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Participants in Planning

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Scottish Natural Heritage. Conservation (Building) Bodies ... Case study - Liverpool Football Club. Development of Centenary Stand 1980's ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Participants in Planning


1
Participants in Planning
  • Penri James
  • 2007-08

2
Participants
3
Statutory consultees
  • Environment Agency
  • Highway Authority
  • Neighbours
  • Listed Buildings
  • English Heritage
  • Cadw
  • Historic Scotland
  • Conservation
  • Natural England
  • Countryside Council of Wales
  • Scottish Natural Heritage

4
Environment Agency
  • Main source of planning advice on
  • water resources and water quality
  • waste and landfill
  • flood risk
  • pollution prevention
  • biodiversity
  • foul and surface water drainage
  • Objection to application is a de facto veto on
    development
  • Increasing influence on development on flood
    plains
  • Increased flood risk due to climate change (link)
  • Capacity of sewerage infrastructure frequently
    cited

5
Highway authority
  • Impact of development on transport infrastructure
  • Provide advice to Planning Officers, Members and
    Developers on planning applications
  • Advice based on national policy statements,
    TAN.s, PANs and Good Practice Guides
  • Local Authority Highways Department
  • Highways Agency

6
Conservation (Environment) Bodies
  • Effect of planning application on environment
    particularly in proximity to SSSI and SAC
  • Natural England
  • Countryside Council for Wales
  • Scottish Natural Heritage

7
Conservation (Building) Bodies
  • Statutory responsibilities on Listed Buildings
    and Scheduled Ancient Monuments
  • English Heritage
  • Cadw
  • Historic Scotland

8
Listed buildings
  • Set up under Section 1 of the Planning (Listed
    Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990
  • Requires government to draw up a List of
    Buildings of Special Architectural or Historic
    Interest

9
Listed buildings
  • Assessment of structures undertaken by Inspectors
    of Historic Buildings
  • Properties are listed in three categories-
  • Grade I - Buildings of exceptional interest
  • Grade II Buildings of special interest
  • Grade II - Particularly important buildings
  • (A,B,C in Scotland)

10
Listed building consent
  • An owner of a listed building has to obtain
    Listed Building Consent (LBC) from the local
    planning authority before carrying out work that
    will change the character of the building
  • If the planning authority considers that consent
    should be granted then referred to English
    Heritage, Cadw, Historic Scotland for
    consideration.

11
National Trust
  • National Trust Act of 1907
  • National Trust Planning Principles
  • 1. The Trust will seek to influence the
    Planning system at local, regional and national
    levels in accordance with our statutory purpose
    and will promote an integrated approach to
    sustainable development.

12
Community Parish Councils
  • Not present in all areas
  • Third tier authority
  • NOT a statutory consultee but many planning
    authorities consult in order to gain local
    perspective
  • E.g.Ceredigion County Council send planning
    application details and development control
    committee agenda to community councils for
    comment.

13
Pressure groups
  • Set up to influence Government on particular
    issues
  • Environmental groups concerned about the effect
    of planning
  • CPRE, CPRW, Friends of the Earth
  • Conservation groups concerned about the
    conservation of buildings
  • Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings
  • National single issue groups
  • Transport - Sustrans
  • Local single issue groups

14
Elected members
  • Members of the Local Authority
  • May or may not be Members of the Development
    Control/Planning Committee
  • Governed by the Code of Conduct

15
Elected Members
16
Local Member
  • Provide advice on planning procedures
  • Campaign on behalf of local residents
  • Hold site meetings with officers, developers and
    objectors
  • If a member is a member of the development
    control committee and publicly states a view
    prior to the committee meeting then he/she is
    disqualified from participating in the matter
  • Requirement to hear all the evidence before
    making a decision

17
Case study - Liverpool Football Club
  • Development of Centenary Stand 1980s
  • Season ticket holders and other members of
    Liverpool City Council Development Control
    Committee were wined and dined by LFC
  • Labour Group enacted a three line whip to pass
    the application
  • Local residents took the matter to the High Court
    on the ground of abuse of process
  • The Court found in favour of the residents

18
Nolan Report
  • The Committee on Standards in Public Life was
    established by John Major, the then Prime
    Minister in October 1994
  • Chairmanship of Lord Nolan
  • to consider standards of conduct in various
    areas of public life, and to make
    recommendations

19
The Seven Principles of Public Life
  • Selflessness
  • Holders of public office should take decisions
    solely in terms of the public interest. They
    should not do so in order to gain financial or
    other material benefits for themselves, their
    family, or their friends.
  • Integrity
  • Holders of public office should not place
    themselves under any financial or other
    obligation to outside individuals or
    organisations that might influence them in the
    performance of their official duties.
  • Objectivity
  • In carrying out public business, including making
    public appointments, awarding contracts, or
    recommending individuals for rewards and
    benefits, holders of public office should make
    choices on merit.

20
The Seven Principles of Public Life
  • Accountability
  • Holders of public office are accountable for
    their decisions and actions to the public and
    must submit themselves to whatever scrutiny is
    appropriate to their office.
  • Openness
  • Holders of public office should be as open as
    possible about all the decisions and actions that
    they take. They should give reasons for their
    decisions and restrict information only when the
    wider public interest clearly demands.
  • Honesty
  • Holders of public office have a duty to declare
    any private interests relating to their public
    duties and to take steps to resolve any conflicts
    arising in a way that protects the public
    interest.
  • Leadership
  • Holders of public office should promote and
    support these principles by leadership and
    example.

