Category Archives: Public

Planning Minister Justin Madden dumps M2030 Implementation group

12 June 2007:      Without any prior consultation or notice, Planning Minister Justin Madden is about to summarily terminate the State Government’s Melbourne 2030 advisory group. The M2030 Implementation Reference Group (IRG) was originally set up to provide feedback on how the new planning guidelines were working in practice. The IRG has been critical of the way the government introduced the policy before much of the necessary council structure plans and upgraded public transport services had been put in place. Residential amenity protection lobby group Save Our Suburbs had two seats on the IRG. SOS president Ian Quick said, “This unilateral action by the Minister leaves the community with no input into the continuing problems caused by Melbourne 2030, a policy that desperately needs removal or serious improvement”. SOS has recommended a moratorium on M2030 until many of the key issues are addressed, including –

  • A Ministerial directive and/or Planning Act amendments so that Rescode amenity standards as well as zone and overlay controls become mandatory.
  • Municipal structure plans completed, and allowed to contain mandatory provisions.
  • Develop a strategic public transport plan with parliamentary funding commitment and begin implementation under the control of a new statutory mass transit authority
  • All Activity Centres locations to be revised to ensure they are located at mass transit nodes and at locations that can support higher density development.
  • Reform VCAT to improve municipal performance by overseeing council development assessment procedures rather than taking over the role of the Responsible Authority.

The Implementation and Performance of Melbourne 2030 – A Critical Review

“Melbourne 2030 – Planning for Sustainable Growth” is a 30-year plan to manage change across metropolitan Melbourne, introduced in October 2002 after three years of extensive community consultation (DOI 2002). However, this feedback, along with some of the department’s own technical reports, was largely ignored in the final draft. Age columnist Kenneth Davidson savaged the strategy as “simply a restatement of the main elements of the Kennett government’s 1995 planning document ( Living Suburbs )… with phoney consultative processes and documents in warm, earthy colours, subliminally evocative of a sustainable environment…” (Mees 2004). No options or alternative futures were ever discussed, identified or evaluated. Most of the final proposals on major issues like activity centres and freeways were opposite to those recommended by the technical consultants and the final draft strategy was released without further public review (Mees 2004). Accompanying the Draft Strategy were six “draft implementation reports” and a Ministerial directive requiring local municipalities to include in all planning scheme amendments a statement that the municipality has “had regard to the Metropolitan Strategy” (Delahunty 2002). M2030 offers no indication of how its integrated implementation is to be achieved by whole-of-government objectives, strategies and responsibilities and it is not linked to budgetary processes (Mees 2004). In particular, the promised “integrated transport strategy” to emphasise upgrading city-wide public transport to underpin higher density activity centre development was just a series of suggestions for various agencies to prepare plans! Even the launch last year of the state government’s long-awaited Metropolitan Transport Plan was criticised by the Minister’s own advisory group as “a plan without specific details, timing or funding commitments …. The current disaggregated approach to transport and land use planning and implementation is not delivering the outcomes it should.” The M2030 transport chapter discusses public transport proposals first and roads last, but does not list any freeway proposals. Instead, these are buried in chapter 4 (“prosperous city”) – without costing – but the total estimated cost of these freeways is $3 billion, about 15 times the cost of the proposed rail extensions, so public transport receives only 6% of transport funding (Mees 2004). The State Government provided a mere $5.6 million ($100,000 per council) for strategic planning work to implement M2030. The Priority Development Panel has cited lack of structure planning for activity centres as a reason to reject some large proposals (although not consistently). These include the Glenroy Activity Centre case, refused partly because there was no Structure Plan nor a timeline for meeting development objectives (PDP 2004b), and the Peak proposal at Wheelers Hill, rejected because the site was within a neighbourhood activity centre but with no final structure plan, fixed rail or suitable bus services (PDP 2004a). These decisions underline the fact that the introduction of M2030 was premature and compliance should not have been required until upgraded public transport services and structure planning for activity centres were complete.

