neighbourhood plans dave chetwyn managing director, urban vision enterprise cic planning adviser,...
TRANSCRIPT
Neighbourhood Plans
Dave ChetwynManaging Director, Urban Vision Enterprise CICPlanning Adviser, LocalityVice Chair, National Planning ForumChair, Historic Towns ForumPlanning Chair, Civic Voice
Introduction
Localism Act
Elements of Neighbourhood Planning
Neighbourhood Planning
Neighbourhood Development Plans
Neighbourhood Development Orders
Community Right to Build Orders
Policy
} Planning Permission
Deciding to Produce a Neighbourhood Plan
Benefits of Neighbourhood Plans
Statutory status – greater influence over planning decisions.
Focus on neighbourhood rather than district
Can modify Local Plan policy.
Community-led.
Possible influence on other council activities.
Opportunity to specify which sites will be developed.
Begins a dialogue with a range of organisations.
Can encourage community projects and self-build initiatives.
Making the Decision
Project Plan
What, when, who, costs
Scope and Content
One policy Comprehensive set of policies
What difference do you want to make?
What in the Local Plan to you want to modify?
No point in just repeating what the Local Plan says.
Process
Process
Local Policy
Regional Spatial Strategy
Local Plan
Core Strategy
Supplementary Documents
Area Action Plans
Neighbourhood Development Plans
} Statutory Development Plan
The Basic Conditions
Have appropriate regard to national policy.
Contribute to the achievement of sustainable development.
Be in general conformity with the strategic policies in the development plan for the local area.
Be compatible with EU obligations.
In addition, NDOs and CRtBOs must have regard to the protection and enhancement of listed buildings and conservation areas.
The Basic Conditions
Getting Started
Neighbourhood Area
Determining the Area
What is a neighbourhood – criteria?
Publicise the process
Core neighbourhood / optional areas
Speak to people in different parts of the area
Contact local groups
Discuss with local authority
Identify clear physical boundaries
Consult
Possible Approaches
Resident association area(s)
High Street/local centre and environs
Housing estate
Village/settlement
University and environs
Town centre/City centre
Administrative boundaries
Conservation area
Business park
Getting the Area Designated
Submit:
•map of area•statement explaining the area•statement on body making application
Business Areas
Designated by local authority
Area has to be wholly or predominantly business in nature
Allows business people to vote in referendum
Qualifying Bodies
Town or Parish Council Neighbourhood Forum
(areas with no parish council)
5 Year duration
Requirements for a Neighbourhood Forum
Express purpose of promoting or improving the social, economic and environmental wellbeing of an area that consists of or includes the neighbourhood area concerned
Membership open to:People living in the areaPeople working in the area Elected members for the area
Minimum of 21 members from above groups
Reasonable steps to secure one of each.
Membership drawn from different places in the area.
Purpose reflects the character of the area in general terms.
Getting the Forum Designated
Submit:
•name of proposed neighbourhood forum;•written constitution;•name of neighbourhood area and map;•contact details one neighbourhood forum member;•statement on neighbourhood forum.
Democratic Legitimacy
Parish/Town Council
Elected Body
Election every 4 years on wide range of issues
Neighbourhood Forum
Self-appointed body
Need to reflect diversity, character and inclusivity of area
Community Engagement(Broad range of issues and detail)
Referendum(Yes/No on entire plan)
Community-led Plans
Qualifying Body
Partners Key stakeholders Volunteers
Wider community
Duty to Support
• Making data and maps available.• Identifying key local strategic policies from the
Local Plan.• Advising on relevant national policies/guidance• Sharing information on key contacts,
stakeholders, etc. • Making available venues and helping to arrange
community engagement activities.• Checking the plan prior to formal submission.• Providing professional/technical support, such as
assistance in laying out and illustrating a plan and writing plan policies.
• Providing members for neighbourhood forums or more informal working groups.
• Setting up a neighbourhood planning web page on the local authority’s website.
Evidence Base
Why is the Evidence Base Important?
Understanding the area
Identifying issues
Identifying need
Identifying trends
Identifying pressures
Informing policy and proposals
Making realistic assumptions
Things You Need to Know
Demographic – current and trends
Socio-economic data and trends
Environmental issues – flooding, air quality, etc.
Designations (heritage, landscape, wildlife, etc.)
Transport – services, capacity, usage
Infrastructure – capacity, fitness for purpose, need
Housing – stock (type, tenure, condition), need
Land uses, development sites
Building the Evidence Base
Proportionate approach
Don’t get overwhelmed!
Recent and robust
Use Local Plan evidence base
Seek help
Involve other organisations
Existing Evidence
The LDF, including core strategyOther local authority plans and strategiesSocio-economic data (e.g. census)Technical reports (land, flooding, etc).Transport studies Strategic Housing Market AssessmentsStrategic Housing Land Availability Assessments.Conservation area appraisals Buildings-at-risk surveys and Landscape character studies.Statutory list (listed buildings and scheduled ancient monuments)Details of other environmental protection designations (TPOs, SSSIs, etc.)Plans from other public bodies or statutory undertakers.Community plans, parish plans and village design statement.Libraries, archives, web sites.
Neighbourhood-Level Evidence
EnvironmentalPlace-checkHeritage auditConservation Area AppraisalsLocal ListsUrban Design AnalysisOpen space survey & analysis
EconomicBusiness surveysVacancy / floorspace surveyAvailable sites surveyLand values
Social/CommunityHousing needs surveyHousing condition surveyAudit of community facilitiesBuilding for Life Assessment
InfrastructureTransport linkagesStakeholder engagement(statutory undertakers, schools, etc.)Transport capacity analysisTraffic / pedestrian flow surveys
Engaging with the Community
Why Community Engagement is Important
Statutory requirements (including in Localism Act)
Developing political consensus
Developing the evidence base (front loading)
Better informed outcomes (community know their own place best)
Realistic and deliverable plans/policies
Maintaining public confidence and support
Avoiding conflict, delay, cost
Democratic deficit
Statutory Requirement
Publicise the neighbourhood area (6 weeks)
Publicise the neighbourhood forum application (6 weeks)
Pre-submission consultation (6 weeks)
Submission of plan publicity (6 weeks)
Referendum
Profile and Awareness Raising
Local Partnerships
Third Sector – disabled, BME, aged, civic, environment, etc.
Private Sector – chamber of trade/commerce, etc.
Education – School council, university, etc.
Public sector – councils, health bodies, etc.
Consultation Comes First!
Capacity Building
Everyday Experience
Specialist Knowledge
Intensive Capacity Building
Minimal Capacity Building
Participation or Tokenism
Outcomes
Access to Specialist Support/Enabling
Relevant, Stimulating and Fun!
Being Realistic – Managing Expectations
Planning
Targeting
Accessible
Timing
Media
Location
Format
Unintimidating
Feedback
What Not to Do
The stand-in-the-library approach
The talking at people at a public meeting approach
The consultant-producing-options approach
The publish-and-defend approach
The boring-people-to-a-point-of-unconsciousness approach
The people-are-too-stupid approach
The outcomes-predetermined approach
Conclusions
Key Points
Statutory development plan – about the use and development of land.
Parish/community-led – you produce the plan
You decide on the scope of the plan
Need for a robust and proportionate evidence base and
Early and effective community engagement is essential
Must meet the Basic Conditions.