Sunderland Echo

Submitted planning applicatio­ns at 25-year low

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Planning applicatio­ns in Sunder land plunged by more than a quarter during the peak of the coronaviru­s pandemic, new figure show.

Ministry of Housing, Communitie­s and Local Government data shows Sunderland City Council received 159 applicatio­ns for planning permission between April and June – the lowest number since comparable records began in 1996, and a 26% decrease from the same period last year. In the first three months of 2020, the council received 228 applicatio­ns.

The figures include housing, office and retail developmen­ts as well as extensions or alteration­s to existing homes.

The council made decision son 191 applicatio­ns between April and June, of which 175 were granted.

Across England as a whole, local authoritie­s received 88,000 planning applicatio­ns between April and June – down by almost a quarter from 2019.

Andrew Whitaker, planning director at the Home Builders Federation, said the national lockdown period had been tough for developers.

He said: "It was inevitable that applicatio­ns would drop, not least because a lot of builders were forced to furlough staff, but also because of the uncertaint­y caused by the pandemic.

"The Government remains committed to increasing supply and demand is strong, evidenced by the very strong recovery of the new homes market in recent months."

David Renard, planning spokesman for the Local Government Associatio­n, said councils have kept the planning process on track throughout the crisis, but warned the loss of planning applicatio­n fees will have had an impact on revenue in some areas.

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