Left behind Towns will suffer most
Housing Secretary Robert Jenrick has announced the introduction of a change to planning rules that will allow empty shops to be turned into flats, cafés or restaurants more easily. Full planning applications will no longer be required to convert retail premises for residential use.
The move is part of a package of measures aimed at revitalising high streets and town centres, which will also introduce a “fast track” scheme for extending public buildings, such as schools, colleges and hospitals.
Property owners will be able to cash in on a feast of changes that include easing demolition on non listed buildings.
Its expected that in inner city areas empty shops will be changed into luxury flats or high class terraced housing but in the left behind Towns in particular East Coast towns suffering from former industrial decline, with high levels of poverty and deprivation and where residents have experienced problems linked with the growth of homes of multiple occupancy that commercial property owners will cash in on the Tories changes.
Councillor Kath Nisbet of Croft Ward in Blyth has many worries about these changes as HMO’s have been forced through using permitted development rights in the Town Centre she is a representative for.
Councillor Nisbet told us: “ I’m not alone in hating this news of changes to planning law by the Conservative Government, we have recently had HMO’s rejected by planning committee forced through on permitted development rights and the local people of Blyth hate it.”
“They fear lots of people hanging around their Town Centre during the day and for the elderly who have to use local high street shops due to the lack of public transport to take them to out of town supermarkets the fear of crime is much worse for them than the crime itself. But with the Tories at all levels concerned more about profit than people what can you expect.”
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