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Leading planning and housing charity, the Town and Country Planning Association (TCPA) will celebrate its 110th AGM today by publishing a Manifesto for the 21st Century. The Association’s vision – Towns and Countryside for a New Age of Challenge – sets out a new set of aspirations which directly address today’s challenges of climate change, globalisation and social justice.
TCPA Chair of Trustees Lee Shostak said:
“Our efforts to realise our vision start with the need to
promote better development. In many communities there is a fear
that any change is undesirable. But such a negative view denies the
challenges of climate change, globalisation, social justice and the
acute housing shortages facing the nation today. Therefore from
here on the TCPA wants to forge a new consensus about the need for
responsible high quality development, only if we achieve this will
our towns and countryside become sustainable.”
The TCPA’s Manifesto comprises four main elements: choice and
diversity; cities and the larger task; a revitalised countryside;
and networks of cities, towns and villages.
TCPA President Professor Sir Peter Hall said:
“We see the need to improve the outcomes from town and
country planning. We believe that Britain has the best town and
country planning legislation in the world and while some
legislative reform would be helpful, the real challenge is to
improve the performance of government and local authorities. The
TCPA advocates more devolution of power to democratically elected
regional, sub-regional and local authorities, away from unelected
bodies. However, we recognise that acting locally will not be
enough: the challenge of wider environmental change needs to be
addressed at international, national and regional levels. At all
levels openness, participation and above all education provide the
best guarantees of a local community’s rights and
freedoms.”
The Manifesto sets out the need for a national spatial planning framework, stronger regional and particularly sub-regional planning, and far more sensitive local planning.
TCPA Chief Executive Gideon Amos OBE added:
“This new agenda places cities as much as town and
countryside at the heart of the TCPA’s mission. The
country’s urban centres will feel the greatest heat of
changes in climate and economy and all the places where people live
and work shape – and in turn are shaped by – their
sense of identity. This pluralist and diverse society can and
should find confident expression in our plans for the future of the
UK as a whole and for the many and varied local
communities.”
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