lyn kesterton development officer locality community rights

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Lyn Kesterton Development Officer Locality Community Rights

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Lyn KestertonDevelopment Officer

Locality

Community Rights

Locality is the leading nationwide network of settlements, development trusts, social action centres and community enterprises. 

Locality

Locality was formed through the merger of bassac and the Development Trusts Association, two leading networks of community owned and led organisations.

Locality MembersCommunity led – by local people, meeting the many needs of a community.

Driving social change – bringing about changes to make communities fairer and more inclusive.

Committed to community enterprise – earning income for community benefit, not for private profit and aiming for long-term sustainability.

Developing assets – maximising community assets: people, land and buildings

Independent – working in partnership but accountable to the local community and free to determine their own objectives.

New Community Rights

BID

BUILD

CHALLENGE

BIDBID

Community Right to Bid

delay the sale and bid to buy assets of community value

Right to Bid (Assets of Community Value)

“aims to ensure that buildings and amenities can be kept in public use and

remain an integral part of community life”

BID

List of assets of community value

The Pub?

The Post Office?

The Village Hall?

The Corner Shop?

The School?

The Allotments?

Your House?

BID

Assembling an assets list• LAs list assets of ‘community value’• Public, private, and VCS owned• Nominated by Parish Council,

community council, or a locally connected voluntary or community body

• LA must inform owner and nominee• Right of appeal for landowner• 5 year listing

BID

What is Community Value?Must further the social well-being or cultural, recreational or sporting interests of the local community

This must be its principal use

Must continue to further the social well-being or interests of the local community

BID

Moratorium Period• Triggered when owner wants to sell• During which the owner cannot conclude

sale• 6 weeks for community group to notify LA

they wish to bid• 6 months to raise capital to purchase• Followed by a protected period – 18 months: to protect owner from

repeated attempts to block sale

BID

Exemptions• If disposal is a gift• Disposal between members of family• If part of bigger estate• If a going concern business is

operating (providing that sale will result in the business continuing)

BID

The Opportunity

• A legal mechanism to encourage community ownership of assets

• Owners viewing assets in a completely different way – as valuable community resources – and recognising they have a responsibility to ensure their preservation

BID

Funds

• SIB Community Assets Pre-feasibility fund. £5,000 - £10,000

• SIB Community Assets Feasibility fund £10,000 - £100,000

BID

BID

Community Right to Bid

any questions?

CHALLENGE

Community Right to Challenge

challenge and take over a council service they think can be better run

When can we submit an EOI?

• At anytime. Unless…• The LA specifies periods for

submitting EOI (inc beginning and end dates)

CHALLENG

E

Who can submit an Expression of Interest?

• charities• voluntary organisations• parish councils• 2 or more employees of the Local

Authority involved in that service

CHALLENG

E

Then what?• LA must respond in writing• If accepted a commissioning and

procurement process is triggered• If not - gives reasons for rejection• Rejection of EOI only on grounds set

out in regulations

CHALLENG

E

Opportunities• Encourages ‘local thinking’• Co-design of services• Breaking down contract size• A catalyst for voluntary & community

sector collaboration

CHALLENG

E

Funds

• SIB Community Services Pre-feasibility fund. £5,000 - £10,000

• SIB Community Services Feasibility fund £10,000 - £100,000

CHALLENGE

Community Right to Challenge

any questions?

CHALLENGE

BUILD

Community Right to Build

small scale, site-specific developments without planning permission

Welcome to

NEIGHBOURHOOD PLANNINGPlease drive carefully

BUILD

Community Right to Build• a specific kind of neighbourhood development

order

Like Neighbourhood Development Plans – • neighbourhood area needs to approved by the

Local Planning Authority• CRtB Order must be in ‘general conformity’ with

the NPPF and local plan• independently assessed• subject to a local referendum

BUILD

Community Right to Build• allows specific proposals to be

developed without planning permission• may be used as part of a

neighbourhood plan or separately• expected to be mainly used for small

scale housing in rural areas• but can be used for shops, businesses,

community facilities, playgrounds, small scale power generation, etc

BUILD

Who can submit a CRtBuild Order?• parish council or existing

neighbourhood forum• local charities• incorporated community

organisations- ‘established for… furthering the social.

economic & environmental well-being of individuals living, or wanting to live, in a particular area’

BUILD

Opportunities• revenue generated stays with the

community• encourages community spirit and

ownership• encourages partnerships with

developers

BUILD

Funds

• HCA Seed corn funding• Neighbourhood Planning funding:

direct supportup to £7,000 grant

BUILD

BUILD

Community Right to Build

any questions?

atu.org.ukatu.org.uk

mycommunityrights.org.uk

mycommunityrights.org.uk

www.locality.org.uk

0845 458 8336

[email protected]