19th January 2025 Caroline Nokes Planning and development

In her recent Letter from Westminster, published in the Hampshire Chronicle, The Almshouse Association was pleased to see Caroline Nokes, MP for Romsey and Southampton North, specifically refer to almshouses and their inclusion in the formal definition of affordable housing.

Full letter below:

Caroline Nokes Letter from Westminster: tackling the failings of housing developers

“I WAS pleased to be able to meet the Minister for Housing and Planning this week to talk to him about a number of issues faced by the Romsey and Southampton North residents.

First and foremost on the agenda was the knotty problem of how to compel developers with extant planning permission to complete developments. Of course my focus was very much on the Brewery Site in Romsey, which all these years on remains a largely undeveloped brownfield eye sore in the heart of our town. Although the revised NPPF indicates there will be measures forthcoming to provide local councils with the power to decline further applications made by developers who fail to build out earlier planning applications in the authority’s area, there remains a question about whether that can include developers with a poor track record of completion in a wider area.

I also raised the ongoing challenges many housing developments have with developers and management companies failing to bring roads and public spaces up to adoptable standards. This means local authorities cannot take over responsibility for the areas and leaves residents having to deal with faceless and sometimes disinterested management companies, who are very hard to hold to account. The Minister is pursuing a range of options as to how this can be resolved, but there need to be minimum standards that developers are resolutely held to, so that Councils are not left picking up the bill for the failures of the large housebuilders.

I am very conscious that Romsey has a number of almshouses, which are much loved and a great model of housing. The Minister is looking closely at how almshouses can be included in the formal definition of affordable housing, which was raised during the NPPF consultation process by The Almshouse Association.

I have always said planning is the most contentious of subjects in this constituency, and it is vital that Ministers understand a one size fits all approach to planning policy cannot reflect the special characteristics of areas like ours. That is why I have no plans to stop badgering the Minister and know that this week I gave him a great deal of food for thought.

Rt Hon Caroline Nokes MP
Deputy Speaker of the House of Commons
Member of Parliament for Romsey and Southampton North