PB July-August 2023 July-August 2023 67
The history of planning legislation is of
a balance between centralised powers,
typically emanating from the Minister [and
latterly from the OPR]; and local authorities
powers, which in turn have been divided
between officials’ and elected councillors
The Planning and Development
(Amendment) Bill, 2022
The Planning and Development (Amendment)
Bill, 2022 attempts to bring clarity to the legal
underpinnings of the planning system which are
currently scattered across numerous laws,
regulations, and court decisions (at both
national and EU levels).
Historical balance between
central and local government
The history of planning legislation is of a balance
between centralised powers, typically
emanating from the Minister and latterly from
the Oce of the Planning Regulator (OPR); and
local authorities’ powers, which in turn have
been divided between ocials’ and elected
councillors’. Too often powers exercisable at
either a centralised or local level, have simply
not been exercised properly, and many would
say local government has not justified the trust
that underpins the delegation of such powers as
planning-permission (in ocials) and zoning (in
elected councillors).
The Bill is a significant salvo at taking back
some of the powers of local authorities by
requiring their deference to centralised
standards. Whether the requirements will be
observed by headstrong local authorities
remains to be shown. Equally uncertain is the
appetite of the OPR to exercise zealously its
powers or of any Minister to sanction councillors
in a delinquent local authority who might be
party colleagues. Long-standing and egregious
failures of planning, including the sprawl of
Dublin and one-o housing, have been largely
perpetrated in contradiction to national policy
due to enforcement inaction rather than action,
with such consistency that that it must be
deemed to be policy inaction.
Consistency and speed to
the detriment of Quality
and Sustainability
The hands of former
Attorney General
Paul Gallagher and of
the property industry
are all over the
Planning Bill
By J Vivian Cooke
Unclear if local authorities will
defer to the centralisation
The Bill carries forward the often-unenforced
logical impetus of the existing system. It is
based on a clear hierarchy for strategic planning
and policy in which subsidiary plans are obliged
to be materially consistent with all policies that
are above them in the hierarchy. The hierarchy
descends from National to Regional to Local
Authority to Local. Under the Bill, the Minister
will set out certain aspects of important policy
in National Planning Statements which contain
directives that purport to be binding, termed
National Planning Policies and Measures
(NPPM).
New planning procedures
Regional assemblies must draft Regional Spatial
and Economic Strategies (RSES) that are
materially consistent (the term is significant:
“comply with would have been stronger,
requiring, as it does, positive action) with the
specific directives in NPPMs, and support
overall government goals; while both national
and regional documents aim to coerce often
recalcitrant local authorities in their individual
Development Plans which drive the planning
permissions they issue.
The Bill sets out a process common for all
actions provided for in law which, the drafters
fear, might not necessarily be observed in the
political process. Each individual step, in both
policy-drafting and permission-decision-
making, is explicitly laid out in comprehensive
step-by-step detail. The requirements for
consultation, notification, review, compliance,
appeal and deadlines are all stipulated in
statutory process maps.
Within these policy constraints, local
authorities can, as now, give eect to national
standards in ways that they deem appropriate
to local circumstances; this may be valuable in
preserving the democratic legitimacy of the
planning process and, in addition, because local
authorities have better knowledge of conditions
on the ground.
Compliance and Enforcement
Errant authorities, whose subsidiary document
Pul Gllgher: hnds ll over Bill
ENVIRONMENT
68 July-August 2023 July-August 2023 69
diverges from a higher-level policy instruction
are legally obliged to amend their policy
documents to take such steps as are necessary
to make it materially consistent with national,
regional or local standards. Moreover, coherent
planning objectives are pursued by obliging
regional and local plans to have an internal, or
horizontal, consistency with the authority’s
other formal policy documents in areas such as
housing, transport and climate action. It
remains to see what will happen if authorities
fail to amend as required. The longstanding
experience has been that correcting the flouting
of such directives inevitably depends on
intervention by the often-reluctant OPR or by
beleaguered individual litigants. The Bill
maintains the current status of OPR enforcement
actions against local authorities which are
recommendations to be implemented at the
discretion of the Minister, but they probably
should be changed to be mandatory.
A legal obligation doesn’t necessarily lead to
compliance. It would, for example, be better if
a standing body — the powers of the OCR could
be increased — were to be charged with — and
employed personnel who were scrupulous and
determined, indeed passionate and fired up
about — taking action to enforce compliance.
And if the standing body were properly funded.
It would ensure that local authority development
plans and individual planning decisions
complied with planning policy. This is what was
envisaged in the recommendation from the
Planning Tribunal to establish a Planning
Regulator. Unfortunately, lobbying means that
we got a regulator for propriety but an advisor
for compliance.
