Englishcombe Inn application requested to be decided at a public Planning Committee meeting

We have requested that if the Planning Case Officer is minded to refuse planning permission for the Englishcombe Inn site for a new 40-bed Care Home, then the application should be heard in public by the Development Control Committee.

Legally, to request this we had to give planning reasons for our request; and these were:

* This is an imaginative reuse of a derelict facility and adds economic vitality to the area;
* The plan, whilst bulky, pays respect to the existing structure whilst using the contour of the land in an imaginative and bold
way to provide the facilities needed for the proposed client groups.
* The application will generate far less traffic onto the busy Englishcombe Lane than other applications such as for housing and
the precedent for density set just a few hundred yards away at Sabin Close.

We also wrote that the applicant has met with residents and listened to their concerns and made modifications that meet most demands. Obviously, the loss of the building as a pub will not suite those who wish to see it returned to being a public house.

The final decision on whether or not to hear the planning application at the democratic public meeting will be made by the Chair of the Committee, Cllr Les Kew (Conservative, High Littleton).

We now await the decision of the Council Officer and the Chair of the Committee.

Parking increase another kick in the teeth for Bath economy

Owners and managers of businesses serving Bath’s evening economy are joining Bath MP Don Foster is voicing their concern over the Council’s decision to increase evening car parking charges by 50%.

The dispute comes after a major campaign last year against increased charges. The Conservative Council recently completed a 3 month parking review, which it was claimed would also take into account the current economic downturn.

None of the businesses Don has spoken to were consulted during this 3 month period, they first heard the news when it was published in the local media. Don said,

It is vital, especially at a time of recession, that we help support our local businesses all we can, but this increase is going to make people think twice about visiting Bath.

Levels of public transport, especially for those living just outside the city, are far from adequate in the evening and for many people driving into town is the only option, but with extra costs they might look elsewhere or not bother at all.

We am deeply concerned by this move from the Conservative Council, and it is made even worse by the fact that apparently none of these businesses were even spoken to about the change.
Read the rest of this entry.

Awards for local volunteer awards – nominate someone

The Council has been working with the Volunteer Centre on a Community Award to recognise the contribution volunteers make within Bath and North East Somerset. The Chairman of the Council announced the Awards during the National Volunteering Week in June and now we are inviting nominations.

There are six categories, with a particular theme linked to the Chairman’s theme for his year in office: “Grow Your Own Food and Know Your Local Heritage”, although nominations are encouraged from all different areas of work. The categories are as follows:

1. Volunteer of the Year
2. Volunteer Leader of the Year
3. Student Volunteer of the Year (Over 18)
4. Young Volunteer of the Year (Under 18)
5. Volunteer Team of the Year
6. Environmental Volunteer of the Year

Everyone nominated for an Award will be presented with a Certificate as a recognition of their contribution to community work. The winners of each category will receive a Certificate and Award presented by the Chairman of the Council at an Awards Ceremony in December 2009. Nomination forms must be returned by no later than 12 noon on Friday 30th October 2009.

Cllr McGall has full details of the Awards (Five pages of A4), so if you would like more details on how to nominate someone locally, please contact shaun on: shaun_mcgall@bathnes.gov.uk

Hopes for school transport improvements dashed

Local campaigners’ hopes that the new school year could bring improvements to school transport arrangements have been dashed by B&NES Cabinet members’ decision to reject key proposals from a committee review.

The Council’s Children and Young People Overview and Scrutiny Panel meeting on Monday night was dominated by a paper on the Transport to Secondary School Review previously initiated by the panel.

In responding to the recommendations within the review, the Cabinet members for Children’s Services and Customer Services accepted a number of proposals such as investigating sources of funding for school transport, but crucially rejected proposals on:

• A flat rate weekly fare of £10;
• Cheaper weekly tickets for second and third children in a family;
• Making school transport a priority for the Council;
• Revising the distance which children may be expected to walk or cycle to 1.5 miles rather than 3 miles.

Councillor Nathan Hartley (Peasedown), who is the Liberal Democrat Shadow Cabinet member for children’s services, commented:

I am disappointed that, despite a hard fought campaign by parents and a full review by the panel, the Cabinet is still refusing to take any definite action to address the issue of school transport.

The Cabinet members said in their response that school transport is not a financial priority for the Council and that the Council was not in a position to tell parents what is an acceptable distance to walk to school. The Cabinet has made it clear they are not going to bring about any significant change, and that they will not be willing to look at this matter again.