21
Standards of Conduct in Local Government in
England, Scotland and Wales. Third Report of the
Committee on Standards in Public Life
  • a clear code of conduct for councillors developed
    by each individual council within a framework
    approved by Parliament
  • that each council should have a Standards
    Committee to deal with matters of propriety and
    to have powers to recommend to the full council
    that errant members should be disciplined
  • the creation of new Local Government Tribunals to
    act as independent arbiters on matters relating
    to councils' codes of conduct and to hear appeals
    from councillors and others
  • the involvement of the courts in imposing
    penalties for misconduct, to replace surcharge
  • following consultation, a new statutory offence
    of misuse of public office.

22
Declarations of Interest
  • a public register of interests covering the
    pecuniary interests of a councillor, close family
    members and members of his or her household and
    non-pecuniary interests which relate to the
    councillor's service on bodies with which the
    council is associated.
  • all relevant interests should be declared at
    meetings. There should be a graded response up to
    and including withdrawal from the meeting by the
    councillor where there is a real danger of bias,
    but in lesser cases it should be possible for a
    councillor to participate in the meeting and, in
    some cases, to vote

23
Members of Planning Committees
  • All members of an authority's planning committee
    (or equivalent) should receive training in the
    planning system, either before serving on the
    committee, or as soon as possible after
    appointment to the committee.
  • Planning committees should consider whether their
    procedures are in accordance with best practice,
    and adapt their procedures if necessary, setting
    them out in a code accessible to councillors,
    staff, and members of the public.
  • The Department of the Environment (and the
    Scottish and Welsh Offices) should consider
    whether present legislation on planning
    obligations is sufficiently tightly worded to
    prevent planning permissions from being bought
    and sold. The Departments should continue to
    reduce the time taken for planning appeals to be
    arranged and should set demanding targets to that
    end.

24
Members of Planning Committees
  • Local authorities should adopt rules on openness
    that allow planning agreements to be subject to
    discussion by members of the authority and the
    public. They should not restrict access to
    supporting documents except where justified by
    the requirements of commercial confidentiality,
    which should be interpreted narrowly.
  • The Government should require authorities to
    notify the appropriate Secretary of State of all
    planning applications in which they have an
    interest, either in the development or in the
    land, either where the proposed development is
    contrary to the local plan, or has given rise to
    a level of objections regarded by the appropriate
    Secretary of State as substantial.
  • The Government should be more ready to use its
    powers to call in all major planning applications
    handled by an authority where, over a period of
    time, there is substantial public concern about
    that authority's decision-making procedures.

25
Committee on Standards in Public Life
  • http//www.public-standards.gov.uk/

26
Standards Committee local authority
  • Independent members
  • Limited local authority member representation
  • Chaired by an independent member
  • Monitoring Officer provides legal advice
  • Decide on dispensation for members to speak and
    vote on matters where they are perceived to have
    an interest

27
Local Government Ombudsman
  • Sanction and discipline breaches of the Code of
    Conduct
  • Suspend or disqualify members from a local
    authority
  • Planning matters
  • Cannot overturn the decision
  • Determine whether the Authority has acted
    incorrectly and can order the authority to pay
    damages to the complainants.

28
Officers
  • Employees of local authority
  • Posses planning or related qualification
  • Some may have professional planning qualifications

29
Officers
  • Key roles
  • Provide pre-application advice
  • Receive and enter applications onto planning
    register
  • Evaluate application on policy grounds and write
    report
  • Assist in the determination process
  • Communicate decision to applicant
  • Bound by Code of Conduct for Officers

30
Typical structure of Planning Department in Local
Authority
31
Government
  • Responsible for national policy
  • Responsible for national planning system

32
Neighbours
  • Statutory consultees
  • Smaller developments
  • Letter, Signpost, Web
  • Larger developments
  • Newspaper as well
  • Planning register is an open register for all to
    view
  • Only legal advice to officers is exempt

33
Neighbours - issues
  • Relevant
  • What the proposal looks like
  • Traffic
  • Potential parking problems
  • Overlooking
  • Loss of light or privacy
  • Impact on the local environment.
  • Not relevant
  • Possible loss of value
  • Disputes between neighbours
  • Restrictive covenants
  • Ownership
  • Disturbance during construction
  • Party wall issues are a civil matter
  • Comments are available to applicants and the
    public to view

34
Local residents
  • More likely to be an objector rather than
    supporter maintain STATUS QUO
  • Concerned by effect of development on-
  • Own property
  • Issue of specific concern e.g. green,
    conservation
  • Issue of local concern e.g. traffic,
    overdevelopment
  • Sometimes object for the sake of objecting

35
NIMBY
  • Not In My Back Yard
  • In favour of development elsewhere but not in own
    locality

36
PIMBY/YIMBY
  • Please In My Back Yard
  • Yes In My Back Yard

37
BANANA
  • Build Absolutely Nothing Anywhere Near Anything

38
CAVE people
  • Citizens Against Virtually Everything

39
Drawbridge mentality
  • Drawbridge mentality describes the attitude of
    people who inwardly migrate to more exclusive or
    more unspoiled communities and thereafter
    campaign to preserve the tranquillity of that
    community by opposing further inward migration by
    people or businesses and, possibly, any
    development or refurbishment, including plans put
    forward by those already located there
  • Particularly true in National Parks and AONB

40
Developers
  • Private Individuals
  • Builders
  • Building companies
  • Speculators
  • Architects

41
Development process
Identify Objectives
Search for Investment Opportunities
Initial Screen
List Possible Outcomes
Measure Cashflow
THE BIN
Select Investment Projects
Review investment decision
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