The report of the
Chief Planning Officer outlined the proposals by the Government,
which were out for consultation between 25 July to 18 October 2023,
on implementation of plan-making reforms.
The Head of Strategic Planning and
Principal Planner from City Development, presented the report,
providing Members with the following information:
·
The Government
consultation specially related to proposals regarding plan making,
as part of the Leveling-Up and Regeneration Bill and alongside the
planning reform white paper of 2020.
·
Key points from the
consultation were noted as vision, plan content, shorter and
simpler timeframes, frontloading the process, consultations, access
to information, monitoring and digitalization.
·
Previous consultation
responses had been incorporated and taken into account before the
Government had resubmitted the consultation.
·
The proposals had been
broadly welcomed but had raised some concerns and this Bill formed
part of bigger reforms and plans being taken forward.
Members discussed the following key matters:
-
The 30 month turnaround timeframe was noted to be
short considering the wide scope of debate and consultation that go
alongside complex policy development and adoption. It was noted
that the initial scoping was not included in the 30 month timeframe
and had no attached time limit.
-
The Statement of Community Involvement (SCI) and the
open consultation with the public conducted in Leeds, was
considerable and the response to the Government will outline this
as a concern as well as querying whether the SCI will remain or be
replaced by project initiation documents.
-
It was confirmed that the reform was proposed to
cover all development plan policy, including Site Allocation Plans,
however it was unclear whether it will also cover neighbourhood
policy.
-
As the development and adoption of policy can be
delayed by factors outside of the Council’s control, the
response noted that the 30 month timescale was unreasonable,
especially given the planning system’s resource issues,
within Local Authorities and Planning Inspectorates. Policy
progressed at the pace of the slowest responder.
-
Comments from other Local Authorities had been
similar, and although there was sense in the consultation, the 30
month time frame being unachievable had overshadowed the overall
contents.
-
It was not known whether sanctions will be in place
for not meeting timeframes, but the gateways will be a point of
determining achievability and a request had been made for the same
Planning Inspectorate to deal with each policy development, to
allow consistency.
-
It was outlined that a specific timeframe the
Council could propose to work to had not been included within the
response but given the complexity and scale of the process in
Leeds, it was difficult to define a plan time frame.
-
As part of the Council’s response, it had
noted gateway 3 was an appropriate time to pause the clock on the
timeframe and allow consultation to reach agreements with
Government as to much time was required to complete the
process.
-
The gateways were to frontload and de-risk the
process, allowing early contact with a Planning Inspectorate to
encourage peer support and identification of unnecessary work at an
earlier stage.
-
It was unclear whether Supplementary Planning
Documents were to be replaced, although the intention was thought
to allow new supplementary guidance to be developed alongside
headline policies. Further information on this issue was to be
sought.
-
Digital consultation, although useful and saved time
and resources, it will raise issues of exclusion. The Council still
intended to hold open, public engagement and provide
feedback.
-
Neighbourhood plans were noted to be complex and had
a requirement to conform with the generality of reasonable public
comments. Further details on the bills impact upon neighbourhood
plans was needed.
-
Members requested that the updated response be
provided back to them prior to it being sent to
Government.
RESOLVED – That the contents of the
report, along with Members comments regarding the Councils
consultation response, which will be sent by the Chief Planning
Officer following further consultation with the Executive Member
for Sustainable Development & Infrastructure, be
noted.