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Leading planning and housing charity, the Town and Country
Planning Association (TCPA) has published its latest Policy Advice
Note on Inland Waterways - Unlocking the Potential and
Securing the Future of Inland Waterways through the Planning
System - at the Local Government Association’s
national conference in Harrogate today.
TCPA Senior Policy Officer Fiona Mannion said:
"The inland waterways of England and Wales are national,
regional and local cultural and natural assets. They link urban and
rural communities - as well as linking historic buildings and
structures with the wider landscape and forming key strategic
wildlife corridors - and planning policy has a vital role in
securing their future.”
TCPA Chief Executive Gideon Amos OBE added:
“Waterways offer attractive sites for both leisure and
development but also provide opportunities for low carbon transport
and other uses and a natural tool to help us adapt our environment
to hotter summers and increased flood risks – it is time to
ensure planning policy helps to realise all these
opportunities.”
The central purpose of this Policy Advice Note is to highlight the areas of opportunity to strengthen existing planning policy at all the different spatial levels - national, regional and local - in order to provide robust planning policy frameworks that:
- support the inland waterways as a cross-cutting policy theme;
- support the inland waterways’ ability to contribute fully in the delivery of Government agendas; and
- secure the long-term sustainability of the inland waterway network, their corridors and adjoining communities.
The Policy Advice Note has been produced by the TCPA with the support of British Waterways, the largest navigation authority in the country.
Robin Evans, chief executive of British Waterways said:
“The regeneration of derelict brownfield watersides has
transformed the prospects of towns, villages and cities across
Britain in the last decade and created new waterside neighbourhoods
in once no-go areas. The long term sustainability of these areas,
and the waterways on which they rely, depends to a very large
degree on collaboration between planners, navigation authorities
and local people, and we very much welcome TCPA’s
contribution. Planning advice can sometimes seem a little dry, but
in this case I believe it provides planners with the tools to
transform local people’s lives for the better.”
The findings and recommendations contained within the Policy Advice Note have been informed by a series of workshops and discussions with planning and policy personnel from local authorities, Regional Development Agencies and other public bodies, the principal navigation authorities, and the Government-sponsored Inland Waterway Advisory Council (IWAC).
Download the Policy Advice Note on Inland Waterways - Unlocking
the Potential and Securing the Future of Inland Waterways through
the Planning System at http://www.tcpa.org.uk/data/files/waterways.pdf
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