News story: Government goes further and faster on planning reform in bid for growth
Chancellor reveals new plans for more houses near commuter train
stations to kick start economic growth, as government continues its
bold reform of the planning system to deliver on the Plan for Change
for working people.
Sweeping reforms under the Planning and
Infrastructure Bill will take an axe to red tape that slows down
approval of infrastructure projects and the government will work with
Parliamentarians to ensure a smooth and speedy
delivery.
Chancellor highlights in its first six months the
government has already taken 13 planning decisions and approved 9
nationally significant infrastructure projects spanning airports, data
centres, energy farms, and major housing developments.
Untapped
land near commuter transport hubs will be unlocked to build new
housing for working people, as part of bold new steps to reform the
planning system and unlock growth to deliver win-win outcomes for the
country and the economy. The bold reforms will create secure, high-
paying jobs and deliver major infrastructure faster to bolster public
services and lower bills.
Ahead of the Chancellor’s speech
next week on economic growth, the government has today announced how
it will go further and faster to deliver our Plan for Change
milestones of 1. 5 million new homes over five years and 150 decisions
on major infrastructure projects by the end of the Parliament. It
follows the ambitious reforms unveiled by the Chancellor in July and
delivered by the Deputy Prime Minister at the end of last year through
publication of the overhauled National Planning Policy Framework.
The government’s next steps on planning reform include
streamlining a set of national policies for decision making to guide
planning decisions taken by local authorities and promote
housebuilding in key areas.
In a major new growth push, the
government will ensure that when developers submit an application for
acceptable types of schemes in key areas – such as in high potential
locations near commuter transport hubs - that the default answer to
development is ‘yes’. This will unlock more housing at a greater
density in areas central to local communities, boosting the
government’s number one mission to grow the economy. These measures
will transform communities, with more shops and homes nearer to the
transport hubs that working people rely on day in day out.
As
part of these measures, the government will streamline decisions on
critical infrastructure projects by slashing red tape in the planning
system which is holding up projects. That means looking again at the
input from expert bodies who developers are required to consult - and
replacing the current systems of environmental assessment to deliver a
more effective and streamlined system that reduces costs and delays
for developers, whilst still protecting the environment.
The
Chancellor also revealed today that she is championing a regeneration
project around Old Trafford in Manchester that will see new housing,
commercial and public space as a shining example of the bold pro-
development model that will drive growth across the region, with
authorities exploring setting up a mayoral development corporation
body to redevelop the area.
The government is also working
with Greater Manchester to release growth-generating land around
transport hubs through local development orders, such as around
Castleton Station, with the potential for this innovative use of
existing powers to kickstart building in these sites to be a blueprint
for the rest of the country so that every corner of the UK benefits
from growth.
The new proposals tackle the dire inheritance
head on. Last year homebuilding fell below 200k and permissions
reached their lowest for over a decade, which is why the government is
taking radical action necessary to reverse this trend and deliver the
homes necessary to reach 1. 5 million homes over this Parliament.
This government is turning the page on the decline and decay
of the past and choosing growth with a significant number of planning
decisions already made by Ministers since July. This includes 13
planning decisions taken by Ministers over 90% of which within the
target timeframe, and 9 nationally significant infrastructure projects
approved, collectively spanning airports, data centres, solar farms
and major housing developments such as the Expansion of London City
Airport, a data centre in Buckinghamshire and a new M&S; store in
Oxford Street, London.
The government has committed to making
150 decisions on these major economic infrastructure applications over
this Parliament, more than doubling the decisions made in the previous
Parliament and more than 130 made since 2011.
This will
unlock the growth necessary to deliver win-win outcomes for the
country and the economy – creating stable and high-paying jobs,
building more affordable homes, and delivering critical infrastructure
faster to bolster public services and lower bills – while improving
the environment where it matters most.
Chancellor of the
Exchequer, Rachel Reeves said:
I am fighting every single day
in our mission to kick start the economy, deliver on our Plan for
Change, and make working people better off. That includes avenues that
others have shied away from.
Too often the answer to new
development has been “no”. But that is the attitude that has stunted
economic growth and left working people worse off. We need to do
things differently and that journey began as soon as I started at the
Treasury in July. These are our next steps and I can say for certain,
there is more to come.
Deputy Prime Minister and Secretary of
State for Housing, Angela Rayner said:
From day one I have been
clear that bold action is needed to remove the blockers who put a
chokehold on growth. That’s why we are putting growth at the heart of
our planning system.
Growth means higher wages, better living
standards, families raising their children in safer homes, and the
next generation taking their first steps onto the housing
ladder.
This year we will go even further to make the dream of
homeownership a reality for millions and fix the housing crisis we
inherited for good – getting more shovels in the ground to build the
homes and vital infrastructure that our communities so desperately
need.
Growth is the number one mission of this Government’s
Plan for Change, so we can put more money in people’s pocket. Today
the Chancellor is setting out further action on the government’s
growth mission by announcing the following: Planning
The
Planning and Infrastructure Bill will provide the powers to accelerate
the infrastructure and homes needed to deliver on the government’s
ambitions – and fast track critical infrastructure such as windfarms,
power plants, and major road and rail projects. Today the government
is confirming for the first time that the Bill will be introduced in
Spring and we will work with Parliamentarians to ensure a smooth and
speedy delivery.
Further detail on the Bill is being
published today in a working paper on streamlining decisions on
nationally significant infrastructure projects, including reducing the
burden on developers by making consultation requirements more
proportionate, strengthening statutory guidance to ensure they are
clear over what is and is not required when submitting planning
applications, and ensuring that National Policy Statements are updated
at least every five years to give more certainty to developers,
speeding up decisions. Previous working papers have already set out
reforms to the operation of planning committees, and an overhaul of
the way developers can discharge their environmental obligations so
that they can crack on with building.
