By RD on Thursday, 04 May 2017
Category: News

Parishing all of England provides key to unlocking people power over housing and planning

Plans to reform the housing and planning system have been welcomed by the National Association of Local Councils (NALC) however England’s communities body has called for the creation of more local councils to help tackle the housing crisis and put local people more in control of planning decisions.


Responding this week to the government’s long-awaited white paper on housing, the national body representing 10,000 local councils and 80,000 councillors highlight the leading role being played by grassroots councils in neighbourhood planning, calling for the whole country to be ‘parished’ to boost engagement with local people over future development including housing.

Key points of NALC’s submission to the consultation from the Department for Communities and Local Government (DCLG) include:

Chairman of NALC, Cllr Sue Baxter said: “We welcome the opportunity to respond to this important white paper and contribute to housing and planning proposals and reforms as local councils play such an important role in communities especially in neighbourhood planning.

“It is local councils that are at the heart of and driving forward the neighbourhood planning revolution and making it such a success story, with around 90% of over 2,000 communities developing a neighbourhood plan being led by England’s most local level of democracy.

“Given their closeness to the local community and engagement with local people, local councils play an important role helping to shape and influence local development plans, commenting on planning applications and producing design statements, neighbourhood plans and neighbourhood development orders.

“We want work with the next government to build a housing and planning system that helps, rather than hinders, local communities and local councils and meets their local housing needs.

“But not everywhere has a local council to give local people a voice and structure for taking action on local issues such as influencing future development including housing. Great strides forward have been taken in recent years to make it easier to set up local councils, but now is the time to parish all of England and genuinely put communities more in control of decisions affecting their areas.

“We know all parties share our views on the important role local councils play in their areas, both now and in the future, and it is vital the next government works with us to deliver on our ambitions for localism and neighbourhood planning.”