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In the third quarter of 2001, district planning authorities in England received 144 thousand applications for planning permission and other related consents. This is the largest number received in the July to September quarter since 1989 and is 5 per cent higher than in the corresponding period last year.
Table 1 - All tables are available on the 'Maps, charts and tables' page available from the 'Planning applications July to September 2001' index.
The number of applications received increased in all regions apart from the South East (down 1 per cent). Largest increases were in the North East (up 10 per cent), Yorkshire and the Humber (up 9 per cent) and London (up 8 per cent).
Map 1 - All maps are available on the 'Maps, charts and tables' page available from the 'Planning applications July to September 2001' index.
District planning authorities made 141 thousand planning decisions in the third quarter of 2001, 6 per cent higher than a year earlier. This is the highest number decided since 1989.
All regions saw an increase in the number of decisions. The largest were in the North East (20 per cent), East Midlands and Yorkshire and the Humber (10 per cent) and West Midlands (9 per cent). The smallest were in the South West and the East of England (4 per cent).
Table 2, Map 2 - - All tables and maps are available on the 'Maps, charts and tables' page available from the 'Planning applications July to September 2001' index.
Once again, the increase in the number of planning decisions is largely due to decisions on householder applications increasing from 63,400 in July to September 2000 to 69,900 in July to September 2001. Householder decisions account for half of all decisions. The number of decisions relating to new dwellings has increased from 13,600 to 14,300 and accounts for 10 per cent of the total.
Table 3 - All tables are available on the 'Maps, charts and tables' page available from the 'Planning applications July to September 2001' index.
Chart 1 - shows the number of planning applications decided and the percentage decided within 8 weeks (both actual and seasonally adjusted), in each quarter since July to September 1991.
All charts are available on the 'Maps, charts and tables' page available from the 'Planning applications July to September 2001' index.
87 per cent of decisions were granted in the third quarter of 2001. This figure rarely changes; values of 87 per cent or 88 per cent have been achieved in each quarter in the last 6 years.
Table 1 - Approval rates across the regions ranged from 93 per cent in the North East (where the number of decisions is growing most rapidly) to 81 per cent in London.
Table 2 - All tables are available on the 'Maps, charts and tables' page available from the 'Planning applications July to September 2001' index.
Because of seasonal variation, quarterly figures should be compared with the corresponding quarter in the previous year. In the third quarter of 2001, 65 per cent of all planning decisions were made within the statutory 8 week period, 2 percentage points higher than a year ago.
Table 1 - For the year ending September 2001, 63 per cent of decisions were made within 8 weeks.
All tables are available on the 'Maps, charts and tables' page available from the 'Planning applications July to September 2001' index.
In July to September 2001, decisions were made quickest in the North East (70 per cent within 8 weeks). Note that the North East is the region where approval rates are highest and decisions are growing most rapidly. Decisions were slowest in London, South West and Yorkshire and the Humber (62 per cent within 8 weeks).
Table 2 - The best improvement in performance was in London, up 5 percentage points on last year.
All tables are available on the 'Maps, charts and tables' page available from the 'Planning applications July to September 2001' index.
Authorities made 84 per cent of all decisions within 13 weeks in July to September 2001 compared with 83 per cent in the same quarter last year. For the year ending September 2001, 83 per cent were decided within 13 weeks.
Table 7 - shows the number of applications decided, the percentage granted and speed of decision in the year and quarter ending September 2001 for each district planning authority. The results for speed of decision are illustrated graphically in Chart 2; this contains information for each of the authorities responding to the latest quarterly survey, ranked according to the percentage of decisions made within 8 weeks. In July to September 2001, there were 42 authorities (12 per cent of all those responding authorities) making 80 per cent or more of their decisions within the statutory 8 week period and 9 authorities making fewer than 40 per cent of decisions within 8 weeks.
All tables and charts are available on the 'Maps, charts and tables' page available from the 'Planning applications July to September 2001' index.
Of the 362 district planning authorities, 355 provided figures in time for this publication (that is, 98 per cent of all authorities and the highest in at least six years). The figures relating to Tables 1 to 3 include estimates for non-responding authorities.
Since April 1997, district planning authorities have provided information about the number of applications decided by planning officers under a scheme of delegation and without referral to committee or councillors.
