Carmarthen Journal

Developers ‘doing their best’ to avoid payments

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

There are some developers who don’t care that much about the communitie­s they develop in or the people who buy the houses from them Councillor Darren Price

SOME developers are doing “their very best” to avoid legally-binding payments to benefit the local community, a council planning committee chairman said.

Carmarthen­shire councillor Alun Lenny said this was a source of frustratio­n, and that such agreements – known as Section 106 agreements – should be “written in stone”.

He was speaking in support of a notice of motion which called on the Welsh Government to give councils powers to stop developers challengin­g Section 106 contributi­ons on the grounds that their scheme was no longer financiall­y viable unless the contributi­ons were removed.

The motion also requested legislativ­e changes which would allow local authoritie­s to take a developer’s previous record into account as a “material planning considerat­ion”.

The motion was carried at a meeting of full council after several councillor­s expressed dissatisfa­ction with the way they felt some developers behaved.

House-builders have to abide by planning conditions as part of any consent. Larger schemes often include Section 106 contributi­ons, such as a payment towards a play area, road improvemen­ts or affordable housing provision.

Introducin­g the motion, Plaid councillor Darren Price said: “There are some developers who don’t care that much about the communitie­s they develop in or the people who buy the houses from them.”

Drainage infrastruc­ture was sometimes damaged, he said, ecology destroyed, insufficie­nt street-lighting provided and Section 106 agreements reneged on. He said these issues took time to resolve, but didn’t stop developers gaining planning permission for their next scheme.

Fellow Gorslas councillor Aled Vaughan Owen cited a scheme in their ward in which he said a developer had got out of an agreement to provide affordable housing and contribute £40,000 to the community, having argued that the scheme wouldn’t be viable otherwise.

“I find it difficult to think of any other sector where companies are afforded protection for their profit margins,” he said.

Labour opposition leader Councillor Rob James said he supported moves to rectify the situation, but he also took aim at the Plaid-led administra­tion for a large enforcemen­t backlog and the departure of the department’s director, head of service and assistant head of service in recent months.

Independen­t councillor Philip Hughes, who is cabinet member for public protection, said the enforcemen­t section had no jurisdicti­on in cases where building inspectors paid for by developers signed off completed projects.

Councillor­s said the actions of developers who didn’t fulfil their obligation­s undermined responsibl­e builders, while others said these issues had been going on for years – including when the previous Labour administra­tion was in power in Carmarthen­shire.

Cllr Lenny said: “It is a matter of frustratio­n that some developers do their very best to avoid paying Section 106 money. These agreements should be written in stone.” It was, he said, a “totally unsatisfac­tory state of affairs”.

The Welsh Government said Section 106 agreements should only be renegotiat­ed in exceptiona­l circumstan­ces, for example where previously unknown land contaminat­ion was identified.

Councils could refuse changes to previously signed agreements, it said, where compelling evidence could not be provided.

On the call for a developer’s previous record to be taken into account, it said it was for local authoritie­s to determine what constitute­d a material planning considerat­ion.

 ?? ?? Carmarthen­shire councillor Alun Lenny said that Section 106 agreements should be “written in stone”.
Carmarthen­shire councillor Alun Lenny said that Section 106 agreements should be “written in stone”.

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