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Find out about our legal Duty to Cooperate with other local planning authorities to work on strategic planning such as housing, transport, flood risk, climate change mitigation and biodiversity.
Government guidance makes it clear that local planning authorities should identify the strategic matters that need to be addressed through cross-boundary cooperation at the beginning of the Local Plan preparation process and identify those local authorities and prescribed bodies that need to be engaged.
Section 33A of the Planning and Compulsory Purchase Act (2004) defines strategic matters as -
"Sustainable development or use of land that has or would have a significant impact on at least two planning areas, including (in particular) sustainable development or use of land for or in connection with infrastructure that is strategic and has or would have a significant impact on at least two planning areas'
Housing delivery, including the provision of sites for Gypsies & Travellers, and the overall assessment of need for employment land and the designation of Strategic Employment Land are key strategic and cross boundary issues, which requires on-going engagement and cooperation.
Key issues requiring cooperation:
Kingston Town Centre is the third best performing of London's Metropolitan Centres. In order to maintain and improve its offer, it needs to provide the type of modern retail and leisure facilities visitors expect and provide an attractive visitor experience.
Key issues requiring cooperation:
Transport is a strategic issue at many different levels. The council needs to work with its neighbouring authorities for opportunities to link cycle and footpath links wherever possible to create coherent networks. Public transport in the wider south-west London sub-region is focusses on radial routes in and out of London, and the orbital routes around the region and out into Surrey are poor. There may be opportunities to improve connectivity by all forms of transport between parts of the borough and with areas outside the borough. These would need to be fully explored.
Key issues requiring cooperation:
The anticipated increase in the amount of waste material needing to be managed, and the shift to recycling and recovering waste materials has led to a need to find additional facilities for waste management. The council plans to meet its waste management facility needs jointly with neighbouring boroughs.
The risk of flooding is a particular concern in Kingston because of the fluvial risks associated with the Thames and the Hogsmill, but also surface water flooding. River catchments cross borough boundaries and the impact of activity upstream impacts on flood risk in this borough, as development activity here will impact on the river and floodplain downstream.
The council is exploring options to introduce heat and energy networks, and there is potential to extend networks into neighbouring authorities.
Key issues requiring cooperation:
The council owns facilities which attract visitors from a wide catchment that extends beyond the borough boundary and that places significant demands on the transport network. Changes to the facilities and user levels could have implications for where visitors are drawn from and visitor numbers.
Key issues requiring cooperation:
The council has a statutory duty to ensure there are sufficient school places in the borough to meet present and future demand. School place provision, especially for secondary school is something that transcends borough boundaries.
One of the key strategic matters that the council needs to resolve is whether the additional demand on the infrastructure network, as a result of new development, can be accommodated and/or mitigated. This is a key strategic issue as infrastructure capacity and delivery is addressed by many different public and private organisations and the issues surrounding it seldom lay within a single local authority area.
Key issues requiring cooperation:
Climate change is an issue that is not constrained by local authority boundaries, and is addressed by national standards set out in the Building Regulations. Addressing climate change is therefore a national issue rather than something that needs to be addressed through Duty to Cooperate. New development either individually or cumulatively can have significant impacts on habitats or areas of landscape designation and where developments/impacts extend across boundaries joint efforts are needed to avoid or mitigate.
Key issues requiring cooperation:
Growth and development is needed and is necessary to provide homes, jobs and opportunity for existing and future residents and businesses in this Borough, but new development will need to respect local character and heritage assets. Where potential development sites and/or heritage assets are close to the borough boundary this will be a matter for the Duty to Cooperate.
Key issues requiring cooperation:
The council intends to meet its growth needs through brownfield redevelopment and regeneration of poorly performing areas in the borough. However, the identified growth needs are expressed in the London Plan as minimums, and there is likely to be pressure from landowners/developers to release some greenfield sites to meet development needs.
The Metropolitan Green Belt is a strategic matter that extends across the London boundary into the Surrey authorities, and the parcels in Kingston cannot be considered in isolation. Green Belt was designated to serve a number of purposes (as set out in the National Planning Policy Framework), and where it is clearly demonstrated that it continues to serve these purposes then development will not be appropriate.
Key issues requiring cooperation:
The council intends to meet its growth needs through brownfield redevelopment and regeneration of poorly performing areas in the borough. However, as stated with the Green Belt, the identified growth needs set out in the London Plan are likely to put pressure on designated Local Open Space to be released to meet such development needs.
Key issues requiring cooperation:
to assess how effective the designated Local Open Space is within the borough and whether there are areas of open space that warrant a designation