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Planning for Housing The private sector perspective John Acres Director of Planning (Sustainable Development)

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Presentation on theme: "Planning for Housing The private sector perspective John Acres Director of Planning (Sustainable Development)"— Presentation transcript:

1 Planning for Housing The private sector perspective John Acres Director of Planning (Sustainable Development)

2 Who are the Catesby Property Group? Catesby has property interests throughout the country - commercial, mixed use and residential Catesby assembles, promotes and develops land and secures planning consent for sale of land to house-builders and developers Catesby is promoting land for 3200 dwellings and 50ha employment land at Newark.

3 Newark Future

4 What am I going to cover? Planning for Housing The story so far Where are we now Where are we going What is the outlook for –planning, –the economy –society

5 The story so far.. Carol Spelman’s letter – Aug 2009 – collusion? Open Source planning – Feb 2010 – concoction An ‘arranged marriage’ – May 2010 - coalition The ‘Pickles’ letter – 27 th May 2010 – confusion Revocation of RSS’s – July 2010 - conspiracy! The ‘Cala’ decision – Nov 2010 - condemnation The Localism Bill – Dec 2010 - conclusion

6 House of Commons Select Committee ‘Abolition of RSS’s – A planning vacuum’ “Having taken 30 years to build up the strategic planning system and perhaps 3 years to prepare each Regional Plan, it has taken literally 3 months to abandon the whole process and create a situation of complete paralysis in the planning system.” Para 3: Introduction.

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8 Key indicators of change. What have been the trends?

9 House prices

10 Regional House price trend (East Midlands compared with England)

11 Housing starts & completions (England, 12 month rolling total).

12 Regional Housing starts (12 month rolling totals).

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14 Mortgage releases

15 Share prices (Comparison between major house-builders and FTSE share index)

16 Core strategies - progress The numbers game! Number of adopted Core Strategies In EnglandIn East Midlands 81 5

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18 Where are we now? Strategic planning – the baby has been thrown out with the bathwater! Planning in limbo – Localism Bill The implications of Cala 1 & 2 (& 3) Kneejerk decisions Less support, changes in structures Coping with cuts – losses of jobs The market in the doldrums Confusion & delay

19 Key pointers for change The Budget statement. “ The planning system has held back investment and created distortions in the way that business compete, deterring development and growth”. Eric Pickles: “LPA’s and other bodies involved in granting development consents should prioritise growth and jobs… with immediate effect.” Greg Clarke: “The answer to development and growth should wherever possible be ‘yes’”. Steve Quartermain: “This statement is a material planning consideration”

20 Localism Bill What’s in? Abolition of regional Planning Abolish IPC – SOS decision Duty to Co-operate Neighbourhood Planning Local Referenda Community Right to Build Community Right to Challenge Removal of Pre-determination rule/tightening penalties What’s out? National Spatial Plan Presumption in favour of Devt. Housing targets Any change to primacy of Local Plans Third Party rights of Appeal Neighbour compensation Local Enterprise Partnerships (non statutory)

21 Where are we going? The longer term outlook.

22 Impact on Planning (Will things be more or less plan led?) Less certainty – more flexibility Less co-ordination – more variation Less needs based – more opportunity based Less influence from planners – more influence from politicians/local people Less professionalism – more parochialism Less staff – more work to do!!

23 Impact on the Economy (Is the Bill pro-growth or not?) Less certainty = more reluctance to invest Less public investment = more pressure on private sector Less bureaucracy = potentially less costs and more freedom Losing a layer in the hierarchy = quicker decisions Localism may = more uncertainty, but may = closer private/public sector relationships.

24 Impact on Society (Will it help foster the Big Society?) Will it promote more genuine community involvement? If so, will it create more tensions in planning? Who will undertake & pay for neighbourhood planning? Will it work in the urban areas? Will it promote survival of the fittest approach? Who will be the winners/losers? Does ‘Big Society’ – mean lots of little societies?

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