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Published byHugo Scott Modified over 9 years ago
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Land Reform – Housing and Regeneration
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Land Reform Review Land Reform Review Group established by Ministers 2012 LRRG Report ‘Land of Scotland and the Common Good’ published May 2014 Makes 60+ Recommendations
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The Nine Housing and Regeneration Recommendations Land Ownership – Modernise Compulsory Purchase legislation – Right of Pre-emption for SG / LAs New Housing – Establish Housing Land Corporation – Housing Land Corporation – Rural focus
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Cont’d Urban Renewal – Introduce Compulsory Sale Order (CSO) – Community Bodies able to request CSO – Majority Land Assembly Measure – Urban Partnership Zone – Scottish Government to support greater emphasis on public interest led development
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Scottish Government Scoping Exercise Determined that : No data could be reliably used to understand scale and nature of the problems Potential for existing systems to be improved Unable to conclude recommendations were actually needed Advice to Ministers, more focused and evidenced based consultation
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Scottish Government Scoping Exercise Response: Agreed consultation way forward Willing to legislate in next Parliament if conclusions from consultation support
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Issues identified Do we understand the extent of development problems to enable us to meet the gap between supply and need? Are the recommendations the right means to resolving blockages? Are some answers already there in good practice and achievements but sharing and dissemination is the problem? Can we talk to those who have the knowledge and experience to obtain substantive evidence?
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Process Series of geographical meetings and sectorial meetings to discuss and gather evidence Invite lists for geographical meetings were people in the public and private sectors involved in housing development and regeneration delivery Glasgow, Edinburgh, Aberdeen, Dundee, Inverness and Troon 35 attendees on average per meeting Set agenda Collation of evidence and views
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Process Practical examples of land assembly projects on the agenda – three per meeting – wide range – positive and negative People then split into three groups to discuss the recommendations as per the categories in the Report -Land Ownership -Urban Renewal -New Housing Series of questions round the recommendations Reconvened to discuss views and opinions Revisited examples to see if adoption of the recommendations would have made any difference
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Process Sectorial meetings with: Infrastructure providers Homes for Scotland Law Society’s Rural Affairs and Land Reform Committees RICS – valuers, land agents and surveyors Heads of Planning Scotland Community developers Opportunity to review outcomes from the geographical meetings
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Evidence and Views Nature and scale of the problem and barriers to development Data available, but not meaningful Generous supply of land, but definition of effective? Land values, site viability, finance, market conditions and infrastructure provision – major barriers Planning, joined-up thinking between services
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Evidence and Views Compulsory Purchase system – views on modernisation Current system onerous, costly, uncertain and resource intensive Skills and confidence issue for local authorities Successful use ( or threat of use ! ) by some LAs as is – what can we do without legislation? Scottish Law Commission
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Evidence and Views Right for SG and LA’s to register a statutory right of pre-emption over land where there is a public interest. Already available to communities/agricultural tenants – 2003 Act Uncertain how operate – timescales and certainty of owning land at the end of the process May enable longer term views of development Pilot approach possible
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Evidence and Views Majority Land Assembly Measure – analogies with company law, use in other countries Presupposes positive action by developers to acquire the majority interest – 90% - risk? Confusion with CPO’s If private sector initiated, human rights issues Could eliminate ransom strips? Highland examples
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Evidence and Views Urban Partnership Zones for land pooling or property land readjustment – risk and benefit sharing – JV approach over defined site/area Many examples of effective partnership already – Dundee waterfront - masterplan Can we achieve the intentions with existing good practice? Rural dimension
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Evidence and Views Compulsory Sales Order – public interest trigger for compulsory sale of land at auction – VDLF designation – mixed objectives CPO’s could achieve same thing, but could work for small plots and buildings Strict criteria to justify public interest Concern about use of auction mechanism without reserve price Grass roots community access to land?
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Evidence and Views Housing Land Corporation – acquisition and development of sufficient land to deliver supply Aim supported but may not be right mechanism – one size does not fit all Central unit/resource available to LA’s, backed with real funding and flexible criteria to deliver Bank – conduit for funds for actual delivery by democratically elected LA’s
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Evidence and Views HLC – emphasis on needs of rural communities Even more need to build on good existing practice and innovation – HSCHT and HHA Rural Community Alliance approach allow for community engagement rather than top down Targets may be useful, but rural impacts often not measured in scale alone
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Evidence and Views Public interest led development Public sector leadership/vision/intervention – skills required. Examples – Dundee Waterfront Can take risks and provide confidence Access to finance – grant/borrowing Public objectives through planning for sustainable, high quality places Greenfield versus Brownfield - regeneration
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