Background
Local government is set to become more remote with District councils due to be abolished, Counties divvied up into unitary packages of 500,000 souls governed by an overarching mayoral authority covering over 3,000 sq miles!
Planning “reform” latest twist
After throwing environmental protection to the wind. You can now forget any local input to planning.
If, as proposed, democratic control over planning is stripped away, inevitably more power will be vested in Local Planning Officers. This is a significant change in how our system works.
How will its integrity, accountably and transparently, be assured?
Anyone think this is going to reinvigorate democracy, get more social housing built where it’s needed, and help clean up our rivers and seas? – Owl
See here for latest consultation
Councillors face ban on interfering in smaller planning applications
Chris Smyth www.thetimes.com
Councillors will be banned from interfering in kitchen extensions and smaller developments as ministers curtail local discretion to speed up housebuilding.
All applications from individual homeowners will be protected from being called in to planning committees, while councillors will also be stripped of the ability to veto developments of up to nine homes.
This could rise to 50 homes in London as ministers seek to make the planning system more predictable for developers.
All planning applications will now bypass elected councillors by default, with only larger schemes able to be called in to committees if planning officers agree.
Angela Rayner, the deputy prime minister, is locked in a battle with the Treasury for billions of pounds to fund council house building, as her team set out a series of reforms that it says are essential to build 1.5 million homes over the course of parliament.
On Wednesday, ministers began a consultation on restricting the ability of council planning committees to intervene in developments, in an effort to reduce delays.
Under the proposals, smaller developments must be decided by professional planning officials “in all cases”. These include applications from individual homeowners, minor commercial projects and schemes of fewer than ten houses.
Ministers want to apply similar rules to developers of between ten and 50 homes in “larger conurbations”, acknowledging that this “would mean very few residential development applications in some areas could be scrutinised by committee”.
Housing style and layout in bigger schemes will also no longer have to be decided by councillors once they have given initial permission.
All other applications would be expected to bypass councillors unless the elected chair of the planning committee agreed with the council’s chief planning officer that democratic scrutiny was needed. This is expected to include the largest and most contentious schemes.
Matthew Pennycook, the housing minister, told The Times earlier this month that he wanted to get councillors out of “swathes” of planning applications, saying this would “increase the certainty and speed at which planning decisions are made”. Councillors could focus on “the biggest, most controversial applications”, he argued.
Matthew Spry of the Lichfields consultancy said that “we are moving towards a more rules-based planning system, which will undoubtedly speed up the process — even as the political dimension is inevitably maintained within it”.
He said that “a lot now relies on the dynamics of those individuals in each council, but there would have been risks to setting a fixed national threshold: what is a big deal in one place is small fry in another”. He added: “One can never take the politics out of planning so the line has to be drawn somewhere and there is safety in allowing for local discretion.”
Councils have warned that the proposals risk undermining local democracy as elected representatives are shut out of decisions where residents have strong views.
Robbie Calvert of the Royal Town Planning Institute said that the reforms “have the potential to unlock thousands of homes on smaller sites and energise a part of the sector that plays a vital role in local economies”.
However, he added that every council would need a strong chief planning officer for them to work, saying that “these reforms propose a significant change to how our system works, and without strong, accountable leadership and oversight, risk undermining the integrity of the planning process”.

