Written and published by Simon Callier

Showing posts with label National Infrastructure Planning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National Infrastructure Planning. Show all posts

Sunday 8 October 2023

The Purpose of National Infrastructure Planning

National Infrastructure Planning ensures that local community development happens in the right place at the right time to benefit local communities and the national economy, allowing national resources to be effectively coordinated to ensure their appropriate and efficient use.
 
It is critical that national and local infrastructure planning is coordinated to avoid a conflict of interest from the needs and issues of local areas being unnecessarily impacted by the needs of the UK.  
 
National and local infrastructure planning plays a critical role in identifying what local development is needed, where, and what areas need to be protected or enhanced and assessing whether a proposed development is suitable. The UK government’s national planning reforms:
  • Prioritise planning that enables sustainable development, delivering homes and jobs to communities vital to local economies.
  • Simplify national and local infrastructure planning.
  • Ensure that local planning decisions are taken at the lowest level with the involvement of local inhabitants.
  • Provision strong protections to enhance and conserve the UK's historic and natural rich environment.
The National Planning Policy Framework, published by the UK government in March 2012, was updated numerous times in July 2018, February 2019, July 2021, and September 2023, emphasising the political importance of national and local planning.
 
The Planning Policy Framework aims to balance the critical and sensitive needs of national and local planning policies that cover the social, environmental, and economic aspects of infrastructure development. Its policies are considered in preparing local infrastructure plans and have a significant impact in deciding planning applications.
 
However, the policy does not dictate how local and neighbourhood plans should be written or the outcome of planning decisions locally. The policy provides a framework for producing distinctive and unique regional and neighbourhood plans and development orders that more accurately meet the needs of local communities.
 
As well as making national planning policy easily accessible, the National Planning Policy Framework serves many vital areas, such as:
  • Providing a clear link for national and local infrastructure plans to be jointly considered through an integrated planning system.
  • Highlighting the legal necessity for local planning applications to be considered in terms of national planning, which must be decided to coordinate both national and local planning requirements unless other essential or material factors indicate otherwise.
  • Ensuring that sustainable development is emphasised to ensure local planning authorities identify and plan for their areas' community needs, taking the needs of the environmental impacts of neighbourhood development into account by prioritising planning applications that deliver sustainable infrastructure projects.
  • Prioritising the requirement to achieve sustainable development by providing safeguards to conserve and enhance the valuable natural and historic environment.
The Nationally Significant Infrastructure Projects document is a separate national strategy planning policy framework and legislation for major national infrastructure projects, such as significant transport or power generation schemes.
 
The principle aim of this strategy is to streamline decision-making for these complex and substantial planning and development projects to make it easier, fairer, and more efficient for local communities and national planning applicants.
 
A succession of UK government Policy Statements has set the national policy for the different types of infrastructure projects, placing thresholds above which specific infrastructure development projects are deemed strategic and substantially necessary to be examined nationally.
 
The Planning Inspectorate, sponsored by the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities, is an executive agency that deals with national planning-related and specialist casework, infrastructure planning applications, examinations of local plans and other planning-related issues such as planning appeals in England.
 
The principal responsibilities of the Planning Inspectorate are to administer planning applications for significant national infrastructure projects on behalf of the Secretary of State for the environment. The Inspectorate typically examines project applications to allow recommendations to be made to the relevant Secretary of State, who will decide whether to refuse or grant infrastructure planning applications.
 
For example, the Planning Inspectorate considers infrastructure planning applications for overhead power line construction projects above 132kV. However, before development consent is granted, planning applications are administered by the Planning Inspectorate but considered by the local planning authority, whose input is considered by the Planning Inspectorate before a final planning decision is made. Lessor planning applications for overhead lines would be determined under the provisions of the Electricity Act 1989, as amended.
 
A local planning authority objecting to a national planning proposal will lead to a public inquiry by an independent inspector, with the Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change making a final decision after considering the inspector's report. As part of the decision-making process, the views of the local planning authority, local people, statutory bodies and other interested parties can be considered.
 
Until recently, strategies to provide for the needs of larger than-local areas or planning across local planning authority boundaries were undertaken predominantly through regional strategy. These plans covered multiple local planning authority areas. They imposed specific requirements on the local communities within those areas, for example, the number of new houses they would need to accommodate.
 
However, planning is more effective when the people it affects are integral to the process. The government abolished this regional planning tier through the Localism Act 2011 to return plan-making to local communities.
 
Outside London, Regional Strategies no longer form part of the statutory development plan, apart from a minimal number of residual policies which remain essential. These residual policies are only relevant in determining planning applications if these residual policies apply.
 
In London, one of the Mayor's responsibilities is to produce a strategic plan for the capital. Local community plans must align in general conformity with the strategic plan, which will continue to guide decisions on planning applications by London borough councils and the Mayor.
 
Most development has an impact on or benefits from infrastructure such as roads, schools and open spaces. Therefore, growth should contribute towards mitigating its effects on such infrastructure.
 
Local planning authorities can place a Community Infrastructure Levy, a charge that sponsors of new developments pay based on the size and type of development. However, exemptions are granted for specific development categories. The money raised through the Levy can fund the infrastructure needed to support the area's development.
 
Local planning authorities can set different rates for different regions, types and scales of development, including low or zero levy rates, to ensure that the charge makes development viable. Local planning authorities must first produce a 'charging schedule' to charge the Levy. The charging schedule for the Levy is often developed alongside a Local Plan and will be independently examined.
 
A 15% share of the Levy is given to the parish council where the development occurred to ensure that communities share the benefits and costs of development. If a neighbourhood plan or neighbourhood development order, including a community right-to-build order, is in place, up to 25% of the Levy may be passed to the parish council to encourage local communities to plan for their area proactively.
 
Where there is no parish council, the local planning authority will retain these funds to spend in consultation with the community. Planning obligations are commonly upheld to mitigate the impact of proposed developments under the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 (as amended), principally utilising section 106.
 
A local planning authority may ask a developer to provide local infrastructure to mitigate the impact of the development upon the local community by delivering road improvements, providing social housing, or funding additional services. However, any requested planning obligation must be tested to ensure that it is:
  • Acceptable in planning terms to make the development viable.
  • Directly relates to the proposed development.
  • Reasonably and somewhat related to the development in terms of scale.
The government is committed to tackling the pressing need for housing. It has introduced several other measures to encourage developers, investors, and councils to build houses. The central government pays the "New Homes Bonus" grant to local planning authorities to provide homes in their area, whether through building new homes, converting existing buildings to residential uses or bringing long-term empty homes back into use. The relevant local planning authority can spend the money raised through the New Homes Bonus in any way they feel is appropriate to support services in their area.


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