Much of the Bill is a reiteration and refinement
of the existing approach to planning rather than
a radical new departure. However, some
proposed changes have the potential to create
diculties.
Locus Standi for Individuals
and Limited Companies
If the Bill works in practice, developers will know
better, before submitting a proposal for
permission, by what standards their proposal
will be judged and by when a definitive decision
will be made. The building industry has, largely
self-servingly, identified inconsistent planning
decisions and the threat of legal challenges as
a major obstacle to designing and financing
urgently needed new private residential
developments and, through extensive lobbying,
appears to have convinced the Department of
Housing of this spurious argument.
Too much of the adverse comment that the
Bill has been subjected to has focused on the
proposed changes to how planning decisions
may be reviewed in the courts perhaps because
it is the easiest criticism among many more
complex ones that the discourse is avoiding.
Section 249 (10) (c) will permit legal challenges
to be initiated only by a party that will “be
directly or indirectly materially aected by the
matters to which the application relates”, the
meaning of which “shall not be limited to an
interest in land or a financial interest.
Tellingly, self-appointed developer lobby
The criterion has already evolved over the
years in legislation from “substantial interest
to “sucient interest” to “material interest” as
proposed in the Bill it is quite tightly defined.
This reflects the received wisdom at government
levels that NGOs and residents are of dubious
worth to the system: and of course of lobbying,
often ventilated in the compliant property
sections.
Significantly however, despite being critical
of this section, the Law Society’s Rachel Minch,
told the Oireachtas Committee on Housing that
There are [only] rare cases where a court finds
an applicant does not have sucient interest.
If the applicant is a limited company, it
among other things must have a constitution
which includes objects related to the promotion
of environmental protection which are relevant
to the case under appeal.
However, individual members of an aected
but excluded company will as always be able to
take appeals and then legal challenges in their
own names, especially if they engage as
individuals early in the process.
That planning actions will be undertaken
without the protections aorded by limited
financial liability should be mitigated by a
proper enactment of the Administrative Cost
Scheme envisioned in Section 250, the details
of which will be fleshed out in secondary
legislation. In order to be valid, this scheme will
need to comply with both the Irish judgment in
the Heather Hill case, (that litigants challenging
planning permissions on environmental
grounds are entitled to a special Protective
Costs Order (PCO) for all, and not just some, of
their grounds of challenge) and the principles of
the Aarhus Convention - on which Heather Hill
was of course grounded - which give legally
enforceable guarantees that justice should be
financially accessible for environmental
litigants.
Too much of the adverse
comment that the Bill has
been subjected to has
focused on the proposed
changes to how planning
decisions may be reviewed
in the courts
Some re determined not to
see the issue s: qulity
lobbying for: a 15-point agenda including
“proportionate cost risk” for people taking a
case, as well as a call to “raise the entry bar for
making a challenge”, and that any applicant
“must be able to show some connection to the
area”.
group, Property Industry Ireland, has been
Administrative Cost Scheme
68 July-August 2023 July-August 2023 69
If the proposed Administrative Costs Scheme
proves to be over-restrictive, it will no doubt be
struck down since the EU generally gets its laws
applied. However, until the scheme’s details are
published, this is moot. But, without a financial
interest in preserving lawyers’ fees in such
cases, Village sees no reason to presume, as
many in the legal profession have, that the
scheme will be an obstacle to access to the
courts merely because it departs from the
established rule that “fees follow the event,
though it will be important to monitor its eect
on those litigating in the public interest who are
employing lawyers on a ‘no foal, no fee’ basis,
which is many of the most important at the
moment.
Aarhus
The Aarhus Convention creates legal obligations
of access to information participation in
decision-making and rights of appeal which the
Bill cannot avoid, although evidence given by
the Department of Housing suggests it is
determined to test just how much it can get away
with. Where the spirit of Aarhus is expansive and
inclusive, the Bill’s is narrow and exclusionary.
It should be admitted that Aarhus balances
the desirability of public participation and the
necessity of providing physical infrastructure
adequate to the needs of the public. An
unswerving commitment to the quality of all new
developments is the best way to resolve
individual conflicts between these competing
societal imperatives.
Exempted Development
Declarations
During pre-legislative scrutiny, opposition TDs,
Eoin O’Broin and Cian O’Callaghan, highlighted
the usefulness of the current provision for any
member of the public to oblige a planning
authority to issue an Exempted Development
Declaration (EDD) stating its opinion about
whether development planning permission is
required for specified works. The new Bills
section 8 will only allow the owner or occupier,
or the person authorised to carry out the work,
to ask for an EDD and the ability of a third party
to obtain the determination will be extinguished.
