Draft response to the Government’s consultation on National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF)

Message from Colne Valley Regional Park.

Click to view draft response to each policy.

Our key points are:

  • The Colne Valley Regional Park is a special landscape, nature and community resource which deserves an overall protected designation, but does not currently have one. Although it is within the Metropolitan Green Belt, this still makes it vulnerable to piecemeal encroachment without adequate compensation. In the absence of this, the NPPF should say more to protect the Park in other ways.
  • The NPPF should say more about the cumulative impact of speculative (as opposed to planned) development, both authorised and unauthorised.
  • Cross-boundary cooperation should be strengthened at all levels of plan-making, not only for housing and economic growth, but also for environmental protection at a landscape scale.

Why I’ve written to the Minister and why I’m not giving up

Independent District Councillor Rue Grewal responds to the Minister’s recent letter.
[See previous post: IMPORTANT: Local Plan Reg 19 Suspended]

I wanted to share the attached letter with you directly and explain why, as an Independent Councillor, I felt it was important to act.

Like many of you, I was deeply disappointed by the Minister’s letter on the Local Plan. I know how long this road has been, how much time, energy and goodwill residents have poured into this process, and how exhausting it can feel to face renewed uncertainty after so much hard work.

I have chosen to act independently because I believe in this community and in doing what I feel is right, not what suits a party line. Being an Independent means I do not have a political machine behind me, but it also means I have the freedom and responsibility to speak plainly, to challenge when needed, and to stand up for residents without hesitation. That is a privilege I take very seriously.

Over the past few years, this has been a long and demanding journey. I have dedicated a great deal of time and energy to protecting our green spaces and shaping a Local Plan that is evidence-based, collaborative and grounded in reality. I know many of you have done the same. What we have achieved together should not be underestimated, and we should all be immensely proud of the work that has been done.

More than that, I genuinely believe we have built something important along the way. We have strengthened relationships, worked constructively across communities, and, at least for me, made new friends. That matters, and it will matter even more in what comes next.

I am sharing my letter with you so that you know, clearly and unequivocally, that I am not giving up. I may not have a party behind me, but I have conviction, evidence, and a community I care deeply about. This moment may require a rethink, but it does not require surrender.

We have come too far for that.

Thank you, as always, for your trust, your partnership and your resilience. I remain committed to standing with you and continuing this work together.

With very best wishes,
Cllr Rue Grewal
Independent District Councillor for Carpenders Park
Independent Group Leader, Three Rivers District Council

Read her full letter here: https://rickmansworthresidents.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/Letter-to-Matthew-Pennycook-MP-v3.pdf

Response to Local Government Reorganisation

Whilst this is obviously very early in the process and our views could change as proposals develop and more information becomes available, I have discussed this matter with Joint Residents’ Association . This is the outline of my initial views. The views below are based on an assumption that the move to a unitary authority is going to happen and therefore we have not considered whether moving to this is better than the current council structure.

Having considered the guidance provided by the Government, it would appear a model where Hertfordshire is split into two unitary authorities (South-West Hertfordshire and North-East Hertfordshire) would provide the best balance of local democracy with being able to leverage economies of scale to deliver increased efficiency.

In this model, South-West Hertfordshire would probably constitute an amalgamation of Three Rivers, Dacorum, Watford, St Albans and Hertsmere. This aligns with the group of districts that are already working together on the Joint Strategic Plan and amounts to approximately half of the population of Hertfordshire County. It also approximately aligns to the local NHS Trust area that used to be covered by the Herts Valleys CCG and now Herts and West Essex ICB.

It is believed that a council of this size will be able to maintain a local perspective whilst balancing the need to deliver increased efficiency. It is possible that a three-council model (West, Central and East) could work but would have an initial population below the level suggested by the Government, about 400,000 each. However, based on the new homes requirement from the Standard Methodology, it would appear that the population of each of the areas will grow quickly.

Whilst a single Hertfordshire Unitary authority would enable increased economies of scale to be generated, it is our feeling that it would be too distant from local areas and would significantly weaken true local democracy, so this is not a preferred alternative.

Within this re-organisation, we strongly feel that consideration should be given to delegating some of the roles of the current district councils to local councils where the need for local knowledge could outweigh the savings that can be made through consolidation of services. This could include areas such as play areas, parks, green spaces, leisure and, possibly, small (not major) planning applications. After all, the best way to economise is to make the right decisions first time and this is aided by local knowledge.

Looking to the future, it is possible that a mayor covering a much wider area than the councils could be a good move – possibly Herts, Essex and Bucks. These areas form the Northern Home Counties, and all have fairly similar natures – in particular being largely dependent on London for employment. As such their concerns are broadly aligned, particularly with regard to transport. This would comprise an area with a population of just over three million, about the same as Greater Manchester and the West Midlands. These mayoralties seem to work well for strategic matters such as transport but should not be involved in more local matters.

To ensure that whatever solution is finally decided upon has the widest possible buy-in, we ask that Residents Associations are included in the discussions on this matter, either through local RA’s or through the Joint RA.

Ashok Pattni