Everyone in this area knows that if we could improve arrangements for transport to school it would go a long way towards tackling congestion, particularly in Bath. We’re sure many people are looking forward to clearer roads now the school holidays are here – if we could encourage more people to use public transport to get to school, it could be like this all year around.

New fire control centre delayed – again!

fire-control-centre.jpg

The opening of a regional fire control centre covering the west country has been delayed until May 2011.

The centre, which is opposed by the the Liberal Democrats, Avon Fire Authority and the Fire Brigades Union, will handle emergency calls from Gloucestershire in the north to Cornwall in the south.

It was supposed to open two years ago, but has been delayed again because of problems with the IT system.

The government said it was a complex project which would deliver benefits. Cllr Shaun McGall, a member of Avon Fire Authority said:

The project is over budget and will not deliver either cost savings or more importantly improved service to local residents and the emergency services. It’s time the Government pulled the plug on the scheme.

Responding to the announcement the Fire Brigades Union said the project was

“like Monty Python’s Dead Parrot sketch with everyone knowing it was dead apart from government which insists it is still alive”.

This project is a total waste of tax payers money, at a time when fire authorities are facing severe financial constraints and cutbacks in public spending it’s absolutely immoral the government is throwing huge amounts of tax payers money that’ s going nowhere.

The money would be better used on frontline services throughout the south west.

Regionally the union said the additional 10-month delay will cost a further £1,548,930.

Read the rest of this entry.

Lib Dems seek solutions to BRT chaos

Councillor Gerry Curran (Lib Dem, Twerton) who is the Lib Dem lead on planning, has said that the situation following last week’s second Bath Transport Package planning committee is one of chaos and confusion and is trying to persuade the Council Leadership to agree to bring an alternative scheme to the next planning committee. Councillor Curran said:

As things stand, the Conservative Leadership of B&NES Council is failing to take action, leaving a chaotic and confused situation. The planning application for the Newbridge Park & Ride and the bus rapid transit route has been deferred for the second time; it will come back a third time in August or September, but I can’t really see the point if the proposals are going to be the same.

Cllr Curren has requested an urgent meeting with the Chief Executive and Leader of the Council to try and come up with a workable and acceptable solution. We certainly don’t want to lose the Package as a whole, but he believes it is time for the Council Leadership to shift their position.

At the last planning committee meeting Councillors from all political Groups on the committee asked for the two elements of the planning application to be separated. Our proposal is that we should drop the BRT segregated route in favour of a bus lane from the Golden Fleece on the Lower Bristol Road to Windsor Bridge combined with extensive works to the two junctions at either end of the bridge.

Some of the money which would have been spent on the BRT should be put into the Western Riverside transport corridor, which might help kick start that whole project, while also bringing forward part of the transport package. We think this is a good argument to make to the government in the current economic climate.

Finally, we should look again at the proposal for a park and ride on the other side of the river at Newbridge – it may now provide a better alternative.
Read the rest of this entry.

Proposed BRT route must surely be dead – Foster

Responding to the decision of the Council’s Development Control Committee to defer the decision on the proposed Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) route, and Newbridge park & ride extension, once again, Bath MP Don Foster has said that the scheme must surely now be dead. Don said,

If only the Conservative Council had listened to what I said at a Council meeting in September, and what Liberal Democrat Councillors have been saying for months: more work was needed into alternative routes, and residents needed to be involved in the process.

The Council did not heed this advice, and with the proposed-BRT route twice having failed to pass through planning it is time for the Council to go right back to the beginning.

The Conservatives have mismanaged this process, and could well be putting the government money at risk. Had they taken onboard my comments last autumn, then this would not be the case.

New Rules on HMOs?

Now is our moment! The government is thinking of changing the rules on HMOs (houses in multiple occupation, or shared houses) – and they are asking us what we think! Now we have a chance to tip the balance in favour of residents.

Oldfield Park’s problem is HMOs. Of course, there’s nothing wrong with sharing a house, as such. But there’s something seriously wrong with a neighbourhood where most of the houses are HMOs.

This is now the case in the neighbourhoods in and around Oldfield Park. Few live in HMOs for very long, so what this means is a constantly changing population. Constant change breaks the links on which communities depend. As HMOs increase, community spirit decreases. There are now many streets in Oldfield Park where temporary tenants outnumber longer term residents. The results are all too obvious in the changes that have overtaken these neighbourhoods in the last decade or two.

