Revised early minor alterations to the London plan October Dalston area action plan Hackney Central area action plan Manor House area action plan Hackney Wick area action plan Statement of licensing Residential extensions and alterations SPD, Public realm SPD, For the town centre and retail documents, please visit core strategy evidence base. Hackney retail centre study, Retail health check, Hackney night-time economy evidence base, Shoreditch night-time economy study, For the employment documents, please visit core strategy evidence base.
Hackney employment growth options study update, Hackney employment growth options study final report , part 1. For the housing documents, please visit core strategy evidence base. Entec housing capacity study executive summary, Hackney housing needs assessment , inc housing needs survey Housing needs update, Hackney housing strategy consultation document , Hackney affordable housing viability study, For the built environment documents, please visit core strategy evidence base.
London view management framework, For the open spaces documents, please visit core strategy evidence base. Open space and sports assessment volumes 1 and 2 GLA access to nature. For the environment documents, please visit core strategy evidence base.
Heat mapping report Hackney climate change strategy, Strategic flood risk assessment level 2 Hackney strategic flood risk assessment sequential test, Strategic flood risk assessment level 1, August Surface water management plan Bio-diversity action plan Air quality action plan Air quality action plan update Contaminated land strategy.
For the transport documents, please visit core strategy evidence base. Hackney transport strategy sections 1 — 13 Local implementation plan 2 Parking and enforcement plan DfT manual for streets 1 and 2 DfT inclusive mobility guidance TfL transport assessment best practice — guidance documents TfL making freight work for you TfL travel planning for new development in London Hackney health profile Local plans and the national planning policy framework — compatibility self assessment checklist, LBH core strategy Local plans and the national planning policy framework — compatibility self assessment checklist — LBH saved policies.
Further alterations to the London plan National planning policy framework Planning policy for traveller sites DMLP — cabinet report — draft for public participation Hackney local plan viability assessment Hackney CIL viability report Dec Hackney CIL viability report Nov Hackney CIL viability report LBH exemption bid Town centre health check data Proposed modifications to DMLP — track change version DM12 hot food takeaway justification Legal advice on policy DM8.
Legal advice and further justification for policy DM46 Vaccination and testing information and other help and support. We have moved to a new system for searching, viewing, and commenting on planning applications. Supplementary planning documents will be produced to support existing policy found in development plan documents. SPD that are adopted or currently under development are listed below:.
Planning obligations are legal agreements that we make with developers to mitigate the negative effects of a development which would otherwise be unacceptable in planning terms. This was seen as necessary because of significant changes to the policy context surrounding planning obligations in the National Planning Policy Framework and Community Infrastructure Levy Regulations as amended which have redefined the way in which developers are expected to contribute to community infrastructure.
The Planning Obligations SPD was adopted on the 23 July and is a material consideration for future planning applications. We are at the very early stages of producing a new Dalston SPD , also referred to as the Dalston Plan, which will support the delivery of the growth strategy set out in the local plan LP The LP33 and the Dalston plan, once adopted, will supersede the current Dalston area action plan adopted The next stage of the project is to produce a first draft of the Dalston plan.
There will be a public consultation later on this year for an opportunity to provide feedback. This supplementary planning document SPD was adopted by the Council on 19 June and seeks to the deliver the objectives and aspirations set out in the current planning and development framework, which includes the Hackney Central area action plan AAP. It is expected to significantly reduce harmful nitrogen dioxide emissions inside the expanded zone by up to 30 per cent.
Beat energy price hikes with free home efficiency measures 25th October The second year of the programme is now open for applications, which could help lower energy bills for thousands of local residents, significantly reduce the gases produced from heating homes - which are a significant contributor to climate change - and help landlords comply with the latest energy efficiency rules.
The second year of the programme aims to support people in privately-owned or rented homes to raise their household energy performance level to Band C, following a recommendation from the Climate Change Committee in the national roadmap to net zero. Last year, over households applied for the Green Homes programme, with high numbers of applications expected in its second year.
It is also delivering a solar power programme on Hackney Council owned rooftops, which it is looking to expand to a further nine Council-owned buildings. We also stood with the whole early years sector at the height of the COVID crisis making sure that local and Government schemes addressed issues around grants and furlough. But despite this, we will still need to make millions of pounds of savings this coming year, and we will be left with funding challenges that will impact us all, for many years to come.
Local authorities across the country have been continually calling for more support for this sector; we simply cannot keep promising to carry on as usual for less and less money - it is unsustainable. Alongside colleagues and the Mayor, I have campaigned, marched, written, Twitter-stormed, petitioned, lobbied, and given evidence to Parliament on behalf of the whole early years sector - all this so far has been ignored by Central Government. It is about reducing unacceptable pressures on service providers and making our services more sustainable, reprovisioning our children's centres, and targeting resources to the most vulnerable and disadvantaged children.
We have spent the last 17 years developing quality provision in all these centres - all of which have been judged either good or outstanding by Ofsted.
This includes occupancy: there are approximately 30 vacancies across both sites. This means there are approximately 11 out of 41 full time equivalent spaces unfilled each day, despite work with both centres to turn this around.
Alone these factors might not lead to closure, but combined with other challenges they make the situation harder. The centres are situated in an area where increasing numbers of children are attending independent settings, up from 1, in to 1,, with fewer children in the community attending mainstream provision. We will do absolutely everything in our power to support them and help them access alternative provision where needed; and these children will be given priority where there are vacancies at other children's centres, including at the three within a short walking distance.
We are keen to continue to work with staff and unions around these proposals and minimise any negative impact. The Early Years Strategy that has also gone out for consultation - alongside these proposals - offers a set of principles that we want to uphold as we seek to reconfigure our provision. Read our FAQs here. The exhibition is open until 15 January This theme continues on 18 November with a talk by Professor Hakim Adi, the first historian of African heritage to become a professor of history in Britain.
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