Angela Rayner visits Victoria North in Manchester, Ministry of Housing, Communities, and Local Government, c Ministry of Housing, Communities, and Local Government

Angela Rayner, pictured here visiting the Victoria North development in Manchester in July, has announced a series of proposed changes to how planning committees operate. Credit: Ministry of Housing, Communities, and Local Government

Bypassing committees? Govt proposes planning shake-up

Housing applications that comply with local plans could be decided by council planning officers rather than politicised committees according to proposals unveiled by deputy prime minister Angela Rayner yesterday.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer had promised to “modernise” planning committees as part of his Plan for Change. Now, with the release of the Planning Reform Working Paper, we have a better sense of what he meant.

In addition to increasing the decision-making powers of planning officers, government is seeking to create small strategic development committees and to require councillors to be trained prior to joining a planning committee.

National scheme of delegation

Providing housebuilding applications with the ability to bypass committees is part of a proposed “national scheme of delegation”. This would create a standardised approach across England when it comes to what is decided by planning officers and what is decided by planning committees – rather than the current system, where each local authority has its own rules.

A large part of this would centre on local plans. The government is considering allowing projects that comply with development plans to be decided under delegated powers.

Another option Whitehall is weighing is just making planning officers the default decision maker with the exception of when applications deviate from the local plan and are still recommended for approval or when they are submitted by the local authority itself.

The third option would once again see delegation as the default method for approving or rejecting planning applications, but there would be a centrally set, prescriptive list of exceptions that would mean an application would go to committee.

Strategic development committees

The government is flirting with requiring all local authorities to have smaller strategic development committees, like those at Stockport Council and Cheshire East Council. These committees would have members with greater expertise when it comes to how to handle larger applications. They would only be held when there is a strategic development application to be considered.

The working paper has suggested that these committees could be as small as three to five members.

Mandatory training for planning committee members

Certified training would be a requirement for members of planning committees and other key decision-makers, like mayors, as part of the government’s plan. The working paper outlines a curriculum that would include planning legislation, the role of local plans, national planning policy, enforcement, the planning application process, and a code of conduct.

These courses would ideally be held online.

‘About time’

It is not often you get uniformed consensus from the built environment, but on this case every planning professional we reached out to was in favour of the government’s proposals to move towards an increased use of delegated powers for schemes that were compliant with local plans and national planning policy .

Caroline Payne, director at Cheshire-based Emery Planning, welcomed the news. Her group has had a number of projects that were fully plan-compliant, recommended for approval by planning officers, and yet rejected by planning committee.

The government’s proposals could fix that.

“The implications for development in the North West are that this would provide much greater certainty for housebuilders and developers who are looking to obtain permission on an allocated site,” she said.

“Sites could be purchased and/or taken forward with an application in the knowledge that the proposals would not incur the significant costs associated with contesting an appeal against a member overturn,” she continued.

“In turn this should speed up the determination of applications through avoiding the appeal process, reducing costs for the developer and LPA, thus contributing towards the faster delivery of housing and ultimately economic growth.”

Colin Robinson, planning director at Lichfields, has faced similar planning problems to Payne.

“We often face situations in the North of England whereby our client’s planning application has been refused at committee despite being in general accordance with its local plan, with officers declining to defend it at appeal, which can result in costs against the determining authority,” he said.

“Hopefully, Ms Rayner’s proposals will expedite the process and take much of the emotion out of decision making whilst maintaining appropriate professional scrutiny in the best interests of local communities, saving time and money for all involved,” Robinson continued.

He added: “Any government measures that can reduce the uncertainty and inconsistency that sometimes occurs due to inconsistent decision-making by planning committees would be welcome.”

Jeremy Hinds, head of planning for the North at Savills, concurred.

“Planning decisions should be decided on their merits,” he said. “That mantra is frequently stated, but in some cases is lost under a political cloud.

“There is no way of totally escaping the political aspect of the planning process, but either diluting it or creating a new framework by which to understand the political inputs is a good thing,” Hinds continued.

“Once a council has signed up to a development agenda in its local plan it should be bound by those decisions when applications come forward. Having another layer of politically-led decision-making is a cause for frustration and confusion that does not serve the system well.”

Ellie Philcox, director at Euan Kellie Property Solutions, described the government’s proposals as a positive move forward.

For her, one of the most important aspects would be the fact it could give greater certainty around timescales for the delivery of projects. This would help schemes achieve deadlines for planning permissions and starts on site that are often crucial to securing grant funding.

