More sections of this document available when you sign-in to Lexis+ or register for a free trial.
This week's edition of Planning weekly highlights includes: the second reading of the Planning and Infrastructure Bill; updated guidance on planning application fees; a number of DCO correction orders and recent cases addressing: the interpretation of Class E in the context of lawful development certificates, procedural fairness in advertisement consent appeals, and the misapplication of local plan policies by a local authority.
To continue reading this news article, as well as thousands of others like it, sign in with UUÂãÁÄÖ±²¥ or register for a free trial
EXISTING USER? SIGN IN CONTINUE READING GET A QUOTE
To read the full news article, register for a free Lexis+ trial
**Trials are provided to all UUÂãÁÄÖ±²¥ content, excluding Practice Compliance, Practice Management and Risk and Compliance, subscription packages are tailored to your specific needs. To discuss trialling these UUÂãÁÄÖ±²¥ services please email customer service via our online form. Free trials are only available to individuals based in the UK, Ireland and selected UK overseas territories and Caribbean countries. We may terminate this trial at any time or decide not to give a trial, for any reason. Trial includes one question to LexisAsk during the length of the trial.
* denotes a required field
Planning case tracker—2022STOP PRESS: An updated version of the National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF) was published on 19 December 2023. This content is being reviewed in accordance with the latest version.The Planning case tracker is a list of key judgments from 2022 considered relevant to
Scotland—the process for applying for sequestrationSequestration in Scotland is the legal process by which an insolvent debtor’s estate is gathered in, realised and then distributed among their creditors by a trustee appointed for that purpose. The process requires that a formal award of
Early leavers—preservationFORTHCOMING DEVELOPMENT: Section 10 of the Finance Act 2022 will increase the normal minimum pension age (NMPA) from 55 to 57 on 6 April 2028 (save for members of the firefighters, police and armed forces public service pension schemes).The Finance Act 2022 will also give
Brussels I (recast)—domicile (Arts 4 and 63) [Archived]ARCHIVED: This Practice Note has been archived and is not maintained.This Practice Note considers the general rule set out in Article 4 of Regulation (EU) 1215/2012, Brussels I (recast) when determining the relevance of a defendant’s domicile to
0330 161 1234