Ottery fights up to 30% increase in housing

Pretty soon, the Exeter suburbs will stretch in one long ribbon development from Pinhoe and Cranbrook to Ottery and Honiton and fron Clyst St Mary to Newton Poppleford – without the infrastructure to support it. And, if there is another major economic turndown or an increase in interest rates, without the jobs to support the mortgages. And little or no truly affordable housing, of course.

A new outline planning application, submitted to East Devon District Council (EDDC) for the construction of up to 53 homes on a greenfield site next to Sidmouth Road, has been met with anger and dismay from many.

If accepted, the development – which includes open market homes and provision for 40 per cent ‘affordable housing’ – could push the total number of new houses in the pipeline to more than 600.

Concerned householders say this represents a 30 per cent population growth that Ottery’s infrastructure cannot cope with.

Councillor Roger Giles called the application from Gerway Landowners Consortium ‘unnecessary, unwanted and damaging’.

He said: “The East Devon Local Plan, reflecting the views of local people, said that Ottery should have an additional 300 homes. Already, more than 500 have been approved.”

Katie Corbin, who lives near Sidmouth Road, is one of the residents joining forces to fight the proposed development. She said: “Five hundred homes have been agreed, but only around 100 have been built. What’s going to happen when the rest are built? They have no idea of the repercussions of the affect of 500 houses. Why risk more?”

Gerway Lane resident Rachel Kirk said: “This is the third proposed development within sight of Gerway Lane and it is soul-destroying for all existing residents.”

In a letter of objection submitted to EDDC’s planning department, Martin Kirby said: “The local facilities are way behind this general house building frenzy.”

Dr Margaret Hall confirmed she will be objecting on behalf of the East Devon branch of the Campaign to Protect Rural England.

She told the Herald: “It is more houses than we need and it is outside of the built-up area boundary. The infrastructure in Ottery cannot cope with it.”

Nigel Machin, of Knightstone Lane, is putting the onus on EDDC to ‘see through the spin, understand the strain the town is already going through and protect Ottery from this continuing onslaught’.

Agents of the application, Ian Jewson Planning Ltd, said: “The proposals will provide much-needed market and affordable housing in a sustainable location adjacent to existing development and close to local facilities.”

http://www.sidmouthherald.co.uk/news/ottery_residents_to_fight_building_frenzy_1_4211229

All singing from the same hymn sheet?

A correspondent writes:

The Talaton appeal decision summarised on “the Watch” recently, intrigued me. It brought to mind another recent appeal, Down Close, Newton Poppleford, dated 29 May 2015, in which the Inspector similarly upheld EDDC’s decision to reject the application but also threw doubt on whether EDDC can demonstrate a 5 year land supply. Something crucial to adoption of the Local Plan.

Two different Inspectors are involved and they are clearly singing from the same hymn sheet. Inspector Thickett is due to produce his report on the Examination in Public of EDDC’s Local Plan fairly soon. If he comes from the same broad church as the Appeal Inspectors then we might expect EDDC to get a rough ride on its housing needs and numbers. Could they be so unconvincing as to return us to a developers’ free for all?

Here is an extract of what Inspector Ball wrote about Newton Poppleford at the end of March:

“Just before my site visit the Council submitted a housing monitoring update purporting to show that it can now demonstrate a 5.45 year supply, including a 20% buffer due to previous under-supply.

I have reservations about this. Following significant objections by the Local Plan Inspector, proposed modifications to the NEDLP are currently out to consultation; the new objective assessment of housing need has not been fully tested; and the appellants raise serious concerns about the development timescales of several major sites relied on by the Council, throwing doubt on their deliverability within the 5 year period. These are matters to be tested and resolved by the Local Plan Inspector. For this appeal, as things stand, I do not consider that it is possible to conclude with any confidence that the Council can demonstrate a 5-year supply of deliverable housing sites.”