PROJECTED GROWTH UNDER M2030

According to the Department of Sustainability and Environment (DSE), in the next 30 years Melbourne is expected to grow by around one million people and 620,000 extra households. M2030 seeks to protect the liveability of the established areas and concentrate major change in strategic redevelopment sites, such as activity centres and underdeveloped land. While supply of land for development is to be maintained in growth areas, over time the strategy assumes that there will be a shift away from growth on the city fringe and that the trend towards smaller households will continue to support demand for well-located apartment lifestyles around activity centres, “supported by an expanded and more attractive public transport system.” (DOI 2002). However, these trends are not being borne out, nor is the strategy yet being supported by any significantly upgraded public transport services. The spatial distribution of the recent increase in multi-unit housing across Melbourne has been very uneven, from 90% in the inner city ( usually as infill development ) to only 10% in Outer Melbourne. Fewer detached houses were constructed in Melbourne in 2002-3 than 15 yrs earlier, while multi-dwelling developments increased over four times. Medium density housing accounted for the entire increase in annual approvals over the same period. Higher rise & larger developments have been concentrated in inner city urban activity centres, with little industry interest in outer activity centres (Buxton 2005). But despite this, over 80 of Melbourne ‘s pop growth is still occurring in outer Melbourne where 60% of new housing is being approved. Redeveloping more of the inner suburbs will be difficult – these are already the most compact areas with high heritage values and allowing unregulated higher rise outside activity centres would undermine the M2030 strategy of concentrating denser development in mixed use areas near public transport. Thousands of medium density units are also going into suburban infill sites, but these are typically dual occupancies which represent low efficiency population accommodation and have a greater potential to cause community backlash through their impact on neighbourhood character (Buxton 2005). Rail travel is the fastest form of public transport but the lowest number of developments occur close to train stations. Buxton concludes that increased medium density development in the outer suburbs is unlikely unless the government at least doubles the current residential lot density. And this would further increase the already-desperate need for an improved public transport system in the outer suburbs serving commuters to central Melbourne to improve the quality of life for people living in the road “transport corridors” that run through the inner city (City of Yarra [CoY] 2003) These inconsistencies are further compounded by a recent study funded by the municipalities of Yarra, Melbourne and Port Phillip to assess the population capacity of the Inner City. The study considered it unlikely that the inner city will receive enough demand to require 90,000 dwellings over the next 30 years (its share of projected population growth under M2030) and that, in any case, accommodating Yarra’s share of this projected need would not require any change to current zoning and local policies (CoY 2003). Clearly, the population projections underpinning the growth strategies of M2030 require a transparent re-appraisal.

