The UK government’s planning system will not be able to deliver the 300,000 homes that Britain needs to build every year, the National Audit Office (NAO) has warned.
The NAO has claimed that several areas of the system are failing, with reforms that were meant to help local authorities determine how many homes should be built leading to underestimates.
The standard method for assessing local housing need is actually reducing the need for new homes in five out of nine regions while 44 per cent of authorities did not have an up-to-date local plan outlining their house-building strategy as of December.
The government’s planning system is underperforming and cannot demonstrate that it is meeting housing demand effectively. Our latest report: https://t.co/2fN7YEKk4upic.twitter.com/WBXmKw6PFB
— National Audit Office (@NAOorguk) February 8, 2019
A local area plan is a legal requirement but the NAO report that the Ministry of Housing, Communities & Local Government has only challenged 15 local authorities for not having an up-to-date plan.
This leaves the door open to developers to build where they please which can lead to infrastructural problems down the line – and no requirement for the department to tie in investment strategies with local plans does not help either.