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PLANNING OBLIGATIONS Environmental, Housing and Planning Scrutiny Committee 23 rd September 2005.

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Presentation on theme: "PLANNING OBLIGATIONS Environmental, Housing and Planning Scrutiny Committee 23 rd September 2005."— Presentation transcript:

1 PLANNING OBLIGATIONS Environmental, Housing and Planning Scrutiny Committee 23 rd September 2005

2 Introduction What is a planning obligation (s.106 agreement)? Private agreement that is negotiated –How much? what on? spent where? Used to make a development acceptable Planning obligations can be used to: Prescribe the nature of development Compensate for loss or damage created by a development Mitigate a development’s impact Criticisms “opaque”, “slow”, “unfair”, “complex”, “legalistic”

3 Key Features Planning obligations are not taxes They are negotiated private agreements Governed by fundamental principal that planning permission may not be bought or sold They do not require an open book approach of a developer They do require a clear policy regime as to what is required of a given site based on an objective assessment

4 Plan-led System General policies – principles and use UDP / Development Plan Documents Detailed policies SPG / Supplementary Planning Documents Standard charges and formulae (e.g. open space)

5 5 Tests of a Planning Obligation A planning obligation must be: 1.Relevant to Planning 2.Necessary to make the proposed development acceptable in planning terms 3.Directly related to the proposed development 4.Fairly and reasonably related in scale and kind to the proposed development 5.Reasonable in all other aspects.

6 Types of Contribution Financial contributions: Lump sum / phased payments / endowment Maintenance payments May be in perpetuity if predominantly for users of the associated development Where asset intended for wider public use, maintenance costs borne by the authority in which the asset is vested. Pooled contributions Where combined impact of a number of developments creates the need for infrastructure Physical installations

7 Public Involvement Circular 05/2005 The planning register Heads of terms in Committee (Planning Panel) papers Salford In the context of a private negotiation and probity issues, role of…… –Cabinet / Lead Members –Ward Members –Community Committees

8 Issues and Uncertainties Has the obligation been triggered? Developers usually have 3 years to commence development Has the contribution been spent? Developers can claw back their contributions if they are not spent on agreed items within 5 years of receipt Appeals relating to planning obligations If the developer and the LPA cannot agree on the inclusion of a planning obligation. Modification or discharge of a planning obligation

9 Planning Obligations IN Salford City wide Policy context –Open Space (Policies H6/H11 and SPG7) –Infrastructure (Policy T3) Chapel Street Residential: £1000/unit Hotel: £500/bedroom Office: £10/m 2 January 2002 – January 2005 46 planning obligations between January 2002 and January 2005 17 developments commenced Total of £757, 720 received (Over £5.7million in total)

10 Projects IN Salford Trinity Park, Chapel Street Area Over £30k provided from s.106 monies to provide a children’s play area, street furniture and public art.

11 Trinity Park

12 Projects IN Salford Trinity Park, Chapel Street Area Over £30k provided from s.106 monies to provide a children’s play area, street furniture and public art. Bloom Street, Chapel Street Area £114k provided by s.106 monies to improve the paving, lighting and roadway.

13 Bloom Street

14 Projects IN Salford Trinity Park, Chapel Street Area Over £30k provided from s.106 monies to provide a children’s play area, street furniture and public art. Bloom Street, Chapel Street Area £114k provided by s.106 monies to improve the paving, lighting and roadway. Victoria Park £24k provided from s.106 monies to provide a children’s play area and a sport’s court.

15 Victoria Park

16 Projects IN Salford Trinity Park, Chapel Street Area Over £30k provided from s.106 monies to provide a children’s play area, street furniture and public art. Bloom Street, Chapel Street Area £114k provided by s.106 monies to improve the paving, lighting and roadway. Victoria Park £24k provided from s.106 monies to provide a children’s play area and a sport’s court. Oakwood Park £110K provided from s.106 monies to provide a children’s play area and to improve footpaths in the park

17 Oakwood Park

18 Management and Monitoring How does Salford manage planning obligations? Negotiate the legal agreement Check whether the development has commenced Ensure payment is received Identify project and deliver The future of planning obligations in Salford Supplementary Planning Document Priorities for s.106 contributions

19 Key Issues Planning obligations are negotiated agreements with an appeal process available Contributions are only required when the development has commenced Developers can claw back their contributions if they are not spent within 5 years of receipt A clear and transparent management process needs to be developed which involves the community Capacity problems – the need for a s.106 officer (funded from s.106?)

20 Summary - Scrutiny questions Criteria for how money is spent Formulae (open space only at present) Who decides how much is spent? When is the money received? The involvement of ward councillors Ongoing maintenance

21 Coming Soon to an LPA Near You???????……….. Government response to the Barker Review Optional planning charges and “scaled back” planning obligation system? Maybe / Maybe not!!


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