Averley urges councils to make progress on local plans in the meantime

The government is to set out further details on its planning reforms, according to a statement from the chief planner. In amonthly updateto local authority chief planners, Joanna Averley said the government would “further update on our approach to changes in the planning system in the spring”.

Crop_Joanna Averley Portrait_Credit Joanna Averley

Source: Joanna Averley

Joanna Averley said an update was due in the spring

The statement follows a lengthy delay in the government’s reforms since the publication in August 2020 of the controversial planning white paper, which proposed ditching the current system of section 106 contributions and bringing in growth areas in which land benefitted from automatic outline permission.

The government has not brought forward a planning bill, as promised in last year’s Queen’s Speech. Housing secretary Michael Gove put the government’s plans under review when he replaced Robert Jenrick last September.

The government is also yet to officially respond to its white paper consultation, to which it received more than 40,000 responses.

Averley’s letter said the planned spring update would “provide further detail on how we will take forward measures to create a modernised and effective planning system that empowers communities to support, and local authorities to deliver, the beautiful, environmentally friendly development this country needs”.

She urged local authorities to carry on with plan-making in the meantime, despite the uncertainty over the future direction of the system.

在过去的几周里,由于政府在其支持发展的白皮书上的明显倒退,一些当局暂停或撤回了当地的计划。巴斯尔登是最近一个在上周四这样做的。

Averley said: “While we understand that many colleagues in local government are looking forward to further detail on the precise details of our changes to planning, I would like to take this opportunity to encourage local authorities to continue work to ensure they have an up-to-date local plan in place in a timely manner.”

Her comments come amid widespread speculation that the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities has abandoned its intention for a stand-alone planning bill and instead intends to wrap both “levelling up” and planning reforms into a single piece of legislation later this year.

The levelling up white paper published at the start of this month said the government “will introduce legislation to parliament to underpin in statute the changes fundamental to levelling up, alongside wider planning measures”.

The government is widely reported to have ditched its plans for growth areas benefiting from automatic outline permission, and for mandatory local housing targets devised in Whitehall.

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Paul Smith

Paul Smith, managing director of land trader the Strategic Land Group, welcomed the impending confirmation of further detail. He said: “This is the first time we’ve seen this written down. They just need to do it now.”

不过,他表示,考虑到近期一些面临高住房需求的政府部门的规划制定速度迅速放缓,总规划师对地方政府继续制定规划的“鼓励”力度不大。

“It’s disappointing,” he added. “That’s a quite weak wording. Local authorities have been asked to make progress before and they haven’t done it. Increasingly we’re seeing them step back.”