I'm putting in a planning application for a new build, once the drawing is submitted, do the planners get it passed then send out letters to neighbours for objection or do they send the letters out whether the planning will pass or not?
I'm putting in a planning application for a new build, once the drawing is submitted, do the planners get it passed then send out letters to neighbours for objection or do they send the letters out whether the planning will pass or not?
The planners essentially advertise for as many objections as possible by writing to neighbours and leaving public notices up, early enough into the process that they can consider the views presented. Some of them will have no basis in planning policy, others will - everything will be taken on board though they cannot refuse something just because a neighbour objected to something that has no base in policy. A sufficient number of objections for any reason can cause the application to be forwarded to the planning committee (busload of old ladies in political party seats for the local council) which can be a double edged sword - they may be more prone to making emotive rather than policy based decisions.
Decisions from either kind of maker can be appealed. A policy-compliant development is more likely to win at appeal against a committee decision; as noted, planners decide more for reasons of policy, so appealing their decision if a refusal is based on policy is less likely to succeed because the decision methods taken by planners and appeal inspectors run along the same lines
My 3 rural neighbours really welcomed me dropping off a set of plans with them and a phone number to call so they could talk through their concerns. Two called me to tell me to crack on and the closest ones talked about allsorts for an hour, came on site, climbed ladders, looked out of windows, checked their privacy was being respected etc. We made some plan changes to give them peace of mind and they wrote a letter in support of the application
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