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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Bewley Homes PLC v Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities & Anor [2024] EWHC 1166 (Admin) (16 May 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2024/1166.html Cite as: [2024] WLR(D) 222, [2024] EWHC 1166 (Admin), [2024] PTSR 1172 |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
PLANNING COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Bewley Homes plc |
Claimant |
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The Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities |
First Defendant |
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Waverley Borough Council |
Second Defendant |
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Ned Westaway (instructed by Government Legal Department) for the First Defendant
Emma Dring (instructed by Waverley Borough Council) for the Second Defendant
Hearing date: 12 March 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Holgate:
Introduction
The National Planning Policy Framework
"a) an economic objective – to help build a strong, responsive and competitive economy, by ensuring that sufficient land of the right types is available in the right places and at the right time to support growth, innovation and improved productivity; and by identifying and coordinating the provision of infrastructure;"
This objective is taken up again in chapter 6
"81. Planning policies and decisions should help create the conditions in which businesses can invest, expand and adapt. Significant weight should be placed on the need to support economic growth and productivity, taking into account both local business needs and wider opportunities for development. The approach taken should allow each area to build on its strengths, counter any weaknesses and address the challenges of the future. This is particularly important where Britain can be a global leader in driving innovation42, and in areas with high levels of productivity, which should be able to capitalise on their performance and potential.
82. Planning policies should:
a) set out a clear economic vision and strategy which positively and proactively encourages sustainable economic growth, having regard to Local Industrial Strategies and other local policies for economic development and regeneration;
b) set criteria, or identify strategic sites, for local and inward investment to match the strategy and to meet anticipated needs over the plan period;
c) seek to address potential barriers to investment, such as inadequate infrastructure, services or housing, or a poor environment; and
d) be flexible enough to accommodate needs not anticipated in the plan, allow for new and flexible working practices (such as live-work accommodation), and to enable a rapid response to changes in economic circumstances.
83. Planning policies and decisions should recognise and address the specific locational requirements of different sectors. This includes making provision for clusters or networks of knowledge and data-driven, creative or high technology industries; and for storage and distribution operations at a variety of scales and in suitably accessible locations."
"The Government's Industrial Strategy sets out a vision to drive productivity improvements across the UK, identifies a number of Grand Challenges facing all nations, and sets out a delivery programme to make the UK a leader in four of these: artificial intelligence and big data; clean growth; future mobility; and catering for an ageing society. HM Government (2017) Industrial Strategy: Building a Britain fit for the future."
"84. Planning policies and decisions should enable:
a) the sustainable growth and expansion of all types of business in rural areas, both through conversion of existing buildings and well-designed new buildings;
b) the development and diversification of agricultural and other land-based rural businesses;
c) sustainable rural tourism and leisure developments which respect the character of the countryside; and
d) the retention and development of accessible local services and community facilities, such as local shops, meeting places, sports venues, open space, cultural buildings, public houses and places of worship.
85. Planning policies and decisions should recognise that sites to meet local business and community needs in rural areas may have to be found adjacent to or beyond existing settlements, and in locations that are not well served by public transport. In these circumstances it will be important to ensure that development is sensitive to its surroundings, does not have an unacceptable impact on local roads and exploits any opportunities to make a location more sustainable (for example by improving the scope for access on foot, by cycling or by public transport). The use of previously developed land, and sites that are physically well related to existing settlements, should be encouraged where suitable opportunities exist."
A summary of the Inspector's decision letter in 2023.
(i) The effect of the proposal on the character and appearance of the area;
(ii) Any implications of housing supply or delivery for the determination of the application.
"93. Short term benefits from construction and longer term benefits from spend in the local economy are hard to attribute to individual developments of this scale, and I see nothing of detail in the evidence that tries to do so. I attribute moderate weight to these matters as benefits of the proposal.
94. Paragraph 81 of the Framework regarding placing significant weight on the need to support economic growth does not increase the weight further, given the principal focus it has on business investment, expansion, and adaption.
95. Notwithstanding the moderate weight attached to the benefits described above, collectively they add weight in favour of the scheme. My attention has been drawn to appeal decisions that consider similar benefits. I have paid regard to these decisions acknowledging also that such judgements turn on their own circumstances and that, whilst it is desirable to decide like cases in a similar way, a small number of decisions following one approach is not always determinative of an issue."
Bewley's complaint focuses on the Inspector's judgment that only "moderate weight" should be given to those economic benefits, rather than the "significant weight" which, it is said, para. 81 of NPPF 2021 prescribes.
Legal principles.
The grounds of challenge.
The case before the Inspector
"Short-term economic benefits from construction.
Long-term economic benefits from additional spend in the local area arising from new residents of the development."
"150. It is also noteworthy that paragraph 81 of the NPPF does not direct that significant weight should be placed on a particular contribution towards economic growth or productivity no matter how large or small. This does not mean that it allows for less weight to be applied to different contributions. That would be a clear misreading of the paragraph. The NPPF is unequivocal in telling decision makers what weight to apply. The weight to be applied is prescribed and the same; but it is being applied to a bigger or smaller benefit. Just as when great weight is applied to heritage harm, the weight is the same but the level of harm to which it is applied may not be."
"95. There would be economic benefits through construction employment, and through expenditure by future occupants in the area. Paragraph 81 of the Framework indicates that significant weight should be placed on the need to support economic growth and productivity. The appellant has given an indication of the significant input into the local economy that the development would make. Therefore, even though the economic benefits associated with the construction would only be short term and most residential development would result in additional expenditure in the local area, I have given significant weight to the resulting support to economic growth and productivity from the development."
"43. Mr Woods accepted that the economic benefits of the appeal scheme, both through construction and through increased local spend by residents, would contribute to supporting economic growth and productivity. This is something to which NPPF para. 81 directs "significant weight" be given. Mr Woods accepted in XX that if you were to determine the appeal consistently with the Rectory Farm and Clappers Lane, you would give significant weight (on his scale, i.e. substantial weight on Mr Neame's scale) to this factor. Those decisions expressly applied NPPF para. 81 in the context of the economic benefits of smaller residential schemes. So too did para. 70(viii) of the Fleet decision (albeit it was NPPF para. 80 at that time. The decisions on which the Council relies on this point do not grapple with NPPF para. 81."
Mr. Brian Woods MRTPI gave planning evidence at the inquiry on behalf of WBC.
"Contrary to the Appellant's argument, there is no national policy imperative to give economic benefits which are incidental to the delivery of housing "significant" weight, irrespective of their scale or duration. On a fair reading paragraph 81 NPPF is a high level statement of policy which is mainly concerned with promoting business/commercial growth and development. If it genuinely required any and all economic benefits to be given significant weight in the planning balance as a matter of course, then that would be generally reflected in appeal decisions (whether or not the point was raised in argument). It is recognised that some Inspectors have accepted the argument that DN [David Neame] advances; that does not mean the argument is correct. Here there is no quantification of the level of economic benefits that would arise to judge their true significance, they should properly be accorded no more than moderate weight."
Ground 1
"The government is committed to ensuring that the planning system does everything it can to support sustainable economic growth. Planning should operate to encourage and not act as an impediment to sustainable growth. Therefore significant weight should be placed on the need to support economic growth through the planning system."
In March 2018 the Government consulted on proposed revisions to the NPPF. The consultation document stated that the text which became paras. 81 to 82 of NPPF 2021 was intended to make more explicit the importance of supporting "business growth and improved productivity in a way that links to key aspects of the Government's Industrial Strategy."
Ground 2
Conclusion
Note 1 The relevant policies in NPPF 2021 are not materially different from those contained in the present NPPF published on 20 December 2023. [Back]