ACTIVITY CENTRES POLICY AND TRANSPORT

M2030 lists 105 Major Activity Centres, the 25 largest being designated Principal Activity Centres, and there are more than 900 local neighbourhood activity centres, but there is no explanation of the basis for selection of activity centres, even in the accompanying Draft Implementation Plan. The list simply appears to be based on retail floor-space – no distinction is made between private car-based malls and traditional centres near mass transit nodes, thus favouring existing centres and car-based malls. So Chadstone is a Principal Activity Centre, East Burwood K-Mart is a Major Centre but Glenferrie is not listed at all, despite being a traditional strip centre with tram and rail access and a large university campus (Mees 2004) . Most shopping malls in Melbourne were located in fortuitously acquired stand-alone sites, beginning with Chadstone in 1960. By contrast, in Sydney stronger adherence to policy and pro-active land assembly by some councils ensured that most major sub-centres are in rail-based locations. The major stand-alone shopping centres in Melbourne have all been designated as activity centres. The charitable view is that maybe this was to at least make them subject to structure plans which could reduce car dependence. However, any plans for upgraded mass transit for these centres is yet to emerge. DSE came up with performance indicators for activity centres in 2005 which included allowing out of centre proposals if there was a nett benefit, a very subjective approach open to wide interpretation. These stand-alone centres are mostly car-based, have a negative economic impact on traditional shopping centres and, being mostly controlled by large financial interests, continue to seek to expand. Yet there is no recognition of this in M2030, let alone any strategies to reverse or control this trend in order to implement activity centre policy (Goodman 2004). There are also no substantive measures to direct higher-density housing into the preferred activity centre locations – for example, by restricting it in other places. M2030 is still “performance-based”, allowing higher-density development anywhere provided certain design requirements are met or considered, a completely ineffective approach to channelling development to preferred locations (Mees 2004). This reluctance to regulate the retail market contrasts with current practice in Europe, where there has been a revival in interventionist strategic policy in many countries in the 1990s to locate new retail development to protect traditional centres (Goodman 2004). There are further distinctions that M2030 fails to adequately address. I nner city retail/business strips are very different to activity centres in the middle and outer suburbs, as illustrated in Yarra where there are 5 major activity centers – Brunswick St , Smith St , Swan St , Bridge Rd and Victoria St . These are already densely developed and surrounded by medium and higher density housing. Yet under M2030, their number and location will open up almost all of Yarra for increased development and high-density housing. The social and engineering infrastructure in these areas is already operating at saturation levels so any extra capacity for growth must be first identified through the Structure Planning process for each centre, which is not yet complete. These centres also have their own distinct low rise Victorian character and lie within established Heritage Overlay areas. Higher density residential development is not compatible with the existing established residential and commercial development. Protecting local heritage is a key policy objective of M 2030 so there is conflict between the development objectives and the character protection objectives of the strategy (CoY 2003). And a high degree of activity centre investment may diminish the very attributes that attract investment in the first place. Rescode allows unrestricted infill development across most of suburban Melbourne , which is cheaper, offers more living space and is more appealing than a high cost, dense, noisy activity centre apartment, or the lower cost suburban perimeter. Businesses too are unlikely to concentrate in such centres because of the way the contemporary urban economy functions and the lack of planning tools to encourage such concentrations. Instead, under the current Rescode rules, a lot of the growth in Melbourne ‘s dwelling stock is in the form of infill, with its localised perceived negative impact (Birrell 2005). With modern communications, business services concentrated in the CBD no longer need to be close to the diverse industrial and commercial enterprises which use their services. According to Birrell, the OECD has confirmed that low density outer and middle suburban industrial and commercial development is common in advanced economies, and that the suburbanisation of population and jobs is one of the major features of settlement patterns in the OECD. Market forces rather than planning strategies appear to be dictating how Melbourne is growing. The Government is aware of this – Bracks’ “Growing Victoria Together policy” launched in November 2001 emphasised that economic growth and jobs were the government’s top priority – for example, in acknowledging the significance of decentralised manufacturing in the SE and the need to provide land for this sector (DOI 2002 p14-15).

