At the heart of this ridiculous process is an assumption that people deserve a say over what gets built next door to them, up the road or somewhere in their neighbourhood. Within the 600 pages of the Planning and Environment Act, there is a broad proviso that “any person who may be affected by the grant of a permit may object to the grant of a permit”.
In this age of expanding grievance, our planning laws go out of their way to invite objections by anyone. What could possibly go wrong?
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The new amendments to planning laws scotch this idea by explicitly removing the right for people to object to proposed residential buildings other than large developments such as high-rise apartment towers. You might not like what the neighbours are building next door but as long as it complies with the residential code, they can build what they like on their land – as can you on yours.
I wish this legislation had been in place when we built our house. Back then, our decision to knock down a small, post-war weatherboard and replace it with a double-storey house so infuriated the neighbours on one side, our relationship never recovered from the ill will.
We never landed in VCAT but for 10 years, the paling fence along our shared boundary was as frosty as the Korean DMZ.
The essential gripe of our neighbours, as best I could tell from what they told us between gritted teeth, is that they hated the new house – its size, its shape, everything. And they resented us for building something which, in their words, detracted from their amenity.
There is no question our house affected them, but it was designed and built by an experienced building company and complied with the residential code.
I never understood why our neighbours felt entitled to interrogate every aspect of the construction of our house, as though they were hosting an episode of Grand Designs. They moved a while ago and are no doubt happier for the absence of our presence in their lives.
The revamped approval process does away with the idea that a neighbour or someone living in another street can object to your plans to renovate, bung on a big deck or knock down and rebuild. They simply won’t get a say about what you want to do on your side of the fence.
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Instead, planning approval for single dwellings or subdivisions becomes a matter between the person applying for a permit and the local government authority responsible for applying the relevant rules. There is no appeal to VCAT. Local councils will have the final word on whether the proposed designs meet the requirements for border setbacks, window heights and overlooking concerns.
For proposed townhouses and medium-density developments, the process is more involved and can take up to 30 days, but there is still no right of third-party appeal. This is reserved for larger apartment block developments, where approval can take 60 days.
This isn’t merely a better way of handling planning permit applications, it is a recipe for improved neighbourhood cohesion. If Robert Frost’s adage about good fences making good neighbours still holds, better planning laws should make for even better neighbours. A state government has taken the path less travelled and actually simplified an area of public law.
As a happy postscript, we now have delightful neighbours on the other side of the DMZ. They are planning to knock down and put up a bigger place. Here’s to a fast approval process and a trouble-free build.
Chip Le Grand is state political editor.
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