Towpath Talk

Planning inquiry ‘misled’ over assessment into boaters’ needs, claims NBTA

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ELMBRIDGE Borough Council did not reveal that it had carried out a Boat Dweller Accommodat­ion Needs Assessment almost six weeks before it reported to a planning inquiry on March 15, 2022 according to the National Bargee Travellers Associatio­n.

NBTA claims that the council stated that its study had just begun in order to boost its case for removing boat dwellers who are moored on unregister­ed land on the River Thames.

The council had served planning enforcemen­t notices on the boat dwellers in August 2019 to try to get them removed, which prompted the boat dwellers to apply for planning consent for the moorings in 2020. When this was refused, the boaters appealed to the Planning Inspectora­te.

If the Planning Inspector had known that the Boat Dweller Accommodat­ion Needs Assessment had been completed on February 3, 2022 and that it concluded there was a need for at least 10 residentia­l moorings in the borough, the boaters’ appeal may well have succeeded, according to NBTA.

Local Planning Authoritie­s are required under Paragraph 62 of the National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF) to assess and reflect need in their planning policies via a strategy and action. As it was, the applicatio­ns for planning consent were rejected, apart from temporary permission of two years for a family with a child under the age of five.

The Planning Inspector’s decision stated in Paragraph 51 that: “I am told that the council is now currently undertakin­g a needs assessment. However, this is not currently in the public domain and so there is no evidence before me on the level of demand for permanent residentia­l moorings and whether this would be addressed or met through a future developmen­t plan examinatio­n process or by some other means, and the timescales for doing so.”

NBTA claims that the council also failed to use the Boat Dweller Accommodat­ion Needs Assessment to inform and shape planning policy in its Draft Local Plan for 2022 to 2037, published on June 17, 2022. It was left up to boat dwellers to discover that the needs assessment had in fact been published and now formed part of the Local Plan Evidence Base.

The south bank of the River Thames forms the entirety of the eight-mile northern boundary of Elmbridge, yet the Draft Local Plan fails to address the needs of those known to be living on so-called ‘unauthoris­ed moorings’ according to NBTA.

Planning consultant Alison Heine represente­d some of the boat dwellers in the planning appeal. She said: “The approach taken by Elmbridge Council lacks fairness, transparen­cy and proper engagement with those most affected by this matter. It is hard to avoid the conclusion that the February 2022 Boat Dweller Accommodat­ion Needs Assessment was deliberate­ly withheld.

“In 2019 a report by Elmbridge Council stated that there were around 50 to 80 boats moored along the River Thames allegedly ‘without consent’ within the borough and there was a need to address this in the Local Plan. This has not happened.”

She added: “In addition, the public had just one opportunit­y, in the consultati­on on the Draft Local Plan which ended on July 29, to comment on the Boat Dweller Accommodat­ion Needs Assessment. This will be the one and only chance to examine its methodolog­y, assumption­s and findings.”

Rex Walden, vice-chairman of the Residentia­l Boat Owners Associatio­n (RBOA), said that the Boat Dweller Accommodat­ion Needs Assessment was a very poor piece of work: “The survey was carried out in January – arguably trying to conduct a survey of this type in the winter is of questionab­le value. Many liveaboard boaters on rivers like the Thames find a ‘safe haven’ for the winter months so they are unlikely to be bankside unless they have found a very secure mooring.

“During the period of the survey, the river was moving on and off Yellow and Red Boards indicating strong stream conditions. From the map provided it appears that the researcher was on the opposite side of the river to Elmbridge most of the time and did not survey all of the river frontage in the borough. The most worrying aspect is that Elmbridge Council appear to have accepted this very flawed plan without demanding it is corrected.”

Steve Cross and Fatmir Kastrati, who have been moored at Molesey in Elmbridge for 16 and 13 years respective­ly, said: “After reviewing the Boat Dweller Accommodat­ion Needs Assessment and Elmbridge Council’s comments on it, we are enraged at the injustice of it all. This report does not fulfil the boaters’ needs.”

Section 124 of the Housing and Planning Act 2016 brought boat dwellers into the ambit of local authority accommodat­ion needs assessment­s in England for the first time. The National Bargee Travellers Associatio­n (NBTA) had been campaignin­g for this change in the law since 2009.

NBTA chairman Pamela Smith concluded: “So far the outcome has been very patchy. Not all Local Housing Authoritie­s where there are navigable waterways even know they need to include boat dwellers in accommodat­ion needs assessment­s. A few have researched the needs of boat dwellers in depth, but this has not yet led to adequate provision of either temporary or permanent moorings for boat dwellers in the locations where they are required. We recommend that local authoritie­s follow our Best Practice Guide for Boat Dweller Accommodat­ion Needs Assessment­s.”

 ?? PHOTO: NBTA ?? A typical Lower Thames mooring.
PHOTO: NBTA A typical Lower Thames mooring.

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