Our Environment is under threat from "Developers"
How come they always name the housing estate after what they have destroyed to build it?
This country is being detroyed for in order that the current Blair government can deliver huge profits to their construction industry paymasters. Brown has recently ( Jan 2007 ) introduced REITS ( real estate investmetn trusts ) so that property companies can get big tax advantages and make even bigger profits from screwing up the countryside.
If you have a local campaign to oppose building that will destroy your environment - tell us. Use the "landscape conservation" forum to organise you opposition.
Fair Planning
By Bernard Ingham
Bring back impartiality to our planning system
Nobody, it seems, has a good word to say for our planning system. Not industry, commerce, developers, public or environmentalists, whether, for example, they are for or against bog brushes in the sky, as wind farms are called.
Based on personal experience, I find the system a disgrace. Indeed, it is little more than a legalised form of extortion. Recently, Calderdale Council, for example, recommended approval of two housing developments in my native Hebden Bridge - provided the developers forked out a total of £122,000 for community projects.
In other words, planning consent is openly, and blatantly, for sale. The system stinks to high heaven. But the current stench will seem as aromatic as Chanel No 5 when the Government has finished “reforming” the system.
By definition, planning is almost bound to be divisive. Those who fail to get their projects approved and those who fail to thwart unwanted developments will be disgruntled. It is therefore crucial to public confidence that, within a democratic system of checks and balances, the system is seen to provide fair hearings, within a clear planning framework that applies equally to all, and right of appeal.
That system has now broken down, not just because developers can get their way by offering a village a scout hut or a new community centre. Local authorities know they face crippling costs if they are taken to appeal by ruthless developers. What is more, they have a pretty fair idea they cannot win if, for example, they fight a renewable energy project because the Government, in its monumental ignorance, says they are a good thing.
But at another level there is a serious problem which environmentalists themselves have done their best to create. They have never hesitated to stretch planning inquiries out interminably - for example, into Sizewell B nuclear power station and developments at Sellafield - by subjecting every issue to the most detailed cross-examination.
In the words of the Campaign to Protect Rural England, the Government now believes “there is a bias in the current planning system in favour of… environmental protection and that insufficient weight is given to business interests”.
If you can retain a sense of humour about the whole miserable business, it is richly ironic that the Greens, by exploiting and abusing the system, have helped to bring the full weight of a Government that prides itself on its “greenness”, down on them.
Some might say it was also richly deserved if only the Government had not again demonstrated its propensity for making a dog’s breakfast of democracy by its urge to command and control.
Inevitably, Ministers “spin” their reforms as “streamlining”. They would achieve this in the case of major projects - for example, power stations, large wind farms, road schemes, airport expansion, giant incinerators and major reservoirs = by producing a national policy statement explaining the need for them.
Once that need had been certified, the system would be expected to approve them, provided that they had gone through the right process of public consultation and environmental assessment.
Many will see this as a means of building a new generation of nuclear power stations.
This is nonsense. In practice, new nuclear power stations will be built on existing nuclear sites, involving no change of use. Nuclear in this context is a red herring.
But what is not a red herring is the Government’s proposed machinery for approving large projects. It intends to set up an “independent” (of course) Infrastructure Planning Commission with power to take final decisions instead of publicly accountable Ministers.
No doubt, Ministers, in their naivete, think this arm’s-length planning system will protect them from political odium. It will do no such thing. Instead, it will effectively drive the final nail in the coffin of the system’s already decomposing body.
A Government worth its salt would not be proposing further to corrupt it but to restore it, root and branch, with the injection of a strong dose of integrity. It would cut out the rampant bribery of “planning gain” and secure impartial and effective administration of clear local planning frameworks within democratically determined statements of national policy that command respect.
Fanatics would be prevented by rules and time limits from distorting and delaying inquiries. And Ministers would remain ultimately responsible for major decisions instead of some faceless quango.
In other words, a responsible Government would be aiming to restore confidence in the planning system instead of walking all over it with hobnail boots.
You have only nine consultative days left to tell it to stop being so daft.
The Damage Blair's Paymasters have done.
This shrinking green and pleasant land
from The Times 13 June 2003
The following article appeared in the times this morning. Themessage is a very stark, and for those of us concerned with conserving the countrside, very worrying. Bliar' government seem committed to paving over more and more of the "green and pleasant land", destroying the environment for wildlife and people alike, whilst unashemedly banging on about climate change.
Don't they realise building on our precious green spaces and rural areas means there is more run off increasing the likelyhood of flooding? Don't they realise one less plant is one less organism that removes CO2? Don't they realise they are fragmenting the habitats of our wildlife?
New System To Speed Up Planning
New System To Speed Up Planning
Major planning applications like Donald Trump's Balmedie golf resort proposal could be decided within 16 weeks in the future.
Gaining permission for large developments is to become much quicker under a new Aberdeenshire Counci
