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LGO – First Draft

LGO – First Draft

9 March 2015 Complaint reference: 14 015 052
Complaint against: South Tyneside Metropolitan Borough Council

The Ombudsman’s draft decision
Summary: This complaint is not upheld. In 2013 a developer
resumed building a boat shed for which he had planning permission
and had started building in 2001. Local residents complained but the
Council found the developer could still build the shed. However, he
had built it almost a metre wider than he should have done. There is
no evidence of fault in the way the Council dealt with the breach of
planning control and its decision not to take enforcement action. It
kept residents informed throughout the process.

I have published this First Draft so that it can be seen that the Inspector has already formed an opinion. I did not correspond with her at all until I had seen this draft. She has, as far as I can see, not responded to the body of my complaint, she has ignored the first 6 items of my complaint:

The Council have allowed the UK Docks development on Riverside Drive to proceed despite multiple objections
from residents and that in dealing with these objections they have neither been open or transparent. It has taken15 months to gain the admission that the construction did not have planning permission:-
05-Sep-2013 Work began on erecting five steel frames of what was to become a large slipway cover to the
surprise and dismay of residents nearby. They were understandably annoyed that they were not given any
notice. When contacted a representative of the Council expressed equal surprise. The Principal Planning
Officer, Mr Peter Cunningham sent out what were said to be approved plans to Ms M Todd, a neighbour.
25-Nov-2013. A meeting was arranged by Councillor John Anglin between Councillors, Mr Cunningham, and alocal residents group including myself. Mr Cunningham again repeated that the shed was neither too wide nor too high and had been built to an approved plan. The slipway cover was said to be ‘legal’.
20-Dec-2013 Mr P Cunningham said in an email to me: “I have measured this on site and have copied the 1996 plans across to you twice already and I have explained during our meeting that the base and height of the structure are compliant…this is the end of the matter as far as I am concerned. He also said “Please do not email me again”
13-Feb-2014 Mr G Atkinson, Planning Manager said that the the current structure is not built to “approved”
plans.
03-Apr-2014 Petition presented to CEO South Tyneside Council. We protest at:-
1. A lack of relevant information from STMBC
2. A lack of public consultation on the unannounced construction
3. Lack of research and impact surveys
4. Apparent negligence by STMBC
5. Apparent breach of planning law by the developers
02-May-2014 Mr Mansbridge, Head of Development Services, responded to the Petition and requests that work
was stopped on the construction while the issues surrounding the plans were resolved by saying that “Apart from the width these dimensions are either entirely in accordance with the approved plan, or subject to such minor deviation that they are properly categorised as non-material changes”. He also says that “Enforcement action is at the discretion of the Council as Local Planning Authority.”
24-Nov-2014 Michaela Hamilton, Customer Advocacy wrote in an email to me that “I can confirm that as
previously advised, the Council accepts that the structure in question does not have planning permission”.

It is not until we get to 24-Nov-2014 where the Council say unconditionally that the shed has been built without planning permission that the Inspector quibbles. [1] ([n]are references to posts).

I also publish the First Draft because it deals mostly with the placement of the footings in 2001 (para:17 [2]),  enforcement of material exceptions (para:21[3]) , condition 2 (para:23[4]) and the end panels (para:24[5]). I know that other residents have been concerned about footings and the end panels and if they wish to comment on the LGO’s findings they may and I will send them a copy of the final draft because the paragraph numbers are slightly different.  See posts for comments to the references highlighted in colour.

