After seven years in the making and costing the Isle of Wight council £660,000 … the authority’s ‘planning bible’ has been delayed once again, and there are now fears it could run out of time.
The draft Island Planning Strategy (DIPS) was back before members yesterday (Wednesday), where cabinet member Councillor Paul Fuller was seeking approval to send it out for one last public consultation before it would go to the government’s Planning Inspectorate for consideration.
The DIPS — among other things — would set the Island’s housing targets, try for more affordable housing discounts and update planning policies.
Spink: Call for return to cabinet
However, there were still some concerns, with Councillor Peter Spink calling for it to be returned to cabinet for them to reconsider various issues.
The issues include decisions around potential development sites allocated in the plan, ‘windfall sites’ and how local need is identified.
Amendments agreed
After a short break, Councillor Fuller agreed to Councillor Spink’s amendments, with 23 councillors in favour of the move, nine against and three abstentions.
While he accepted the change, Councillor Fuller warned if they were going to delay the DIPS further than the ‘very short period’ he could afford, the council was “in danger of running out of time”.
Fuller: “Dithered and delayed”
Councillor Fuller said the plan had been “dithered and delayed” and the longer the council leaves it, the more the data “starts to collapse”.
The DIPS will now return no later than the end of April to full council, either with the relevant changes made or an explanation from cabinet as to why not.
Jones-Evans: ‘A game of whack-a-mole’
Councillor Julie Jones-Evans called the situation ‘a game of whack-a-mole’ with more issues arising despite trying to move on with the plan.
She said the council could not afford to run out of time and start over again, and that the move was ‘really poor’ and not showing a responsible attitude.
Andre: Delayed long enough
Councillor Debbie Andre said the plan had been delayed long enough.
This article is from the BBC’s LDRS (Local Democracy Reporter Service) scheme, which News OnTheWight is taking part in. Some alterations and additions may have been made by OnTheWight. Ed