Llanelli Star

Huge amount spent to process planning cases

- RICHARD YOULE Senior Local Democracy Reporter richard.youle@walesonlin­e.co.uk

CARMARTHEN­SHIRE Council spent more than £200,000 on private companies to process planning applicatio­ns and enforcemen­t cases over the last four years because it was struggling to do the work.

The new head of the planning service, Rhodri Griffiths, said there have been significan­t improvemen­ts in recent months and that it was not using private companies at present.

Planning officers determine numerous applicatio­ns a year, with planning committees made up of councillor­s often responsibl­e for larger schemes. Enforcemen­t officers, meanwhile, look into breaches of planning control.

The council, in response to a Freedom of Informatio­n request by the Local Democracy Reporting Service, said it spent £182,123 and £4,078 on two firms – Prospero Planning and

Asbri Planning – to process planning applicatio­ns between April 1, 2018, and March 31, 2022. It paid Randstad Solutions Ltd £24,892 in relation to enforcemen­t casework.

Mr Griffiths, who took up his head of place and sustainabi­lity post in January this year, said a council report a couple of years ago raised concerns and led to the authority asking Audit Wales to review the planning department.

Audit Wales’s subsequent report, published last summer, highlighte­d many concerns – particular­ly around an inability to deal with a growing backlog. In March 2021, there were 761 planning enforcemen­t cases waiting to be dealt with, and 847 outstandin­g planning applicatio­ns – some dating back more than five years.

“Significan­t and long-standing performanc­e issues in the planning service need to be urgently addressed to help support delivery of the council’s ambitions,” said the Audit Wales report, which also identified developmen­t management weaknesses.

The council set up an interventi­on board to address the issues and work through a number of recommenda­tions, which Mr Griffiths said have almost all been implemente­d.

He said the enforcemen­t team had, as of early July, around 340 outstandin­g cases to investigat­e – a big drop from 761 the previous March. A lot of historic cases, he said, had been closed. He said there were around 530 planning applicatio­ns to be determined, compared to the 847 figure eight months earlier.

“There are public documents that show the improvemen­t,” he said.

Mr Griffiths said a new team called the planning hub had made a major impact. It takes planning-related phone calls, freeing up planning and enforcemen­t officers to focus more on their bread and butter work.

He added that the enforcemen­t team had been restructur­ed, and an extra focus more generally on performanc­e management was in place.

“I now have data on a real-time basis, so I can see bottleneck­s,” said Mr Griffiths, who used to be a senior Welsh Government civil servant.

More staff have also been appointed, although councils generally are in need of qualified planning officers and specialist­s such as planning ecologists.

Carmarthen­shire’s planning department is also dealing with a higher proportion of planning applicatio­ns and enforcemen­t cases within Welsh Government target times than previously. The compliance figure for planning applicatio­ns was up to 93%, said Mr Griffiths, in the most recent quarter.

A planning enforcemen­t statement has been published by the council, which helps the public understand the subject and sets out various service level targets.

Swansea Council, in response to the same Freedom of Informatio­n questions as those sent to Carmarthen­shire, said it hadn’t spent any money on private companies to process planning applicatio­ns and enforcemen­t cases.

Swansea’s most recent planning applicatio­n backlog stood at 715, while it had 662 new and ongoing enforcemen­t cases.

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 ?? HARRIES ?? County Hall inROBERT Carmarthen, home to Carmarthen­shire Council.
HARRIES County Hall inROBERT Carmarthen, home to Carmarthen­shire Council.

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