Today a new Rural Coalition publishes The Rural Challenge, a report outlining detailed proposals to give local people, entrepreneurs, community groups and councils the ability to bring about positive change that will ensure a thriving future for the countryside. The report is being billed as a blueprint for delivering the government’s so-called Big Society in the small places which are at huge risk unless action is taken now.
The report sets out propositions for taking on five key challenges facing the countryside – meeting rural housing need, building thriving economies, delivering good rural services, creating flourishing market towns and empowering local communities. The Rural Coalition, chaired by Lord Taylor of Goss Moor, believes this can be achieved by letting communities seize the initiative.
Key recommendations of the report include:
Urging the Government to give greater independence to local residents and councils; Scrapping plans for referendums in the Government’s Community Right to Build scheme which would require 90% community support before new, small scale development can go ahead in villages;
That town hall planners, local councils and communities should be free to come up with innovative solutions to the rural affordable housing crisis;
A call for the Government to take proper account of the impact of public sector funding cuts on rural areas before finalising the Comprehensive Spending Review in October;
Pressing for a radical transformation of planning practice to give communities the lead in planning for thriving and sustainable new neighbourhoods when market towns need to grow.
The Rural Coalition is made up of Action with Communities in Rural England, the Campaign to Protect Rural England, the Country Land & Business Association, the Local Government Association, The Royal Town Planning Institute and the Town & Country Planning Association.
Do I at last see some joined-up thinking about solving the problems of the countryside? Or wil it all end up in a tangle of red tape?