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Windsor & Maidenhead “paying the price” over adopted local plan

Posted on March 8, 2023March 8, 2023 by ecwlarcombe

(Extract from Windsor Observer – by James Bagley – Local Democracy Reporter – 8/3/2023)

Cllr Andrew Johnson (Con: Hurley & Walthams) has requested an urgent meeting with the Department for Levelling Up, Housing, and Communities (DLUHC) to see if it is possible to lower the council’s housing target, which is currently 14,240.

The Conservative-led Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead (RBWM) adopted its borough local plan (BLP) in February 2022, which earmarks multiple sites, including Green Belt land, for housing to meet its future population and economic growth by 2033.

It has proven to be a highly controversial decision, which resulted in two failed High Court challenges to overturn it, by opposition and campaigners who believe it is “environmental vandalism” and is not needed due to the 2012 population figures it was based on as being “outdated”.

The Maidenhead Golf Course, which is earmarked for 2,000 homes, has been the most controversial within the site allocations However, the government of that time forced all local authorities to adopt local plans in order to hit the national target of 300,000 a year. But due to a fear of a Tory rebellion, DLUHC Secretary of State Michael Gove has decided to scrap that target and only make it an ‘advisory’.

This has prompted many local authorities, such as Wokingham Borough Council, to pause their BLP-making processes to try and seek a reduced housing target. Speaking to the Local Democracy Reporting Service, Cllr Johnson said RBWM was effectively “paying the price” for abiding by the government’s instruction at that time. He is now seeking if the council can amend its housing figure and put more of an emphasis on placemaking and family housing as opposed to cramming in flats just to hit a target.

He said: “Had we been in a different place in our local plan when we were just about to go out to public examination and we finished all the pre-examination in public work, would I press the huge button that says pause? Actually, to be honest, I probably would, but given where we were 12 months ago and that none of this was seemingly on the table, we were compliant with national policy, we couldn’t demonstrate a five-year land supply, and we were at serious risk of developers bringing forward sites because we didn’t have an adopted local plan and we had very little pushback.

“Am I frustrated by it all? Absolutely I am because it’s not particularly fair that we played the game because we were told to do it whereas others who were not as advanced as us may get away with less housing as a result of changing legislation.” However, it will be unlikely to remove sites from the BLP, such as the controversial Maidenhead Golf Course, but the council is seeking if it can deliver fewer homes and also seek to protect the Royal Borough’s commercial and employment space from being converted into residential.

The council leader also said it is an “opportunity” to speak to developers delivering homes in RBWM to bring forward less housing and deliver more family homes and a better emphasis on placemaking. When asked about the timing of the letter, Cllr Johnson said it was only until December, 10 months after the BLP adoption, that it became apparent the government was seeking to amend its housing targets

READ MORE: “Flawed” Windsor & Maidenhead borough local plan adopted”

Source document: https://www.windsorobserver.co.uk/news/23369752.windsor-maidenhead-paying-price-adopted-local-plan/

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DATCHET

The name "Datchet" is thought to be Celtic in origin, and the last part may be related to cet ("wood"). In the Domesday Book it is called "Daceta".lla. Datchet is first mentioned between 990 and 994, when King Ethelred made small grants of land here.

HORTON

The village name "Horton" is a common one in England. It is Old English in origin and derives from the two words horu 'dirt' and tūn 'settlement, farm, estate', presumably meaning 'farm on muddy soil'.In the Domesday Book of 1086 it was recorded as Hortune.

WRAYSBURY

The village name was traditionally spelt Wyrardisbury; it is Anglo Saxon in origin and means 'Wïgrǣd's fort'. Its name is recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086 as Wirecesberie and as Wiredesbur in 1195. The name is seen again as Wyrardesbury in 1422.

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