we can do. It is important that people are
properly consulted and that there is some flexibility
during the periods of bank holidays. I would not wish to
prescribe a period and then find that all local authorities
are saying, “We do not have to exercise any discretion
now”. The discretion that is exercised is important.
In response to some contributions from noble Lords, it is
inevitable that some people will come along to a planning
hearing and be aggrieved that it is not going the way they
want. They therefore seize upon whether the procedure has
been correctly followed. I agree with the noble Baroness
about proper service of notice. I recall some years ago
getting a proper notice delivered to me in the proper time,
where the development was half a mile away and I was not
sure why I was being consulted. That does not matter, but
if the reverse happens clearly it does. That said, there
are rules that should be adhered to. So, in the
write-round, I will ensure that I draw attention to those
rules, because clearly they are an integral part of the
system as well.
I turn to the amendment so ably spoken to by the noble
Baroness, Lady Pinnock, who is obviously on a roll now.
Once again, this deals with statutory consultation but, on
this occasion, in relation to statutory consultees. A
couple of points cause me difficulty in responding
positively to this amendment. The first is that the annual
performance data for 2015-16 show that, on average, 98% of
substantive responses were made by the key statutory
consultees within the 21-day period or such other period as
agreed. Part of the procedure is that the law provides for
an extension on a case-by-case basis if the two parties
agree to it. This performance appears to be consistent
across small and large developments and we monitor that
very closely through the annual performance returns that
statutory consultees are required to provide by law.
Therefore, I am concerned that adopting the approach
suggested in the amendment would lead to a worsening in the
performance of statutory consultees. Extending the period
to 28 days would mean that the good ones—the vast majority,
I have to say—who respond within 21 days would then respond
within the 28-day period, and this would slow down
performance and affect housebuilding. That said, if the
noble Baronesses, Lady Pinnock and Lady Bakewell, have
evidence, I would be very keen to see it. However, so far
as we can see, this area is working well and I would be
loath to extend the 21-day period. It would be something of
a kick in the teeth for those who are working hard to
achieve the 21 days, and it would be seen as geared to
those who do not perform as well, who appear to be a small
minority.
-
I certainly accept the point that the noble Lord makes.
However, as with all these things, the vast majority of
people may act properly but there will always be one
organisation that does not. Another example that I can
think of is when you get your highway repaired and then
along comes the water board the following week and digs it
all up to put in a new water main. Those sorts of things
drive you up the wall. Reminding these organisations how
they should operate may be something that the Minister can
look at. There will always be exceptions and it may well be
that it is one group of people that is always acting in
that way in one particular area. I accept that the vast
majority act perfectly properly, but it can be extremely
annoying when things are not dealt with properly.
-
The noble Lord makes a very fair point. However, we do not
want to flex the legislation and extend the period for the
very small minority that fail to meet the deadline when, as
I said, the vast majority perform very well. That would
send out the wrong message.
I turn to Amendment 27A, spoken to very ably by the noble
Lord, . He was
at pains to tell us that, like all the other amendments in
this group, this is a very good one. We tend to agree: this
is a sensible amendment. It seeks to move responsibility
for any town development corporation established under the
New Towns Act 1981 from the Secretary of State to the
relevant local authority.
I say at the outset that I support of the broad thrust of
the amendment. This Government are supporting 10 locally
led garden cities and towns and 14 locally led garden
villages—high-quality new settlements of between 1,500 and
tens of thousands of new homes. The noble Lord, Lord
Taylor, has been an influential and important voice in the
creation of our garden villages programme, and I thank him
for his engagement.
We have seen a strong response locally to our offer of
support for locally led garden cities, towns and villages,
and we want to do more to help the places that are
currently in our programme, and others which may become
part of it in future, deliver. The Government recognise
that a statutory delivery vehicle, such as a new town
development corporation, may in some circumstances be a
helpful means of co-ordinating and driving forward the
creation of a new garden city, town or village.
The Government also recognise that, in line with our
locally led approach, this statutory delivery vehicle,
while enjoying significant independence to get on with the
business of delivering, should be accountable not to
central but to local government. I stress that. That is an
argument that has been made not only by the noble Lord but
by the Local Government Association and the Town and
Country Planning Association.
If there is sufficient local appetite, we will consider
legislating to amend the New Towns Act to enable the
creation of development corporations, for which
responsibility rests locally, not with central government.
I reassure noble Lords that the Government recognise and
support a locally-led approach to the creation of new
garden towns and villages. This fits also with our
devolution agenda more generally. As I have indicated, the
statutory delivery vehicle of the new town development
corporation already enjoys significant independence.
However, I believe it should be accountable to local
government, not central government.
To that end, should there be sufficient appetite we will
look into making local bodies accountable for the new town
development corporations, with new legislation should local
areas show that they would use it. Discussions stemming
from the White Paper would be the first step in exploring
local appetite. I hope that with this reassurance and the
statement of policy going forward, the noble Lord feels
able not to press his amendment. Following the indications
I have given, I also ask my noble friend Lady Gardner to
withdraw her amendment.
-
I thank all those who supported what I had to say. I do not
think it is at all onerous for the good authorities that
are already doing what the amendment suggests, and it is
important to help those who are living somewhere where they
are not getting the benefit of this. However, I beg leave
to withdraw my amendment.
Amendment 27 withdrawn.
Amendment 27A not moved.
Committee adjourned at 6.01 pm.
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