how localism and experience from pioneers is playing out in rural england; key issues, lessons and...
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How localism and experience from pioneers is playing out in rural England;
key issues, lessons and learning
Ivan Annibal
Origins of Presentation
• My thinking about localislm
• Some factual information and a presentation on front-runner impressions partly from a PAS presentation
• Outcome of the Dawlish Inspection
• Rural Insight Survey 2
• Bristol Accord and ACRE on sustainability
Philosophical Background
So What’s New?
• The Big Society.... is about liberation –the biggest, most dramatic redistribution of power from elites in Whitehall to the man and woman on the street.’
• Hey you – you’re not their puppet on a string, you can do anything. Its true if you really want to, you can do anything you want to – just like I do!
New Rights and Powers•Community Right to Challenge – to take over a service – has to
listen, agree and procure – CCT 1997•Assets of Community Value – List of assets and the right – when
they come up for sale - to bid for them – Quirk Review 2007• Local Referendums – must take the outcomes into account –
Parish Polls Local Govt Act 1972•Right to approve or veto council tax – No increase 2012/13 –
Capping since 1979•Duty to Cooperate- TINA
Public Services White Paper
• Neighbourhood Councils taking on local services - possible national framework
• Commissioned services - switch the default from one where the state provides the service itself to one where the state commissions the service from a range of diverse providers
• Local commissioning of: customer contact, planning, property, back office services, family support, looked after children, trading and environmental standards
• Employee ownership
Neighbourhood planning aimsThe Government is giving neighbourhoods greater ability to determine the shape of the places
• Empower communities• Neighbourhood led• Light-touch but robust• Flexible - inspire innovation and creativity• Pro-growth - exploring ways of enabling community
supported development• Critical role for local plan in setting strategic context• New basis for partnership work with local authority
Neighbourhood Planning mechanisms• Neighbourhood Development Plans: Communities can
write a plan which, if passed, becomes part of the statutory planning framework for the area
• Neighbourhood Development Orders: Communities can agree to approve a particular development or type of development without the need for planning permission
• Community Right to Build: Whilst maintaining the principle of the green belt, communities will be able to develop land subject to doing the work and passing examination and referendum (via an NDO)
The basic conditions
A Neighbourhood Plan must:– have appropriate regard to national policy– generally conform to the strategic elements of the
local plan– be compatible with EU obligations– and be compatible with human rights obligations
A Neighbourhood Development Order must also:– Have regard to the protection and enhancement of
listed buildings and conservation areas
The Plan• The Forum/Parish Council has to
– publicise the proposals in the plan– bringing them to the attention of a majority of those who live, work or operate business in the neighbourhood area.
– publish contact details for representations and information about the proposed timetable for consultation
– consult any statutory consultees whose interests are affected
• Minimum 6 week consultation period
The independent check/examination
• Examiner must have appropriate qualifications, experience and meet other requirements in Act (e.g. independent)
• Appointed by LA but agreed with parish council/forum
• Looks at written representations and only if necessary will hold a public hearing
• Limited to considering whether proposals passed regulatory requirements (e.g. consultation) and whether neighbourhood plan/order meets ‘basic conditions’ (e.g. national policy)
• Report which summarises their findings.
Front runner work
• Over 100 authorities working on approaching 200 plans and development orders (waves 1-5)
• Mixture of parished & non-parished areas, commercial and residential
• DCLG/PAS/5 funded groups• All shapes and sizes – comprehensive, England
wide, coverage
Headline issues from front runner programme
• Enthusiasm – this is seen as a good thing• Building on existing community groupings and
community work (parish focus)• Not anti-growth……..but not always pro-
growth either• Not always clear why a plan is being done, or
what it will deliver• Differences between parished and unparished
areas
Front runner issues
• Housing: – growth (how much and where)– bringing empty/inadequate homes back into use– affordable housing provision– retirement village– self build
Front runner issues
• Inner city development pressures • Town centres• Preserving the character of neighbourhoods • Local employment • Physical & economic regeneration• Lack of infrastructure • Transport issues • Rural isolation
Issues for a local authority• Aligning with current plan-making work/adding value• Understanding the ‘conform with the strategic
elements’ of the plan - especially if there isn’t one• Resourcing – ‘advise and support’• Cross boundary practicalities• Arbitrating on neighbourhood areas and competing
forums• Ward councillor interest (especially in parished areas)• Getting the community interested• Behaviour change – ‘letting go’
Dawlish
• Consulted on draft plan Sept 2011 – 400 responses
• Prepared by mixture of people: council staff, town and county councillors, Conservation Trust, Youth Service, police, residents associations and others
• Steering group of 25 individuals with different interests
• Will inform the Teignbridge core strategy
Dawlish Vision and actions
• Sets out a vision for Dawlish over next 20 years – meeting housing need (and where), jobs and infrastructure
• 10 actions based around providing homes, job creation, supporting tourism, community facilities, public realm, town centre regeneration, improved accessibility, climate change mitigation, landscape and heritage, design quality
Dawlish Depression!!![It] reflects the NPPF by providing a positive approach to plan-led growth to deliver sustainable development with the aim of producing clear economic, social and environmental benefits. However because of its timing in relation to the production of strategic policies it is not possible to demonstrate that the provision for housing growth is based on an objective assessment of housing need. This is a key flaw…which cannot be remedied until the Teignbridge District Council’s Core strategy/Local Plan is settled.
