Keeping up the pressure for a post office in Southgate

Bath MP Don Foster has today written to Multi, the company behind the Southgate development, encouraging them to push the idea of a post office within the new centre.

Although Post Office Ltd themselves are unlikely to purchase a unit, other stores are able to host a post office counter. Following the closure of the old Southgate post office, the main branch in town is now very busy, especially at peak times. With just under 60 new retail units and almost 100 flats, demand for postal services in the centre of town is set to increase come the opening of the centre. Don said,

When the Southgate post office was closed, I argued that we would need to have it replaced when the Southgate development was completed. At that time I received assurances from Multi and Post Office Ltd that this would be looked in to.

With so many new shops and apartments, it is clear that there will be a need for a post office at this end of town, even if it is just a couple of counters.

As the development nears completion, and more shops agree to move in, it is important that we raise the issue with them of hosting a post office counter within their store. I have written to Multi today to ask them for their help in getting a post office for Southgate.

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.

(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?

Resubmission of plans for Englishcombe Inn

Revised plans for the Englsihcombe Inn have been submitted to the Council’s planning department. The reference number is: 09/02098/FUL

Local residents and former regulars of the Englishcombe Inn should take this opportunity to formally comment on Cedar Care’s revised planning application for conversion of the Inn into a 40 bed care home.

The previous planning application was not refused due to the change of use of the site from a public house to a care home, but on a range of other planning grounds.

Councillor Will Sandry chaired a public meeting on the 28th May 2009 to bring together the concerned former regulars and local residents with the developers and their architects. The revised plans were displayed and many residents took the opportunity to quiz the developer, Mr Ash Desai, on the revisions to the plans.

Many local residents took the opportunity to ask important and searching questions of the developer and architects on their revised plans. Residents particularly wanted to know whether concerns they had previously expressed were being addressed in the new proposals.

Former regulars of the Englishcombe Inn also voiced their opposition to the plans and to the loss of a public house which was a community asset in the area.

At the meeting Councillor Shaun McGall explained the way the planning process works and urged residents to get involved with the process by submitting official comments on the new planning application.

It’s vital that former regulars and local residents take this opportunity to make their voices heard on this application, whether for or against.

We encourage residents to send a copy of their comments to us, their local Councillors. If there is a lot of opposition to the application then we will request that the planning application should be decided in public by the planning committee rather than by planning officers.

More details of the planning application can be found here

Chance to comment on Englishcombe Inn conversion plans

We are encouraging former regulars of the Englishcombe Inn and local residents in the area to comment on Cedar Care’s revised planning application for conversion of the Inn into a 40 bed care home.

The previous planning application was not refused due to the change of use of the site from a public house to a care home, but on a range of other planning grounds.

Councillor Will Sandry chaired a public meeting on the 28th May 2009 to bring together the concerned former regulars and local residents with the developers and their architects. The revised plans were displayed and many residents took the opportunity to quiz the developer, Mr Ash Desai, on the revisions to the plans.

Many local residents took the opportunity to ask important and searching questions of the developer and architects on their revised plans. Residents particularly wanted to know whether concerns they had previously expressed were being addressed in the new proposals.

Former regulars of the Englishcombe Inn also voiced their opposition to the plans and to the loss of a public house which was a community asset in the area.

At the meeting Councillor Shaun McGall explained the way the planning process works and urged residents to get involved with the process by submitting official comments on the new planning application.

It’s vital that former regulars and local residents take the opportunity to make their voices heard on this application, whether for or against.

We encouraged residents to send a copy of their comments to their local Councillors. If there is a lot of opposition to the application then we will request that the planning application should be decided in public by the planning committee rather than by planning officers.

Public meeting held to discuss plans for Care Home at the Englishcombe Inn

On Thursday 28th May 2009, a public meeting was organised by Cedar Care House at the request of us to discuss their revised planning application for the conversion of the Englishcombe Inn Public House to a 40 bed care home.

Cllr Sandry chaired the meeting where local residents and former regulars of the Engishcombe Inn questioned the developers, Cedar Care Homes, and their architects on their revised plans following comments and questions from local residents as well as the comments and views of the Council’s planners following the rejection of their first application.

Questions were asked about the highways access, parking, the plant room, as well as the proposed landscaping and the obvious loss of the community access of a public house.

 The developer informed the meeting that they hoped to submit a revised planning application in the next couple of weeks.

Cllr McGall informed the local residents present how the planning process worked and informed the meeting that notice of the planning application would be posted on this website, as well as in the Bath Chronicle.

Local residents and previous regulars of the Engishcombe Inn were asked to copy in their local councillors to representations to the Council’s Planning Department on this revised application.

Home to School Transport Scrutiny Panel Report – Cabinet Response

Frustration and anger at last Monday’s Meeting of The Children and Young People Scrutiny Panel

The Panel undertook a cross-party review of “Home to School Transport” and presented its reccomendations to the Cabinet member responsible earlier this year. At Monday’s Meeting of the Panel the Cabinet member’s response to the recommendations were received and discussed.

