5 Year Housing Land Supply Monitoring Report 1
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5 Year Housing Land Supply Monitoring Report 1st April 2013 Intentionally left blank 1 IWC 5 Year Housing Land Supply, 1st April 2013 1. Introduction 1.1 This document demonstrates that the IW Council has 5.32 years supply of deliverable sites for the period 1st April 2013 to 31st March 2018. 1.2 This document has been prepared in compliance with government advice set out in the National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF). 1.3 The NPPF states (paragraph 47 and footnote 11) that local planning authorities should identify and update annually a supply of specific deliverable sites sufficient to provide five years’ worth of housing against their housing requirements. It further requires an additional buffer of 5% to ensure choice and competition or a 20% buffer where there is a record of persistent under delivery. 1.4 To be considered deliverable sites should be available now, offer a suitable location for development now and be achievable with a realistic prospect that housing will be delivered on the site within five years and in particular that the development of the site is viable. Sites with planning permission should be considered deliverable until permission expires, unless there is clear evidence that schemes will not be implemented within five years. 1.5 The five year supply consists of: Unimplemented residential planning permissions1 Residential development that is currently under construction Specific identified sites that have the potential to make significant contribution to housing delivery within the stated 5 year period. A projection for windfall allowance from small sites that have not been specifically identified. Monitoring and Review 1.6 The council will monitor housing delivery on an annual basis and will use this data to inform and update the 5 year supply. The monitoring processes will be reported through a 5 Year Housing Land Supply Monitoring Report which will be published in June each year and will also form part of the discussion on housing delivery within the Annual Monitoring Report which is published in December each year. Strategic Housing Land Availability Assessment (SHLAA) 1.7 The IW Council SHLAA was produced in accordance with the requirements set out in the SHLAA Practice Guide (July 2007) and as such forms a robust and credible evidence base to inform the preparation of local plan documents. The council’s published SHLAA report, update reports and maps are available to view on the Council’s website. 1 The approach of the council is that sites with permission but little likelihood of delivery have been discounted. Likewise where delivery is projected beyond the period of 31st March 2018 units have not been included in the five year supply. 2 IWC 5 Year Housing Land Supply, 1st April 2013 2. How much housing is the Island required to deliver? 2.1 In the past, local planning policy for housing has had to conform to the requirements set out in regional plans (the Regional Spatial Strategy). In the Localism Act the coalition government committed to abolishing regional spatial strategies and therefore the approach taken by the Island in the Island Plan Core Strategy has been to decide how much new housing to bring forward and where it should go. 2.2 At the examination into the soundness of the Island Plan Core Strategy the council successfully demonstrated to the Inspector that the delivery of 520 units per annum took appropriate account both of relevant environmental constraints and the likely levels of housing development. At the time of the examination the IW Council was able to demonstrate that it had approximately a 6 year land supply and in additional could also demonstrate that the potential sites identified in the SHLAA considerably exceeded the number of new dwellings required to achieve the core strategy target when completions and extant permissions were taken into account. 2.3 The Inspector specifically recognised that whilst the five year supply assumes the delivery of some sites that are not presently allocated Policy SP1 provided a significant degree of flexibility in approach by supporting in principle development on appropriate land within or immediately adjacent to defined settlement boundaries such that it would support the evidence of the 5 year supply. 