She felt that giving more power to planning officers made sense.

“It is about time that there was greater recognition of the skills of local planning authority officers,” Philcox said. “They’re highly skilled professionals and there should be greater reliance on them in terms of making those important decisions.”

Undemocratic?

Lichfield’s Robinson argued that just because committees would have less say, it did not mean that the public voice would be less heard.

That is because of the fact that local development plans are subject to democratic procedures.

Robinson explained: “This would not avoid democratic accountability, given that the development plan will already have been subjected to considerable scrutiny and public consultation (although ensuring that local residents feel that they have had the opportunity to properly engage with the plan-led system remains a perennial problem).”

Anna Relph, director at Turley, concurred with Robinson.

“If enacted, the proposals will mean that local authorities only have to make the ‘tough’ decisions as to where housing should go once,” she said.

“The local plan process is the right place to make strategic decisions about the location of new development within an area, and to ensure growth is supported by necessary infrastructure provision,” she continued.

“Local plans are subject to extensive consultation and endorsed by elected members. Once a site has been allocated, the approval of detailed matters should be delegated to officers.”

Euan Kellie Property Solutions’ Philcox also contended that bypassing the committee did not mean that the road to planning permission would necessarily be easy for developers.

“Irrespective of if something goes into committee or not, planning is a rigorous process,” she said. “It’s not individuals making decisions – it’s still a very rigorous process of decision making.”

Elaine Field, legal director in Brabners’ property team, said that the government’s proposed changes would mean public consultation is more important than ever.

“Ensuring local people have a voice remains crucial, particularly in areas like the North, where local input is key to protecting and enhancing communities and their identities,” Field said.

“Balancing faster approvals with robust community consultation will be essential to the long-term success of this approach,” she continued.

“To avoid resistance later in the process, the focus on community engagement will need to be enhanced during the development of local plans or at the earliest stages of a specific project. Clear opportunities for public input at these stages will help foster trust and promote a shared sense of ownership over local development.”

There is one possible fatal flaw in the government’s plans, however. The growing emphasis on local plans puts a spotlight on the sheer fact that many councils do not currently have an up-to-date one.

“Even where they do exist, they do not plan for the increased housing figures recently consulted upon by the government (and expected to be finalised in the updated NPPF) to contribute to delivering the 300,000 homes a year nationally,” Relph said.

It will take time and support, she argued, for Northern authorities to get their local plans in order.

Darren Muir, planning director at Pegasus Group, described Labour’s plans as putting things in the right order – but it is not enough to speed up delivery, necessarily.

“It would be fair to say that planning is too democratic,” he argued.

“Allowing applications to be determined by expert planning officers rather than layperson committees is a welcomed change to the system, but the extra time and uncertainty of committee-level decisions is only a small issue to the current planning process,” Muir continued.

“A scheme on an allocated site that aligns with the local plan will generally be approved, even at committee. The difficulty is the several months (or years) it takes to get an application to the decision-making stage. Generally a welcome development, but we remain cautiously optimistic for some more far-reaching reform.”

Your Comments

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The current system of giving all the power to clueless councillors has produced one of the most chronic housing shortages and the most stagnant economy the UK has ever seen. The scale of the challenge ahead is unprecedented because of the small-minded councillors that have created this system by opposing much-needed homes simply to keep themselves in power come the next local election. They have brought this on themselves and should really be ashamed of the decline they have brought about in their local communities as a result.

I’ve yet to read the report but from the looks of this article this is a very positive step. It will streamline the UK’s planning system and take the uncertainty out of developing the homes and economic growth we need. Plus, the more power taken away from myopic councillors the better.

By Anonymous

That’s all very well, but sometimes you WANT an application to go to committee.Sometimes, if the arguments are finely balanced, officers will want to refuse, but Councillors may give added weight to e.g. community benefits, outweighing disadvantages and triggering approval. I’ve done precisely that on a scheme in St Albans.

By Edge

Good because LCC haven’t got a clue what day it is.

By Anonymous

Rayner is playing politics with democracy. The Starmer Playbook

By Anonymous

No “politicized” commitees? Democracy is daft. Rule by professionals is better. Proof? See how my Soviet Union industrialized within 10 years and beat Nazi Germany within 4 years. The UK takes a quarter of a century to build a new train line, and fails. Yours, Uncle Joe.