See this Link for full table of reccommendations and Cabinet member response: http://tiny.cc/RESPONSE733

Overall, the Cabinet’s response to the review is disappointing, and gave no real timescales as to when anything would or could be implemented. For instance the Cabinet member Cllr Chris Watts failed to accept the idea of a pilot “Green Bus” scheme, stating that ”a public transport provider cannot be favoured by the Council”.

The idea of a £10 per week bus ticket was accepted as a good idea, but the Panel was told by Cllr Watts the Schools Forum would have to discuss this first, and as with other reccomendations, no timescales for action/implementation were forthcoming. After a proposal from the Labour Member on the Panel it was decided that Cllr Watt would come back to the Panel in July, when the Panel, if still dissatisfied with the responses, could opt to refer it to the Full Council September meeting for an open debate.

It is surely not a good day for participatory local government to hear on the one hand that substantial numbers of residents like the parents who campaigned so committedly on this issue over many months, feel disillusioned and largely unheard. And on the other, the work and reccomendations of the Cross-Party Scrutiny Panel has not been valued and taken on board to any significant extent by this Conservative Administration.

For further views see the story on the Bath Chronicle website: http://tinyurl.com/qvho6w

Full Council – May 2009

On Thursday we had a meeting of the Full Council (ie, all 65 councillors). These are now quite rare under the Conservatives so there is generally an exciting (and long) agenda. This was also our AGM so we elected a new council chair and made changes to our panels and committees.

Cllr McGall has moved from the Corporate Audit Committee and will now sit of the quasi-judicial panel: Regulatory (Access) Committee. Cllr Sandry is staying on the Healthier Communities and Older People Overview & Scrutiny Panel. Clrr McGall also sits on Avon Fire Authority.

On Thursday night, council had two named votes. Ordinarily, votes are taken by show of hands with only the numbers recorded. However, councillors can request a named vote be taken for the public record.

The first vote was after a debate about licensing a casino in Bath; a similar proposal was passed in principal last year. Now with applicants in mind, the cabinet brought the controversial plans back to council. A free vote was held in whcih both Cllr McGall and Cllr Sandry voted infavour. We believe that responsible adults should be free to spend their money as they see fit, and that politicians ought not interfere. This was an unusually and genuinely interesting debate with a close result. The casino licence was granted.

The second named vote was altogether more odd. Bristol Airport wants to expand and is preparing a planning application to its local authority, North Somerset. The Liberal Democrats of Bristol City council recently passed a motion questioning the justificaion for expansion on both economic and environmental grounds. BathNES council has a similar motion on record from a few years ago, but the Lib Dems wanted to strengthen it. With the airport causing as much global warming as all the traffic in Bristol, the environmental cost of short haul air travel is obvious. However, less clear is the economic cost. Recent surveys by the South West regional assembly reveals that most business does not want or use a regional airport like Bristol. The airport is used mainly for tourists – leaving the UK. With convenience and cheap fares, British people spending weekends away are taking their money out of the UK, hurting tourism jobs. It should be fairly obvious that there are more Bristolians who holiday in rural Spain and Portugal, than Iberian farmers who take their holidays in Bristol. However, this section of the Liberal Democrat motion was deleted and exchanged by one praising the job creation potential of the airport expansion. The Conservative who proposed this not only sits on the Bristol airport consultation panel, but his ward is the most blighted by airport traffic and noise! With the motion thus wrecked, we were forced to vote against.

WASTE DAY CHANGE: Find out your new day online

You can find out now when your new waste collection day will be from the 8th June 2009. The Council has put information on its website about the new collection days through its new ‘My House’ information facility.

By typing in your postcode, residents can find out what new day of the week all their waste collections will be and register for regular alerts detailing other local information, like street works, planning applications, community facilities, and changes to Council services. Residents can log-on to www.bathnes.gov.uk/myhouse to find out more.

Further information about the changes is available now through various leaflets. This includes guidance on how people should put out their waste so it’s clear for the collection crews and other frequently asked questions. However, households will also be issued with a letter in the week commencing 25th May 2009 confirming which their new day will be from 8th June. Residents can also call Council Connect on 01225 394041 to find out their new day.

From the 8th June 2009, households across the district will put out their refuse, the green recycling box, and cardboard and garden waste on the same day – although the cardboard and garden waste will be collected every fortnight.

The Council is asking residents to put out their waste by 7am on the right day every week and to check which week their cardboard and garden waste will be collected as this may have changed from current arrangements. Collection times on each street will be different to what people are used to at the moment so its important waste is put out early so as not to miss the collection.

The Council is undertaking the change in direct response to residents who want a more convenient waste collection service and the need to meet the Council’s key priority of addressing the causes and effects of climate change.