UK Parliament / Open data

Planning: Appeals

My honourable friend the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State (Parmjit Dhanda) has made the following Written Ministerial Statement. The majority of planning appeals in England are decided by inspectors, but a small percentage is decided by the Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government, usually because the development is large and/or controversial. Around 27,000 appeals are made each year. In 2007, 110 appeals were determined by the Secretary of State. This Statement sets out the Secretary of State’s policy on recovering planning appeals. It replaces the previous policy on which appeals are recovered for the Secretary of State’s determination, which was set out in a House of Commons Hansard Written Answer for 24 July 2006. These changes are being made following the review of the 2006 criteria promised in the White Paper Planning for a Sustainable Future. They introduce two new criteria; one relates to climate change and energy and the other to World Heritage Sites. In future the Secretary of State will consider recovery of appeals involving: proposals for development of major importance having more than local significance; proposals giving rise to substantial regional or national controversy; proposals which raise important or novel issues of development control and/or legal difficulties; proposals against which another government department has raised major objections or has a major interest; proposals of major significance for the delivery of the Government's climate change programme and energy policies; any proposal for residential development of more than 150 units or on sites of over 5 hectares, which would have a significant impact on the Government’s objective to secure a better balance between housing demand and supply and create high-quality, sustainable, mixed and inclusive communities; proposals which involve any main town centre use or uses, as set out in paragraph 1.8 of PPS6, where that use or uses comprise(s) over 9,000m² gross floor space, either as a single proposal or as part of or in combination with other current proposals, and which are proposed on a site in an edge-of-centre or out-of-centre location—as described in table 2 of PPS6—that is not in accordance with an up-to-date development plan document prepared in accordance with the policy in PPS6; proposals for significant development in the green belt; major proposals involving the winning and working of minerals; and proposals which would have an adverse impact on the outstanding universal value, integrity, authenticity and significance of a World Heritage Site. There may on occasion be other cases which merit recovery because of the particular circumstances.
Type
Written statement
Reference
703 c5-6WS 
Session
2007-08
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Monday, 20 October 2008
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