About this Consultation
This consultation document and consultation process have been
planned to adhere to the consultation principles issued by the
Cabinet Office.
Representative groups are asked to give a summary of the people and
organisations they represent, and where relevant who else they have
consulted in reaching their conclusions when they respond.
Information provided in response to this consultation, including
personal data, may be published or disclosed in accordance with the
access to information regimes (these are primarily the Freedom of
Information Act 2000 (FOIA), the Data Protection Act 2018 (DPA),
the General Data Protection Regulation 2016, and the Environmental
Information Regulations 2004.
If you want the information that you provide to be treated as
confidential, please be aware that, as a public authority, the
Department is bound by the Freedom of Information Act and may
therefore be obliged to disclose all or some of the information you
provide. In view of this it would be helpful if you could explain
to us why you regard the information you have provided as
confidential. If we receive a request for disclosure of the
information we will take full account of your explanation, but we
cannot give an assurance that confidentiality can be maintained in
all circumstances. An automatic confidentiality disclaimer
generated by your IT system will not, of itself, be regarded as
binding on the Department.
The Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government will
process your personal data in accordance with the law and in the
majority of circumstances this will mean that your personal data
will not be disclosed to third parties. A full privacy notice is
included on the next page.
Individual responses will not be acknowledged unless specifically
requested.
Your opinions are valuable to us. Thank you for taking the time to
read this document and respond.
Are you satisfied that this consultation has followed the
Consultation Principles? If not or you have any other observations
about how we can improve the process please contact us via
the complaints
procedure.
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Privacy Notice
The following is to explain your rights and give you the
information you are be entitled to under the data protection
legislation.
Note that this section only refers to your personal data (your name
address and anything that could be used to identify you personally)
not the content of your response to the consultation.
1. The
identity of the data controller and contact details of our Data
Protection Officer
The Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG)
is the data controller. The Data Protection Officer can be
contacted at dataprotection@communities.gov.uk.
2. Why we
are collecting your personal data
Your personal data is being collected as an essential part of the
consultation process, so that we can contact you regarding your
response and for statistical purposes. We may also use it to
contact you about related matters.
3. Our
legal basis for processing your personal data
Article 6(1)(e) of the General Data Protection Regulation 2016
(GPDR) provides that processing shall be lawful if processing is
necessary for the performance of a task carried out in the public
interest or in the exercise of official authority vested in the
controller.
Section 8(d) of the Data Protection Act 2018 further provides that
this shall include processing of personal data that is necessary
for the exercise of a function of the Crown, a Minister of the
Crown or a government department.
The processing is necessary for the performance of a task carried
out in the public interest or in the exercise of official authority
vested in the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local
Government. The task is consulting on departmental policies or
proposals or obtaining opinion data in order to develop good
effective government policies in relation to planning.
4. With
whom we will be sharing your personal data
We will not share your personal data with organisations outside of
MHCLG without contacting you for your permission first.
5. For how
long we will keep your personal data, or criteria used to determine
the retention period.
Your personal data will be held for 2 years from the closure of the
consultation
6. Your
rights, e.g. access, rectification, erasure
The data we are collecting is your personal data, and you have
considerable say over what happens to it. You have the
right:
a. to see what data we have about you
b. to ask us to stop using your data, but keep it on record
c. to ask to have all or some of your data deleted or
corrected
d. to lodge a complaint with the independent Information
Commissioner (ICO) if you think we are not handling your data
fairly or in accordance with the law. You can contact the ICO
at https://ico.org.uk/, or telephone 0303 123 1113.
7. Storage of your personal data
We are using SmartSurvey to collect data for this consultation, so
your information will be stored on their UK-based servers in the
first instance. Your data will not be sent overseas. We have taken
all necessary precautions to ensure that your data protection
rights are not compromised by our use of third-party software.
If your submit information to this consultation using our
third-party survey provider, it will be moved to our secure
government IT systems within six months of the consultation closing
date (28 January 2021).
8. Your
personal data will not be used for any automated decision
making.
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Respondent Details
This section of the survey asks for information about you and, if applicable, your organisation.