But it’s not only our area which is affected. Most university towns now have concentrations of HMOs. And not only these – there are huge problems in seaside towns where guest-houses have been turned into HMOs, and in many market towns gangmasters have bought up HMOs for seasonal workers.

As a result, residents groups from all over the country have joined the National HMO Lobby, a network of community associations pioneered by the Leeds HMO Lobby. Locally the Bath Federation of Residents Assoications are members. In addition, there is a parallel national group of local councillors, of which Cllr Shaun McGall is a member. Don Foster, our MP here in Bath, is a member of the parliamentary Group working on these issues.

Together we all have campaigned for ten years to get government nationally to bring in legislation which will enable government locally to resist concentrations of HMOs. We helped to bring in licensing of HMOs with the Housing Act 2004, and the highly successful voluntary local accreditation scheme for HMOs

But licences and accreditation schemes don’t resist HMOs – for this, new planning legislation is needed.

At the moment no permission is needed to convert a family house to a HMO – so anyone can do so, landlords, buy-to-let investors, student parents … There’s nothing the Council can do without new powers. So we has been campaigning for a change to the Use Classes Order, the relevant regulation. Colleagues in Loughborough, Nottingham and Southampton have shown ministers what the problems are in their areas. So last year, we got the government to commission a report on HMOs – and this recommended consultation on new legislation. This year, in May, the government published a consultation paper: click here. click here.

The consultation paper agrees that concentrations of HMOs cause problems. It suggests three courses of action, and is seeking the views of the public on these.

Option 1 is to rely on existing ‘good practice’, like the things we’ve done in Bath to try to tackle the problem – but we know it doesn’t work!

Option 2 is to change the Use Classes Order, so that HMOs need planning permission – this is obviously what is needed, and what we’ve campaigned for so long. On its own it won’t solve the problem, but it is essential to prevent it getting any worse, here and elsewhere.

Option 3is a complicated proposal to allow HMOs anywhere at all – except where the government agrees to give special powers to councils in limited areas (Article 4 Directions). This is basically unworkable.

We have until 7 August to persuade the government to act on Option 2.

What can you do to help?

Cllr Shaun McGall and Cllr Will Sandry will be writing to the government of course. So will other local Lib Dem councillors in Bath. So will Don Foster, our MP here in Bath. So too can you, the more voices the better!

  • First of all, below there should be a model letter to send to the government. All you need do is add your address, give an idea of some of the problems you have had – and sign and send it!
  • If you would like to write your own letter or email, please do. Contact Cllr Shaun McGall for background info.
  • Also, encourage you neighbours to write. And lobby the Council to write in. Contact Cllr Shaun McGall if you need details.

The email address for replies is:

UCOHMOConsultation@communities.gsi.gov.uk (subject: HMO Consultation);

The postal address is:

Susan Turner,
Planning System Improvement Division,
Department for Communities and Local Government,
Zone 1/J10,
Eland House,
Bressenden Place,
London
SW1E 5DU.

The deadline is 7 August 2009.

(Shorter) Model Response to the CLG Consultation on Houses in Multiple Occupation and possible planning responses

The Consultation Paper asks sixteen questions, but it is not necessary to answer them all.

We would recommend the following responses to five key questions. The Questions are in bold, and suggestions for responses in italics. See also the longer Model Response below.

First of all, the Consultation asks you to say who you are. If you are writing as an individual, mention how long you have lived in your neighbourhood. If you are writing on behalf of an organisation, outline your role in it, its area of interest and its membership.

1. Do you experience problems/effects which you attribute to high concentrations of HMOs? [Consultation Question 1]
a) Outline the scale of the local HMO problem: size of the area? for how long? proportion of HMOs?
b) Summarise the effects of the HMOs: noise? antisocial behaviour? crime? rubbish? houses & gardens? streets? local shops? local amenities? traffic? parking? etc?
c) Outline the effects on the local community: population balance? population turnover? local schools? neighbourliness? control over the community’s future? community spirit?
d) Give evidence of the problems.

