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Department for Communities and Local Government
Great Britain. National Audit Office
其他書名
Planning for Homes : Speeding Up Planning Applications for Major Housing Developments in England
出版
The Stationery Office
, 2008
主題
Architecture / Urban & Land Use Planning
Business & Economics / Real Estate / General
Business & Economics / Development / Economic Development
Political Science / General
Political Science / Public Policy / City Planning & Urban Development
Political Science / Public Policy / Regional Planning
ISBN
010295447X
9780102954470
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=rT_S5CmjC7kC&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
Housing developments require the approval of planning applications by the 368 local planning authorities in England before they can proceed. The Department for Communities and Local Government has given local authorities approximately £68 million a year to improve the handling of planning applications and in particular to speed them up. Measures taken include: national targets; payment of Planning Delivery Grant; initiatives to build public sector planning capacity; initiatives to improve the development management process. While authorities are taking more decisions on major housing schemes within 13 weeks, the true extent of the improvement across the development process is not as clear as it could be. The combination of the extra grant and the setting by the Department of targets has encouraged local authorities to give a higher priority to taking speedier decisions. The Department's figures on processing planning applications for large housing developments show a significant improvement, with 67 per cent of decisions being reached in 13 weeks in 2007-08, up from 37 per cent in 2002-03. But the extent of improvement across the development process is less clear because the Department's performance measure excludes the time spent before an application's submission and after its subsequent approval, both of which can be substantial. The Department does not collect data on how long it took to reach these decisions. The National Audit Office found that, for the 11 authorities visited, decisions to reject were taken more quickly than those to approve, with approval taking on average 25 weeks for the 100 cases examined from 2006-07.