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Integrated Development Assessment and Consent Procedures: Proposed Legislative Changes

Integrated Development Assessment and Consent Procedures: Proposed Legislative Changes

Advice on legislation or legal policy issues contained in this paper is provided for use in parliamentary debate and for related parliamentary purposes. This paper is not professional legal opinion.
Briefing Paper No. 09/1997 by Stewart Smith
  • The development approval process in NSW has been criticised by most sections of the community for some considerable time. Problems have included its complexity, too many government agencies involved and delays in determining development applications. Whilst there have been numerous inquiries to find ways to improve the planning approval process, the Thirty different governments...' report has usefully summed up many of the issues and included recommendations (page 3).
  • This paper includes a short overview of the planning system in NSW (page 4) and reviews the Green Paper on Integrated Land Use and Planning released by the State government in May 1996 (page 5).
  • From the basis developed in the Green Paper, the government released in early 1997 the Integrated Development Assessment White Paper and Exposure Draft Bill. The draft Bill amends the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979 by replacing Part IV of the Act, which deals with development control and assessment (page 7).
  • The proposed reforms to the EPAA are described in detail (pages 9-19). The reforms can be classed in the following areas: changes to the development assessment system, including the introduction of complying development; the introduction of integrated development consents; and increasing the role of the private sector in the assessment process.
  • The proposed reforms have attracted both support and criticism. In general, most sectors of the community agree that reform of the EPAA is necessary. What many people also regard as important is maintaining the fundamental basis of the EPAA, ie, ensuring that developments are assessed adequately for their social, economic and environmental affects, without favouring one side or another'.
  • On 28 May 1997 the Minister for Urban Affairs and Planning Hon Craig Knowles MP introduced into the Legislative Assembly a Bill amending the EPAA and the Land and Environment Court Act 1979 (page 20). The Bill amends processes relating to Ministerial consents of State significant and prohibited development under s.101 of the EPAA. The Bill introduces mandatory requirements in the development assessment process, relating to the advertising of development. All other requirements must be substantially followed.
  • Objectors to development under s.101 of the EPAA can only appeal a Ministerial development consent under s.123 of the EPAA. This provides for an appeal not on the merits of the decision, but on the grounds of technical breaches of the law. This may include claims that the advertising requirements of the Act were not complied with, or that the heads of consideration' under s.91 were not considered properly.
  • If the Land and Environment Court upholds a s.123 appeal, development consent may be invalidated. The consent authority must start the process again, which delays the whole process. The proposed amendments change the Land and Environment Court Act, so that the Court is required to give the Minister as consent authority the opportunity to correct the technical breaches of the law, and then the Minister may seek a declaration from the Court that the development consent is valid.