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PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT AMENDMENT REGULATION 2008 (NO 5) (NO 52 OF 2008)
2008
LEGISLATIVE
ASSEMBLY FOR THE
AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL
TERRITORY
Planning and Development
Amendment Regulation 2008 (No
5)
SL2008-52
EXPLANATORY
STATEMENT
Circulated by authority of the
Minister for Planning
Mr
Andrew Barr MLA
Planning and Development Amendment Regulation 2008 (No
5) (the “amending regulation”).
The
amending regulation facilitates construction of housing in new estates before
subdivision and estate development is undertaken.
Background
New urban areas or ‘estates’ in the ACT
can be established by selling a holding lease, for a significant
tract of future urban area land, to an estate developer. The holding
lease may require the land to be developed by building roads and other
urban infrastructure and subdivision to produce residential and other blocks of
land. The proposed development of the future urban area, as defined in the
holding lease, is shown in an estate development plan (an EDP)
defined at section 94 of the Planning and Development Act 2007 (the Act).
An EDP shows amongst other things the block boundaries for individual blocks
proposed for inside the estate. An EDP is submitted and assessed under the
normal development assessment processes. When the EDP is approved the land
ceases to be future urban land and the proposed block boundaries are
electronically recorded in the digital cadastre database maintained by the
planning and land authority. Typically, the related infrastructure is then
developed and the blocks of land are created under the Districts Act 2002
through registration of a ‘deposited plan’ at the Land Titles
Office.
Undertaking development, defined at section 7 of the Act,
requires development approval (DA) unless the development is exempt. The
Planning and Development Regulation 2008 (the regulation) exempts a
single dwelling on new residential land from requiring a development approval if
it meets stated requirements. To be exempt the single dwelling must be built on
a block as defined in the regulation. The regulation defines a
block as a block shown on a deposited plan for the purposes of the
Districts Act 2002. Land included in an approved EDP and the planning
and land authority’s digital cadastre database, but not yet recorded in a
deposited plan at the Land Titles Office, does not meet the definition of a
block as defined in the regulation. This means that land does not
become a block until the infrastructure is developed (e.g.
physical roads etc) and a deposited plan registered. This means that the
dwelling on ‘preliminary blocks’ on the digital
cadastre database but not yet registered cannot be DA exempt.
Therefore,
building the single dwelling, prior to completion of the estate requires
development approval. The alternative is for the estate developer is to wait
until the infrastructure is completed and the proposed blocks are registered at
the Land Titles Office under the Districts Act 2002. Because block
boundaries and location of roads etc are fully defined and fixed when the
preliminary block is recorded prior to the development of the infrastructure and
deposited plan, it is not necessary to require the developer to wait for the
registration of a deposited plan to make use of the DA exemption for single
dwellings. Such delay is unreasonable given that it can unduly add to
developers holding costs, or prevent the early construction of such things as
display villages and other residential dwellings. Such a delay is also not
consistent with the Government policy to expedite the land release and
development assessment process.
The amending regulation provides for the
concurrent development of the estate, in terms of infrastructure including
roads, and the building of exempt single dwellings. This is achieved by
defining and including a preliminary block as a block of land that
a single exempt dwelling may be built on. A preliminary block is the block
shown on the approved EDP and electronically recorded in the digital cadastre
database maintained by the planning and land authority; it does not have to be a
deposited plan registered at the Land Titles Office.
The regulation only
permits exempt developments (single residential) on a holding lease where there
is an approved EDP and the builder and estate developer are legally the same
entity. This is to avoid the potential for mistakes in design and siting due to
communication problems with unrelated third parties.
This form of exempt
development will not impact other persons because the exemption continues to
rely on surveyed block boundaries. These boundaries do not change from the
digital cadastre stage, relied on in this amending exemption, to the deposited
plan stage relied on in the existing regulation. Further, any exempt
development must comply with an approved EDP and meet building certification
requirements under the Building Act.
The amending regulation meets the
requirements of the Legislation Act 2001 s36 (1) (b) in terms of the potential
impact on persons as the amending regulation is of such a nature that it will
not adversely impact on the person’s rights or impose liabilities on that
person.
Clauses 1 – Name of Regulation –states the name of the
regulation, which is the Planning and Development Regulation 2008 (No
5).
Clause 2 – Commencement –states that the
regulation commences the day after its notification.
Clause 3
– Legislation amended – states that the regulation amends the
Planning and Development Regulation 2008.
Clause 4 –
Schedule 1, section 1.100 (1) (aa)
Provides that a single dwelling-new
residential land, for the purposes of exemption from requiring development
approval, may include a single dwelling on a preliminary block if the dwelling
is built by the lessee of the holding lease i.e. the estate developer.
Clause 6 refers to preliminary block and Clause 5 provides for when the
dwelling is built by the lessee.
Clause 5 – Schedule 1, section
1.100 (1A)
Provides that for the purposes of schedule 1, section 1.100
(1) (aa) the dwelling is considered to be built by the lessee even if some or
all of it is built by an employee or contractor of the lessee. For example if
the lessee is a company, then employees of the company or persons contracted by
the company are considered to be doing the building work for the
lessee.
Clause 6 – Schedule 1, new section 1.100
(3)
New section 1.100 (3) inserts provisions that extend the
meaning of the block for section 1.100. The meaning is
extended to include the term preliminary block, which is defined
in new section 1.100B (2) to be taken to be land to which the following
applies—
• part of a holding lease (defined in clause 14 of
the amending regulation to be the same as the definition in the Districts Act
2002, section 7 (7), Which provides—“holding
lease means a lease issued to allow for urban development and
subdivision”); and
• an estate development plan (an EDP)
that has been approved under the Act in relation to the lease;
and
• the EDP identifies the land as a block. (Such blocks
comprise the proposed subdivision of the block that is subject of the holding
lease into small blocks. An EDP could identify a block by showing its proposed
boundaries within a proposed section containing several blocks, for example);
and
• information about the boundaries of, and the distinguishing name
or number for the land is recorded in the database maintained by the
planning and land authority under the Districts Act 2002, section 17
(Digital cadastral database). (That database contains the land survey
information, and other information, used in the processes that result in the
production of plans that describe blocks for the purposes of the Districts
Act 2002, and the setting out of the respective block boundaries in the
field).
• the land is not a ‘block’ under the Districts
Act 2002 (that is a deposited plan registered at the Land Titles
Office).
Clause 7 – Dictionary, new definition
Inserts
new definition for holding lease. A holding lease is defined as
that provided under the Districts Act 2002, section7 (7), which
provides—“holding lease means a lease issued to allow
for urban development and subdivision”.