Public vs Private Planning

Public vs Private Planning

These days, the 'elephant-in-the-room' when it comes to development approval (DA) applications is local authority approval time frames. Most DA applicants and their professional consultant team are really only prepared to discuss these protracted and prolonged time frames in hushed tones, closed door client meetings or off-the-record phone conversations and certainly never in a public blog article or the like......

Personal DA application experiences in south-west Western Australia give you some indication how the DA process has evolved into a lengthy ordeal. For example, a recent DA application in the Shire of Augusta-Margaret River was drawn-out to 200 days, a simple DA application for a class 1 dwelling at the City of Busselton notched up a staggering 224 days and a current application at the City of Busselton is sitting at 122 days and counting. This month, an inquiry with a local authority's Manager of Development Services on a yet to be submitted two story building, unashamedly advised that the DA application would take at least 90 days. The late Michael Swift, City of Busselton CEO 1997-2002, was meticulous in ensuring all applicants were delivered an expeditious response (ie within twenty-eight days) on each and every application and would no-doubt be grieved by the legacy that now exists. When canvassing south-west builders, developers, town planners and other professionals; these time frames are certainly not anomalous - bearing in mind that most DA applications are then followed by a building permit application - also approved by the local authority.

One may well say, "...build a bridge a get over it..." or "...start a group..." but these extensive time frames are well beyond the Town Planning and Development Act 2005 statutory period of ninety days and have a real commercial cost to every application, every proponent, all planning and building professionals and the wider community. Afterall, are not planning officers' salaries borne by the local authority ratepayers who ensure that the Council 'make-ends-meet'? When faced with these exaggerated time frames, some of the choices are:

a) State Administrative Tribunal ('the Tribunal') review after ninety days;

b) abusing planning staff (only for the very brave or fool-hardy)

c) write a letter of complaint to the Chief Executive Officer (CEO);

d) lobby Councillors;

e) contact Department of Local Government and Communities;

f) contact Western Australian Planning Commission;

g) all of the above

 Baby boomers may have noticed the adjustment of attitudes amongst the public service with the evolution of JDF's to the 'officer' description but this may not be so apparent to the gen-xer's or millennials. Unfortunately, this perceived recalcitrant behaviour falls outside the scope of the last two organizations and just another governance issue that falls between the cracks of State government bureaucracies. The applicant is left with the choice of pleading for mercy to the CEO or lobbying a higher authority (Councillors) and the difficult task of finding a Councillor who cares. The applicant's next act is to then try to motivate the Councillor to bring about accountability to the CEO and his/her sub-ordinate staff who are contracted through the CEO. When faced with this type political manoeuvring, most applicants will defer back to option (a) - a State Administrative Tribunal review after ninety days. Regrettably, taking your case to the Tribunal involves more effort, cost and longer time frames - and local government officers know it. Infact, I have seen deliberate stalling tactics by local authority officers during Tribunal review meetings; presumably in an attempt to 'bleed-out' the appellant through excessive consultant time and professional fees. Thankfully, the Tribunal possibly addressed this insufficient respect towards the Tribunal in the decision DR 196 2014 Bruhn vs City of Joondalup, where the City lost the case and the Tribunal awarded the Bruhn's costs of $14,880 - certainly a David and Goliath battle that turned the table on the Philistines.

In recent times, the Building Commission has shifted building surveyors out of local authorities to the private sector via the Building Act 2011 so should planning officers be the target of the next privatisation push of a hopeful new state government? Although the recent privatisation of building surveyors' services by the Building Commission has it's detractors - perhaps the expedited time frames on building permit applications and significantly reduced fees should be observed by policy makers. Given that successive state and national governments have privatised, CBA, Qantas, Telstra, Alinta Gas alongside a plethora of other parliamentary privatisation proposals; perhaps planning departments could be the next service industry to be privatised? "...Extreme..." or "...radical..." you say; perhaps not? The Western Australian Planning Commission has actually already set-up a working group to consider the outsourcing of the arduous planning approval process to the private sector - specifically to do with sub-divisional applications. Premier Brian Burke set the ball rolling and made the first attempt on privatising the Public Works Department (PWD) with later liberal and labour regimes thereafter taking bigger bites of the PWD cherry. Equally, it will take an incredibly self-assured Minister for Transport, Planning, Lands and Heritage to initiate a move of this magnitude in privatising town planning services. Would the private sector do a better job? Would the Corporations Act, ASIC et al bring greater accountability to private planning companies than we currently see at the local level? Are the local authority CEO's prepared to relinquish their lucrative DA fees and planning officers take a hair-cut? And finally the question on every voter's lips; what effect would this have on rates?

A competitive tender to private planning companies for local authority statutory approvals with a three year contract period, reviewed at the end of the contract period and KPI's measured to evaluate performance would emulate the procurement method mandated by Dept of Finance WA for Building Management and Works - it could also have the effect of potentially halving the approval periods and fees.

Like
Reply

To view or add a comment, sign in

More articles by Stuart Threadgold

Others also viewed

Explore content categories