CRITICS say a long-awaited overhaul of NSW’s planning laws will silence local communities and create a developers’ paradise.
But the government claims the most significant revamp of the system in more than 30 years has public consultation as its centrepiece.
“The community will be able to own this planning system. They will own what happens in their local area,” said NSW Planning Minster Brad Hazzard.
New laws will require the state government and councils to consult early with the community in developing the long-term planning ground rules for their region.
About 80 per cent of development proposals will be fast-tracked under the agreed system, estimated to save businesses and families about $174 million a year.
Most of those applications, including new homes and extensions, will be determined in less than 25 days.
Residents will be informed but not consulted about such projects, and the state’s 152 councils won’t have the power to knock them back.
Greens MP David Shoebridge said the legislation was intended to benefit developers, while local councils would be “utterly sidelined”.
They will also be outnumbered by ministerial representatives on regional planning boards in a ‘four-against-one’ system.
“Local councils will become government patsies. They will just implement the decisions being made by the regional planning boards,” Mr Shoebridge said.
Opposition Leader John Robertson said the planning laws gave developers everything they wanted.
“It will exclude local communities from having a say at the most critical point of the planning process – that is, when the detailed development applications go to a council and no one in the local community will have a say on anything.”
Mr Hazzard said a “modest levy” would be imposed for the first time on builders of new homes and apartments in existing suburbs, to provide funding for schools, roads and other infrastructure.
The new charge would help spread the costs more evenly across the state.
Currently, only developers in greenfields areas need to pay such levies. The minister said the government was slashing millions of dollars in red tape, making new homes cheaper to build.
Social media, such as Twitter and blogs, will be used to encourage people to get involved in the community consultation process, although Mr Hazzard conceded it would be “a mighty challenge” to get people to switch on at such an early stage.
Mr Shoebridge warned if the reforms became law, the first notice most people would have that a new house was being built next door “is when the bulldozers arrive”.
The white paper is now open for community consultation for the next ten weeks. Legislation will be introduced to parliament in the second half of this year.
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