The Chancellor is today
also announcing reform to the statutory consultee system, which
requires developers to consult local communities and expert bodies
when making planning decisions. This often means too many
organisations consulted on too wide a range of issues, clogging up
much-needed development. Today the government has declared a
moratorium on any new statutory consultees and the Chancellor and the
Deputy Prime Minister will review in the coming weeks the existing
arrangements to make sure they meet this Government’s ambitions for
growth.
This follows changes announced last week to the rules
around challenging major infrastructure projects through the courts –
stopping blockers getting in the way of the Government’s Plan for
Change and getting nuclear plants, trainlines and windfarms built
quicker. Current excessive rules mean unarguable cases can be bought
back to the courts three times. This will be overhauled, with just one
attempt at legal challenge for hopeless cases that would previously
have caused much more delay. Environment
The government is
also reforming environmental impact assessments, which have strayed
from their original purpose of supporting decision making and have
become voluminous and costly documents that too often support legal
challenges rather than the environment.
They will be replaced
by Environmental Outcome Reports which will be simpler and much
clearer, which will support growth by saving developers time and
money, whilst still protecting the environment. The government will
publish a roadmap for the delivery of these new Environment Outcomes
Reports in the coming months.
This follows a working paper on
development and nature published by the government before Christmas
setting out a new approach that will turbocharge the delivery of
housing and infrastructure while securing positive environmental
outcomes. Developers will be able to pay into the Nature Restoration
Fund which will allow them to discharge relevant environmental
obligations for protected sites and species and focus on building,
safe in the knowledge that appropriate action will be taken to support
nature’s recovery. Major infrastructure
A working paper is
being published setting out the government’s plan for its 10 Year
Infrastructure Strategy, which will be focussed on infrastructure’s
role in enabling resilient growth, delivering clean energy by 2030 and
net zero by 2050 while securing the growth benefits of the transition,
and improving public services.
The working paper seeks
industry views as part of the government’s continued consultation on
the development of the strategy which will be published in late
Spring.
Jennie Daly, CEO of Taylor Wimpey said:
We
continue to be impressed by the speed with which the government has
gripped the need for planning reform to deliver much needed new
housing supply. New high-quality housing and the infrastructure it
brings are essential drivers of economic growth.
We welcome the
commitment from the government to introduce the Planning and
Infrastructure Bill as a priority in the spring, and we look forward
to supporting the promised consultation work on reforming the planning
system to expedite decisions and overcome local barriers to
growth.
Mark Reynolds, Mace Group Executive Chairman and Co-
Chair of the Construction Leadership Council said:
When the
government and the Construction sector work in partnership we can
unlock growth of up to 2% of GDP. The simplification and streamlining
of the planning system is a significant contributor to this so the
announcements today are a welcome development which could deliver £2
billion per year in savings once fully implemented.
In addition
the upcoming publication of the 10 year National Infrastructure
Strategy is an opportunity to set out plans for ambitious growth and
chart a direction for the industry, instilling confidence in
businesses to invest in skills, innovation and deliver profitable
growth, we look forward to contributing to its success.
Neil
Jefferson, CEO of Home Builders Federations said:
Identifying
more land for development and removing the treacle from the planning
process that delays applications is essential if we are to increase
housing supply. The swift moves to address these blocks in the
planning system are very welcome and will pay dividends if the other
constraints on housing supply can be tackled. Housing delivery is
dependent upon a range of factors, of which planning is a major one,
and these changes underline the government’s commitment to increasing
supply.
Mayor of Greater Manchester, Andy Burnham
said:
With our devolved powers we’re mobilising the whole
Greater Manchester system to lock in growth for the next decade and
reap the rewards for our city-region and UK plc.
The project
around Old Trafford represents the biggest opportunity for urban
regeneration this country has seen since London 2012 and is a key part
of our 10-year plan to turbocharge growth across Greater Manchester.
We look forward working with the Government on moving freight away
from the site around Old Trafford to new locations to open up capacity
our rail network, and unlock massive regeneration potential –
delivering benefits across the whole of the North.
As part of
its relentless focus to get Britain building and achieve the ambition
to build 1. 5 million new homes over five years, the government has
already:
Overhauled the National Planning Policy Framework,
including new and higher mandatory housebuilding targets for councils,
a comprehensive modernisation of the Green Belt, and far greater
support for growth-supporting development such as labs and
datacentres.
Launched a New Homes Accelerator group to unlock
thousands of new homes currently in the planning
system.
Published a series of working papers on further reforms
to the planning system:
‘brownfield passports’, designed to
ensure that where planning proposals meet design and quality
standards, the default answer to planning permission is
‘yes’,
development and nature recovery, detailing a new
approach for developers to discharge environmental obligations through
payment into a Nature Restoration Fund which then allows them to crack
on with building,
planning committees, proposing a national
scheme of delegation to speed up the approval process and provide
greater certainty to developers.
Set up an independent New
Towns Taskforce, as part of a long-term vision to create largescale
communities of at least 10,000 new homes each.
Awarded £68
million to 54 local councils to unlock housing on brownfield
sites.
Awarded £47 million to seven councils to unlock homes
stalled by nutrient neutrality rules.
Extended the existing
Home Building Fund for this year providing up to £700 million of vital
support to SME housebuilders, supporting the delivery of around 12,000
additional homes.
Confirmed that government investment in
housing will increase to £5 billion for this year, including an extra
£500 million in new funding for the Affordable Homes Programme to
deliver tens of thousands of new affordable and social homes across
the country.