Issue - meetings
Plymouth and South West Devon Joint Local Plan Review Report
Meeting: 11/03/2024 - Cabinet (Item 127)
127 Plymouth and South West Devon Joint Local Plan Five-Year Review Report 2024 PDF 422 KB
Additional documents:
- 240311 App A PCC Cabinet Briefing-Report JLP 5YRR, item 127 PDF 70 KB
- 240311 App B Review Report FINAL, item 127 PDF 952 KB
- 240311 App C Review Report Climate Impact Assessment, item 127 PDF 43 KB
Minutes:
Councillor Coker (Cabinet
Member for Strategic Planning and Infrastructure) introduced the
item and highlighted the following points:
a)
In March 2019, Plymouth City Council, South Hams and
West Devon adopted the first Joint Local Plan (JLP) for Plymouth
and Southwest Devon;
b) Five years, ago, the first JLP for Plymouth and Southwest Devon was only one of five in the country and the only one to fully meet the objectivity assessed needs for housing for an entire plan period;
c)
The JLP had been a success within the three councils
and had enabled them to effectively guide and promote development
in relevant areas, rather than what was dictated by Government
Policy;
d)
It was a legal requirement for Local Planning
Authorities to complete a review of their plans at least once every
five years;
e)
National Planning Policy
assumed that a local plan became out of date on its fifth
anniversary unless a local plan review demonstrated that its
policies remained effective and up-to-date;
f)
In the absence of an up-to-date plan, National Planning Policy would take precedence and
there would be an increased risk of planning by appeal;
g)
The five year review report considered changes to
National Policy and Legislation since the JLP was adopted, how the
plan had performed against key targets and indicators, changes to
economic, environmental and social circumstances and factored in
the latest demographic data;
h)
National Policy dictated that after five years, a
local plan’s housing requirement is out-of-date and would set
a new housing requirement for the area based on the Government
Standard Method for assessing local housing needs, this would then
become the basis for the give year housing, land supply calculation
and housing delivery test. The only exception to this was when a
Planning Authority could demonstrate their local plan housing
requirement was sufficiently close to the numbers generated using
the standard method;
i) The Government’s Standard Method was based on 2014 demographic data as a basis for its projection despite the 2021 census, and eight mid-year population estimates since 2014;
j)
The Government’s Standard Method also gave a
35% uplift to the top 20 cities in England, including
Plymouth;
k)
The JLP was based on evidence, tested and supported
by planning inspectors;
l)
The report set out a case for continuing the JLP
housing requirements and not applying the Government’s
Standard Method;
m)
The report addressed the issues of the time-limited
Plymouth Airport Safeguarding Policies;
n)
The Plymouth Airport Safeguarding Policy had been
pushed back due to unforeseen circumstances since 2019 including
COVID-19 pandemic, the Ukraine and Russia war and associated
economic shock and therefore more time was needed to allow the
complex negotiations and actions relating to land ownership to be
concluded;
o)
The report set out Plymouth City Council’s
position to continue to safeguard the Airport Site through the
planning process;
p) West Devon Borough Council and South Hams District council had approved the JLP five-year review report.
Jonathan Bell (Head of Spatial Planning & Sustainable Development) added: ... view the full minutes text for item 127