15th August 2010 – FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
The Government’s proposed approval threshold for ‘Community Right to Build’ schemes needs to be lowered from the current 90 per cent of local people agreeing in order to prevent minorities holding back much needed development in the countryside to enable it to thrive and prosper, says the Federation of Master Builders (FMB).
Brian Berry, Director of External Affairs at the FMB said:
“The Government’s intention to give communities the right to grant themselves planning permission is welcome but there is a real danger that the stipulation that no more than 10% of voters object to any proposal in a local referendum will hand a tiny minority the ability to decide the future of the community without themselves having had to achieve any kind of mandate to do so. The objectors would not, as things stand, be subject to any need to justify their objection and as such the ‘right to build’ that the Government wishes to grant communities may be taken away by a handful of unaccountable people who cannot, or will not, accept the need for change.”
Berry concluded:
“To make the right to build a success communities need to have the power to deliver enough housing to secure their medium and long term futures and it is very unlikely that this will happen unless the 10% objection referendum threshold is significantly raised. Most referenda are decided by a simple majority and if the Government wants local communities to exercise their right to build, they will have to consider something more in line with normal referendum practice.”