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Organisation (if applicable)
City of York Council |
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Developer |
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Planning consultant |
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Construction company or builder |
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Local authority |
X |
Statutory consultee |
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Professional organisation |
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Lawyer |
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Charity or voluntary organisation |
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Town Council |
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Parish Council |
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Community group, including residents’ associations |
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Private individual |
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Other (please specify): |
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Education section |
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Health sector |
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Prison sector |
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None of the above |
X |
Supporting housing delivery through a new national permitted development right for the change of use from the Commercial, Business and Service use class to residential
Agree |
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Disagree |
X |
Don't know |
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Please give your reasons:
There
needs to be limitation to ensure that an acceptable level of
housing is achieved. The potential for large-scale conversions
without the provision of for local community infrastructure is a
significant concern. Similarly re-purposing out of town
retail should be subject to planning permission given the scale,
surroundings and location of such uses. |
Agree |
X |
Disagree |
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Don't know |
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Please give your reasons:
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Agree |
X |
Disagree |
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Don't know |
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Please give your reasons:
Only if subject to safeguards that allow the LPA to consider the
impact on the character and appearance of the area in accordance
with existing legislation. To ensure that the historic character is
appropriately safeguarded. York is characterised by its historic
nature and to not have suitable considerations in place raises
significant concerns |
Agree |
X |
Disagree |
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Don't know |
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Please give your reasons:
The use and appearance of commercial buildings can be a key
component of the character and appearance of conservation
areas. Although consequential changes to buildings in
historic areas also need to be considered and this is not confined
to ground floors. the character of York’s Conservation Areas
needs full consideration when assessing any approvals |
Agree |
X |
Disagree |
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Don't know |
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Please give your reasons:
All the matters (outlined below) are key to assessing the acceptability of a proposal. •Similar to other permitted development rights for the change of use to residential: •flooding, to ensure residential development does not take place in areas of high flood risk •transport, particularly to ensure safe site access •contamination, to ensure residential development does not take place on contaminated land, or in contaminated buildings, which will endanger the health of future residents •To ensure appropriate living conditions for residents: •the impacts of noise from existing commercial premises on the intended occupiers of the development •the provision of adequate natural light in all habitable rooms •fire safety, to ensure consideration and plans to mitigate risk to residents from fire •To ensure new homes are in suitable locations:
•the impact on the intended occupiers from the introduction of
residential use in an area the authority considers is important for
heavy industry and waste management |
Yes |
X |
No |
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Don't know |
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Please specify:
1. All elements of noise related impacts (eg transport related noise) not just commercial impact. 2. Air Quality impacts 3. Specific reference to the provision of adequate waste and re-cycling storage 4. The adequate provision of services provided by class E and the sustainability of a key shopping area. We are concerned that the proposed rights may result in the loss of retail and service uses that will undermine town and district centres and potentially isolate remaining commercial uses by reducing local footfall because of visitor perceptions at a street or shopping area level.
5. The adequate provision of medical and health facilities;
crèche, day nurseries and day centres in an area. The
proposed PD right may result in the loss of such facilities to
residential use undermining local and national policies to retain
such uses and the potential loss of uses from accessible
locations. |
Agree |
X |
Disagree |
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Don't know |
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Please give your reasons:
The work and resources required to undertake consideration of such
applications should be funded through the application
process |
Yes |
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No |
X |
Don't know |
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Please give your reasons:
This is insufficient to cover all costs including the
administration and assessment of the process, undermining the
ability of the LPA to provide its other functions. |
Yes |
X |
No |
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Please specify:
Serious reservations as to the implications for both city and local centres. Also concerns with regard to the quality of housing coming forward from the proposals. The consultation proposals do not include safeguards on the adequate provision of shops and services and the impact on the sustainability of key shopping areas. Whilst the impact of trading conditions on retailers and commercial property owners is acknowledged, there is concern that the consultation proposals may lead to the loss of retail and service uses that will undermine town and district centres and potentially isolate remaining commercial uses by reducing local footfall because of visitor perceptions at a street or shopping area level. Retaining the existing permitted development right condition which allows the LPA to consider such issues, whilst recognising the changes taking place in the retail industry, would enable that balance to be achieved. The new use class E includes the provision of medical and health facilities; crèche, day nurseries and day centres. The proposed PD right may result in the loss of such facilities to residential use undermining local and national policies to retain such uses and the potential loss of uses from accessible locations.
Whilst we encourage the provision of increased residential
accommodation in our city and district centres. We consider
that particularly in historic areas, new residential uses would
prove to be more popular for visitor accommodation, negating the
benefits to residents outlined in the consultation. |
Yes |
X |
No |
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Don't know |
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If so, please give your reasons:
Businesses – this is too broad a definition, it could have a number of impacts on different businesses.
