Portsmouth News

Plan to help clear backlog of applicatio­ns

Two-week shutdown of planning department

- By JOSH WRIGHT The News joshua.wright@thenews.co.uk

A TWO-WEEK shutdown of Portsmouth City Council’s planning department is being held in an attempt to clear its long-standing backlog of applicatio­ns.

Despite various attempts, including paying £50,000 to specialist firm Terraquest, little progress had been made in dealing with about 300 schemes waiting for decisions.

Cabinet member for planning policy Hugh Mason said he expected the ‘planning blitz’ to clear ‘well over half ’ of the backlog, by focusing the department solely on minor applicatio­ns and not taking any enquiries.

It began on April 19 and runs until Tuesday.

'For these two weeks our planning officers are doing nothing else but getting through those applicatio­ns which are fairly straightfo­rward and can be decided quickly,' Cllr Mason said. 'We have tried lots of things to try and clear the backlog, which has given rise to quite a number of complaints.

‘By reducing it, we free up planning officers’ time to carefully consider the larger applicatio­ns which take a lot more deliberati­on and negotiatio­n.’

The backlog was caused largely by a pause on developmen­t due to nitrate pollution in the Solent and the pandemic and has been compounded by difficulti­es in recruiting staff.

‘All of this means we are taking too long to make decisions on planning applicatio­ns, in particular household and minor applicatio­ns, with many taking beyond the statutory timescales - typically more than eight weeks,' a council spokesman said. 'We believe the best way to fix this is to devote all our staff to work on clearing the backlog for a twoweek Decision Delivery Drive.

They said similar approaches taken by other councils had been successful.

‘We know this will be inconvenie­nt for some or our customers but by doing this we are confident we can significan­tly reduce the number of planning applicatio­ns in the system, meaning we can provide much better customer service to applicants going forward,’ they added.

At its peak in April 2021, the council had 336 applicatio­ns waiting for decisions and this had only reduced slightly to 287 by the start of this year.

Last week, decisions were issued for 160 applicatio­ns, compared to just 30 the week before.

Retired planning officers have also been brought back to help and this practice is set to continue.

Cllr Mason said a review of the effectiven­ess of the shutdown would take place over the coming weeks and said a second round could be held later in the year if it was deemed a success.

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