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LAND (PLANNING AND ENVIRONMENT) AMENDMENT REGULATION 2006 (NO 3) (NO 19 OF 2006)
2006
LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY FOR THE
AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL TERRITORY
LAND (PLANNING AND ENVIRONMENT)
AMENDMENT REGULATION 2006 (No 3)
Subordinate Law No
SL2006-19
EXPLANATORY STATEMENT
Circulated by authority of Simon
Corbell MLA
Minister for Planning
Overview
The Land (Planning and Environment) Amendment
Regulation 2006 (No 3) (amendment regulation) amends the Land (Planning
and Environment) Regulation 1992-
§ to introduce provisions to enable the ACT Planning and Land Authority to request additional information from an applicant for development approval and to expand the statutory timeframes for decisions to be made (‘stop the clock’);
§ to make minor amendments to existing exemptions from development approval for smaller structures to clarify errors and oversights in the drafting of the existing exemptions.
The amendments will take effect one day after notification of the regulation.
However, the ACT Planning and Land Authority will provide a grace period of two
weeks before commencing processes under the ‘stop the clock’
provisions. It is considered that the amendment regulation does not impose an
appreciable cost and, therefore, a regulatory impact statement is not
necessary.
The amendment regulation is made under sections 282 and 288 of
the Land (Planning and Environment) Act 1991.
Background
‘Stop the clock’
The ACT
Planning and Land Authority has the power to require the applicant for a
development approval to supply information additional to that lodged with the
application (s233 of the Land Act). The information must be supplied within the
period stated in the request (no more than 28 days).
This procedure has
no effect on the requirement for the ACT Planning and Land Authority to make a
decision within the prescribed period (30-45 days, s230 of the Land Act and
section 37 of the 1992 Regulation). After this period, if no decision has been
made, the application is ‘deemed to be refused’ and the applicant
acquires a right of appeal to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT). In
many cases, the prescribed period runs out or nearly runs out because of the
time taken to supply the requested additional information.
The above
sequence of events has two disadvantages:
§ it gives rise to a right of appeal before the ACT Planning and Land Authority has had a reasonable chance to make a decision on the relevant information. In practice, this right is illusory as the AAT is not likely to grant an appeal on the grounds of delay in these circumstances; and
§ it creates the potential for confusion
by requiring a deemed refusal and right of appeal in the middle of the
assessment/decision process.
The ACT Planning and Land Authority, until
recently, has sought to tackle these difficulties in part by requiring all
applicants to complete a validation process prior to lodgement of the
application. This process was designed to give the ACT Planning and Land
Authority an opportunity to assess the need for further information prior to the
lodgement of the application.
After reviewing the effectiveness of the
validation process and after considering submission on the Planning System
Reform Project, the ACT Planning and Land Authority now intends to remove
validation for all development applications in favour of a document check at the
counter.
However as it is likely that the ACT Planning and Land
Authority will still require further information for some development
applications, the amendment regulation establishes a system whereby the ACT
Planning and Land Authority can seek further additional information within a 15
day period from lodgement of the application. A period of 28 days, or the
period it takes for the applicant to respond, which ever is shorter, will be
added to the period that the ACT Planning and Land Authority has to determine
the application. Provision is also made for what happens when the information
provided is insufficient or is not provided at all.
Minor adjustments
to development approval exemptions
Schedule 1 of the Land (Planning
and Environment) Regulation 1992 exempts specified structures from Part 6 of
the Land (Planning and Environment) Act 1991, that is, the
requirement for a development approval. The amendment regulation corrects
errors and oversights in relation to exemptions for certain structures.
The amendment regulation provides that:
§ external decks, retaining walls, terraces or landings and external stairs (over 0.4m but less than 1m in height) are not exempt if the structure is within 1.5m of the side or rear boundary;
§ the exemption of class 10 structures
(sheds, gazebos, pergolas etc) will only permit one such structure to be built
within 1.5m of a rear or side boundary without an approval. Any additional such
structure shall require application for an approval.
Amendments in
detail
Section 1 - Name of regulations - provides that the
name of the amendment regulation is the Land (Planning and Environment)
Amendment Regulation 2006 (No 3).
Section 2 - Commencement -
provides that the amendment regulation commences on the day after its
notification day.
Section 3 – Legislation amended –
provides that the amendment regulation amends the Land (Planning and
Environment) Regulation 1992.
Section 4 – Section 37
− remakes section 37 of the Land (Planning and Environment) Regulation 1992, which provides the time periods by which decisions on development application should be made, and for extensions to those periods. The remade sections are substantially the same as the sections they replace.
− Introduces new section 37D-37F, which establishes processes whereby
the ACT Planning and Land Authority may seek further information from the
applicant. This request for further information extends the time periods
established by section 37. In most cases, the period is extended by the time
that it takes for the applicant to provide the information, although other
periods exist to cover circumstances when the information provided is
insufficient or is not provided at all. Any such request must be made within 15
business days of the date of lodgement of the development application.
Only one request for additional information (and a further request to
rectify insufficient information) can be made that has the effect of extending
the time periods for determining a development application. Additional requests
for information can be made but will have no effect on time
periods.
Section 5 – Schedule 1, item 16, column 2 -
substitutes the existing exemption from development approval for structures
such as retaining walls, carports, pergolas, sheds, gazebos, small decks with a
new exemption for such structures; the new exemption stipulates that certain
structures must be no less that 1.5 metres from a side or rear boundary and
minimises the number of structures that can be located closer than 1.5 metres
from a side or rear boundary.
Section 6 - Schedule 5, item 3, column
2 - makes minor changes to the wording of the existing notification
exemption for class 10 structures; these changes do not affect the substance of
the existing exemption.
Section 7 - Schedule 7, item 6, column 2 -
makes minor changes to the wording of the existing exemption from third party
appeals for class 10 structures; these changes do not affect the substance of
the existing exemption.