By Anonymous

Clueless councillors pandering to their electorate is certainly part of the problem. But no government is going to solve the chronic housing shortage faced by this country until it realises that the biggest issue, by far, is the continued assumption that the failed approach of relying on the private sector to deliver is somehow going to miraculously start working. The only times in history that this country has ever got anywhere near meeting housing need – in the periods immediately following both world wars – has been when it is the state delivering that vast majority of it. The market led approach of the past 50 years – and the chronic housing shortage that it has resulted in – has categorically failed to do anything other than inflate house prices and the market value of housebuilders. If you want to deliver enough housing to meet need then the state needs to do the heavy lifting. Until a government recognises that and acts accordingly all we will get is more of the same, with increased failed attempts at rebalancing things at great cost to society and the environment.

By and by

So Liebour wish to give more power to un-elected beurocrats . That just about sums up how un-democratic and dictotorial they are . And also how utterly clueless they are . First they stopped us from speaking our minds about issues unless we agree with them , and now they wish to crush our rights even further . Liebour is killing this country.

By Anonymous

I support delegating more powers to officers in principle, but the whole criteria of whether an application complies with policy makes no sense as that is the point of officers/planning committee. For example, transport is often a point of contention and the key criteria for that is severity which is largely subjective (i.e. you can model an increase in queuing, but who says when that becomes ‘severe’).

By Anonymous

This proposal – unless there are safeguards not already briefed – would further incentivise councillors who dislike development in the green belt to delay and dither over the creation of a local development plan, as once a local plan is in place, the decisions will be taken out of their hands, and will be harder to use as local election ‘wedge’ issues. I hope Rayner et al have seen this coming and will ensure that, in the proposed national scheme of delegation, not having an up to date local plan leads to all planning decisions (with appropriate exceptions) being delegated to officers – rather than none!

By UnintendedConcequences

LCC is a classic example of all that is wrong with UK planning . A ludicrous policy against tall buildings in the city forced on us by one individual . The planning committee who are completely without built environment experience or professional / academic educations pontificate on significantly important issues mostly to the detriment of the city. For me the whole process should be professionalised and taken away from ward councillors who know nothing but have an opinion on everything . Its a huge problem for the city and one of the main causes why we have become a backwater particularly against the business friendly and progressive Manchester.

By Paul M

About time! Having Cllrs with little or no training or planning knowledge making decisions of applications instead of trained professionals has always been a joke. Completely politicised a process that shouldn’t be political. Imagine that happening in any other industry?! The most important part of the process is the development of the Local Plan, for which the public and Cllrs will have a say. The public and Cllrs can also comment on planning applications. Therefore, plenty of democracy still in the system, just takes away a lot of the often ridiculous decisions that most planning committees make.

By Anonymous

The UK is not short of planning permissions for housing which are being sat on by the big house builders.

As others have said, the problem is less the planning system than the reliance on big, listed volume house builders who have no incentive to increase production as to do so would impact sales prices and reduce their margins, profitability and bonus schemes.

By Anonymous

The red herring of planning allied to the idea of giving the final say to Metro Mayors, most of whom were imposed on their electorate and have less knowledge of the planning system than most councillors.

By Anonymous

    Part of the changes proposed would require training on planning policy for councillors and metro mayors, as an fyi

    By Julia Hatmaker

Planning inertia caused by local councillors pandering to the demands of a vocal minority needs addressing. It’s about time we had a Government who will take on vested interests.

By Anonymous

Having submitted many reasonable applications in councils around the UK this is absolutely needed. As soon as you get outside of major cities, planning boards are rife with ignorance. Small councils lose hundreds of thousands a year in lost appeals because planning board refuse applications against officers opinions.

By Anonymous

NPPF rumoured for Thursday.

By CG

Paul M – “ward councillors who know nothing but have an opinion on everything”. Absolutely nailed it there, that is exactly the problem.

By Anonymous

…refer back to the thread on Trafford Planners and their unbeliveably obstructive and obsfucative approach to dealing with entirely appropriate developments. Completely agree about clueless and myopic committee members; however, unless you are a “trusted partner”, I’m not sure it’s the game changer we might hope for…just sayin….

By anonymous

Anon 12.555……..the key words are trusted and partner.ie those more likely to develop in accordance with council policy……..just saying….

By Anonymous

Trafford will be the most prolific Borough with the new developments..can Stockport go higher than..22 floors..apparently the council don’t want a Benidorm skyline..

By Anonymous

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