2. Option One proposes no change to legislation, instead relying on measures that have been tried in university towns (like university community strategies, student liaison officers, landlord accreditation, extra council resources in student areas, and when students come and go). Could promotion of such measures sufficiently deal with the problems associated with HMOs? [Consultation Question 3]
a) These measures will not tackle all the problems in 1b above. They are not effective anyway.
b) Such measures will do nothing at all for the problems described in 1c.
c) And they depend on voluntary action by councils and universities.

3. Option Two proposes changing the ‘Use Classes Order’, so that planning permission is needed to convert a home to a HMO. Should planning legislation be amended along the lines of option 2? [Consultation Q4]
a) Councils need the power to be able to control HMOs, if this is necessary locally.
b) Should planning legislation introduce a definition along the lines of the Housing Act 2004? [Consultation Question 5] The main problem is that there is no definition of ‘HMO’ in the present legislation.

4. Option Three proposes changing the ‘General Permitted Development Order’, so that HMOs are allowed everywhere; councils can then apply to the government for an ‘Article 4 Direction’, permitting them to refuse HMOs in particular areas. Should planning legislation be amended along the lines of option 3? [Consultation Q4]
a) This will remove all control over HMOs from councils everywhere.
b) This will oblige councils to apply for a Direction. And it leaves the decision to the government.
c) Landlords can claim compensation if they are refused: this will prevent councils from applying.

5. Would the benefits of greater control over HMOs outweigh the costs of processing more planning applications? [Consultation Question 16]
a) The Consultation itself says, “local planning authorities are assumed to have no additional costs given that the fees cover the administrative costs,” p28.
b) The costs of HMOs to councils and Council Tax-payers of the problems outlined in 1 above are enormous.

If individuals or organisations want to make a fuller response, contact Cllr Shaun McGall for guidance or you the longers version of the suggested response below.

The deadline for responses is 7 August 2009.

Send responses by email to:

UCOHMOConsultation@communities.gsi.gov.uk (subject: HMO Consultation)

Or by post to:

Susan Turner, Planning System Improvement Division, Department for Communities and Local Government, Zone 1/J10, Eland House, Bressenden Place, London SW1E 5DU.

Cllr Shaun McGall would appreciate a copy of any response sent to the government.

(Long) Model Response to the CLG Consultation on Houses in Multiple Occupation and possible planning responses

Masthead

Model Response
to the CLG Consultation on
Houses in Multiple Occupation and possible planning responses

Give a brief introduction to Oldfield Park and the issues in the area you face.

Consultation Questions

Q1. Do you experience problems/effects which you attribute to high concentrations of HMOs?

# Outline the scale of the concentration of HMOs in your neighbourhood: area, how long, proportion?

# Outline the effects of HMO-concentrations: noise? antisocial behaviour? crime? rubbish? houses & gardens? streets? local shops? local amenities? traffic? parking? etc?

# Outline the causes of these effects, that is, a destabilised community: for instance, population balance? population turnover? local schools? neighbourliness? control over the community’s future? community spirit?

Give evidence of these problems, either statistical or residents’ experiences.

[For a summary, see ‘Symptoms of Studentification’ in the Lobby’s Balanced Communities & Studentification, 2008]

Q2. Do you consider the current planning framework to be a barrier to effective management of HMOs by local planning authorities?

# Manifestly, the local planning authority (LPA) has been unable to manage HMOs in the area. Planning Inspectors have interpreted the idea of ‘single household’ in functional terms: the occupants simply share facilities; but on this basis, any form of sharing could be conceived of as a single household. On the contrary, common usage and housing legislation interpret the idea of ‘single household’ in structural terms, that is, on the basis of the relationships within the household. On this basis, there is a clear distinction between a shared house and a single household (typically a family). It is the lack of a clear distinction between ‘single’ and ‘multiple’ household which makes the UCO ineffective as a tool for the management of HMOs. [Give a local example, if you have one.]

# The current UCO is intended to require planning permission for a HMO: “as a general rule planning permission will be needed before a dwelling house could undergo a material change of use to an HMO” (para25). What is clear is that this is not in fact ‘a general rule’. And the reason is the conflicting definitions of ‘single household’.

Q3. Could promotion of best practice measures as opposed to changes in the planning framework sufficiently deal with the problems associated with HMOs, in particular those problems often associated with high concentrations of HMOs with student occupants?

# Outline any best practice in your locality, by the university or the council. Has it worked?

# Are there measures they could have taken, but haven’t? Do you have any confidence that they are at all likely to adopt any of these measures, if the government settles for Option 1?