The complaint
1. The complainant, whom I shall refer to as Mr Dawson, complains the Council has wrongly allowed a developer to build and keep a boat shed despite many public objections. In particular he says
• It wrongly said the boat shed conformed with approved plans
• It has not taken enforcement action against the boat shed
• There has been a lack of information and public consultation
• It took 15 months for the Council to admit the boat shed did not have planning
permission
The Ombudsman’s role and powers
2. The Ombudsman investigates complaints about ‘maladministration’ and ‘service failure’. In this statement, I have used the word fault to refer to these. She must also consider whether any fault has had an adverse impact on the person making the complaint. I refer to this as ‘injustice’. If there has been fault which has caused an injustice, she may suggest a remedy. (Local Government Act 1974, sections 26(1) and 26A(1))
3. The Ombudsman cannot question whether a council’s decision is right or wrong simply because the complainant disagrees with it. She must consider whether there was fault in the way the decision was reached. (Local Government Act 1974, section 34(3))
4. The Ombudsman cannot investigate late complaints unless she decides there are good reasons. Late complaints are when someone takes more than 12 months to complain to the Ombudsman about something a council has done. (Local Government Act 1974, sections 26B and 34D)
5. If the Ombudsman is satisfied with a council’s actions or proposed actions, she can complete her investigation and issue a decision statement. (Local Government
Act 1974, section 30(1B) and 34H(i))
How I considered this complaint
6. I have considered the complaint made by Mr Dawson.
7. I have considered the Council’s response to Mr Dawson’s complaint and I have discussed its response with a senior planning officer in the Council. I have considered planning documents and relevant law and case law.
8. I have written to Mr Dawson and the Council with my draft decision and given them an opportunity to comment.
What I found
Authorisation for the development and the decision not to enforce
9. In August 1996 the Council’s predecessor, the Tyne and Wear Development Corporation, gave planning permission for a boat shed. Although the grant of that permission is too long ago for the Ombudsman to investigate, the permission’s 5 conditions are relevant.
• the permission lasted for 5 years (cond.1);
• development had to accord exactly with the approved plans (cond. 2);
• no work was to begin until the Council had approved the shed’s outside appearance (cond. 3);
• no work was to begin until the Council had approved details of the end panels.
“Thereafter these approved details shall be implemented to the full satisfaction of the Development Corporation prior to the commencement of any
operations/works within the shelter” (cond. 4); and
• work on vessels was to take place between 7am and 7pm Mondays – Saturdays and not on Sundays or Bank Holidays (cond.5)
10. Let me begin by commenting on these 5 conditions. Condition 1 was a standard condition. Once a developer “implements” his permission he can take as long as he likes to complete the development. He can achieve lawful implementation by carrying out some basic foundation work and discharging certain pre-commencement conditions. The courts have held a trench one spade’s depth is enough to create a lawful implementation .
11. The case of Whitley & Sons v. Secretary of State for Wales and Clwyd County Council (1992) established the need to discharge certain pre-commencement conditions. If development starts without having discharged pre-commencement conditions which are
(a) expressly prohibitive, and
(b) go to the heart of the permission,
the development will be unauthorised. If a development is unauthorised none of its conditions can be enforced.
12. Unauthorised developments may be retrospectively regularised by subsequent compliance with the condition. This can happen within the life time of the planning permission, in this case 5 years. It can also happen after the permission has expired, if the application to discharge the condition is made before the permission expires and the work carried out conforms to the details subsequently approved. The authority for this is the case of R v Hart Aggregates Ltd V Hartlepool Borough Council.
13. Condition 2 is also standard. It is a simple statement of the law.
14. Condition 3 is a pre-commencement condition. It is, for Whitley purposes, expressly prohibitive in its wording. However, it would be hard to argue in planning terms that it went to the heart of the permission.
15. Condition 4 is interesting. It says details of the end panels must be approved by the Authority and then implemented according to that approval. It does not say they have to be retained throughout the lifetime of the building. This is arguably a weakness in the original drafting but too long ago for the Ombudsman to now investigate.
16. The Authority’s view is that condition 5 should not have been imposed because the site already had the benefit of unrestricted working hours. I cannot comment on this. I do not know how the business operated in 1996 and it is too long ago for the Ombudsman to investigate.
17. The developers built the foundations before May 2001[2] but took no further action until September 2013 when building started again. Many residents then complained to the Council.
18. The Council investigated. It located the historic permission and plans. It had to decide whether the building was authorised.
19. We know work on the foundations started within five years of the approval. Building control inspectors confirmed it at the time. However, the developers had not met conditions 3 and 4 before starting work in 2001. The Council considered if this meant the permission had not been implemented (i.e. if commencement was in breach of the Whitley principle). It concluded conditions 3 and 4, although pre-commencement conditions did not go to the heart of the permission. The Council found the planning permission was lawfully implemented. There is no fault in either the process or reasoning by which the Council reached this decision.
