Sounds very benign but often what gets middle class communities agitated is the prospect of social housing being built near them. There has to be a middle point recognising community rights that doesn't turn into a NIMBY charter.https://twitter.com/FerretScot/status/1001014713231298560 …
-
-
Als antwoord op @MhairiHunter
See also, anything that might employ people.
2 antwoorden 0 retweets 3 vind-ik-leuks -
Als antwoord op @DrewSm1th @MhairiHunter
surely the key is setting planning priorities democratically/locally then properly fund planning departments to deliver on those policies. Layers of appeals don't support the less listened to groups.
1 antwoord 0 retweets 1 vind-ik-leuk -
Als antwoord op @kaysillars @DrewSm1th
Yes. There need to be higher standards at the pre-planning stage.
2 antwoorden 0 retweets 1 vind-ik-leuk -
In most cases, any pre-planning would be preferable to the current system where deals are agreed, money changes hands and only the finished plan is up for public comment.
1 antwoord 0 retweets 2 vind-ik-leuks -
Als antwoord op @GaryCushway @MhairiHunter en
In 2006, Malcolm Chisholm dismissed calls for equal rights of appeal because his new approach to front-end loading the system was going to sort everything. In 2018, Kevin Stewart has dismissed calls for equal rights because ... indeed.
1 antwoord 0 retweets 1 vind-ik-leuk -
Als antwoord op @jonmolyneuxSGP @MhairiHunter en
I can see where it could become difficult in some circumstances when people are awkward, irrational and reactionary about some things. But there’s at least room for improvement.
2 antwoorden 0 retweets 0 vind-ik-leuks
Countries to have gone some way to equalising appeal rights include Ireland, NZ, Denmark and Sweden. I can’t say for certain, but I assume they still get social housing built.
Het laden lijkt wat langer te duren.
Twitter is mogelijk overbelast of ondervindt een tijdelijke onderbreking. Probeer het opnieuw of bekijk de Twitter-status voor meer informatie.