Issue - meetings

Planning Enforcement Update

Meeting: 19/07/2023 - Decision Session - Executive Member for Housing, Planning and Safer Communities (Item 4)

4 Planning Enforcement Cases Update (10:14) pdf icon PDF 616 KB

The purpose of this report is to provide the Executive Member with an update on planning enforcement cases and the progress of work within the enforcement team.

Additional documents:

Decision:

Resolved:

i.             That the contents of the report be noted.

Reason: To ensure that the Executive Member is aware of the work currently being undertaken in Planning Enforcement.

Minutes:

The Executive Member considered a report which provided an update on planning enforcement cases and the progress of the work within the enforcement team.

 

The Principal Development Management Officer presented the report and provided a summary of the complexity of the work of the enforcement team and explained that breaches of planning control were dealt with in order of priority and that enforcement action should only be taken where the Council was satisfied it was ‘expedient’ to do so. He also stated that the enforcement team had a number of ways of enforcing planning breaches and noted that:

  • Between 31 May 2022 and 1 June 2023, the Council received 984 new planning enforcement investigations and 7 Enforcement Notices were served. 
  • 679 cases were closed and a total of 722 investigations remained open. 

The Officer concluded by explaining that the key challenge for the enforcement team over the next 12 months would be the investigation of the considerable number of House in Multiple Occupation (HMO) cases due to changes in licensing requirements. He then noted that 574 HMO investigations had been opened and 150 had been closed.

 

In response to questions from the Executive Member, the Head of Planning and Development Services and the Principal Development Management Officer explained that:

·        The enforcement team follows up on any unlawful HMOs after a reasonable time to ensure compliance and could serve notices thereafter.

·        A new system alerting complainants every three months on the progress of an enforcement case was recently introduced by the Council.

·        Prosecutions of cases were rare as the team tried to avoid them and find a resolution instead.

·        Enforcement of short-term holiday lets was difficult due to a lack of legislation and planning guidance.

They concluded by explaining that the enforcement team was a reactive service and they needed members of the public to raise complaints so that they could be investigated.

 

The Executive Member and Officers then discussed the summary of enforcement notices served between 2018-23 as detailed in annex 1. The Executive Member then;

 

Resolved:

i.             That the contents of the report be noted.

Reason: To ensure that the Executive Member is aware of the work currently being undertaken in Planning Enforcement.


 

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