The final column in Table 7 - shows the percentage of such decisions. Of the 354 authorities that provided information about delegated decisions in the third quarter of 2001, only 4 did not use delegated powers for any decisions.
All tables are available on the 'Maps, charts and tables' page available from the 'Planning applications July to September 2001' index.
From April 1997, district planning authorities have also provided information about the number of applications decided which were advertised as departures from the development plan in force, and the number of departure applications which were granted.
A total of 355 authorities (98 per cent) were able to provide this information for July to September 2001. Of the planning decisions taken by these authorities, 1,382 (about 1 per cent) were advertised as departures from the development plan. New dwellings accounted for 33 per cent of departure decisions. An average of 41 per cent of departure applications were granted, compared with 87 per cent of planning applications overall.
Table 4 - shows statistics of formal enforcement action taken by responding authorities in each year since data collection began in 1992/93. In July to September 2001, district planning authorities reported issuing 1,070 Enforcement Notices and served 906 Planning Contravention Notices (the lowest quarterly figure since records began in April 1992), 320 Breach of Condition Notices and 18 Stop Notices. The High Court or County Court granted 12 Enforcement Injunctions and 1 was refused.
All tables are available on the 'Maps, charts and tables' page available from the 'Planning applications July to September 2001' index.
Table 5 - shows the number of Regulation 3 and 4 Consents granted in each quarter since 1993/94. Under Regulation 3 of the Town and Country Planning General Regulations 1992, SI 1992/1492, a local planning authority makes an application to itself for permission to develop land within its area, and determines that application. In the third quarter of 2001, 1,605 Regulation 3 consents were reported granted (the highest in five years) and 85 Regulation 4 consents were granted. Regulation 4 is concerned with planning permission for development of land in which the local planning authority has an interest but which it does not itself propose to carry out.
All tables are available on the 'Maps, charts and tables' page available from the 'Planning applications July to September 2001' index.
In July to September 2001, district planning authorities reported receiving 3,304 applications for determination whether local authority approval is required for certain works (Table 6 - (Adobe Acrobat 6kb) (MS Excel 22kb). They decided to intervene in 554 cases. This is 17 per cent of applications received, slightly lower than the previous two quarters.
'County matters' planning applications are predominantly concerned with minerals extraction and waste disposal developments. They are decided by the county-level planning authorities - that is, county councils, metropolitan districts, unitary authorities, London boroughs, and national park authorities. However, because of the nature of county matters applications, the large majority are handled by the county councils.
County planning authorities receive fewer than two thousand 'county matters' applications each year. This compares with about 550 thousand planning applications received by district planning authorities. Quarterly figures for 'county matters' decisions are likely to be much more variable than those for districts because of the smaller numbers of such decisions.
In the third quarter of 2001, county planning authorities reported receiving 465 planning applications, 10 per cent higher than for the same quarter last year. County councils accounted for 80 per cent of total applications, metropolitan districts for 12 per cent and unitary authorities for 7 per cent.
Table 8 - Cumbria received the highest number this quarter (26) followed by Lancashire (23) and Staffordshire (21).
Table 11 - All tables are available on the 'Maps, charts and tables' page available from the 'Planning applications July to September 2001' index.
County planning authorities reported 399 planning decisions in the quarter, 10 per cent higher than last year. Of these, 88 per cent were granted, marginally lower than in the corresponding period in 2000. Waste developments accounted for 63 per cent of total decisions and minerals developments for 32 per cent.
Table 9 - Kent reported 21 decisions, the highest number in the quarter, followed by Cumbria and Hampshire with 19 decisions.
Table 11 - shows individual numbers of permissions granted by authorities under Regulations 3 and 4 of the Town and Country Planning General Regulations 1992. The highest numbers of Regulation 3 consents were granted by Kent (103), Lincolnshire (61) and Hampshire (55). In order to better reflect the workload of authorities, information on the total number of decisions on applications for consent, agreement or approval of details or schemes required by conditions, as defined by Article 21 of the GDPO 1995 has been collected from April 2000 and is also published in this table. In July to September 2001, the highest numbers of decisions were reported by Leicestershire (82) and Somerset (24). The number of determinations under the review of mineral planning permissions (ROMPs) was also collected. Somerset recorded 3 determinations, the highest this quarter.
All tables are available on the 'Maps, charts and tables' page available from the 'Planning applications July to September 2001' index.
