Over recent years, our pocket of Wiltshire has taken more than its fair share of housing. Local residents often tell me they feel like they are being bombarded by housing that is not in line with the local plans or is not strategic. I have been banging the drum to successive Housing Secretaries over the years and I have been making our case directly to Michael Gove, the current Housing Secretary. While we absolutely need new homes for young people to move into and affordable homes - it needs to be strategic and we need them in the right places for local communities and amenities. Blindly covering the countryside with haphazard developments is unacceptable, as it disrupts village communities and strains existing infrastructure without necessary upgrades.
All over our area we have been helpless to developers who have been exploiting our lack of 5-year housing land supply to build bolt-on development after bolt-on development - with next to nothing offered to local residents. Local residents give up hours and hours of their time and energy to draw up plans for their neighbourhoods - only for developers to bypass this thanks to a loophole. This is completely not acceptable and is why I have been pushing so hard for change to better protect our area. I have been successful in securing the changes to the National Planning Policy Framework that we need to protect our areas and ensure where there is house building, it is done with the community and not just imposed upon them. The changes that I fought for and won does mean that our local council has much more strategic control and ability to work with the local community to decide the number and location of homes of homes they are aiming to build. For example Wiltshire Council can now overturn unplanned and unwanted applications, such as the Berryfield proposal and the 650-home development on Blackmore Farm. Combined with the Levelling Up and Regeneration Act, we are putting local communities in the driving seat and we are placing beauty, delivery of improved infrastructure and local people at the front and centre of housebuilding. |