2.4 Policy SP2 of the Island Plan Core Strategy provides for 8,320 dwellings for the Isle of Wight in the period 2001-2027, which is an average of 520 dwellings per year to be delivered broadly in accordance with the following distribution: 3,200 existing permissions, and a further 1,350 dwellings within the Medina Valley 2,100 dwellings within Ryde 370 dwellings within The Bay 240 dwellings within the West Wight 80 dwellings within Ventnor 980 through smaller-scale development at the Rural Service Centres and wider rural area. 2.5 Table 5.3 of the Island Plan Core Strategy provided information on the potential housing supply 2011- 2027. Island Plan Core Strategy, SHLAA Potential Housing Supply 2011-2027 Based on Isle of Wight Requirement of 520 dwellings per annum (520 x 16 years = 8,320 dwellings) (a) Existing Housing Permissions 3,200 (b) 2011-2027 requirement (16 years x 520 dwellings) 8,320 (c) Additional dwellings required 5,120 (d) SHLAA – within Key Regeneration Area settlement 1,782 * boundaries potential supply (e) SHLAA – within Smaller Regeneration Area 136 * settlement boundaries potential supply (f) SHLAA within Rural Service Centres settlement 107 * boundaries potential supply (g) SHLAA other potential supply 4,632 (h) Core Strategy potential supply outside defined 15,426 boundaries within KRAs and immediately adjacent to SRA settlement boundaries (i) Potential supply from windfall sites (2021 onwards) 700 (a+d+e+f+g+h+i) 26,548 Potential Over Supply 18,228 3 IWC 5 Year Housing Land Supply, 1st April 2013 3. Housing Land Supply 3.1 This report includes a full schedule of sites that are considered able to deliver housing in the next 5 years. These sites are deemed to be deliverable and have been assessed as: Available The site is available now. It is already in the planning system and has planning permission. Also included are sites proposed by the landowner to the SHLAA process that the LPA consider could come forward quickly. Suitable The 5 year supply includes permissions and SHLAA sites where a local housing need can be demonstrated and there are SHLAA sites that the LPA consider could come forward quickly to meet local need. These sites are therefore considered to be in a location suitable to contribution to sustainable communities. Achievable The 5 year supply includes sites with permission and SHLAA sites which are considered by the LPA to have a reasonable prospect of being delivered within 5 years with any constraints being overcome in the short term. 3.2 Housing land supply is derived from the following sources: Sites with planning permission but not yet complete Site with planning permission not yet commenced Sites that are not allocated, but are identified within the SHLAA Small site allowance (with permission for the 5 year supply but windfall in later years of the plan period). Sites with planning permission 3.3 The council’s residential land availability database records the number of dwellings with planning permission, the number under construction or not yet started and information on completions in any given period. The latest position from 1st April 2013 is used to inform this 5 year supply report. 3.4 The end of year residential land availability information demonstrates that there are 2,893 commitments in total (additional dwellings with planning permission that are either under construction or not yet started). This total includes large sites (sites with approval for 10 or more units) and small sites (sites with approval for 1-9 units). 3.5 Planning permissions are generally assumed to be deliverable within 5 years; however the council has assessed its total supply of permitted units in more detail to assess what it considers to be the deliverable supply with permission. The deliverable supply is considered to be 1,846 (909 units have been discounted. This is made up of 1,246 units from permissions on large sites and 600 units from permissions on small sites). Strategic Housing Land Availability Assessment 3.6 The SHLAA identifies and assesses sites for their potential to deliver housing. It contains specific, unallocated sites that could contribute to the 5 year housing land supply. The potential sites have been identified, mapped, assessed and the full information on the SHLAA is provided on the council’s website. Using the information within the SHLAA and considering deliverable sites it is estimated that 1027 units will contribute towards the 5 year land supply calculation. This equates to 38% of the 5 year land supply. 4 IWC 5 Year Housing Land Supply, 1st April 2013 Windfall sites 3.7 The NPPF states that Local Planning Authorities may make an allowance for windfall sites in the five year supply if they have compelling evidence that such sites have consistently become available in the local area and will continue to provide a reliable source of supply. Any allowance should be realistic having regard to the SHLAA, historic windfall delivery rates and expected future trends, and should not include residential gardens. The NPPF defines windfall sites as sites which have not been specifically identified as available in the local plan process. The council takes the view that in addition windfall sites are sites that have not been identified through the planning permission route. 3.8 In order to establish evidence to support the inclusion of windfall sites in the latter years of the plan period the IW Council has looked in detail at the housing completions in the last 5 years.