# Do any of these measures actually tackle the root causes of the problems – concentrations of HMOs, and therefore demographic imbalance

Q4. If planning legislation is seen as a barrier to the effective management of HMOs in an area how should planning legislation be amended – along the lines of option 2 (introduce a definition along the lines of the Housing Act 2004) or option 3?

# Concentrations of HMOs have caused problems, precisely because of the inadequacy of current planning legislation, the UCO. Option 2 addresses this deficiency directly (in its second variant). First of all, this Option removes the ambiguity over the meaning of ‘single household’. It replaces the functional usage of Planning Inspectors (which allows any shared house to be a ‘single household’). It substitutes the structural definition of the Housing Act 2004, which prioritises the relationships within the household (and therefore excludes shared houses).

# Secondly, Option 2 explicitly removes all houses in ‘multiple occupation’ from Class C3. Either as a new development or as a change of use, they thereby become subject to planning control. The combination of these two steps provides LPAs with powers to manage the provision of HMOs, to be used positively, negatively, or not at all, as they choose. It also provides residents with a process which can alert them to proposals for HMOs locally.

# Option 3 however takes an opposite approach. Though it proposes redefinition of HMO as in Option 2, instead it goes on to remove HMOs from the UCO altogether by identifying them as permitted development, through the General Permitted Development Order (GPDO). LPAs thereby lose any planning control at all – unless they apply successfully for an Article 4 Direction, suspending the permitted development of HMOs in a designated area.

# But such an application is fraught with difficulties. The application process itself is laborious and resource-intensive, and may well involve a Public Inquiry. The decision is out of the hands of the LPA, and subject to central government judgement. And the local authority becomes liable to compensation claims, where HMOs are refused. [Give a local example, if your council has applied, eg for additional HMO licensing, or controls on letting boards.]

Q5. Do practitioners have a preference for one approach listed as part of option 2 over the other?

# The key problem with the current UCO is not to do with numbers of occupants, but with their relationships. If Planning Inspectors have no difficulty in accepting eight unrelated occupants as a ‘single household’, then it seems unlikely that smaller numbers would pose any problems. Lowering the threshold to three persons, as proposed in para37, therefore makes no contribution to improving the effectiveness of the UCO.

# On the other hand, the second variant of Option 2, in para38, addresses the key problem directly. Currently, the idea of ‘single household’ is undefined. Planning Inspectors have resorted to a functional interpretation (‘do the occupants share facilities?’). Any shared house is thereby regarded as a single household. However, in normal usage, the term ‘shared house’ indicates that sharing takes place precisely because the occupants are not a single household (typically, they are a family). The definition in the Housing Act 2004 adopts this structural definition, which thereby captures HMOs unambiguously.

# The second variant goes on to remove newly-defined HMOs from any of the present Use Classes – thereby subjecting them to a need for planning permission, and placing them within the planning control of the LPA.

Q6. What effect would a change to the Use Classes Order as described in option 2 have on those local planning authorities that do not encounter problems with high concentrations of HMOs?

# If a LPA had no problems with HMOs, then Option 2 would make little difference. HMO applications could simply be processed as normal. If a LPA wished to encourage HMOs, it could simply adopt a local planning policy to that effect – as indeed the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames has done (UDP, Policy HSG 15, “The Council will consider favourably applications for new non self-contained accommodation.”)

Q7. Would a change to the Use Class Order as described in option 2 or 3 have an impact on the homeless and other vulnerable groups?

# Insofar as the changes to the UCO proposed in Options 2 and 3 increase LPAs’ capacity to manage the provision of HMOs, then these changes should be advantageous to the homeless and others. In the present market free-for-all, many HMO landlords target wealthier markets, like young professionals and students – at the expense of the homeless. Improved controls would allow LPAs to make better provision for vulnerable groups like the homeless.

# Furthermore, many HMOs are in fact effectively used as second homes, when they are occupied by students on a seasonal basis, as temporary term-time accommodation. This demand places additional pressure on the housing stock generally. [Give examples of housing shortage in your area.]

Q8. Would a change to the Use Classes Order as described in option 2 or 3 have any unintended consequences, for example an impact on small scale care homes or children’s homes, which are currently classed a C3 dwelling houses?

