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Labour Council failed to seek £6.2m for school provision as parents miss out on places or forcing their children to travel out of town

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Thursday, 13 July, 2023
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Town Hall

Today Chorley County Councillor Alan Cullens (Hoghton with Wheelton) asked the County cabinet member:

Will the Cabinet Member for Education and Skills advise this council how contributions for education are sought and recovered from District Councils through the planning system?

In response CC Jayne Rear, cabinet member for education and skills, revealed that of £37m not received from district councils to support new housing developments with investment in school places, buildings and land, £33m was held back by just three authorities, Preston, £17.7 million, Chorley £6.2 million and South Ribble £9.4 million.

CC Rear was clear that the County Council's response to any planning application should be considered as an objection where these contributions are not made.

So before playing politics with school places, buildings and land in Lancashire, Labour councillors should put their money where their mouth is.

Borough and County Councillor Aidy Riggott later posted:

Since 2017, Lancashire County Council have requested £8.4 million from housing developers to mitigate the impact of all the the additional housing approved by Chorley Council, on educational provision here in Chorley.

And Chorley Council only supported the County Council in securing £2.2 million of that.

This is a shortfall of £6.2 million for educational provision that Chorley Council didn’t support. Money that should have been secured by Chorley Council for the County Council, from the housing developers.

That is an extra £6.2 million of investment that would have gone into providing new school places, new buildings or even a new school.

Well worth remembering next time your local Labour Councillor complains about the lack of suitable school places and investment in new school buildings here in Chorley. Given that they approved all the Planning Applications and new houses and then didn’t secure the requested educational contributions to support them.

The County Council's Cabinet Member for Education also confirmed that if their requests for contributions for education was not supported, it should be treated as a formal objection at the [Borough] Planning Committee.

Which makes me wonder how many housing applications that have been approved, could have instead been rejected?

Chorley Education funds from new housing developments

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CC Jayne Rear's response in full

The Department for Education sets out the expectation that housing developers should mitigate the impact of additional housing on education The intention is for local authorities to secure developer contributions towards the cost of providing new school places which may be in the form of capital and/or land

We carry out an assessment of the potential impact of development at several stages. This includes engagement with district and city councils in the development of Local Plans and Masterplans, and consideration of individual planning applications for housing to determine whether there will be an impact on education infrastructure.

In assessing the proposed development, we consider the impact on primary and secondary school places that are within 2 miles and 3 miles respectively.

We look at the schools within that radius, and assess the forecast need for places in five-year time against the anticipated net capacity of those schools We also take in to account the forecast impact of other planning applications that have been approved in the area that may contribute to the demand for places. Where there is a gap between the forecast demand and the forecast net capacity we will seek a contribution towards the provision of those extra places.

If the forecasts identify sufficient surplus across the schools within a 2- or 3-mile radius, then the council is unable to request an education contribution through the planning process.

Where it is assessed that housing development will create a demand for school places which is greater than those available, we will submit a request to the Local Planning Authority, setting out the forecast impact of the proposal and a request for a contribution of money and/or land to mitigate that impact. 

We are clear that our response should be considered as an objection to the development unless our request is supported. Asked 

Since 2017, three quarter of the requests we have made to Chorley have not been supported, this totals £6.2m. Preston haven’t support 44% of our requests amounting to £18m, and South Ribble have not made a single contribution to the £9 and a half million we have requested.

These three districts are by far the worst contributors in terms of support for providing education places with over £33 million of Community Infracrure Levy and s106 monies not secured. 

Remember, that's developer contributions that would go towards the cost of lessening demand for new school places in areas of growing demand in our county.

Chorley Conservative Association

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