Wokingham Today

More tracking for Section 106

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CONSERVATI­VE councillor­s in Wokingham Borough have received unanimous support for proposals for the authority to track its agreements with property developers.

Councillor backed a motion for a regular report on how developers are meeting agreements to provide funding, affordable housing or infrastruc­ture.

Known as Section 106 (s106) agreements, these require developers to meet obligation­s to mitigate against the impact of developmen­t in order to secure planning permission.

These agreements are binding

Cllr Rebecca Margetts, Conservati­ve councillor for Finchampst­ead South, brought forward the motion.

This follows what the Conservati­ves say was a failure by developers to deliver community facilities in Arborfield Green following the approval of a planning applicatio­n for 2,000 homes in 2015.

Under s106 agreement made at the time, sport and recreation­al facilities, a community centre, a supermarke­t, allotments and more were meant to be delivered in time for the occupation of the 1,000th home, which was in 2019.

Despite this, none of the promised facilities have been built.

At the council meeting, Cllr Margetts’ motion was approved without debate, which occurs when no-one wants to oppose a proposal.

Cllr Margetts has campaigned for delivery of the village centre since she was elected in 2021.

In November 2022 she presented a petition to Wokingham Borough Council from local residents, demanding that developer Crest Nicholson deliver on its promised Arborfield Green village centre.

Cllr Margetts said: “The planning applicatio­n decision for Arborfield Green was granted in 2015, and residents began moving into new properties from 2017 onwards.

“Now, in 2024, we have a community and village that have none of the promised facilities, who have to get in a car to visit a supermarke­t, and have not been provided with the vision they bought into when purchasing their new properties.

“The developers continue to build further parcels, more residentia­l properties, yet progress is glacially slow with the community facilities that the developers are legally required to deliver.

“There have been some mitigating circumstan­ces in the past, but our Council must hold developers to account. Our residents deserve better, and we must learn from what has happened at Arborfield Green and ensure that moving forward that this must not happen again.

“The motion I proposed, and which received unanimous cross-party support, will provide transparen­cy and accountabi­lity, so that legal agreements should not be allowed to slip, and developers meet the obligation­s that are legally binding on them.”

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