There is no provision that would provide safeguards for existing businesses who do not wish to leave premises at the end of their lease, or small businesses that may be put under pressure to loose space to allow for conversion. The planning process allows for such considerations, balancing the needs of communities with the rights of building owners to develop their properties. The proposals would preclude the examination of whether alternative businesses may wish to take up vacant space. The loss of this potential and alternative premises for businesses to relocate to will impact upon economic growth. Other businesses may not feel that feel the monetary savings of applications brings a better outcome or service. Communities – would no longer be able to have the same say in the planning application process due to the timescales in involved in prior approvals. Ad hoc and not plan lead development would lead to a mixture of developments and may lack social cohesion. Local Planning Authorities – The Governments assertion ‘Local planning authorities would benefit from reduced volume of planning applications, offset by a reduction in fees’ is short sighted and questionable. Prior approvals require as much work if not more than a regular planning application with significantly less fee. Local Planning Authorities have been significantly under resourced for a number of years due to changes such as these proposed. |
Yes |
X |
No |
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Don't know |
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If so, please give your reasons:
The new use class E includes the provision of medical and health
facilities; crèche, day nurseries and day centres. The
proposed PD right may result in the loss of such facilities to
residential use undermining local and national policies to retain
such uses and the potential loss of uses from accessible locations
adversely impacting on the elderly, people with disabilities. |
Supporting public service infrastructure through the planning system
Agree |
X |
Disagree |
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Don't know |
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Please give your reasons:
Agree in principle. However there are concerns regarding
local considerations from what could be significant scale
developments including heritage, traffic and amenity impacts.
There appears to be no reference to the positioning of windows in
new development or consideration of the potential impact from
possible displacement of car parking and the knock-on effect for
road safety in surrounding streets. |
Agree |
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Disagree |
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Don't know |
X |
Please give your reasons:
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Yes |
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No |
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Don't know |
X |
Please specify:
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Agree |
x |
Disagree |
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Don't know |
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Please give your reasons:
Agree in principle. However there are concerns regarding
local considerations from what could be significant scale
developments including heritage, traffic and amenity impacts.
There appears to be no reference to the positioning of windows in
new development or consideration of the potential impact from
possible displacement of car parking and the knock-on effect for
road safety in surrounding streets. |
Yes |
X |
No |
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Please specify:
Permitted development rights for such facilities should exist but local consideration should be a key point of the process. The proposed right should include limitations regarding windows in proximity with boundaries to residential property so as not to significantly impact upon living conditions. The proposed right should include limitations where existing car parking is proposed to be lost to development. Whilst supportive of moves toward more sustainable travel options for hospitals and schools, the potential for displacing parking to local streets and any mitigation should be part of a decision making process. |
Yes |
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No |
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Don't know |
X |
If so, please give your reasons:
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Yes |
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No |
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Don't know |
X |
If so, please give your reasons:
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Yes |
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No |
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Don't know |
X |
If so, please give your reasons:
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Yes |
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No |
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Don't know |
X |
If so, please give your reasons:
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Yes |
X |
No |
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Please give your reasons:
Yes but with the very strong caveat that the resources have to be
made available to facilitate this. This would involve having
sufficient officers for all elements of the planning application
process. It would not be feasible without extra resources |
Yes |
X |
No |
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If not, please give your reasons as well as any suggested alternatives:
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Yes |
X |
No |
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Please give your reasons:
Subject to the points raised in response to Q11 and with the
retention for agreements to be made with the applicants as exist at
present. |
Yes |
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No |
X |
Please give your reasons:
Members of the public/consultees should be given sufficient
time to fully consider applications. This change would
undermine public confidence in the planning process. |
Yes |
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No |
X |
Please give your reasons:
This would require additional resources and would be a burden on
the authority. It is unclear what benefit would be derived from
such notification. |
Yes |
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No |
X |
Please give your reasons:
The wording of this question is concerning as Local Planning
Authorities would always seek to proactively engage to resolve key
planning issues. Pre-application engagement can only be initiated
by the applicant. It is a key part of the planning process which is
not always undertaken by public service bodies and if this was made
a requirement it would a positive impact upon application
timescales. |
Yes |
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No |
X |
Please specify:
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Yes |
X |
No |
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Please specify:
As outlined above pre-application engagement should be a requirement of the process and appropriately funded.
Should the public notification period be reduced to 14 days it
should be a requirement that pre-application public consultation is
undertaken by the public service body. |
Yes |
X |
No |
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If so, please give your reasons:
Reducing the times scales for commenting on applications may
cause a disadvantage. |
Consolidation and simplification of existing permitted development rights
Agree |
X |
Disagree |
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Don't know |
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Please give your reasons:
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Yes |
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No |
X |
Please specify:
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Agree |
X |
Disagree |
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Don't know |
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Please give your reasons:
The reuse of such shops for other uses should be
supported |
Agree |
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Disagree |
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Don't know |
X |
Please give your reasons:
Further information is required around the specifics of this
element before it would be fully supported. The examples given do
not give sufficient information to allow a comprehensive response
too be given. |
Yes |
X |
No |
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Please specify:
Permitted development rights are complex and at times
difficult to navigate |
End of survey
You have reached the end of the consultation questions. Thank you
for taking the time to complete them and for sharing your views.
Please note that you will not receive an automated email to confirm
that your response has been submitted.
After the consultation closes on 28 January 2021 we will consider
the responses we have received and publish a response, in due
course.