And here is an extract of what Inspector Preston said at on 24 August:

From the information in front of me, the Council has not demonstrated that previous under delivery has been accounted for within its five-year supply calculations. Even if the previous under-delivery has been accounted for within the estimated need of 17,100 identified within the SHMA, which is not certain, the way in which the Council have addressed the previous under-supply is not consistent with the aim of addressing it within the first five years, where possible. In the Council’s projection the 17,100 has been split evenly over the plan period, ‘the ‘Liverpool’ method. Whilst the PPG is not prescriptive in stating that any under-deliver must be recovered within the first five years it sets a clear preference for this approach, ‘where possible’. No evidence was presented by the Council to suggest that it would not be possible to recover any previous under-supply over the next five years and the Local Plan Inspector has previously written to the Council to advocate the ‘Sedgefield’ approach with the aim of boosting housing supply.

“Moreover, I have concerns that the projected delivery rates for the new settlement at Cranbrook are not supported by clear evidence. The predicted completion rate for the two phases of the development over each of the following five years is 467 dwellings per annum. However, the March 2015 HMU identifies that there had been 757 completions between ‘summer’ 2012 and August 2014. It is not clear when development commenced but the published completion rate suggests a figure in the region of 350 to 375 dwellings per year over the two year period.

The Council suggested orally at the Hearing that there is evidence to suggest that delivery rates are likely to increase but no firm evidence was submitted to show how the predicted delivery rates had been derived. In effect, those predictions show an increase of approximately 100 dwellings a year at the site, over and above the published rate of completion to date. That rate of delivery is not supported by the evidence presented to me.”

Cranbrook to become a “health town” to cut NHS burden?

The head of the NHS has had this bright idea and Cranbrook is mentioned as a possible pilot town.

The chosen towns will emphasise active travel, parks, table tennis, more sheltered housing for elderly people, mobile and accessible health services, no fast food restaurants close to schools, GP monitored technology in homes, no kerbs, non- slip pavements and symbolic signs to help dementia sufferers.

Good luck with that one, with a fish and chip shop opening near the school and a row already going on about the school playing fields having no floodlighting making it inaccessible at night and cars parked half-on kerbs because there isn’t enough parking. Not to mention – so far – zero provision for specialist housing for the elderly.

The article mentions that Cranbrook is expected to have 20,000 new homes which seems to imply that all the 17,100 homes claimed as being required in the Local Plan will be sited there along with another 3,000 for good measure.

Source: Sunday Times 30/8/15, page 15

Housing Minister “hurt” that people criticise him for £150 per night hotels when he could go home

“The government’s housing minister has defended claims of almost £31,000 for London hotel stays, despite owning a home in Essex.

Great Yarmouth MP Brandon Lewis spent nearly £15,000 last year on 99 overnight stays and about £16,000 the year before, The Sunday Times reported.

Mr Lewis opted to stay in the capital rather than travel home to Essex, the paper said.

In a statement, he said all the claims complied with parliamentary rules.

A spokesman for his office said: “Every expense claim is entirely in accordance with the rules and approved by the Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority (IPSA).”
Privately, he is said to be “hurt” by the allegations.
Nearly all the stays were at the Park Plaza hotel, near Parliament, for which Mr Lewis would typically claim £450 for three nights and £750 for a five-night-stay.”

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-norfolk-34042547

Unaffordable affordable housing

Shelter: Starter homes unaffordable

According to Shelter, the Government’s starter homes initiative will be unaffordable for families on average incomes in almost 60% of local authorities in England. Those on the national living wage would be priced out of all but 2% of areas by 2020. Single homebuyers on low or average wages would also struggle to afford a starter home in the majority of local authorities and, even when on a higher than average salary, three out of four local authorities would be off limits.

Under the scheme, starter home prices are capped at £450,000 in London and £250,000 in the rest of England. Shelter believes that these thresholds mean that a number of local authorities would probably not build any starter homes because their house prices would go over the maximum amount to which the scheme would apply.

The Times, Business, Page: 40

Talaton planning refusal will affect many other communities in East Devon

Two planning applications for 10 and 25 houses in Talaton have been refused on appeal. It is best to read the full document (see link below) for how it might affect YOUR community.