20. The Council then considered if the building accorded with the approved plans. The planning officer originally assigned the case considered the developers were building the boat shed to the measurements in the 1996 plans. Mr Dawson says he told residents this at a public meeting. The Council accepts these measurements were wrong. A more senior officer checked the measurements; he found the width at ground level was just less than one metre wider than the permission allowed.
21. The Council considered this and decided not to enforce. Enforcement is discretionary and the Council explained to residents in great detail how it reached its decision. It explained the law and policy it considered. There is no need for me to repeat this. It decided the degree of departure from the plans – less than one metre – was “non-material.”[3] Given the overall scale of the building, its decision is sound. The Council took the view “comparing the as built development from that for which permission was granted, there are not considered to be any additional significant impacts to residential amenity that would justify taking enforcement action.” In other words, there was not enough harm.
22. I cannot fault the Council’s decision not to take enforcement action. It is established in law that enforcement action merely to respond to criticism without clear evidence of harm is likely to be considered unreasonable. Such cases are unlikely to succeed and lead to an adverse costs award.
23. When the Authority found the structure was wider than the approved plans, there were two possible decisions it could reach. It could have said the development was wholly unauthorised because it was in breach of the approved plans. In this case it could not enforce any of the conditions. Or it could have said the development was authorised but the structure as built was in breach of condition 2 of the permission. In that case it had to consider whether it was expedient to enforce condition 2[4].
24. It is not clear from the correspondence which of the two views the Council took. Writing to residents on 2 May 2014 it said: “The development has not been built in accordance with the approved plan. This means that the conditions attached to the permission are unenforceable against the building which was constructed.” Yet in October the previous year it had discharged proposals for conditions 3 and 4. Writing to residents on 4 April and 2 May 2014 the Council told them it meant to enforce condition 4. It said it would “instruct” the developer to fix the end panels. If the development were, as it said, unauthorised, it would have no power in law to do this[5].
25. The Council’s senior planning officer, with whom I have discussed this, says the Council took the former view. In seeking to enforce condition 4, the Council “appealed to the developer’s better nature.” The point is academic. The end panels are in place. Only if there remained outstanding conditions which were both perpetual and enforceable would the point matter. The Council has explained why it could not seek to enforce condition 5. In the unlikely event of the developer removing the end panels, the Council could not insist on their reinstatement under the original condition 4 anyway.
26. Let me for completeness make one other comment. The Council discharged condition 4 in October 2013, after the permission had expired. This was the pragmatic and sensible thing for it to do. As Planning Authority it had nothing to gain by telling the developer he was too late to submit those details. Any challenge to the legality of the discharge is for the courts not the Ombudsman. The alleged failure to consult and time taken to say the shed does not have planning permission
27. Councils have no duty to consult with the public on planning applications. Their duty is to publicise the application and take account of material representations they receive in response. A duty to publicise is not the same as a duty to consult. The duty arises when the application is validated, in this case in 1995 or 1996.
28. There is no duty to consult with the public on the discharge of planning conditions.
29. The Council had no duty to publicise anything in 2013. As enforcement authority the Council should keep those who complain about the development informed. The Council did this by public meetings and detailed letters.
30. Mr Dawson says the Council took 15 months to admit the boat shed did not have planning permission.
31. The Council said in February 2014 the boat shed was not built in line with the permission. This is 5 months after residents had raised concerns. The Council had not ignored the situation in those months. It had taken measurements; dealt with applications to discharge conditions; and, negotiated with the site owners and residents.
32. In April and May 2014 the Council wrote detailed explanation of why there had been a breach of planning control.
33. Mr Dawson was unhappy with the Council’s decisions and explanations. He sent several e-mails to the Council about this. In September 2014 Mr Dawson received the Council’s final response to his complaint. This said the boat shed did not have the benefit of planning permission. In November 2014 Mr Dawson e-mailed the Council again. It responded that it accepted the “the structure in question does not have planning permission”.
34. The Council did not take 15 months to tell Mr Dawson the planning status of the shed. Mr Dawson may not have been clear about the status. However, I do not find the Council at fault for this. It tried to explain a very complex situation.
Future development on the site
35. The developers have submitted an application for more development and Mr Dawson would like the Council to prevent this. The Council cannot do this. The owners are entitled to request planning permission for further development. The Council must properly consider any application made against the Local Development Plan and other material planning considerations. The current application has to follow this process.
Draft decision
36. I have seen no evidence of fault, either by delay or otherwise, in the way the Council dealt with this acknowledged breach of planning control. It has provided a sound justification for its decision not to take enforcement action. The Ombudsman cannot question the merits of that decision. Throughout the decision-making process it kept residents properly informed. The complaint is not upheld.
Investigator’s draft decision on behalf of the Ombudsman

