Abstract
This article reviews the findings of a survey undertaken by the authors in 1999 of all local planning authorities in England and Wales to establish current practices and procedures regarding public speaking rights at development control planning committees. The survey found that the number of planning authorities allowing public speaking appeared to have doubled in the last few years. At the same time, over one third of all planning authorities still did not allow public speaking, and had no intention of introducing it. Moreover, of those that did allow it, only one in five permitted the full range of interests recommended by the Nolan Committee on standards of conduct in local government. We argue that there is a need for planning authorities to exchange experiences on speaking rights in order to inform ‘best practice’, and conclude that there may well be tensions between the drive to improve efficiency in local government decision making and the demands for more openness and accountability.
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