Basically, although the Inspector had a LOT to say about how he did not trust EDDC’s figures on 5 year land supply or its planning abilities in general particularly with regard to Cranbrook, the unsuitability of the suggested S106 option of village hall extra parking, the lack of sustainability AND Talaton’s nearness (within 10 km) of the Pebblebed Heath weighed heavily in his decision:

30. From the information in front of me, the Council has not demonstrated that previous under delivery has been accounted for within its five-year supply calculations. Even if the previous under-delivery has been accounted for within the estimated need of 17,100 identified within the SHMA, which is not certain, the way in which the Council have addressed the previous under-supply is not consistent with the aim of addressing it within the first five years, where possible. In the Council’s projection the 17,100 has been split evenly over the plan period, ‘the ‘Liverpool’ method. Whilst the PPG is not prescriptive in stating that any under-deliver must be recovered within the first five years it sets a clear preference for this approach, ‘where possible’. No evidence was presented by the Council to suggest that it would not be possible to recover any previous under-supply over the next five years and the Local Plan Inspector has previously written to the Council to advocate the ‘Sedgefield’ approach with the aim of boosting housing supply.

31. Moreover, I have concerns that the projected delivery rates for the new settlement at Cranbrook are not supported by clear evidence. The predicted completion rate for the two phases of the development over each of the following five years is 467 dwellings per annum. However, the March 2015 HMU identifies that there had been 757 completions between ‘summer’ 2012 and August 2014. It is not clear when development commenced but the published completion rate suggests a figure in the region of 350 to 375 dwellings per year over the two year period. The Council suggested orally at the Hearing that there is evidence to suggest that delivery rates are likely to increase but no firm evidence was submitted to show how the predicted delivery rates had been derived. In effect, those predictions show an increase of approximately 100 dwellings a year at the site, over and above the published rate of completion to date. That rate of delivery is not supported by the evidence presented to me.

I conclude that the location of the site is such that the proposed developments would result in unsustainable travel patterns resulting in an increase in the use of the private car. The harm resulting from those unsustainable travel patterns would be comparatively greater for the proposed development in Appeal B due to the greater number of dwellings in that scheme. Both proposals would be contrary to the requirements of policy TA1 of the LP and policy TC2 of the ELP, which state that new development should be located so as to be accessible by pedestrians, cyclists and public transport and well related to compatible uses to as to minimise the need to travel by car.

the proposed car park [for the village hall] is not directly, or even indirectly, related to the impact of the proposed scheme and is not necessary because of it. Thus, the offer to provide the car park is not a matter that I can take into account in reaching my decision, having regard to paragraph 204 of the Framework and regulation 122 of the Community Infrastructure Levy Regulations (2010). Whether an individual landowner or developer chooses to offer the car park to the Parish Council is a matter for their consideration. It is not a factor that can be taken into account in reaching my decision.

…The appeal sites are within a 10km radius of the Pebblebed Heaths SAC/SPA. The Council have referred to the South East Devon European Site Mitigation Strategy10 (the Mitigation Strategy) which identifies that planned residential and tourist accommodation development within that radius would, in combination, have a detrimental effect on the integrity of the SAC/SPA, as a result of increased recreational pressure within the designated SAC/SPA boundaries. Both main parties agree that mitigation is necessary in order to off-set the harm caused by the proposed developments and clause 3.3 of the s.106 agreements in relation to both proposals indicates that planning permission should be refused in the absence of the proposed mitigation11. Based upon the findings of the Mitigation Strategy I concur with that view.

Paragraph 7 of the Framework identifies three dimensions of sustainable development, based on economic, social and environmental factors. The Framework identifies that these strands are mutually dependent and should not be considered in isolation. In this case, the village is not in a sustainable location in terms of its proximity to shops, services and employment opportunities. Future residents would be largely reliant upon the private car. That reliance would not foster a move towards a low carbon economy and would be contrary to the environmental dimension of sustainable development.

The full document is HERE13.1832 & 1833.mout

“Affordable” shared-ownership flat – £1 million!

