What the health? The planning system and healthcare service funding

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What the health? The planning system and healthcare service funding

What the health? The planning system and healthcare service funding

Myles Wild-Smith 20 Aug 2020
As the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic continues to reshape our daily lives, one thing has also become clear: we need to think more seriously about the links between the built environment and our physical and mental health. To date, this discussion has generally been weighted more towards access to open space and suitably-sized homes with windows, but the issues are more broadly based. Even though the Government’s Planning for the Future White Paper has charted some radical reforms to planning obligations, the current planning obligation framework will continue to be in force for a few more years, and there are some critical issues which will continue to need to be addressed over this interim period.

Planning for health

Pre-pandemic, the revised National Planning Policy Framework (2019) [NPPF] sought to include a stronger emphasis on health and well-being; it states that the planning system should support “strong, vibrant and healthy communities” (Para 8b) and should take account of “local strategies to improve health… for all sections of the community” (Para 92b). But, it also introduced the notion of addressing inadequate ‘services’ (Para 81b). The development industry in large part accepts the need to contribute to providing capital funding for education and health infrastructure, but despite the NPPF’s subtle shift to include services, little consideration had been given to what role, if any, the development industry should play in helping to address healthcare services revenue funding challenges (beyond its contribution via general taxation).
By contrast, the NHS has proverbially left the running blocks. Faced with budget cuts, resource constraints, and need to keep up with an ageing population, one NHS Trust has been seeking s106 funding for acute healthcare services from via planning obligations since 2014.
These initial requests were successively rejected at planning appeals, as the Inspectors considered that such funding requests were not in accordance with Regulation 122 of the Community Infrastructure Levy (CIL) Regulations (2012) and did not relate to the development. However, two appeals, recovered by the Secretary of State [SoS] in 2016, concluded that such requests were material to the consideration of the applications, were acceptable in principle, and were necessary to make the development acceptable in planning terms.[1] The ‘Securing Section 106 and community infrastructure levy funds’ (September 2018) guidance followed this, in which NHS Improvement and Trusts highlighted the capital and revenue opportunities for NHS trusts impacted by local development.[2]

An un-funded funding gap

So how are Trusts impacted by development beyond infrastructure requirements? The key issue for Trusts is the Government’s current funding mechanism. Trusts are commissioned by Clinical Commissioning Groups [CCGs] to provide planned and emergency acute healthcare to the population of areas under the terms of the NHS Standard Contract. However, this contract is an outturn activity volume-based contract which is agreed annually with CCGs and is based on the previous year’s activity. The contract, therefore, does not account for in-year population increases until the next year, and any additional healthcare activities resultant from an increase in the population of an area – which Trusts are legally obliged to undertake – remain unfunded. Simply put, there’s a potential hole in Trust’s budgets arising from population growth in an area, and a greater number of NHS Trusts are now turning their attention to the development industry to plug these ‘funding gaps’ through S106 contributions.
Having dealt with a number of these requests, we can see there are practical concerns about how some NHS Trust’s are seeking s106 contributions. The Regulation 122 Tests requires s106 requests to be “fairly and reasonably related in scale and kind to the development”. In this regard, it is important that Trusts only make requests for the un-costed ‘new persons’ that would likely and reasonably present themselves for treatment because of a proposed development. This is because some of the population of the development will have moved from within the area, and will have already been considered within the service provider’s funding model. At present, there are legitimate questions regarding whether the Trusts’ calculations address this.
In addition, these requests are typically made well into the determination period of planning applications. Indeed, one Trust submitted four s106 requests to developments which had already been determined by a planning committee in Worcester – requests which were subsequently rejected.[3] Consequently, there is little room left for the negotiation of additional s106 monies beyond which has already been agreed or found viable.

A return to marginal viability debates?

Turning to the latter point, and setting aside broader concerns about the Trusts’ calculations, the manner in which Trusts are currently engaging in the planning system is somewhat at odds with the spirit of the NPPF, and more importantly, likely to hinder the Government’s ambition to ‘build, build, build’.
The revised NPPF shifted the consideration of the ‘viability’ of sites from the decision-making stage to the forefront of the planning process – plan-making – and is clear that Local Plans “should set out the contributions expected from development… [and] such policies should not undermine the deliverability of the plan.” (Para 34).  In the context of education contributions, the Planning Practice Guidance [PPG] states that obligations should be set out in the local plan, so that they are subject to examination [4]. The aim of this is to ensure that these obligations are sufficiently certain and can be accurately accounted for in the price paid for land”.4 This is particularly important, as paragraph 57 of the NPPF serves to limit the scope for re-testing the viability of developments post-Local Plan examination. As such, developers are likely to find it more difficult to justify diverging from planning obligations on viability grounds.
However, currently, few authorities have grappled with the revised NPPF through local plan reviews, and few, if any, local plans contain an explicit reference to the need for developments to fund healthcare services, let alone including a standardised approach. It is therefore difficult for the development industry to factor these ‘unknown’ costs into the viability of the development.
Whilst the economic implications of COVID-19 are still crystalising, the viability of sites will invariably be at the forefront of many plan-making and decision-making discussions. This is likely to limit Trusts further, as the viability assumptions of sites will have already been ‘baked-in’, and the economic uncertainty of COVID-19 will invariably impact the viability of some schemes. Moreover, LPAs may have to make tough decisions in the balancing exercise, to ensure that planning obligations align with their area’s particular priorities: fund the NHS? deliver affordable housing in an area where there is already an acute shortfall? Or ensure this brownfield site is brought back in to use?
The Government has been clear that a critical part of our economic recovery plan is to ‘build, build, build’ the homes and infrastructure this country needs. But there is still uncertainty from Councils and the Government as to whether such requests are acceptable. Fareham Borough Council rejected a c.£6m S106 request for the Welborne Garden Village in October 2019[5], and the SoS recently rejected a £1m request in Teignbridge in June 2020. Coupled with eleventh-hour requests, discussions and negotiations between LPAs, applicants and Trusts, there is a risk that such requests will delay the decision-making process for applications which are proposing to deliver housing to meet needs, which also deliver wider economic benefits.
What the above highlights is that, increasingly, LPA officers will have to weigh up the importantance of further S106 requests in the planning balance, and make difficult decisions as to which best align with the LPA’s priorities, and importantly, which can be viably be delivered. Despite opening up planning obligations to the provision of public ‘services’, the Government is seemingly silent on whether planning should cooperate and integrate with service providers. Historically, whilst both NHS Trusts and CCG’s have been consulted in the preparation of local plans, this has largely in respect of the infrastructure-related impacts of planned housing growth. If planning is to play a role in mitigating the impacts of development on service funding – and evidence from the West Midlands indicates that Trusts believe it should – there is a cogent need for them to engage more proactively in the planning system form an earlier stage, or more specifically, the plan-making process.
In the interim, we would urge our developer and housebuilders clients to have a more keen regard to these potential planning obligations when acquiring land and considering site viability, and to discuss this with us.

[1] Appeal References: APP/T3725/A/14/2221613 and APP/T3725/A/14/2229398[2] https://www.hsj.co.uk/south-warwickshire-nhs-foundation-trust/massive-pool-of-untapped-cash-for-nhs-from-property-developers/7020202.article[3] https://www.worcesternews.co.uk/news/17918031.city-council-agrees-reject-hospital-39-s-plea-millions-massive-housing-developments/[4] PPG ID: 23b-004-20190901[5] Application Reference: P/17/0266/OA