Local authorities must be given greater powers to ensure prompt build out of sites with planning permission, the Local Government Association (LGA) has said in its response to the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government consultation on a revised National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF).

In its submission the LGA said: “People cannot and do not live in planning permissions. The Government must take urgent action and work with the development and housebuilding industry to ensure there is a suitable pipeline of sustainable sites, which once allocated in a Local Plan and / or given planning permission, are indeed built out.

“Local authorities must be given greater powers to ensure prompt build out of sites with planning permission. Local authorities deliver permissions, developers deliver homes. Unless there is a fundamental shift in local authorities’ abilities or expectation to deliver homes, they should not be subject to punitive measures which undermine the plan-led system including the 5-year housing land supply test and the Housing Delivery Test.” 

The submission’s other “key messages” included:

The LGA also renewed its criticism of “unfettered” permitted development rights, “in particular those which permit the creation of new homes without contributions towards affordable housing and requirements to ensure the new housing is high-quality”.

These rights represent a deregulated approach to development which undermines the Government’s own and local authorities planning policies and place-making ambitions, both in urban and rural settings, it argued.

The submission argued that the NPPF must be stronger on promoting sustainable and resilient place-making. “Within a clear set of expectations set by a national framework, local planning authorities are best placed to make decisions about ways in which to address climate change mitigation and adaptation in their local areas, and therefore the NPPF should be suitably flexible to accommodate this.”

The LGA also called on the Government to bring forward urgently a more ambitious Future Homes and Buildings Standard as soon as is practically possible.

It meanwhile “hugely welcomed” allowing local authorities to set their own planning application fees, saying it would help to address growing and real concerns that planning departments are facing regarding resourcing and capacity constraints.

The Ministry's consultation ran until 24 September.