London, of course, where you cannot even register for shared ownership with a housing association if you earn less than £77,000:

http://www.theguardian.com/money/2015/aug/24/affordable-shared-ownership-flat-hackney-1m

Not helped by this story on how much money some Labour candidates are taking from property developers for their campaigns:

http://www.standard.co.uk/news/mayor/revealed-labour-mayoral-hopefuls-accepting-tens-of-thousands-in-donations-from-property-tycoons-a2919631.html

What is this country coming to?

One law, and three homes for the rich Housing Minister, who still claims £30,000 for hotel expenses in London

Sunday Times, page 14:

“Brandon Lewis, the housing Minister, has claimed more than £30,000 from the taxpayer for hotel accommodation in London for 2 years, despite owning three houses, two of them less than an hour by train from Westminster”.

Of course, Lewis has broken no rules.

Additionally, his Chelmsford home is on green belt land and was originally limited to occupation by agricultural workers, but its former owner successfully applied to have the restriction lifted.

He also hit the headlines when he rented out his home in his constituency and rented a flat there instead.

During his election campaign he said “Like everyone else, I was angry and disgusted at the behaviour of some members of Parliament at Westminster. nIt has taken a new generation of MPs to end the cosy arrangements that allowed individuals to apparently profit from the taxpayer”

The Sunday Times goes on: “Neighbours living close to his home in [his constituency] in Yarmouth claimed that he was rarely seen there. “He was here for a while before the election but generally we see him very infrequently” … “Once every so often there will be loads of cars parked there … a few times a year”.

Unlike our own dear MP Hugo Swire, who doesn’t even have his second home in our constituency, preferring a completely different part of Devon. Still, at least it is in Devon. Though we do not know how often he uses it, given that he jets to exotic parts of the world most weeks, and whether he deigns to visit his constituency when he IS there.

But so cheering to know that our Housing Minister has such wide experience of housing himself.

“UK housebuilding held back by shortfall”


“The Federation of Master Builders says 66% of construction firms have been forced to turn down work because of a shortage of skilled workers. This follows the Local Government Association’s declaration that the UK is training “too many hairdressers and not enough bricklayers”.

Housebuilders including Persimmon and Barratt Developments have warned that a shortage of skilled construction workers is hitting the housing market by holding back the building of new property.”

The Daily Telegraph, Page: 31 Daily Mail, Page: 73 Independent I, Page: 2

So how will this affect the number of houses in EDDC’s Local Plan?

And what impact will the labour shortage have on Govt Inspectors’ decisions nationwide?

George Osborne’s “rural solutions”

Our summary: more houses and trying to persuade internet providers to connect mote rural areas.

Does it cut the mustard for rural communities: hhhmmm.

http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/Chancellor-unveils-new-point-plan-unleash-rural/story-27639025-detail/story.html

Council appeals Planning Inspector decision

The council seems to be in a very similar position to East Devon (Core Strategy, evidence gathering, not yet a Local plan):

The local authority refused the application in October 2014.

“During the appeal process the development was amended to 90 dwellings and was approved by an inspector in July 2015.
West Berkshire said it was “of the view that the inspector has failed to apply the correct planning tests in determining the appeal and the council has been substantially prejudiced as a result.

Cllr Alan Law, Portfolio Holder for Planning at West Berkshire, said: “It is very important that planning inspectors are challenged when we believe they get things so wrong that it prejudices the council in determining other planning applications for housing.

The council has worked hard over many years to get the Core Strategy Adopted following stringent Government guidelines. We are currently doing this again, following unprecedented evidence gathering and public consultation, with the forthcoming Housing Site Allocations Development Plan Document. This will complete the picture for West Berkshire regarding future housing.

Cllr Law added: “We simply cannot allow all that effort and proper process to be totally disregarded and overturned by an individual planning inspector. We owe that duty to the people of West Berkshire who would not expect any less from us.”

http://www.localgovernmentlawyer.co.uk/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=24105:council-in-court-challenge-after-inspector-grants-permission-for-90-home-scheme&catid=63&Itemid=31

East Devon economy nose dives – who will buy all those houses?