The rationale the Department of Housing gives
for this change is that third parties querying the
exempted status of a development will instead
in future be directed to the enforcement process
but that is infamously undynamic due to a
national culture of deference to the holders of
property rights – making this very much a
retrograde step for enforcement of good
planning.
Public Participation
According to acting assistant secretary in the
Department of Housing’s planning division, Paul
Hogan: “A key policy aim of the new legislation
was to ensure that to a greater extent, major
debate is focused on the plan-making rather
than the planning application stageThe way
we see it is that the area plans should be the first
stage. That is where people get involved to
influence and shape what can happen, informed
by appropriately tailored national guidance and
a national plan”. This is a good starting point
that activists, developers and government
should be able to agree on.
A recent article by housing academic, Lorcan
Sirr, in the Irish Times, notes the very real
correlation between best practice, including
proper consultation (which might be deemed to
suit the public), and avoiding delays (which
might be deemed to suit developers): “In a 2016
study by TU Delft in the Netherlands measuring
citizen engagement in planning across 32
European countries, Ireland came third from
bottom, just beaten to the wooden spoon by
Spain and the Czech Republic (Lithuania,
Denmark and Sweden were top dogs). Things
have worsened since then.
Rather than adopting best practice, the
Planning and Development Bill – bearingr the
fingerprints of the property industry – seeks to
further prevent the public from meaningful
participation in the planning system, including
restricting residents’ associations taking legal
reviews of decisions by An Bord Pleanála.
Of course, like any form of best practice,
meaningful engagement takes eort. But why
bother with that when it is easier to weaken the
system itself – and then push for reducing
participation through regressive legislation?.
RSESs dont address the comprehensive
agenda that comprises Sustainability
It is somewhat depressing that the objectives
of RSESs as defined in section 27 (2) (b) seem
to elevate the economic perspective in a jarring
and unorthodox move away from the
sustainability standards that are endorsed by
the UN, EU, OECD and others: “The objectives of
a regional spatial and economic strategy shall
be— (a) to support the implementation of the
National Planning Framework, and (b) to support
the economic policies and objectives of the
Government”.
RSESs are to support government economic
policies but not its policies on climate action,
environment, transport, or heritage; and there
is little elsewhere in the Bill to shift the
orientation of policy from an economic agenda
to one that embraces a concept of planning that
is anchored in sustainability and excellence, in
the era of climate and biodiversity crises; and
indeed modernity and its focus on high
standards.
Material Contraventions
The Bill, retains, with some small adjustments,
too many of the means by which material
contraventions can be approved — that cut
across good planning at the moment.
Indeed, exceptions will not, under the Bill, be
limited to local government. Although section 7
(3) states that a “Development shall not be
exempted development if an environmental
impact assessment or an appropriate
assessment of the development is required,
section 7 (5) allows exactly such exemptions by
ministerial regulation to either individual
developments or entire classes of developments.
The broad power to dispense with environmental
impact or appropriate assessments under
section 7 (5) (b), if public consultations are
required by any other law prior to the grant of
permission is simultaneously the most
overlooked and one of the most foolish
provisions in the bill.
In fact, EIAs are always welcome because of
the requirements they impose to conduct
assessments of alternatives to the development;
outline mitigation measures; provide
photomontages in the cases of EISs; and provide
the context of plans for sites that have already
been subject of an EIA and adjoin the applicant
site.
It is invidious to grant this broad ministerial
discretion to circumvent always desirable
safeguards for the environment and the EU will
not, in any event, stand for it.
Section 249 (10) (c) will permit legal
challenges to be initiated only by a
party that will “be directly or indirectly
materially affected by the matters
to which the application relates, the
meaning of which “shall not be limited to
an interest in land or a financial interest”
Poor-qulity sprwl: the Bill hs no solution to it
70 July-August 2023 July-August 2023 PB
Possible Legal Challenges to
new provisions
There is a suspicion that the Attorney General
who initiated this Bill, Paul Gallagher, steered
elements of the Bill knowing that they were
legally fragile but keen, perhaps after his
years soldiering in private practice on behalf
of property developers – to at least finally get
them teased out, if necessary in court actions
arising from the Bill.
There will almost certainly be swift challenges
to the following provisions if they are enacted:
section 249. (15) (a) (iii) limiting the jurisdiction
of the Court of Appeal; section247 (15) (b)
preventing High Court decisions from being
appealed to the Supreme Court except in cases
involving article 34.5.4° of the constitution and;
section 466 (3) which does not provide an
administrative avenue of appeal for a planning
authority decision’s relating to strategic
development zones.