In the third quarter of 2001, 11 per cent of all decisions on 'county matters' applications were made within the statutory 8 week period, 6percentage points lower than in the corresponding quarter of 2000. Authorities made 34 per cent of decisions within 13 weeks and 51 per cent within 17 weeks
Table 10 - All tables are available on the 'Maps, charts and tables' page available from the 'Planning applications July to September 2001' index.
In July to September 2001, county planning authorities issued 24 Enforcement Notices and served 3 Stop Notices, 22 Planning Contravention Notices and 17 Breach of Condition Notices.
Table 12 - All tables are available on the 'Maps, charts and tables' page available from the 'Planning applications July to September 2001' index.
Of the 157 county planning authorities, 154 (98 per cent) provided figures in time for this publication.
1. The term 'district planning authorities' describes the group of authorities with responsibility for deciding planning applications at 'district level': metropolitan and non-metropolitan districts, new unitary authorities (those created from April 1995 onwards), London boroughs and national park authorities.
2. Statistics of planning applications received and decided by district planning authorities have been collected on a quarterly basis since April 1979, on the PS1 and PS2 General Development Control statistical returns. Prior to April 1986, these returns covered applications and decisions under section 29 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1971 (since replaced by section 70 of the consolidated Town and Country Planning Act 1990).
3. Since then, data collection has been extended to cover other types of application requiring permission from local authorities, including listed building consents, conservation area consents and consent to display advertisements. This reflects the wider range of planning casework handled by district planning authorities. From April 1997, data have also been collected on receipt of Environmental Statements with planning applications, on the use of delegated powers, and on applications which the authority decided to advertise as departures from the Development Plan.
4. District planning authorities are sent the quarterly information bulletin together with more detailed figures for individual authorities in their respective Government Office region. These provide a set of yardsticks against which authorities can judge their own figures.
5. 'County matters' planning applications are predominantly concerned with minerals extraction and waste disposal developments, as set out in Schedule 1 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990, the Town and Country Planning (Prescription of County Matters) Regulations 1980 (SI 1980/2010) and in Annex 7 of Planning Policy Guidance Note 23 'Planning and Pollution Control'.
6. Prior to April 1986 decisions made by county councils had been included in the returns (PS1/PS2) submitted by the district planning authorities. A review of these returns in 1985 recommended that information about county council applications should be collected separately and a quarterly collection of county council development control statistics relating to 'county matters' planning applications (the CPS1/2 Return) was introduced from the beginning of April 1989.
7. From April 1992, data collection was extended to cover other types of authority with responsibility for 'county matters' applications. From April 1995, the scope of the quarterly survey was widened to include collection of data on enforcement action taken by authorities relating to 'county matters' developments and from April 1997, data have also been collected on receipt of Environmental Statements with 'county matters' planning applications. From April 2000, information has been collected on the total number of (i) decisions on applications for consent, agreement or approval of details or schemes required by conditions, as defined by Article 21 of the GDPO 1995, and (ii) determinations of new conditions under the review, or periodic review, of mineral planning permissions (ROMPs).
8. All figures included in the commentary have been calculated using unrounded data. As a result, there may be some apparent discrepancy with figures shown in the tables.
9. All statistics shown in Tables 1 to 3, Chart 2 and Maps 1 and 2 are based on information provided to the Department for Transport, Local Government and the Regions by 23 November 2001. These will include estimates for non-responding authorities. Figures received by 30 November have been included in Tables 4 to 6, Tables 8 to 12 and Chart 1. Figures received from planning authorities after that date have been included in Table 7 where this was possible within the publication schedule.
10. The reorganisation of local government in England has necessitated a change in the presentation of statistics for local authority areas. Where data are presented by 'type of authority' in Table 2, figures for unitary authorities are included in the category 'non-metropolitan districts'. Figures for unitary authorities are shown in Table 7 within the former county structure. In Tables 8 to 11 (relating to 'county matters'), figures are shown separately for the category 'unitary authorities'
11. A guide to the composition of Government Office Regions and their relationship to the Standard Statistical Regions is given at Annex A. Figures for the Standard Statistical Regions are available on request from the Planning and Land Use Statistics Division, Department for Transport, Local Government and the Regions, 3/K9, Eland House, Bressenden Place, London SW1E 5DU. Email plus@communities.gsi.gov.uk Tel. 020-7944 5502 Fax. 020-7944 5519.
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