Noise from Generators

Environmental Health.
Dear Mr Rutherford

I am emailing to inform you of the use of a generator situated outside of the shed built without planning permission. The noise emanating from the said generator is continuous and unacceptably loud.

It would appear that this is how UK Docks working practise is being established. Can you please address this issue and let me know how future need to continually inform yourselves of noise pollution from this site can be prevented?

Kind regards
Resident of Greens Place

Tidying up

Serious update being done. The ‘Details’ timeline is being made logically sound i.e. broken apart and rebuilt. Also it is no longer a shed; it’s a cover and so hopefully the references in Google will slowly change. Bit rarer than shed so  if anyone in the world types in ‘slipway cover’ they will get theharbourview.co.uk. Apologies for any inconvenience caused by my megalomania.

17-Mar-2014
MD

Noise – 1st September

Good afternoon everyone,

For anybody who is at home this afternoon I’m sure you’re aware of the noise emanating from UK Docks River Drive site. I have lodged a complaint with S T Council Customer Services 4277000, which means that it will be logged in their system and raised with an Environmental Health Officer. Anybody else experiencing the noise today please take a minute to let S T Council know. It’s important that we maintain our community and individual voice regarding  the ‘Shed’ and any  nuisance it causes which will also add to the weight of our objections to the live planning application: ST/0461/14/FUL.

Regards,
Melanie

Leaflet re: Expansion plans

PLEASE READ – THIS AFFECTS YOU!

tyne slipway-febr14shedmb01lawtop

Further Development at River Drive

News from ‘theharbourview.co.uk’

You will have seen, (probably heard) and been dismayed by the development of the UK Docks site at River Drive.

Some of you have already made your feelings clear by signing a petition protesting against the development (over 300 signatures to date). Others have gone further and registered official complaints with South Tyneside Planning Department, local Councillors, and other professionals who are obliged to protect your rights and interests.

This persistence has resulted in admissions from the Planning Department that the current structure has not been built to plan and that conditions set out in the original planning permission (back in 1996!) have been ignored.

Despite these admissions the Planning Department is refusing to take any action or apply any sanctions and we have had no support from Councillors. This fight for justice will continue.

In the meantimeUK DOCKS has now applied to the council to significantly expand the development with potential for more damaging consequences for the neighbourhood.

We strongly advise that you visit the planning portal at www.southtyneside.info/article/9015/Search-planning-applications

or go to the Town Hall to view the proposals. The planning reference is ST/0461/14/FUL

Reverse Side

Why should I be concerned?

The new proposals will:

  • Create further traffic issues. We are already plagued by lorries and cranes blocking River Drive and by careless parking, this can only get worse;

  • Create more noise, more often, both during construction and also once the site is fully operational;

  • Create an increased risk of environmental contamination, both in the air and to watercourses. The owners have already failed to comply with a planning condition to fully enclose the shed and have let waste from ship cleaning drain directly into the River Tyne;

  • Further compromise our visual amenity. Planning law does not allow us to complain about ‘the view’, although the view is clearly affected. However ‘development that adversely affects visual amenity’ can be challenged, if phrased this way.

