Guest blog by Philip Grant. He deserves congratulations for winning a victory for openness and transparency.
This subject may appear to be of limited interest, but if you are ever affected by a planning application, or if you ever have to deal with Brent Council over any issue where you feel they are not acting reasonably, I would invite you to read on.
Just before the first “virtual” Planning Committee
meeting on 6 May, Sudbury Town Residents Association sought to have the station car park application adjourned from the agenda, on grounds including that
Statutory Consultee comments were not available to view on Brent’s website.
STRA’s request was ignored, although Planning Officers persuaded the committee
to adjourn it, after they had voted to reject the Officers’
recommendation.
Consultee comments on planning applications can be
useful to help both potential objectors and applicants understand the points at
issue on the proposals, particularly on a large application. There might be
over 100 documents to look at, a daunting prospect for any resident who finds
out about an application that might affect where they live. Why shouldn’t they
be able to see what TfL, Thames Water or any of the Council Officers dealing
with matters such as air quality, transport or noise think about the merits or
defects of the proposed development?
I had raised a similar point on the 1 Morland Gardens application. The first comment I submitted, on 1 March, said:
‘Under the "tab" View
Consultees Comments, there are notes of many people who have been invited to
comment, but none of their comments are actually available to view. All
comments made by any of these consultees should be included here, just as
comments for or against the application by members of the public are shown, in
the interests of openness and transparency.’
This is what you get if you want to "View Consultees
Comments" for application 20/0345!
When there were still no consultee comments shown
for application 20/0345 later in the month, I raised the point again in an
email with Regeneration Admin. Services, who look after the planning website.
The initial reply I received was: ‘we
do not publish [these] comments on our public access system, unless
specifically requested to do so, as some commentators complain when we publish
their comments.’
I questioned this
response, as comments from members of the public are all published (without
their name, but with their address shown). My reasoning was: ‘When those
comments are made by Brent Council officers, about planning applications which
themselves are open for public consultation, it surely goes against the
Council's own policies on openness and transparency not to make their comments
publicly available?’ I asked for the matter to be passed up to the unit’s
manager for a reply, and was told that it had been, but no reply came.
As heritage would be
a key issue in the 1 Morland Gardens case (with the Council seeking to demolish
this locally listed Victorian villa in Stonebridge), I did manage to obtain a
copy of the consultee comments from Brent’s Principle Heritage Conservation
Officer in April (under FoI!). Martin also obtained a copy, and published his
comments as a blog. Among other
things, they said that the building ‘should be considered an important local heritage
asset of high significance’, and that ‘additional information needs to be
obtained before a proper assessment of the proposals can be determined.’
1 Morland Gardens (with No.2 beyond) - 'an important local
heritage asset'.
When those consultee comments, or any others, had not been put on Brent planning’s website in May, I took up the matter again with the Case Officer. He said: ‘we only publish comments made online on our website, but of course will consider all comments received – both from internal and external consultees - when evaluating a scheme.’ I responded that: ‘In the interests of openness and transparency, all consultee comments, whether from the public, council officers or other consultees should be publicly available on the website, as all are relevant to anyone considering the application(s).’ I asked for this to be referred to a higher level.
Experience has
taught me that you can’t rely on the summaries of consultee comments that
Brent’s planners include in their Officer Reports to Planning Committee. I was
an objector in another heritage planning case a year ago (the Bobby Moore Bridge tile
murals). A key consultee comment was summarised in a single sentence: 'The Council’s Principal
Heritage Officer notes that, given that the tiles are not a designated heritage
asset, the proposals are a reasonable compromise.'
I had obtained a copy of the comments
(again, under FoI!) and the Report failed to mention the Heritage Officer’s comment
that: ‘These colourful tiled murals … have artistic, historic and cultural
merit.’ That would have helped the objectors’ case, but also would have
undermined the planning officer’s recommendation to approve the application!
