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Standing up for Nature event to discuss HBC new local plan.

Will the new local plan protect the environment and provide homes for the homeless?

Standing up for Nature are holding a local debate on how to protect the environment as part of the new local plan.  The event is due to take place in Central Hall, Station Road, Hastings TN34 1NG on Sunday 1 December from 2–5pm. Reserve your spot here. Dee Williams takes a look at the key issues. 

Following on from a recent protest at OWENS from local people desperate to find suitable housing, as previously reported in HOT, those wishing to protect the environment are holding a meeting to discuss the following issues.

The government wants Councils to build new housing but our valued green spaces are under threat. Are there other ways to provide more homes?

Join us to formulate creative suggestions for the Hastings Local Plan, which sets out council policies on building development and land use for the next 20 years.

We’ll be discussing new builds, refurbishment, and use of empty homes, as well as key green spaces and wildlife corridors that need protection.

This is your chance to tell the Council what you think and to give them ideas, solutions and to let them know you care!

Anyone thinking of attending may benefit from an examination of the key issues, as protecting the environment must also take into consideration the homelessness crisis in the area.

Hastings Borough Council (HBC) current local plan was adopted in 2014 and was due to complete in 2028. It contains 7 main objectives.
  1. Achieve and sustain a thriving economy
  2. Ensure everyone has the opportunity to live in a decent home, which they can afford, in a community in which they want to live
  3. Safeguard and improve the town’s environment
  4. Addressing the impacts of climate change
  5. Supporting sustainable communities
  6. Provision of an efficient and effective transport system
  7. Making best use of the Seafront and promoting tourism

Essentially, the circle they are trying to square is finding a way to achieve growth for the economy with increased retail and local industry, whilst providing a growing population with suitable housing and at the same time protecting urban green spaces and the surrounding areas of natural beauty which bound the zone on all sides. All on a tight budget and with an eye to climate change emissions.

Objective 1 contains a number of aspirational statements which are difficult to achieve. The most contentious of which is likely to be:

  • ensuring new development only occurs where there is adequate capacity in existing services, facilities and infrastructure or where this capacity can be reasonably provided.

Added to the mix is the fact that HBC has a legal duty to co-operate with Rother District Council and East Sussex County Council who also face significant demands with limited resources.  While government requires HBC to apply ‘presumption in favour of sustainable development’ rules as contained in the National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF). Failure to do so allows developers to overturn decisions by appealing to the Planning Inspectorate and such action can be costly to defend.

This plan was set to deliver at least 3,400 net new dwellings between 2011–2028.

Keeping all the plates spinning is not an easy task and in their development strategy they identify the following problems.

“…comparatively low house prices; declining affordability for local people, a bias to smaller dwellings; imbalanced in-migration; a large private rented sector and high levels of deprivation.”  4.9

The comparatively low house prices encourage movement into the area from more expensive zones such as Brighton and London.  The large private rented sector includes properties for holiday lets which brings income from tourists into the area. While the high levels of deprivation include the increasing number of families who find themselves homeless due to rising rents and landlords deciding to sell up due to changes to the rules.

In 2023 Cllr Barnett said in an article in the Express: It has gone from 170 people needing temporary accommodation two years ago. Now it is over 1,000 people here. It is a shock. And in a town of 90,000, that’s a massive percentage.”

In an i Opinion piece written by Vicky Spratt in November 2024, Hastings is described as the ‘hidden homelessness capital of the UK’.

“So many families have either been evicted or unable to find a home they can afford to rent that one in 28 children in Hastings is now homeless and in emergency temporary accommodation – usually bed and breakfast, hostels, hotels or shared accommodation.”

A lack of social housing results in long waiting lists for a property. According to HBC social housing information the total number of households waiting for a property at 31 December 2023 was 1,547. The total number of properties let through Sussex Homemove from 1 January 2023 to 31 December 2023 was 189.

There is a wait of up to 8 years for a 2 bed house.

Long waits for social housing in Hastings.

Hastings is undoubtedly suffering a housing crisis. So what is to be done?

According to government statistics, the whole of Rother Council completed just 153 homes in 2023/24. At that rate of building it would take 22 years to complete 3,400. A key problem is a lack of brownfield sites, which are the only areas you can build on if you wish to preserve the natural habitat.

From the overview map you can see that they are few and far between and include areas that are unsuitable for development such as the former West St Leonard’s Primary School on the Bexhill Road. This site spends much of the year sodden with water and rumour has it that anthrax sheep are buried here.

Brownfield sites available to HBS

If you can’t expand out due to restrictions from areas of natural beauty and you can’t build high without damaging the historic nature of the town, then you are forced to look for patches of land within the already developed area for new build properties, putting a strain on local amenities.  Trying to please the environmentalists, the existing residents and the homeless is a tough task, if not mission impossible.

Campaigners continually draw attention to using empty properties as a solution to the problem. This option was considered in the 2014 local plan.

“Empty homes are a wasted asset, and a good deal of progress has been made by the Council in tackling empty homes in recent years. However, whilst bringing empty homes back into use does not increase the overall housing stock, it does increase the efficient use of the existing stock. In 2010 there was estimated to be approximately 400 long term empty homes in the town. By long term, we mean homes that have been empty for 2 or more years.”  4.20

It is not clear what HBC has done to increase the number of empty homes being brought back into housing stock but their retrospective council tax charges do not encourage new buyers to take them on.

“If when you purchased or leased your property it had already been empty and unfurnished for two years or more, you will have to pay a 200% council tax charge, or if empty and unfurnished for five years or more you will have to pay 300%.”

Although they add that, “the additional charge can only be removed by bringing your property back into use” this would not apply to properties that require structural repairs.  “No reduction is given on uninhabitable properties requiring or undergoing structural repairs.”

There seems to be no efficient process for obtaining empty properties before they fall into disrepair, deterring new buyers from taking on restoration projects.  Perhaps the land is more valuable than the property, with developers waiting for the best time to make their move.  If the OWENS failure is anything to go by, then more retail and office space is likely to become available. Could these be repurposed by HBC as housing or will they just be left to fall apart?

Having pretty much failed to deliver on the previous local plan, HBC is on more comfortable ground as they draw up plans for the new one. Local councils are very good at running consultations, filing reports, debating decisions and creating lengthy documents full of aspirational intentions. And taking their time about it.

The new local plan started life in quarter 1 of 2020/21 and should be adopted by quarter 4 2026/27.

HBC new local plan programme

If you would like to contribute to the debate, then why not drop into the Standing up for Nature event on Sunday 1 December.  Full details here. 

If you’re enjoying HOT and would like us to continue providing fair and balanced reporting on local matters please consider making a donation. Click here to open our PayPal donation link. Thank you for your continued support!

Posted 14:52 Tuesday, Nov 26, 2024 In: Local Government

Also in: Local Government


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