  • Affect property prices. Once again planning law does not recognise the potential adverse effect on property prices as a legitimate reason to challenge a planning application but be under no illusion this is a serious risk to the value of your home.

The owners of the yard have already demonstrated their willingness to disregard previous planning constraints and may well do so again and it appears we cannot expect the planning authorities to be even handed.

OK I’m concerned, what should I do?

The planning application is currently open for consultation, but time is running out. This is your only chance to express your views as a concerned resident.

Make your feelings known. Please don’t rely on others to pursue this. The more people who register an objection the more difficult it will be for the Council to ignore strong local feelings. Objections are not limited to one per household.

Register your objections as soon as you can. We only have until Friday 11 July to respond.

How do I register my views?

If you want to protect your rights as a resident and exercise your democratic right to protest you should:

  • Make a formal objection to the Council. Set out your views in writing. Use your own words and let the authorities know how you feel. It would be best to challenge specific aspects of the proposals as well as the general principle that the development is inappropriate.

  • Send your objection to the Planning Department either via the portal or by letter (see below).

  • Copy in your local Councillor. They are your democratic representative and need to be aware of the strength of feeling.

  • Ask for an acknowledgement that your objections or complaints have been received.

Useful addresses

Main planning portal: www.southtyneside.info/article/9015/Search-planning-applications (reference ST/0461/14/FUL)

Email your objections to: planningapplications@southtyneside.gov.uk

Or post to:  Planning Group, Town Hall and Civic Offices, Westoe Road, South Shields, Tyne and Wear, NE33 2RL.

Boat shed development at River Drive, South Shields

Do we have a legal case?  Key facts/questions:-

  • Original planning permission 1996

  • Foundations begun before 5 year statutory period elapsed but not signed off until after the 5 year period had elapsed. (Is the planning permission still valid?)

  • There is doubt as to what has been approved as the plans provided in support are incomplete, contradictory and not appropriately stamped (by law what must the planning dept.be able to produce in support of planning approval?)

  • Development started in Sept 2013. The dept. initially claimed that the development was built to plan but after the shed was completed (and after intensive lobbying) they have admitted that it has not been built to plan being 0.9m wider than what is purported to be approved. They are saying that recent changes to national guidance gives them discretion in deciding whether to enforce planning permission and they have chosen not to do so. (Does this new guidance apply in retrospect?) Given that they made an error whilst measuring the structure at the start of construction and would therefore (presumably) be liable for the cost of removing the shed (should they choose to enforce the breach of planning permission) there appears to be a conflict of interest. (Has the planning dept. been negligent? How can we challenge their decision? Can we require an independent review? How do we challenge using the ‘public confidence in the process’ argument?)

  • There have been further breeches in relation to the pre commencement conditions attached to the planning permission, as outlined in letter dated 4 April. In that letter the planning dept. indicate that they do not consider that late compliance is an issue although they agree to attempt to enforce the condition about not allowing boat repair within the shed unless the ends are ‘fully enclosed’. The owners had previously ignored this and had commenced repair work without meeting this condition. In a subsequent letter (2nd May) to all local residents the planning dept. appear to retract this and take the stance that because the development has not been built to plan the conditions are not enforceable. However, as stated above, the dept. also indicated that they are not going to challenge the fact that the development has not been built to plan. This is counter-intuitive and illogical. (Can the planning dept. legally argue that the developers, who have not built to plan are, as a result, not subject to the conditions?) The planning dept. have said “The difficulty (we) have is that the established use of the slipway is for general industrial purposes and in effect they can quite lawfully undertake works to repair boats on the slipway and across the entire site.” This seems to say that the condition was never enforceable. (Are conditions attached to planning permissions intended to override any general principles relating to the use of land?)

  • The planning dept. have categorised the site as having general industrial status. (Does this industrial status have a legal definition and if so how does land acquire such a status?) The planning dept. seem to suggest that the granting of historic planning permissions (whether or not they were subsequently acted upon) are sufficient and there seems to be no discrimination between small scale boat repair and large scale intrusive industrial activity. (What rights do local residents have to challenge definitions, changes of use or scale of activity?)

