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New Hospitals Programme, Making Waves

New Hospitals Programme, Making Waves

Jonathan Standen 21 Jan 2025
Set up by the Johnson Government in 2019, to much fanfare, the New Hospitals Programme (NHP) was to fulfil the then Government’s manifesto commitment. It combined eight hospital building projects that were already under construction or pending final approval with the pledge for 40 more, which were to be completed between 2021 and 2030. Since then, the programme has been beset by delay and uncertainty.
The then Department of Health and Social Care said the total cost of delivering the schemes had been estimated at significantly over £20 billion, but only £3.7 billion had been allocated up to 2024/2025. This commitment arose amid a £11 billion maintenance backlog within the wider NHS estate not addressed by the Programme.
Review
After the July 2024 election, the new Government appointed Ara Darzi (Baron Darzi of Denam) to undertake an independent review into the performance of the NHS in England, with the aim of putting the NHP onto what is seen as a realistic, deliverable and affordable footing. The scope included hospitals in the NHP without full business case approvals for their main build phase.
Nearly six months have passed by since the election where the new Labour Government committed to undertake a review of the previous administration’s flagship NHP for England and provide a through and realistic and costed timetable for delivery.
This is against the backdrop of the Infrastructure and Projects Authority annual report upon the NHP which The Secretary of State for Health and Social Care Wes Streeting summarises as: ‘There are major issues with project definition, schedule, budget, quality and or benefit delivery which at this stage do not appear to be manageable or resolvable. The project may need rescoping and or its overall viability reassessed.’
Government plans
The Government has now announced its plans for the progression of the NHP which will see the staged funding of hospital development, with the most urgent and advanced taking place firstly with the remainder being undertaken in ‘waves’ between 2025 and 2039.  
The Secretary of State highlights that the Government’s review of the previous administration’s approach through the National Audit Office shows that no funding has been set aside for future years with ‘the programme built on the shaky foundation of false hope’.
In line with its previous commitment, the Government provides continued support for the urgent remediation of 7 hospitals (Airedale in West Yorkshire, Queen Elizabeth King’s Lynn in Norfolk, Hinchingbrooke in Cambridgeshire, Mid Cheshire Leighton in Cheshire and Frimley Park in Surrey and West Suffolk Hospital in Bury St Edmunds and James Paget Hospital in Norfolk), where reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete (RAAC) had been used in their used in construction. The chancellor, in her October budget committed £1 billion in funding to cover also the backlog of critical maintenance, repairs and upgrade across the National Health Service estate, with a further £1.5 billion investing in new surgical hubs, scanners and beds. Thereafter, the Government commits to 5 yearly waves of investment backed by £15 billion of funding, with each consecutive waves averaging £3 billion per year.  
Staged approach
The staged approach will see projects in ‘Wave zero’ which are already in the advanced stages of development and to be completed in the next 3 years. Projects in ‘Wave 1’ will be in construction between 2025 and 2030. This includes the 7 RAAC hospitals.
Projects in ‘Wave 2’ will see construction taking between 2030 and 2035.  These include:
  • Leicester Royal Infirmary and Glenfield Hospital
  • Watford General Hospital
  • Specialist Emergency Care Hospital, Sutton
  • Kettering General Hospital
  • Leeds General Infirmary
  • Musgrove Park Hospital, Taunton
  • Princess Alexandra Hospital, Harlow
  • Torbay Hospital
  • Whipps Cross University Hospital, north-east London.
Wave 3 includes 9 schemes which will start construction between 2035 and 2039.
  • St Mary’s Hospital, north-west London
  • Charing Cross Hospital and Hammersmith Hospital, north-west London
  • North Devon District Hospital, Barnstaple
  • Eastbourne District General, Conquest Hospital and Bexhill Community Hospital
  • Hampshire Hospitals
  • Royal Berkshire Hospital, Reading
  • Royal Lancaster Infirmary
  • Royal Preston Hospital
  • Queen’s Medical Centre (QMC) and Nottingham City Hospital.
Framework for construction
The Secretary of State in his announcement confirmed that the Government will shortly announce a new framework for the construction of the new schemes. This will bring forwards a different way of contracting, working partnership with industry, with the aim of mitigating costs scheduling and delivery risks and saving money through a standardised design approach (Hospitals 2.0), with the intention of speeding up the opening of new hospitals.
This reprioritisation, together with rising costs of building materials, the programme for delivery of some hospital projects has slipped by some way, has resulted in consternation amongst NHS Trusts, particularly those which now find themselves within Waves 2 and 3 where planning permission has been obtained for new development and significant range enabling works have been undertaken. In some cases, significant areas of cleared land await development and could remain so for some considerable time.
Not only are aspects of the NHP delayed but also there are significant knock- on implications for schemes where wider organisation and regeneration of the hospital estate and wider locality were envisaged, including the investment decisions associated with these. The delay is likely to raise particular questions for grants of planning permission and the prolonged timescale for implementation and detailing of schemes with Hospitals 2.0 in mind and the good planning of the public realm within which those hospitals sit.
The Government’s announcement is likely to have far reaching implications for healthcare development for Trusts located around England.  The planning sector looks to respond effectively to meet the challenge.
Jonathan Standen is a Planning Director with Lichfields and planning advisor to leading healthcare projects in England. 