'These colourful tiled murals have artistic, historic and
cultural merit.' (Photo courtesy
of Quintain)
The Case Officer did
refer my detailed explanation, of why all consultee comments on planning
applications should be made publicly available, to Brent’s Development
Management Manager (“DMM”). When chasing up for a reply, in mid-May, I
mentioned that STRA had also raised the absence of consultee comments with the
Council (they never received a reply).
The DMM’s response
was: ‘We are not legally required to
publish comments on our web site, but we do publish comments that are made
using our online portal as these are automatically redacted. We don’t publish
other comments due to the time taken to redact the comments (and associated
cost).’ He did say, however, that redacted copies of consultee comments would
be made available, on request to the Case Officer.
I made clear in my reply that this
was now a complaint, as the Council should be making consultee comments publicly available,
because of clear statements in Brent’s Constitution about openness and
transparency, as part of supporting the active involvement of citizens in
the decision-making process. The way to solve my complaint was simple –
consultees should be asked to submit their comments using the online planning
portal, just as ordinary members of the public have to do, and their names
would be automatically redacted!
My helpful
suggestion met with a short (and rather sharp) response from the DMM in June:
‘I note that you believe that our current processes are not in line with statutory and constitutional obligations. I don’t share your view. Our practices are in line with relevant obligations.’ He did, however, say: ‘we will evaluate your suggestions.’
‘I note that you believe that our current processes are not in line with statutory and constitutional obligations. I don’t share your view. Our practices are in line with relevant obligations.’ He did, however, say: ‘we will evaluate your suggestions.’
I felt this attempted “brush off” was
unacceptable, so referred the matter to Brent’s Chief Executive as a Stage 2
complaint, saying: ‘Unless Brent Council can show, clearly, why it has no
obligation to make consultee comments on planning applications publicly
available, just as it makes other comments on those applications publicly
available, it should acknowledge that its current practice is not acceptable,
and change that practice forthwith.’
The initial
acknowledgement was not encouraging, as I was told that the Head of Planning
would be dealing with my “Stage 1” complaint. My response, to the Chief
Executive, was polite but firm: ‘[The Head of Planning] may well need to ensure
that the Planning Service's practice over "consultee comments"
is changed, as a result of my Stage 2 complaint, but I look forward to
hearing that the complaint itself will be properly dealt with by an independent
officer, as set out in the Council's complaints procedure.’
On 27 July, nearly
five months after first raising the matter of consultee comments with Brent’s
planners, I finally received a satisfactory answer, by way of a letter drafted
by a senior Complaints Investigator and signed by Carolyn Downs, Brent’s Chief
Executive (see copy below). While it does not admit that the existing practice
of not publishing consultee comments goes against the promises in Brent’s
Constitution (‘The legal advice was that the constitution does not specifically
require internal consultee comments to be published as a matter of course.’),
that practice will now be changed.
The letter
says: ‘Your complaint has however helpfully contributed to a discussion which
had already commenced within the Planning Service about whether statutory and
internal consultee comments should be published on the planning application
database, regardless of the absence of a legal or constitutional requirement to
do so. The Planning Service has now reached the conclusion that it would be
beneficial to publish statutory and internal consultee comments in future.’ Whether
or not ‘the discussion within the Planning Service’ only commenced when faced
with my Stage 2 complaint is just speculation. The result is that ‘the new
approach’ to consultee comments should be fully implemented within the next 3
months.
More "View Consultees Comments" entries from the
20/0345 application details on the Planning website.
That won’t help for the application I raised the matter over, which will probably go to Planning Committee in two weeks time. I am still waiting for some further consultee comments I requested on this, especially those of the Principal Heritage Officer in response to the June 2020 Heritage Impact Assessment, and my own objection comments on that.
I hope that others
will take heart that, through polite but persistent pressure, it is sometimes
possible to make Brent Council take action over a reasonable request – but they
make you work hard for it! I also hope that more people will be encouraged to
respond to planning applications that may affect their lives, make use of the
extra information that will become available through consultee comments, and
put in their own comments (either objecting or in support) where they have a
view which they feel strongly about.
Philip Grant.