Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Ireland 2040 – Our Plan National Planning Framework (NPF) Department of Housing, Planning, Community and Local Government Arts Council Conference 12th January 2016 Introduction The National Planning Framework (NPF) will be the successor to the 2002 National Spatial Strategy (NSS) Horizon: 2040 - concise High-level, strategic document Co-ordination - spatial aspect of Government policy Developed in parallel with 3x Regional Spatial and Economic Strategies by the new Regional Assemblies NPF+RSES - strong basis for more joined-up policies and therefore more effective planning, investment and decision-making National NPF Regional Spatial and Economic Strategy City and County Development Plans Local Economic and Community Plans Local Area Plans/ Area Based Local Development Detailed Proposals Strategic Objectives Planning Policy Hierarchy, Ireland 2016 Opportunity & Challenges What should Ireland look like by 2040 bearing in mind that over the next 20+ years we must plan for up to 1m extra people, min +0.5m extra homes and over 2.2m jobs? Current trends – location of employment is concentrating yet housing dispersing, population ageing, challenges public infrastructure and service delivery, ensuring quality of life and international environmental quality objectives (zero-carbon by 2050) NPF essential to ensure sustainable development as highlighted in Programme for Government, Action Plan for Housing, Planning Policy Statement To work, NPF must be backed by wider policy alignment of investment, planning, economic development and environmental strategies NPF to have statutory backing under Planning and Development (Amendment) Bill 2016 and must comply with EU Environmental Directives (Strategic Environmental Assessment and Habitats) Experience & Ambition NSS offers invaluable learning experience - expert advisory group report 2014 recommended a more strategic approach and dealing with “hard choices” Prelim Census 2016 – growth happening outside our key cities and towns, tendency towards increasing urban vacancy & for development, rather than plan-led infrastructure provision i.e. sprawl outside cities and towns NPF must be different: Whole of Oireachtas and rolling Government buy-in Harness each region’s differing potential and avoiding ‘winners’ and ‘losers’ while also not treating all regions or settlements in the same way Ireland 2040/NPF must, through an evidence-base, establish a placemaking vision that people will understand as a “plan” that is realistic, responsive to their needs and adaptable over time Key Areas of NPF Work Programme 1) Project Governance 2) Communication & Consultation 3) Framework Development 4) Environmental Assessment Governance and Oversight Oireachtas Consultations Government Minister for Housing, Planning, Community and Local Government NPF Cross Departmental Steering Group NPF Advisory Group NPF Team Working Groups Demographic and Econometric Group Environmental Group Regional Assemblies Group Additional working groups may be formed as the project progresses DHPCLG Working Group Communication & Consultation Initial High-Level Engagement (July) Local Authorities and a range of other infrastructure, economy, society and environmental stakeholders Pre-Draft Consultation (Jan 2017) National campaign, supported by website and ‘issues and choices’ position paper • Posing key questions, scenarios, options • Local engagement and inputs Draft NPF Consultation (Q2 2017) To enable submissions on the Draft NPF prior to final drafting and decision-making stages 10 Key Questions 1. What should Ireland look like in 20 years? 2. How do we ensure that every place can realise its potential? 3. Where will jobs be located and what kind of jobs will they be? 4. Where will we live and what types of housing will be needed? 5. What are the key services that people will need? 6. Where will Ireland fit in a wider (geographical) context? 7. What are the planning responses to key environmental challenges? 8. What infrastructure is required – what are the national priorities? 9. How should a National Planning Framework be implemented? 10.What will success look like? Framework Development Influences Stakeholder and public ideas Good examples from other administrations (Scottish NPF adopted by Scottish Parliament) ESRI working with DHPCLG on Demographic and Econometric modelling and projections Development and testing of alternative scenarios Expert environmental assessments underway AIRO (NUIM) spatial data/mapping Environmental Assessment Key Stages and Outputs Stage 1: Stage 2: Stage 3: Screening SEA & AA SEA Alternatives Final SEA Statement Scoping workshop SEA Env Report SEA Scoping Report AA Screening &/or NIS Final NIS Pre-draft SFRA Draft SFRA Management Plan Final SFRA Management Plan Current Status: Consultants (RPS) appointed to carry out the integration of environmental considerations (SEA, AA & SFRA) into the NPF process Strategic Issues Do we follow ‘Business as Usual’ or Influence a new pattern? 1: Planning for People - Society and Quality of Life 2: A Place-Making Strategy • • • • • A Vision for our Capital, our Cities and Towns Key strengths and opportunities for our Regions A future for Rural Ireland Ireland in an All-Island Context Realising opportunities for integrated land and marine development 3: Equipping Ireland for Future Development – Infrastructure 4: Making a virtue out of Ireland’s unique environment sustainability 5: Implementation and Delivery – making sure NPF is driven Policy Choices ‘Business as Usual’ undesirable - will not deliver competitiveness, QoL, BRD, climate change objectives, cost to State; Previous success – investment/policy led, Inter-urban motorway programme; Temple Bar/Dublin Docklands; Wild Atlantic Way Trends are telling us that a ‘New Direction’ is required - Policy and Investment led; Harnessing metropolitan/city element likely to be key, must also address regional and rural potential; Currently seeking to identify and test alternatives to business as usual; Will feed into Capital Plan review. Project Timetable Currently finalising ‘Issues and Options’ paper and Communications Strategy Pre-Draft Consultation – launch January 2017, submissions to end Feb Draft NPF for further consultation – Q2 2017 Final draft for approval – Possible Summer 2017 Contact Details Paul Hogan, NPF Project Manager/Senior Planning Adviser - [email protected] Alma Walsh, Planning Adviser [email protected] Colm McCoy, Planning Adviser [email protected] Website: [email protected]