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New planning application fees from 1 April 2025

New planning application fees from 1 April 2025

Jennie Baker & Sean Farrissey 17 Jan 2025
Following the Government’s July 2024 consultation on planning fees, draft amendments to the Town and Country Planning (Fees for Applications, Deemed Applications, Requests and Site Visits) (England) Regulations 2012 (‘the Regulations’) have been published.
If approved by Parliament, the Town and Country Planning (Fees for Applications, Deemed Applications, Requests and Site Visits) (England) (Amendment and Transitional Provision) Regulations 2025 (‘the 2025 Regulations’) would come into force on 1 April 2025.
Fees will also rise annually with inflation from 1 April 2025 (capped at 10%, measured by the Consumer Price Index from the preceding September). This year the fee increase will be 1.7%, which will apply to the fees in the current Regulations. The fees intended to be introduced on 1 April 2025 will not also have a 1.7% increase applied on that day.
 

Increased fees for certain applications

The fee for section 73 applications is currently a flat £292, regardless of the development type. The 2025 Regulations are expected to introduce a new three-tier banded structure to fees for section 73 applications of £86 for householders, £586 for non-major development (other than householders) and £2,000 for major development. The fees for applications for approval of details reserved by condition are doubling to £86 (from £43) for householders and £298 (from £145) for any other development.
The fee for prior approval applications is increasing from £120 to £240 (100%) and from £258 to £516 (100%) if the development includes building operations. The fee for prior approvals relating to the change of use of commercial, business and service uses to residential is increased from £125 per dwellinghouse to £250 per dwellinghouse.
 

Increased fees for householder applications

Proposals to increase the fee for householder applications to £528 (from £258) for a single dwellinghouse and to £1,043 (from £509) for two or more dwellinghouses are being taken forward in an attempt to allow LPAs to achieve full cost recovery. However, the existing fee of £258 (£262 from 1 April 2025) will remain for small-scale operations within the curtilage of a dwellinghouse, such as the construction of gates or fences. The existing fee exemptions and concessions will continue, including those relating to domestic accommodation for disabled people. The £528 fee is at the lowest end of the fee rates suggested in the consultation; more than half suggested fees be set at £528 of more. If these estimates of the fees needed for cost recovery are accurate, householder development applications will only scrape cost recovery.
 
A common criticism of this proposed increase to householder fees, in the consultation, was that it would lead to more unauthorised development as applicants would be put off applying for permission due to the additional cost of doing so. Examples given included the fee for a new rooflight being the same as a large extension to a house (and the rooflight fee potentially being similar to the cost of the development itself). The consultation response recognised that this may be an issue but highlighted that LPAs have enforcement measures at their disposal to stop unlawful development. As discussed here, there is a possibility that the new enforcement measures which increase the time limit for enforcement action to be taken, could lead to stretched LPAs prioritising other action which need more immediate attention. However, it is important that this fee increase is made, so that householder development is not, in effect, subsidised by other development, given that local planning authority budgets are unlikely to be increased by another means.