Attachments: Letter 04 Apr 2014 and 02 May 2014

A Complaint to Environmental Health

From: Marilyn Chapman
> Subject: Re: Official Notice re UK Docks Planning Application
> Date: Fri, 27 Jun 2014 11:48:52 +0100
> To: Mick Dawson and Others

Hi everyone , just to let you know I Again, logged a complaint to environmental health about constant noise and not being able to sit out on my balcony, or indeed open windows at the back of my property. The girl Lindsay I spoke to could hear the racket through the phone and I was in my apartment at the time of the call. Shortly after Ian Rutherford rang me and the usual mutters of he understands and yes it must be disruptive especially as we have not had a lot of activity from the site in the past. I asked him to come and view the scene and noise from my balcony , he said one of his team had been to a neighbour of mine this week so he knew what I was talking about.
> I tried to explain that I feel a prisoner in my own house and how would he like it if this was plonked on his doorstep ? He replied he has had neighbours building an extension and you have to just to be a bit patient . I was getting extremely frustrated and angry and responded that this monstrosity is a lot different to conservatory. He just kept saying the Wilson’s own the land and they had planning permission.
Felt it was a total waste of time!!!!
Regards Marilyn Chapman

UK Docks River Drive – Noise

An Email to the Council, MP and others with reference to :-

http://www.noisenet.org/Noise_Enviro_stat1.htm

Please be aware: continuing and exacerbated issues with the noise emanating from Mr Wilson’s UK Docks. It is a nuisance and unacceptable in an area surrounded by residential properties. Please see attached link with regard to noise pollution.
Residential rights state we do not have to endure the levels of noise we are experiencing.
We have rights equal to the owner of the business site. Therefore you must treat the residents of Greens Place, Harbour View, and others affected with the same level of law. Until the owner is able to provide accoustic sound- proofing, you should apply the laws which stop the work until adequate action is taken to reduce the noise.
I am unable to open windows and doors at the back of my house for ventilation due to the extreme levels of noise coming from the yard. This is an environmental and health issue that needs immediately addressing.
Council and representatives: I would appreciate if you could also answer why Mr Wilson’s yard and business seems to have precedence over residents rights, and the fact that this estate was built and owned in 1991 with the ensuing residential rights, above a business that has remained relatively dormant until 2013, and was only owned by the Wilson’s since 1994?

Council: Can you explain the anomaly of this situation please? I would hate to think that Mr Wilson has the priority due to other reasons we don’t fully have the knowledge of? Including verbal or documentary agreements we have not been made aware of.

Thank you
Julie Routledge

Planning under Vested Interests

A shed that is 3m too high. That is equivalent to four story block of flats where three stories were approved. Not only have a Principle Planning Officer of the South Tyneside Council* denied our claims  that the shed is not built to plan but the Head of Development Services,  MP and the Local Press are in denial as well.

Why this is so remains a mystery but it will no doubt come out in the wash.  In the meantime the local residents are subjected to a level of noise and inconvenience etc. that is clearly not acceptable.

It has also come to light that the Port of Tyne offered Tyne Docks UK an alternative site as part of their plans to fill in Tyne Dock. This was turned down but explains why there were no objections Readheads Landing excepted.

* the Planning Manager has however conceded that the offending shed has not been built to plan.

 

Example of a Normal Planning Process

Sent in by Melanie
This shows that local residents can put a stop to inappropriate plans. We need to come together and block UK Docks next phase.

From the Gazette:- CAMPAIGNERS have won the battle to prevent part of a former South Tyneside Army camp being converted into a luxury housing development.

Council planners had recommended the go-ahead to build almost 50 homes at Whitburn Army Camp in Mill Lane, Whitburn, despite strong objections from neighbours of the site.

The development, proposed by Sunderland-based Bett Homes, would have involved the demolition of the army camp buildings and construction of 48 homes, including 36 four and five-bedroom detached properties.

At a meeting of the council’s planning committee yesterday, members threw the application out, on the grounds that it was “inappropriate” and “detrimental to greenbelt land”.