Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Planning decisions to be made by council officer until June

EMERGENCY SHORT-TERM POWERS WILL BE IN PLACE FOR THE REST OF MAY

- By TONY EARNSHAW Local Democracy Reporter @LdrTony

PLANNING decisions for housing, school buildings and retail units in Kirklees will be made under emergency powers for the remainder of May.

It follows a decision by Jacqui Gedman, chief executive of Kirklees Council, to delegate determinat­ion to a senior officer during the coronaviru­s crisis.

That senior officer is Karl Battersby, the strategic director for economy and infrastruc­ture.

He has responsibi­lity for all frontline environmen­tal services, planning, regenerati­on and developmen­t functions, the capital programme and all council land and property assets.

Prior to committee meetings resuming virtually on June 3 Mr Battersby is expected to determine a handful of planning applicatio­ns. They include:

40 homes at the former Batley & District Cottage Hospital in Batley

65 apartments at the former

Wheelwrigh­t Centre in Dewsbury

19 homes on a former railway goods yard in Netherton

A roundabout and access road to land at Lees Hall Road, Dewsbury, which has been earmarked for 240 homes as part of the first phase of the Dewsbury Riverside developmen­t

A mezzanine floor for a vacant retail unit at Birstall Shopping Park

The matters for determinat­ion were described as “a short-term use of emergency powers” by a council spokesman.

The authority has confirmed that decision-making by committee will resume after June 3.

The council has been criticised for its slowness in setting up virtual meetings and for effectivel­y excluding members of the public from decision-making on planning issues.

One Conservati­ve councillor said it was undemocrat­ic for officers rather than elected members to decide on potentiall­y contentiou­s planning matters.

And the leader of the Liberal Democrats on Kirklees Council said confidence in the planning process was driven by public input.

Clr Donald Firth (Con, Holme Valley South) said committee decisionma­king should be re-establishe­d as a matter or urgency.

He said passing the responsibi­lity to officers was “disgusting”. “It’s not what I call democracy. I’m not happy that one person is making decisions that councillor­s were elected to make.”

His colleague Clr Martyn Bolt (Con, Mirfield) said Kirklees had failed a benchmarki­ng scenario as other authoritie­s had been speedier in setting up virtual meetings, which negated the use of emergency powers.

“Why do we need delegated powers? We have them yet we have the process in place to have elected members making decisions at Cabinet.

“The technology is there. The legislatio­n is there. What is missing in Kirklees? That’s the question.”

He added: “A councillor sitting on a planning committee has to undergo training every year. Are the officers that are making these decisions equally trained?

“On a committee there is a vote.

How many people are making these delegated decisions? Is it just one member of staff?”

Clr John Lawson (Lib Dem, Cleckheato­n) said he wanted a return to public engagement “as soon as possible”.

He added: “While we understand that there are technical difficulti­es at the moment the lack of public input causes a fundamenta­l weakness in the process.”

Green group leader Clr Andrew Cooper (Newsome) said: “We need to restore democratic planning meetings as soon as possible to ensure local people get their say on controvers­ial planning decisions before they are made.”

A spokesman for Kirklees Council said: “The power to make these urgent decisions is delegated to the chief executive in consultati­on with the chair of the planning committee - as recommende­d by Government.

“It is a temporary emergency measure until planning committee meetings can be held virtually.

“We’ve been working hard to put these in place and can now confirm that planning committee will meet virtually from June 3.”

 ??  ?? An artists impression of how the former Batley & District Cottage Hospital could look
An artists impression of how the former Batley & District Cottage Hospital could look

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