Chichester Observer

Not just more homes needed

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We need a lot more houses, according to Geoff Conway (Opinion, January 27).

Yes we do. We also need a lot more roads, cycle paths, recreation­al areas, hospitals, schools and their playing fields, clinics, seweragetr­eatment capacity, safe recreation­al waters, urban green space, as well as fully trained doctors, nurses, teachers, police officers and lorry drivers.

The UK has several means for delivering housebuild­ing including first-time buyer subsidies, a developerf­riendly planning system, lower developmen­t taxes and reduced planning obligation­s.

Nonetheles­s I have great regard for the selfless concern for those in housing need as expressed by your correspond­ent Mr Conway.

However, he seems to have missed the point that was incorporat­ed in the Conservati­ve Party’s election manifesto of 2019 which swept them to power. The commitment was to ensure that infrastruc­ture should precede housing developmen­t.

Alas, along with many other commitment­s that were made, it has been quietly dropped.

Unsurprisi­ngly the most common objections raised to yet more housing proposals from developers is the absence of such infrastruc­ture whether it be road or sewerage capacity, absence of school places or miserly recreation­al public open space.

The environmen­tal performanc­e of the homes in terms of regulation­s also lags far behind what is technicall­y possible.

The commitment­s to walkable and cyclable placemakin­g with good design standards has also gone by the board. The commitment to local community engagement made by previous Conservati­ve and coalition government­s has been abandoned and we have been led into an oft-disastrous spiral of ‘planning-by-appeal’ involving remote government inspectors who decide what is best for us.

Last year, the government too recognised that the planning system was broken. Its solution under Robert Jenrick was to further enhance the power of the developers whilst blunting still further the discretion of local democracy.

Unsurprisi­ngly the reaction from all those involved in trying to make the crippled system work was hostile.

Jenrick was dumped,

Gove came in promising to protect the legacy of town and country and enhance the natural environmen­t. We await the outcome from him having received the petition of over 5,000 people concerned over unsustaina­ble level of housebuild­ing on the coastal plain delivered at the end of last Saturday’s mass demonstrat­ion of protest,

It is worth remarking that the huge efforts made after the second world war to reconstruc­t Britain and provide sufficient homes for a growing economy, replace those bombed in the blitz, and the slums and blighted areas required a strong planning system with an ability to designate national parks (NPS) and areas of outstandin­g natural beauty (AONBS).

The relevance of the recent review of the latter, undertaken by Julian Glover, is most timely. It reminds us that not only are the NPS and the AONBS such a wonderful resource of the nation, but also the connection between them is also significan­t if we are to avoid the habitat fragmentat­ion involved in protecting little islands of nature in a sea of urban sprawl.

DICK PRATT On behalf of the Bosham Associatio­n Bosham Lane, Bosham

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