While the DPNP is in broad conformity with the strategic policy of the Preferred Options Report, there are substantive differences in terms of both housing and employment land. While it may be possible to resolve these, particularly as the strategic policies remain to be settled, as currently drafted the two documents are in clear conflict….
While it is not a requirement that neighbourhood plans pass the ‘test of soundness’, my assessment ..has found that it is neither positively prepared nor justified.
Forerunner 5: City of RiponRipon City Council will be leading the work on a new neighbourhood plan with other community groups from the City of Ripon and with the local planning authority Harrogate Borough Council. The new neighbourhood forum will involve members from Ripon City Council, the Ripon Chamber of Commerce, the Civic Society, Greater Ripon Improvement Partnership and the Chapter of Ripon Cathedral. Ripon will also be working with neighbouring parishes such as Sharow and Littlethorpe.Issues to be looked at include:
•revitalising the City Centre •town centre management and use of empty shops •the provision of community infrastructure •taking advantage of opportunities for tourism and business growth •new neighbourhood development orders to speed up development
Forerunner 5: Lubenham
Lubenham Parish Council will be leading the preparation of a new neighbourhood development plan assisted by Harborough District Council. Lubenham is a large parish west of Market Harborough containing Lubenham village, HMP Gartree and an area of land identified for 1,000 houses to accommodate the growth of Market Harborough. The parish council wants to use the opportunity afforded by neighbourhood planning to help assess options and plan in detail where and how new housing development will occur in the parish. This approach is supported by the district council.
NPs Will be most effective where…
• There is a recently adopted core strategy;• There is an organised community group already• There is an issue to address (what’s the problem you
are trying to solve?)• A recognised need to plan for that development;• A desire to help shape the development • Good relationship between council (officers and
councillors) and group (collaborative democracy)• There is some form of resourcing
How Rural Are We?
• ONS states 27% of England’s population is rural.• Using the OECD definition, about 10% of England’s
population is considered rural.• Is rural just a spatial concept?• Only 1.1% of England is taken up for housing.• Why do we cherish green-space so much?• Is it because we have a “cottage garden” view of rurality
because we are so urban focused in our habits and lifestyles?
• Is so what does that mean for those who determine what happens in rural England? – a charter to preserve or a means of stifling development in terms of planning??
Why communities will want one• Statutory plan• Set the ground rules for development in the
area• More detailed policy than might exist in the LDF• Specify design quality• Certainty (via NDOs)• Conserve heritage and local character• Bring community together??? Or splitting it
apart???
Ongoing Dissonance
• Town and Country Planning Act 1947 nationalised the countryside
• To date too fluid a policy environment for local planning to work
• Some districts working off plans over a decade out of date, because the music never stopped long enough to meaningfully change them
• Often an in-balance between local wants and needs and the evidence or at least straightforward access to the evidence
• Planners often misinterpret the rural evidence – esp in terms of settlement hierarchies
• An in-balance between statutory adoption process and the “essential vernacular”
• Can a populist approach to planning overcome the technocrats who make our decisions for us or the wealthy “rural picklers?”
Rural Manifestations
• Large Parishes have a head start in terms of experience and structure
• Joining up smaller geographies to develop meaningful and properly resourced plans will be difficult
• The experience for smaller places can be: costly, complicated, attritional and ultimately unfulfilling
• We lose a focus on wider community led planning at our peril – the economy is the issue not the plan!
Rural Insight Survey 2012 – 1613 responses (57%)
A Vision of a Sustainable Community – Bristol Accord 2005
Key: Process OutcomeOutput
The Community Action Plan
Community activists
Parish Council support
Community finance
1. Community Led Plan process 2. Implementation route map through Big Society mechanisms – ACRE 2010
Research the solutions
Gain volunteers
Research needs & priorities
Involve external stakeholders
Raise community finance
Community shop
Affordable housing
New village hall
Renewable energy scheme
Allotments/ community farm
Open space
Local Housing Trust OR community-supported development scheme
Community shop
Community buy out
Assets of Community Value
Wildlife area
Community pub
Heritage building
Open space
Negotiate with public service agencies
Right to challenge
Lunch club
Transport scheme
Youth club
IT suite
Clean room in village hall for outreach healthcare
Good neighbour scheme
Identify options and funding sources
My Advice
• Start by thinking about everything – not just “the stone in the shoe”
• Revisit or incorporate the community plan
• Take the opportunity to widen the community engagement in the process not just the referendum via the Neighbourhood Forum
• Be clear on the timescales, costs and risks – because, once the genie is out of the bottle.....
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