# Para38 of the Consultation Paper proposes am amendment to the UCO which would take care of the impact of Option 2or 3 on smaller scale care homes or children’s homes. There may be other unintended consequences – if so, they must be set against the consequences (surely unintended) of current legislation.

Q9. Would a change to the Use Classes Order as described in option 2 or 3 impact unfairly – directly or indirectly – on any equality strands?

# “The planning system is about land use impacts and does not differentiate between different types of occupant” (paraA71). It should not therefore imply any inequalities. In fact, the current planning framework does give rise to inequality. Concentrations of HMOs represent an extreme of social polarisation, which excludes single households, owner-occupation and social renting, and children and the elderly. Change to the UCO would enable LPAs to promote housing mix -which is after all, national policy (PPS3).

Q10. Would a change to the Use Classes order reduce the supply of HMO accommodation in your area?

# The need for planning permission might discourage some HMO developers – but if they are so easily discouraged, this may be just as well. In fact, change to the UCO need have no impact on supply. On the contrary, it would enable LPAs better to manage the supply and distribution of HMOs.

Q11. If amendments are made to the Use Classes Order, should a property that has obtained planning permission for use as an HMO require planning permission to revert back to a C3 dwelling house?

# The consultation on HMOs is prompted by the need to address the acknowledged problem of concentrations of HMOs. Reversion from HMOs to Class C3 should therefore be encouraged – and planning permission should not be required. The GPDO could be amended so that such change is ‘permitted development’.

Q12. Would a change to the Use Classes Order as described in option 3 place a new burden on local planning authorities?

# Option 3 would place heavy burdens on LPAs who wished to manage HMOs. First, they would have to engage in the costly process of seeking an Article 4 Direction. Secondly, they would lose the fees which currently cover the costs of planning applications.

Q13. Under option 3, would the removal of the current requirement for HMOs to seek planning permission pose a problem for practitioners in managing land use impacts in their area?

# Option 3 would remove from all LPAs the ability to tackle inappropriate one-off HMO developments. Those who wished to encourage HMOs would lose any leverage. Those who wished to discourage concentrations would be dependent on successfully applying for an Article 4 Direction.

Q14. Should the compensation provisions included in Section 189 of the Planning Act 2008 be applied to change of use between C3 dwelling house and an HMO if option 3 were to be implemented?

# Since potential compensation claims would be a major disincentive to LPAs to apply for an Article 4 Direction, then any means to minimise these should be adopted – including Section 189 of the Planning Act 2008.

Q15. How important would the risk of compensation be in the decision to use Article 4 directions under option 3?

# The answers to Q4 and Q14 have already indicated that the potential compensation costs to LPAs of Option 3 would be prohibitive, and a decisive deterrent to using Article 4 Directions.

Q16. Would the extra certainty of greater control bring benefits that outweigh the burdens placed by the need to process more planning applications?

# The burdens placed by the need to process more planning applications under Option 2 are negligible. The Consultation Paper itself makes clear that “local planning authorities are assumed to have no additional costs given that the fees cover the administrative costs” (paraA36).

# However, the benefits brought by the extra certainly of greater control under Option 2 are enormous. These benefits arise from the savings made by avoiding the costs of concentrations of HMOs. These costs are wide-ranging, and include –
• Staffing of noise nuisance services;
• Extra waste disposal and street cleansing, as well as clearing ill-managed waste;
• Tackling rodent infestation;
• Removing fly-posting and graffiti;
• Additional policing, especially at the beginning of the academic year, and coping with burglary throughout;
• Casualisation of the local economy, and loss of income during vacations;
• Management of traffic and parking problems;
• Intensive demand on public services, not only policing and environmental health, but also housing, planning, etc;
• Loss of social capital, which keeps neighbourhoods clean, quiet and safe;
• Extra investment of time by local authority and university officers in liaison, consultation, planning, implementation, etc;
• Development of dedicated policies on housing, planning, licensing, environment, etc;
• Extra policing, by police and by council officers during freshers week and changeover, at the beginning and end of the academic year.
• Restoring HMOs as family homes.
[Add or delete as appropriate to your area; give local references.]

Impact Assessment (optional)

Do you think that the impact assessment broadly captures the types and levels of costs associated with the policy options? If not why?

Do you think that the impact assessment broadly captures the types and levels of benefits associated with the policy options? If not why?

Do you agree that the impact assessment reflects the main impacts that particular sectors and groups are likely to experience as a result of the policy options? If not why not?