Front page of today’s Midweek Herald – no link to story on website:

Retirees, probably …

image

Whose “bright idea” was it to have too little office space in Cranbrook? Whose even “brighter” idea was it to convert a new 3 bed house to get some?

Cabinet, 12th Aug 15, 5.30pm)

Click to access combined-final-agenda-120815.pdf

p.53 “planning permission would be required to change the use of a house to some form of office accommodation”

They are referring to a planning application to turn a newly-built 3 storey town house with no disabled access to upper floors into office space for which EDDC is prepared to pay out £25,000 for capital costs and £30K for revenue costs.

It appears that the very little amount of space available above the Younghayes Community Centre is already spoken for and the conversion of this house is EDDC’s answer to the underprovision:

http://www.exeterandeastdevon.gov.uk/retail-space-at-cranbrook/

With Cranbrook set to double, triple, quadruple or quintuple expand over the next few years, one wonders whether developers care about office provision.

Does it provide less profit than housing, perhaps? Why has the Local Plan not made adequate provision? Is this the first of many houses to be converted? Will any of this space be suitable for disabled access? Or was everyone expected to work at Skypark!

Another omnishambles.

The shape of things to come?

New York today, East Devon tomorrow?

Londoners have already been given permission to build extra storeys on their homes.

And here’s a suggestion: build affordable housing on top of EDDC’s new Honiton HQ! Money where mouths are or mouths where money is!

http://www.apartmenttherapy.com/a-floating-highrise-nyc-developers-plan-to-build-above-an-existing-building-222748

40% of Right to Buy homes being rented out

Right to rent – and not affordable rents one must assume:

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/right-to-buy-40-of-homes-sold-under-government-scheme-are-being-let-out-privately-10454796.html

South-West rents jump “for lifestyle reasons”

” … He noted that the South West of England was showing a particularly sharp rise in rents on the back of people attracted to the area for “lifestyle reasons”.”

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/rents-have-gone-up-by-12-per-cent-in-the-past-year-10449500.html

Government was set to lose £693m and 37% of affordable housing from setting S106 contribution threshold too high

Setting the threshold for payment of S106 contributions from developers at 10 houses or more whereas it was previously 5 was set to lose the government contributions of £693m and cut the number of affordable homes being built by 37%.

Or to look at it another way, it was set to give developers £693m more profit and no need to build 37% more affordable homes. Now, either that was an unintentional mistake in drawing up the guidance (bad) or intentional (bad). Of course, the DGLC is appealing this High Court ruling on behalf of developers.

The judgment added that officials had advised ministers that if a threshold of ten units or fewer were to be introduced, 21 per cent of affordable housing contributions would be exempt, equating to an annual value of £693 million. According to research published last month by social charity the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, 37 per cent of affordable homes completed in 2013/14 were delivered through section 106 deals (see infographic).

Ricketts said the ruling “tells the secretary of state in capital letters that PPG is not a place for substantive changes to government policies”. He added: “There are lessons for the way in which the government approaches the next round of changes to the planning system about complying with appropriate legal principles on consultation and then for the responses to consultation to be taken into account by the government conscientiously.”

Ivory added that, since the introduction of the PPG, there has been a “blurring between policy and guidance”. He said: “I am concerned that policy is being announced by way of changes to the guidance. This case doesn’t quite tackle that point, but does seem to move in the direction of demonstrating the need for clarity.”

Mike Kiely, chairman of the board of the Planning Officers Society, said the ruling was a “shot across the bows of the DCLG”. He added that the judgment makes clear that consultation responses should be examined “diligently” and given due response. “It’s not a tick-box exercise”, Kiely said.”

http://www.planningresource.co.uk/article/1359134/repercussions-planners-landmark-affordable-housing-judgment

“Victory for affordable housing as court throws out ‘insane’ government policy”

Well, it was insane for councils but very, very nice for developers!

http://gu.com/p/4bbh9?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other

Developer loses legal challenge after site not included in Neighbourhood Plan

http://localgovernmentlawyer.co.uk/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=23944:judge-rejects-attack-on-decision-to-put-neighbourhood-plan-out-to-referendum&catid=63&Itemid=31