Extreme heat and health alerts
Both the Met Office and UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) have extended the red alerts for Surrey and the south east until 11pm on Friday 26 June.
Local plans have often been complex and taken a long time to prepare. On average, they have taken 7 years from start to finish.
The new system aims to reduce this to 30 months. It also introduces steps to simplify the process, including National Development Management Policies and a simpler approach to preparing plans, what they must contain, and when you can get involved.
There are 3 phases:
We are at the pre-commencement stage.
At this stage, we are gathering evidence, preparing a project plan and other key documents to keep the plan on track and meet statutory timescales.
After we publish the timetable and the ‘notice of intention to prepare a local plan’, we must wait at least 4 months before publishing the Gateway 1 self-assessment.
Go the notice of intention to prepare a local plan
During this time, we must carry out a formal consultation. This is a scoping consultation. We ask for views on what the local plan should contain and how people want to take part.
The consultation will run for 4 weeks.
The formal plan-making stage starts when we publish the Gateway 1 self-assessment.
This is a summary of how ready we are to prepare the new local plan.
The Gateway 1 self-assessment must include details about readiness:
We must publish it at least 4 months after the ‘notice of intention to commence’ (NIC) and after the scoping consultation has ended.
After we publish the Gateway 1 self-assessment, we will publish a summary of the comments received during the scoping consultation and our responses.
We will then carry out another consultation on the proposed content of the local plan and supporting evidence. This consultation will run for 6 weeks.
Before we submit the Gateway 2 assessment to the Planning Inspectorate, we will publish a proposed policy map. This will show areas of land with different designations, for example:
This will be an interactive map. You should treat it as a ‘working map’ that will change as the local plan progresses. It will have little weight in planning decisions. It may show where development could happen, but it does not allocate land.
If we receive a positive outcome from the Gateway 2 assessment, we will consult on the draft local plan.
This consultation will run for 8 weeks. This will be the final version we plan to submit for examination.
If a Spatial Development Strategy is available, we must check that the draft local plan is consistent with it. Before the third gateway check, we will publish summaries of consultation responses on the draft local plan. The Planning Inspectorate will then carry out the Gateway 3 assessment. It will decide whether the local plan can progress to submission.
Submission and examination start at this stage and should take no more than 5 months.
During this time, there will be examination hearings. The inspector will publish a report.
In the final month, we will adopt the new local plan. At this point, it will have full weight in planning decisions and replace the current Local Development Framework documents.