Potential forthcoming further changes to fees

The Government says that the Planning and Infrastructure Bill will give local planning authorities powers to set their own fees. It has also said that, alongside devising those proposals, they “will conduct a comprehensive review of all national fees in order to establish a robust baseline for full cost recovery of fees and to inform a national default fee”. This appears to reflect consultation responses that, once householder fees are increased, some other fees (or zero fees) appear very low cost. This includes listed building consent, tree preservation order, discharge of condition and non-material amendment applications.

 

 

First annual increase of fees to take effect

The annual increase of fees, as provided for in regulation 18A of the Regulations, applies to the fee amounts in the 2025 Regulations from 1 April 2026.
 
Planning Portal has provided a helpful Forthcoming Fees for Planning Applications in England table. We set out in the table (further below) some examples fee changes.
 

Closing thoughts

Historically, application fees have been fixed for several years and the various fee amounts become familiar over time. We are now seeing more frequent fee changes; from April onwards there will not only be annual changes, but further consideration of all planning related fees, as the Government aims for full cost recovery for determination of planning applications, while seeking to ensure that fee increases do not encourage a bypassing of the system, particularly for minor householder development. For all types of development, the Government and local authorities will be mindful of the consistent message from applicants - increased fees should come with an improved service.

 
         

Current Fee until 1 April 2025

     

New Fee from 1 April 2025

 
 

 

     

 

     

 

 
 

Outline for dwellings on a site area of between 0.5 hectares and 2.5 hectares

     

£624 for each 0.1 hectare (or part thereof) 

     

£635 for each 0.1 hectare (or part thereof)

 
                     
                     
                     
 

Outline for buildings (other than dwellings) on a site area of between 1 hectare and 2.5 hectares

     

£624 for each 0.1 hectare (or part thereof)

     

£635 for each 0.1 hectare (or part thereof)

 
                     
                     
                     
 

Outline on sites of more than 2.5ha

     

£15,433 and an additional £186 for each 0.1 hectare (or part thereof) in excess of 2.5 hectares. Maximum fee of £202,500.

     

£15,695 + £189 for each additional 0.1 hectare (or part thereof) in excess of 2.5 hectares. Maximum fee of £205,943

 
                     
                     
                     
 

Full application/reserved matters for between 10 and 50 dwellings

     

£624 for each dwellinghouse

     

£635 for each dwellinghouse

 
                     
                     
                     
 

Full application/reserved matters for more than 50 dwellinghouses

     

£30,860 + £186 for each additional dwellinghouse in excess of 50. Maximum fee of £405,000.

     

£31,385 + £189 for each additional dwellinghouse in excess of 50. Maximum fee of £411,885

 
                     
                     
                     
 

Full application for buildings other than dwellinghouses, agricultural, glasshouses, plant or machinery, between 1,000 square metres and 3,750 square metres

     

£624 for each 75 square metres (or part thereof)

     

£635 for each 75 square metres (or part thereof)

 
                     
                     
                     
 

Full application for buildings other than dwellinghouses, agricultural, glasshouses, plant or machinery, more than 3,750 square metres

     

£30,680 + £186 for each additional 75 square metres (or part thereof) in excess of 3750 square metres. Maximum fee of £405,000.

     

£31,385** + £189 for each additional 75 square metres (or part thereof) in excess of 3,750 square metres. Maximum fee of £411,885

 
                     
                     
                     
 

Other operations (not coming within any other category in the Regulations)

     

£293 for each 0.1 hectare (or part thereof). Maximum fee of £2,535.

     

£298 for each 0.1 hectare (or part thereof) Maximum fee of £2,578

 
                     

 

The Draft Town and Country Planning (Fees for Applications, Deemed Applications, Requests and Site Visits) (England) (Amendment and Transitional Provision) Regulations 2025

 

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