Daily Mail

BORIS THE BULLDOZER

Planning red tape will be axed in drive to rebuild Britain and create jobs

- By Jason Groves Political Editor

BORIS Johnson vowed yesterday to bulldoze Britain’s bloated planning system to help get the economy moving again.

relaunchin­g his Government, the Prime Minister pledged to bring forward ‘the most radical reforms of our planning system since the end of the Second World War’.

He said the move, which will see ministers take the axe to swathes of red tape, would pave the way for an ‘infrastruc­ture revolution’ that would create jobs now and improve productivi­ty long-term.

Mr Johnson said the Government wanted to ‘build, build, build’, but added that he would ‘build back better, build back greener, build back faster.’ Chancellor rishi Sunak will lead a new unit, dubbed ‘Project Speed’ to fast track major infrastruc­ture projects and identify bottleneck­s in the system that need to be cleared away.

The Prime Minister hinted that he would also take the bulldozer to parts of the Whitemachi­ne, saying he had been frustrated by its ‘sluggish’ response to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Mr Johnson used the speech in dudley, in the West Midlands, to set out the principles of his government following months in which the coronaviru­s has occupied almost all of its effort.

He said that, despite the continuing health challenges and looming economic crisis, it was ‘ the moment to be ambitious’ about the future.

People would be offered a ‘New deal’, he said, with Britain rebuilt in a fairer way after the pandemic exposed divisions in society. The PM restated his determinat­ion to offer opportunit­y to people living in ‘neglected’ parts of the country, saying he was ‘doubling down on levelling up.’

The Prime Minister said there would be no return to austerity, despite the dire state of the public finances, but refused to rule out tax rises further down the track.

and he said he would pour resources into addressing the looming jobs crisis, saying that keeping people in work and helping them re-skill was the ‘biggest and most immediate economic challenge that we face’.

But Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said much of the speech was recycled from previous policy announceme­nts and failed to meet the challenge the country is facing.

‘The Prime Minister promised a new deal, but there is not much that’s new, and, it’s not much of a deal,’ he said.

Mr Johnson acknowledg­ed that, with Leicester becoming the first city to go back into lockdown, some would think it ‘premature’ to focus on the future. But he said the country could not afford to continue being ‘prisoners of this crisis’.

In a wide-ranging speech, the Prime Minister:

■ Set an ambition to make the UK a ‘science superpower’, with ministers planning a new system for funding ‘ high risk, high reward’ projects that can transform British ideas into ‘new British industries and British jobs’.

■ Pledged to offer young people an ‘opportunit­y guarantee’, with businesses to be offered grants to ensure apprentice­ships are available for all.

■ revealed that he is close to finalising proposals for a new system for funding social care which will ensure people do not have to sell their homes to pay for care.

■ defended the free market system, saying that people should clap for businessme­n and bankers as well as doctors and nurses, as their efforts ‘make our NHS possible’.

■ Hinted he could revive audacious plans for a bridge linking Scotland to Northern Ireland as part of plans to strengthen the Union.

■ announced £5billion of additional infrastruc­ture spending, with money to rebuild and refurbish schools, hospitals, courts and prisons.

■ Warned against abusing new freedoms to enjoy pubs and restaurant­s this weekend, saying: ‘ The virus is out there still, circling like a shark on the water.’

The PM focused much of his fire on Britain’s sclerotic planning system. He announced a number of

immediate changes designed to tackle the crisis in the commercial property sector.

These include allowing offices and shops to be converted into housing without planning permission in most cases.

Businesses will also be able to ‘repurpose’ property to a new use, such as converting a shop into a cafe, without the need for council red tape.

And developers will be able to demolish vacant and redundant buildings without normal planning permission, provided they are to be rebuilt as homes. But government sources said yesterday’s changes were ‘by no means the end of our ambitions’. At a meeting of government advisers last week, Dominic Cummings, the PM’s chief adviser, described the planning system as ‘appalling’, adding: ‘It makes things so hard to build.’ Mr Johnson yesterday announced that ministers will bring forward proposals to replace Britain’s sevendecad­e old planning system with ‘a new approach that works better for our modern economy and society’. He hinted that time-consuming environmen­tal surveys, and similar red tape, could be streamline­d, saying: ‘Time is money, and the newt- counting delays in our system are a massive drag on the productivi­ty and the prosperity of this country.’

He added: ‘Yes, we will insist on beautiful and low carbon homes, but Covid has taught us the cost of delay. Why are we so slow at building homes by comparison with other European countries?’

Mr Johnson suggested that ‘Nimbys’, who often slow down developmen­ts near their homes by objecting, would also have to accept change. ‘I can imagine there will be some people who reject this or that but there always are,’ he said.

‘We need pace and this is the moment to inject that pace into the ambition of the Government.’

The PM acknowledg­ed that the planned increase in constructi­on would involve the loss of some green field sites.

He said that although new homes and other projects could often be built on previously developed ‘brownfield’ sites there were ‘other areas that with better transport and other infrastruc­ture could frankly be suitable and right for developmen­t’. Downing Street later clarified that the Government’s manifesto commitment to protect the Green Belt remained in place.

But the push for new developmen­t alarmed some environmen­tal campaigner­s. Tom Fyans, of the CPRE countrysid­e charity, said: ‘Deregulati­ng planning and cutting up red tape simply won’t deliver better quality places. It’s already far too easy to build poor quality homes.’ ÷Latest coronaviru­s video news, views and expert advice at mailplus.co.uk/coronaviru­s’

‘A massive drag on prosperity’

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