Venue: Council Chamber
Contact: Susie Blood
No. | Item |
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Withdrawal of the Development Brief for Hemlington North. PDF 293 KB Additional documents:
Minutes: The
Director of Regeneration and Culture submitted a report to withdraw the
Development Brief for Hemlington North. The decision requires decision as this
was seeking to reverse a decision made by the Executive at its meeting of 18th
October 2020. The report outlined that the Executive approved a Development Brief for
the development of land at Hemlington North in
October 2020. The site forms part of the wider Hemlington
Grange mixed-use development site that was allocated in the Housing Local Plan
(2014), and already has the benefit of an extant outline planning permission.
The brief was intended to act as guidance for when the Council marketed the
site, and to assist in assessing the suitability of any subsequent schemes. Following adoption of the Development Brief the Council received
representation from an interested member of the public questioning the validity
of the document, its role as a Supplementary planning Document and whether it
could actually be used in the planning process owing to a conflict with the
Local Plan. This conflict arose because
the brief allowed apartments in the north east corner of the site if their
inclusion would support good design and place making. This conflict was recognised and hence why
the brief was not adopted as a Supplementary Planning Document. Whilst the brief would be a material
consideration in the planning process the weight attached to it would be
limited, particular with regards to the inclusion of the apartments. The provisions of the Local Plan would be the
prime consideration unless material considerations dictate otherwise. Such material considerations could include
design and place making, but these would need to be weighed in the balance in
assessing any application. As this matter has clearly caused some confusion it is felt more
appropriate that to avoid any doubt or misunderstanding to withdraw the
Development Brief. Instead the design
criteria will be included within the marketing particulars issued by the
Council in the disposal of the site.
This will then form part of the assessment of bids in choosing the
successful scheme. In doing so the
Council can still ensure that a high quality design can be achieved when the
site comes forward. OPTIONS Other potential decisions
and why these have not been recommended Not to withdraw the
Development Briefs for Hemlington North. It was clear that the
continued adoption of the Brief creates a level of confusion which if not
addressed could lead to a challenge to any subsequent planning scheme/permission. Whilst the success of such a challenge is
considered to be an extremely low risk it has the potential to delay the
ability to bring the site forward quickly. ORDERED That Executive withdraws the Development Brief for Hemlington
North. REASON To provide greater clarity on the planning
framework for the site, and to strengthen the marketing particulars to ensure
that an appropriate scheme is delivered. |
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2021/22 Transport and Infrastructure Capital Programme PDF 318 KB Minutes: The
Director of Regeneration and Culture submitted a report, the purpose of this
was to gain approval to allocate funding to develop and deliver transport and
infrastructure improvements contained within the report. The
report required a decision as the proposals would impact upon the whole
Borough, and utilise a cocktail of funding allocations secured by the
Council. Approval would ensure that the
proposals are aligned with the Councils ambitions and objectives. Middlesbrough
Council is pass ported Local Transport Plan (LTP) funding from the Department
for Transport (DfT) via Tees Valley Combined
Authority (TVCA) to undertake maintenance and improvement works on the Councils
transport network. The
final allocation is yet be provided by the DfT. However, the indicative allocation is £1.057m
Integrated Transport (new works) and £1.473m Highway Maintenance (£2.53m total)
as per the last three years of allocation. This forms the basis of the proposed
allocations. Similarly,
the Council has identified funding allocations linked to Housing developer
transport impact mitigation in the form of S106 and calls on the capital
receipt (where Council land is disposed). These figures are indicatively
included within the programme) Several
schemes from 2020/21 have been identified at this point to require being
undertaken in 2021/22 due to delays associated with COVID19. The values
associated with them are indicative, and may fluctuate dependent upon progress
and expenditure within the 2020/21 financial year. The
projects within the proposed programme have been identified from the Councils
“Future Year scheme” list. This was a compiled table of all known requirements
and suggestions received, which are ranked for their suitability against a set
criteria. This then forms the priority basis.
This is however dependent upon external funding criteria, statutory
obligations and other implications. The
maintenance schemes are based on asset condition rating systems, and allocation
of resources work to address a “worst first” is used. This is rationalised on
the basis of public safety and asset longevity priorities (such as ensuring
that structures are safe). This ensures that the Council is addressing the
areas of the network in most need of resolving. The
Council also received specific allocations through competitive grant programmes
and awards that are to deliver prescribed pieces of work, depending upon
national / regional criteria. Any awards for such projects by-pass the scoring
criteria (although this may be used to identify the most suitable candidates),
and can be awarded / is accessible throughout the year. The proposals within this report include all
known awarded allocations at time of approval, but can be subject to
change. If so, approvals will be sought
through the formal decision making process. Full
funding allocations used to identify the projects / programme were at appendix
2 of the report. OPTIONS Other potential decisions
and why these have not been recommended a) Do nothing - this is not recommended as it will not allow the Council to allocate funding and make the necessary arrangements in advance of receipt of the allocations. The delivery of infrastructure improvements require prudent planning, and co-ordination, ... view the full minutes text for item 21/2 |
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The decision(s) will come into force after five working days following the day the decision(s) was published unless the decision becomes subject to the call in procedures |