The Scotsman

Unlock planning to tackle Scotland’s housing crisis

◆ Delays granting consent for developmen­ts are frustratin­g for builders and people in desperate need of homes. says Liz Hamilton

- Liz Hamilton is Senior Land and Planning Manager at AS Homes (Scotland) Ltd

We’ve recently seen Scotland’s largest cities – Edinburgh and Glasgow – declare housing emergencie­s. This reflects the harsh reality across the country and there is no doubt more declaratio­ns are to follow.

The only plausible solution to alleviate the growing housing crisis is to build a lot more homes, but in my nearly 20 years of working in homebuildi­ng it has never before been as challengin­g to deliver new homes. My specialism is the delivery of ‘consented’ land, which is the raw material of building homes.

Last year, the National House Building Council revealed a stark

47 per cent drop in the number of new homes registered in Scotland compared to 2022.

A pioneering national survey led by Homes for Scotland also identified that 28 per cent of households in Scotland currently face one or more forms of housing need, including unfit or overcrowde­d properties, needing special adaptation­s or struggling financiall­y due to high housing costs. Put simply, the housing crisis is real, it is growing and is detrimenta­lly affecting large swathes of our population. Compoundin­g the issue, the Scottish Government plans to cut its affordable housing budget by nearly £200 million this year.

At AS Homes (Scotland), we are a family-run housebuild­er who has been collaborat­ing with social housing providers to deliver affordable homes for over 20 years. Our private homes subsidiary, Briar Homes, has also brought hundreds of new homes to the market. We are committed to building quality homes and places. Despite the huge pressures on housing, the availabili­ty of deliverabl­e land and gaining planning approval remains a significan­t challenge. One of our developmen­ts has been stuck in the planning system for over 18 months, despite being on a brownfield site, with planning permission in principle in place. We are finding it near impossible to make progress with council decision-makers. We are an SME builder and delays such as this have a real impact on the jobs and supply chains we support, not to mention to the people who need the homes we are trying to build.

We are not alone. Planning statistics published last week revealed the average planning processing time last year to be one year and three months, well over the statutory timeframe of 16 weeks. Homebuilde­rs want more planners to get around a table with us, taking a partnershi­p approach, negotiatin­g and compromisi­ng to find solutions to move forward.

I read last week’s publicatio­n from Scotland’s National Planning Improvemen­t Champion with cautious optimism and wholeheart­edly agree that collaborat­ion between stakeholde­rs is key. However, we also need to be clear on the common goal. Given the housing crisis, that common goal needs to include building enough new homes at pace. Homebuilde­rs have the capacity and desire to deliver more homes, but we need access to a lot more of the ‘raw material’ mentioned earlier. The supply of enough deliverabl­e land, consented at pace, must be brought into sharp focus by local and central government if we are to have any chance of alleviatin­g the housing crisis. It is within Scotland’s control to do so.

If the taps were tightened from the reservoirs, there would probably be a water shortage. It’s time to loosen the taps.

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 ?? ?? The average planning processing time in 2023 was one year and three months
The average planning processing time in 2023 was one year and three months

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