NHF greets Committee view on ‘botched’ reforms


The National Housing Federation (NHF) has welcomed the publication of a Select Committee report into the Government’s ‘botched’ reforms of the planning system.

The all party Commons Communities and Local Government Committee has published its report after its Inquiry and has concluded that the intended abolition of regional spatial planning strategies leaves a vacuum at the heart of the English planning system which could have profound social, economic and environmental consequences set to last for many years.

 

The Committee warns the Government that it must act quickly to bring forward appropriate transitional arrangements compliant with the existing law for the period before Regional Spatial Strategies (RSSs) are abolished. It also warns that the hiatus in planning created by the abolition of RSSs will hamper the UK’s economic recovery and delay new house building. The Committee is also concerned that the Government’s proposals may be inimical to the plan-led system on which planning in this country is supposed to be based.

Meanwhile the National Housing Federation says:

 

‘The select committee conducted an in-depth inquiry into the impact of the abolition of regional spatial strategies (RSS) and the likely impact of the new homes bonus, the Government’s flagship policy to encourage local communities to support plans for new homes.

 

Their report, which quotes Federation evidence extensively, concludes that the ‘botched revocation’ of  the RSS ‘leaves a vacuum at the heart of the English planning system.’

 

The Federation, which represents England’s housing associations, has been lobbying hard for the robust and consistent assessment of housing need by local authorities to be at the heart of the new localised planning system.

 

In response to the select committee’s report, Federation chief executive David Orr said: “The select committee’s report echoes the Federation’s warnings about the Government’s hasty and damaging dismantling of the planning system before it was able to put anything in its place. ? However with 4.5 million people in England in housing need, the priority now must be to ensure the new localised planning system effectively delivers new affordable homes.

 

The Government must heed the committee’s recommendations to support robust and consistent assessment of housing need by councils.  This will mean providing help for over-stretched planning departments and a stronger obligation for councils to work together to meet the overall housing need in each part of England. And as the Committee recommends, revisions are needed for the new homes bonus to provide adequate incentives for new affordable homes.

 

The National Housing Federation will keep working with the Government to ensure the new planning system delivers the new homes that are so desperately needed.”

National Housing Federation: LINK


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