Skip to content
Support Us

We need your help now

Support from readers like you keeps The Journal open.

You are visiting us because we have something you value. Independent, unbiased news that tells the truth. Advertising revenue goes some way to support our mission, but this year it has not been enough.

If you've seen value in our reporting, please contribute what you can, so we can continue to produce accurate and meaningful journalism. For everyone who needs it.

PA

Young people blocked from living in towns due to objections over ‘character of an area’, says minister

Objections to housing developments based on aesthetic concerns has to change, says Chambers.

THERE IS “TOO much tolerance” of housing objections based on the “character” of an area, Public Expenditure Minister Jack Chambers has said.

Chambers made the comments as he launched a new taskforce to find blockages in the delivery of infrastructure. 

A mindset around objecting to housing developments based on the character of a given area “has to change”, the minister said.

Chambers said he had heard from many young people that others living in an area for decades had sought to block developments based on the “character of an area”.

However, Chambers said such objections can be “nebulous” and “block” the broader social and economic goal of increased housing supply.

He made the comments after Government approved a series of actions designed to accelerate the delivery of strategic infrastructure.

This includes a review of the National Development Plan, the establishment of a new infrastructure division which will second experts from key delivery agencies, and the creation of a taskforce to accelerate infrastructure delivery.

The minister said “provocative zeal of reform” will be the “core focus” of the division, as he criticised objections to housing delivery.

An evidence-based assessment of the “barriers impeding timely infrastructure development” is to be done, which will inform an action plan of “high-impact reform measures”, said the minister. 

Frustration over objections

Asked if there was room to change planning regulations to prevent objections from slowing down delivery, Chambers said:

“Anything that can achieve faster and more accelerated infrastructure delivery has to be on the table.

“And the last number of years have shown how too many individuals have had too much of a say in impeding infrastructure and housing across our economy.”

The minister said there were “countless examples” of people in housing trying to “frustrate” and “undermine the broad public good”.

He added that in recent months, he has seen examples of housing getting stopped because it undermines the character of the area.

“What does that mean?” he asked. 

“And you know, for me, it’s about housing. It’s about infrastructure and cutting through some of the nonsense which is just impeding the broader economic and social objective.”

The minister has previously said he had seen examples of “eminently sensible proposals” for housing supply in Dublin which were refused on aesthetic grounds.

“I think additional housing, people, new people living in an area enhances the diversity and character of an area – and the fact that people think they have a veto on more people living around them, I think is a mindset that has to change.

“It’s just a frustration I see and hear from many young people who would like to live in many urban areas, but they have people who’ve lived in places for decades objecting to housing on the basis of a character of an area – which I think is a nebulous reference that just seeks to block and object the broader social and economic objective,” he said. 

He said areas can have enormous character but that shouldn’t impede additional housing or community infrastructure. 

A need for balance

Asked if he was signalling an era of the deregulation with the new approach, Mr Chambers said it was an attempt to “balance regulation”.

He added: “If the regulation doesn’t fit the the broader public interest or objective, then it should be assessed – and we just need to have a balanced approach around that.

“And endless regulation which constrains infrastructure or housing delivery on our economy isn’t, in my view, in the long term economic or social interests of the State.

“And I suppose it’s having a balanced approach to that is what’s ultimately important, protecting – obviously – certain standards that we have which are important for for people who would like to live in, in particular, housing, for example, and but we need to have a balanced approach to that.”

Close
49 Comments
This is YOUR comments community. Stay civil, stay constructive, stay on topic. Please familiarise yourself with our comments policy here before taking part.
Leave a Comment
    Submit a report
    Please help us understand how this comment violates our community guidelines.
    Thank you for the feedback
    Your feedback has been sent to our team for review.

    Leave a comment

     
    cancel reply
    JournalTv
    News in 60 seconds