The existing technical guidance, often complex and repetitive, is catalogued in 230 separate documents and at 7,000 pages is almost impossible for residents and businesses to use effectively.
Boles said that new online national planning guidance will give much needed simplicity and clarity to the planning system and a user friendly format will make planning guidance more accessible and also make it easier to keep up to date.
Following an external review by former MP Lord Taylor, ministers have proposed a new streamlined planning practice that will provide the support for growth and creation of jobs and homes that the country needs.
It aims to also provide clearer protections for the natural and historic environment by giving power back to communities who are generally best placed to make local decisions.
It is now active in test mode and for comment over the next six weeks and none of the current planning practice guidance will be cancelled until the final online guidance is in place and live later in the autumn.
The web pages of advice set out guidance on a range of issues including: a new affordability test for determining how many homes should be built, opening up planning appeal hearings, discouraging councils from introducing a new parking tax on people’s driveways and parking spaces, encouraging more town centre parking spaces and ending aggressive anti car traffic calming measures like speed bumps, and building housing for older people such as more bungalows.
There is also new neighbourhood planning guidance to help more communities start their own plans, and new local green space guidance to help councils and local communities to plan for open space and protect local green spaces which are special to them.
‘Planning shouldn’t just be the preserve of technocrats, lawyers and council officers. Yet up to now even the experts have struggled to plough through all the background documents and find the right advice. To be effective our planning system needs to be supported by practical guidance that anyone can consult and follow,’ said Boles.
‘Having stripped away outdated advice, our new user friendly website brings together a simplified set of clear, concise guidance and publishes it altogether in one place. This will make the planning system much easier to navigate for everyone involved,’ he explained.
This launch follows an external review that looked into streamlining some 7,000 pages of practice guidance which explains statutory provisions, planning and the planning system. A vast amount of the material included very outdated documents, some going back to the 1960s, which have been superseded.
Lord Taylor said that he believes that the work that has been done to reduce and revise the existing planning guidance and launch the new online resource transforms the effectiveness, accessibility and accountability of the government’s planning guidance.
‘By opening the draft guidance suite to public testing and comment we now have the opportunity to make sure it works and doubtless improve it. I would encourage anyone with an interest in the planning system to use the next six weeks while the site is open for comment to submit their feedback to help make the site even better,’ he explained.
‘The government accepted that the existing guidance needed reform and consolidation. In light of the positive response to this consultation, where 86% of respondents agreed with the recommendations, the government set out in the Budget plans to publish significantly reduced planning guidance, providing much needed simplicity and clarity in line with the recommendations,’ he added.
The review follows the National Planning Policy Framework which distilled around 1,000 pages of planning policy into a streamlined, easy to understand 47 page document. This guidance review will not involve any changes to national policy set out in the framework.