The important bits for housing and construction in the government鈥檚 legislative programme revealed today
The government鈥檚 legislative programme for the months ahead was revealed in the Queen鈥檚 Speech this afternoon. Here is a summary of the measures most likely to affect housing and construction.
Levelling up and regeneration bill
This bill would:
- 鈥渓ay the foundations鈥 for all of England to have the opportunity to benefit from a devolution deal by 2030.
- introduce a new approach to environmental assessment in the planning system.
- largely replace Section 106 with a new locally set, non-negotiable levy to deliver housing and infrastructure.
- simplify and standardise the process for local plans so that they are 鈥減roduced more quickly and are easier for communities to influence鈥.
- place a duty on the government to set Levelling Up missions and produce an annual report updating the country on delivery of these missions.
- create a new model of combined authority: the 鈥楥ounty Deal鈥 which will provide local leaders with powers to enhance local accountability, join up services and provide transparent decision making to rejuvenate their communities, increase their ability to reflect local preferences in arrangements including directly elected leaders鈥 titles.
- grant new powers for local authorities to bring empty premises back into use and instigate rental auctions of vacant commercial properties in town centres and on high streets.
- give residents more of a say over changing street names.
- strengthen neighbourhood planning and digitise the system to make local plans easier to find, understand and engage with; by making it easier for local authorities to get local plans in place, we will limit speculative development.
>> Also read: Environmental assessment shake-up included in planning reforms
Procurement bill
This bill would:
- reform the UK鈥檚 public procurement regime post-Brexit to 鈥渃reate a simpler and more transparent system鈥.
- aim to make public procurement more accessible for new entrants such as small businesses and voluntary, charitable and social enterprises, enabling them to compete for public contracts.
- establish a single digital platform for supplier registration.
- enshrine in law the objectives of public procurement including: delivering value for money, maximising public benefit, treating suppliers equally and without discrimination, and acting, and being seen to act, with integrity.
- require buyers to have regard to the government鈥檚 strategic priorities for public procurement as set out in the National Procurement Policy Statement.
- introduce new, 鈥渃learer鈥 arrangements for how contracting authorities can buy at pace if necessary to protect life or health, public order or safety, with strengthened safeguards for transparency.
- tackle unacceptable behaviour and poor performance through new exclusion rules and giving buyers the tools they need to properly take account of a bidder鈥檚 past performance.
- provide a number of sector-specific features where necessary, including tailored rules to better suit defence and security procurement in order to protect our national interests.
>> Also read: Delayed procurement bill welcomed by industry
Energy bill
This bill would:
- introduce business models for Carbon Capture Usage and Storage transport and storage, low carbon hydrogen and industrial carbon capture.
- give government the power to give directions to, require information from, and provide financial assistance to core fuel sector businesses to ensure resilience and continuity of fuel supply.
- provide for a new market standard and trading scheme for electric heat pumps.
- appoint Ofgem as the new regulator for heat networks.
- extend the energy price cap.
- enable the first ever large-scale hydrogen heating trial.
- introduce competition in Britain鈥檚 onshore electricity networks, 鈥渆ncouraging investment and innovation鈥.
- create a new pro-innovation regulatory environment for fusion energy.
- establish a new Future System Operator 鈥 a public body to provide strategic oversight across electricity and gas systems. It will drive progress towards net zero, energy security and minimising consumer costs.
- clean-up of the UK鈥檚 legacy nuclear sites.
>> Also read: Energy Bill to extend price cap and encourage innovation across sector
UK Infrastructure Bank Bill
This bill would:
- finalise the creation of the UK Infrastructure Bank.
- ensure the Bank can become fully operational and is able to utilise its 拢22bn financial capacity to help grow the economy to address the cost of living and support the transition to net zero by 2050.
- allow the Bank will partner with the private sector to 鈥渦nlock more than 拢18bn of additional investment in infrastructure鈥.
- enshrine the Bank鈥檚 objectives and functions in legislation to ensure that it will be a鈥 long-lasting institution with a clear policy mandate to support economic growth鈥.
- set out clear accountability for how the bank is to be run, including reporting and board requirements.
- give the bank powers to lend directly to local authorities and the Northern Ireland Executive.
Social housing regulation bill
This bill would
- enable the social housing regulator to intervene with landlords who are performing poorly on consumer issues, such as complaints handling and decency of homes, and to 鈥渁ct in the interest of tenants鈥 to make sure issues are rectified.
- enable the regulator to inspect landlords to make sure they are providing tenants with the quality of accommodation and services that they deserve.
- create new tenant satisfaction measures which will allow tenants to see how their landlord is performing compared to other landlords and help the Regulator decide where to focus its attention.
- ensure tenants of housing associations will be able to request information from their landlord in a similar way to how the Freedom of Information Act works for tenants of Local Authority landlords.
- guarantee that the regulator will be able to act more quickly where it has concerns about the decency of a home. They will only be required to give 48 hours notice to a landlord before a survey is carried out.
- provide powers for the Regulator to arrange emergency repairs of tenants鈥 homes following a survey and where there is evidence of systemic failure by the landlord. This will ensure that serious issues are resolved rapidly where a landlord is unable or unwilling to act.
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