Clearview National February 2016 - Issue 171 | Page 16
INDUSTRYNEWS
475,000 Homes with
Planning Permission
still waiting to be built
New research reveals there are a record 475,647
homes in England which have been given
planning permission but have yet to be built.
»»The study, commissioned by
the Local Government Association and carried
out by industry experts Glenigan, shows this
bumper backlog has grown at a rapid pace
over the past few years.
In 2012/13, the total of unimplemented
planning permissions was 381,390 and in
2013/14 it was 443,265.
The LGA said that the figures underline
the need for councils to be able to invest in
building more homes and also for the skills
shortage affecting the construction industry to
be addressed.
‘councils are approving
almost alf a million more
houses than are being built,
and this gap is increasing’
Council leaders also want powers to charge
developers full council tax for every unbuilt
development from the point that the original
planning permission expires.
The LGA, which represents more than 370
councils in England and Wales, also said:
Developers are taking longer to complete
work on site. It now takes 32 months,
on average, from sites receiving planning
permission to building work being completed –
12 months longer than in 2007/8.
The number of planning applications being
granted planning permission in 2014/15 was
212,468 - this is up from 187,605 in 2007/08
and is higher than all previous years.
Councils still approve nine in every ten
applications.
While the construction industry’s forecasted
annual recruitment need is up 54 % from
2013, there are 10,000 fewer construction
qualifications being awarded by colleges,
apprenticeships and universities.
16 » F EB 2016 » CL EARVI E W- UK . C O M
There was 58% fewer completed
construction apprenticeships last year than in
2009.
Cllr Peter Box, LGA Housing spokesman,
said: “These figures conclusively prove that
the planning system is not a barrier to house
building. In fact the opposite is true, councils
are approving almost half a million more houses
than are being built, and this gap is increasing.
“While private developers have a key role
in solving our chronic housing shortage, they
cannot build the 230,000 needed each year on
their own. To tackle the new homes backlog
and to get Britain building again, councils must
have the power to invest in building new
homes and to force developers to build homes
more quickly.
“Skills is the greatest barrier to building, not
planning. If we are to see the homes desperately
needed across the country built and jobs
and apprenticeships created, councils must
be given a leading role to tackle our growing
construction skills shortage, which the industry
says is one of the greatest barriers to building.
“Devolving careers advice, post-16 and adult
skills budgets and powers to local areas would
allow councils, schools, colleges and employers
to work together to help unemployed
residents and young people develop the vital
skills to build.
“New homes are badly needed and councils
want to get on with the job of building them.
If we are to see a genuine end to our housing
crisis we have to be given the powers to get
on with it.”
The LGA commissioned Glenigan to
undertake an analysis of the extent and
scope of unimplemented residential planning
permissions in England and Wales in financial
years 2013/14 and 2014/15.
The analysis updated work published
by the LGA in 2013, and the findings have
been combined to examine unimplemented
‘If we are to see a
genuine end to our
housing crisis we have
to be given the powers
to get on with it’
planning permissions over the last eight
financial years (2007/08 – 2014/15). The
analysis uses data taken from Glenigan’s
database of construction projects. This data is
also used by other government departments,
such as Communities and Local Government,
to monitor planning permissions.
The LGA has launched a Housing
Commission to set out a forwardlooking vision for the future of housing
and the relationship between councils
and communities. This call for evidence
invites councils, partners, organisations and
individuals to contribute their issues, evidence,
and examples of effective housing and ideas
to the Commission’s Advisory Panel, made
up of LGA Board members, experts and
academics.