Becoming entangled in satellite litigation
would be an outcome that directly contradicts the
bill’s stated purpose of bringing certainty and
clarity to the planning process. Yet, Tom Flynn,
representing the Planning, Environmental and
Local Government Bar Association predicted,
perhaps inevitably, that these issues - the new
grounds for judicial review and the administrative
cost scheme - would “end up with a wall of
litigation” which would take years to grind to a
conclusion. He further held the opinion that the
ability for the Commission under section 249 to
seek a stay in judicial reviews in order to correct
non-material errors in facts or law, was created
undesirable ambiguity of status of planning
decisions granted in such circumstances. The
possibility was raised that, rather than allow
construction of approved developments to begin
more quickly, the practical eect of section 249
would lead developers to wait out the 8-week
deadline in which judicial reviews will be
permitted to be initiated.
Similarly, preventing parties seeking judicial
review from raising issues that were not included
in their submissions to the original application
will encourage participants in straightforward
planning applications to submit catch-all
submissions in order to preserve the right to raise
an issue at appeal should the need arise. It may
also be challenged where it provides an
opportunity to avoid EU law which is unconcerned
with whether the point of EU law has been raised
during the planning process. In attempting to
avoid rare incidences where High Court
challenges are obstacles to development, the
Bill, if unchanged, would bog all application in
the new process in an avalanche of unnecessary
paperwork at their inceptions.
An objective perspective suggests the best
approach.
Flawed Premise
This legislative review project has been misled
from its conception by exclusively focusing on the
wrong goals – consistency, eciency and speed.
It obsesses over measures such as setting
statutory mandatory timelines for all consent
processes. But this will create an incentive for
inspectors, planners and commissioners to make
quick decisions rather than correct decisions.
Parking for this purpose the scandals revealed in
the practice of An Bord Pleanála in the last two
years, by May 2021, Justice Richard Humphreys
had already identified “a certain laxity in scrutiny
[on the part of An Bord Pleanála inspectors],
involving in eect the cutting and pasting of
developers’ materials, without adequate critical
interrogation”.
By contrast, if the Bill had dedicated itself to
the objective of achieving the best plans and
decisions that guaranteed, through mandatory
wording, sustainable developments, then the
clarity and certainty desired would be achieved
as incidental outcomes of consistently good
decisions which might achieve a consensus that
precluded challenge. As it is, the stated purpose
of the Bill treats consistently good decisions the
same as consistently bad decisions – just so long
as they are consistent.
If it was going to be heavy on law, the Bill
should have legislated for sustainability and
excellence not speed and eciency.
Yes to law, but not to law that
lays down the wrong principles
Unfortunately, while Village will concede that the
emphasis on consistency is welcome, much more
fundamentally it needed a lawyer concerned with
sustainability and excellence, not with speed and
eciency, the developers’ short-term concern.
This Bill has Paul Gallagher written all over it. The
sad irony is that a less partisan lawyer would have
been the best person to formulate changes to the
system since the principal problem is that too
many provisions are not at the moment legally
binding.
Sustainability and excellence
Sustainability and excellence should have been
enshrined in exchange for speed and eciency.
Since they continue — extraordinarily — to be
treated as minor concerns it is inevitable that
those who suer from their failures will continue
to use tooth and claw to challenge them. Perhaps
the ineectual Greens should have focused more
on what they think a planning system should aim
to achieve but they have added little to the
discussion bar inexpert barkings about Aarhus.
A key point that seems to have escaped all
commentators is that concessions to property
developers would be more palatable if they were
part of a system that balanced concessions by
genuinely aiming for clever ‘win-win solutions: for
example, providing a model of excellence in the
criterion for planning permission (to which no
developer should object, provided there is no
reduction in profit) — if for example “excellence
in design” were added to the current “proper
planning and sustainable development, as the
standard necessary to get planning permission.
Shocking failure to legislate for grown-up win-
win solution
A grown-up solution in the era of climate
change, biodiversity collapse and housing crisis
is consistency, sustainability, excellence and, in
exchange, eciency and speed. The deficiencies
in what legislators have envisioned from this Bill
can only be described as shocking
.
The legislative review
project has been misled
from its conception by
exclusively focusing on the
wrong goals – consistency,
efficiency and speed
A legal obligation doesn’t necessarily lead
to compliance. It would be better if the OCR
were charged with, and employed personnel
who were scrupulous and determined, indeed
passionate and fired up about, taking action to
enforce compliance
Everyone wnts speed but qulity must not
be sidelined

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