LEGAL INTERPRETATION OF M2030

M2030 was unsuccessfully challenged by the City of Yarra in the Stewart St case at the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal (VCAT), which established legally that no particular aspect of the Strategy carries greater weight than another. However, tension between policies will require a balance of conflicting interests to ensure a result consistent with the policies within the plan (VCAT 2003b). Thus, since the predominant theme of M2030 is consolidation, VCAT judgments have tended to favour most contentious proposals, no matter what local policies indicate. A proposal for a 19.4m high apartment block in Domain Rd South Yarra was approved in 2003 despite a DDO height limit of 12m near the Botanical Gardens. VCAT considered that the “high standard of design…would justify any additional height above that recommended in the DDO” ( VCAT 2003a ). But the worst example remains the Mitcham Towers case where Justice Morris inferred that most designated activity centres within Whitehorse were not really adequate as activity centres and that since the area surrounding the 14-storey Columbo St proposal was better suited, it should therefore be unofficially accorded that status! Yet the M2030 description of neighbourhood centres, like the Mitcham Towers site, specifies only three or four storey buildings (VCAT 1706, 2004) ). This decision was a dangerous precedent for all suburban areas anywhere near a public transport route and highlighted the fact that the Government should have allowed councils both the time and resources to put structure plans and other controls in place first to regulate M2030 before the strategy ever became operational. Contrary to the public assertions of Planning Minister Hulls, it is clear that M2030 was the driving force behind the Mitcham approval since a large proportion of the decision discusses activity centres and the requirements of M2030. Yet both Morris and Hulls publicly claimed that the development was simply in line with the Whitehorse Planning Scheme, and that the Council was to blame for not protecting the area by not submitting interim structure plans or requesting interim mandatory height controls (Quick 2005). But the development application was lodged a year before these controls were even made available to councils in late 2004 (Delahunty 2004), after pressure from residents’ lobby group Save Our Suburbs and the Minister’s own M2030 advisory group. The new controls consisted of mandatory height limits for neighbourhood activity centres and a new residential R3 Zone with a mandatory maximum 9m height limit, plus the implementation of interim structure plans for activity centres as protection against over-development while full structure plans were being developed. The practice guidance note for preparation of structure plans for activity centres wasn’t even published by DSE until December 2003 – full structure plans involve community consultation and take several years to produce. And the departmental guidelines for developments of more than three storeys weren’t formally adopted until November 2004. At the same time, the Government has been taking a piece-meal approach to planning reform by continually “band-aiding” planning legislation, allowing further exercise of discretion, more avenues for appeals to VCAT and less certainty. This is turn adds to the complexity of planning assessments and makes it harder for council planners to meet statutory deadlines (Wood 2005). And this is despite the fact that all parties — councils, residents and developers — want more certainty (M2030 IRG 2003). The Planning Act of 1987 is now way out of date and needs to be re written with more mandatory provisions, not just continually patched up with layer after layer of discretionary guidelines (Budge 2005). The Mitcham decision also highlights the need for the role of VCAT to be amended to one of overseeing the integrity of council procedures, instead of acting as a central duplicating planning authority. Local policies can only become law after community consultation, appraisal by a panel and Ministerial approval and are thus unlikely to conflict with State policies. VCAT’s role should thus be to oversee and strengthen council processes to ensure that properly established local policies are followed, rather than usurping council powers and overturning local policy in favour of state urban consolidation guidelines, which makes a mockery of Hulls’ claim that councils and their communities must work to develop local policies if they want to have more control over their own neighbourhoods (Quick 2005). Finally, it could be expected that the alleged focus of M2030 on sustainable growth would see legislative emphasis on sustainable practices like passive solar design, energy conservation construction and appliances, and waste water and reticulated water conservation measures. And indeed there are some recent general guidelines in planning schemes that specify that new development should be sited and oriented to maximise solar energy use, for example. However, VCAT president Stuart Morris has undermined this practical approach to sustainable design at the planning stage, stating in Taras Nominees v Yarra CC [2003] VCAT 1952 that this issue should be tackled at the building permit stage because all dwellings require building permits but not all require planning permits. This simplistic approach totally ignores the major gains in building performance that can only be made by optimising the incorporation of passive solar design – the orientation and layout of building envelopes, including floor plans, elevations, location of open space, window placement and orientation, etc. By definition, these factors cannot be properly addressed at the building stage (Wood 2006). The extra resources involved in requiring all development applications to undergo an ESD assessment could be provided by simply making Rescode amenity standards and planning scheme zone and overlay provisions mandatory, cutting out most of the time-consuming exercise of discretion involved in all development applications and reducing the number of VCAT appeals by providing much of the greater degree of certainty that councils, residents and most developers have already said they want.

CONCLUSION

Not only M2030 but the whole Victorian planning regime is a policy-based system that encourages innovation and flexibility, so that nearly anything is possible with practically everything left to the discretion of the decision maker. As the Victorian president of the Planning Institute of Australia wrote recently to Premier Bracks, “coupled with the lack of experienced staff in local government and a sustained period of heightened development activity, this has created many of the problems the planning system now faces. A more prescriptive approach on a whole host of matters is required.” (Budge 2005) In a democracy, government must also take note of the community’s wishes. This author was a participant in the comprehensive community consultation process for both Rescode and M2030 – which in both cases was largely ignored, either because of external pressure from the development industry, internal high-level bureaucratic and political interference, or both. A number of the key factors M2030 was predicated on were not in place when it was introduced in 2002 and are still nowhere near being fully implemented four years later, particularly any significant upgrading and integration of public transport services or requirements for activity centre development to comply with structure plans and to locate near mass transit nodes. Despite this, M2030 was introduced as legislation to be complied with for all development applications (although it was not gazetted until January.2006) and now community, industry and professional concern continues to grow as the negative impact of the laissez-faire nature of the strategy in practice makes itself felt. But at least the M2030 consultation process demonstrated that Melbourne ‘s residents want more sensitive location and scale of higher density development and the prior provision of an upgraded and integrated public transport system, open space, social facilities and other services. They want more clarity, simplicity and certainty in planning generally and in the development assessment process in particular. M2030 was also introduced 18 months late without the promised final public review and, in a political sense, strategically released just a few months before the state election on 30 November, allowing the government time to sell the strategy but not enough time for any adverse effects from its implementation to be apparent before polling day. As outlined above, the record of M2030 so far indicates that a major revision of the strategy and many of its underlying assumptions and processes is long overdue. Perhaps in this election year those wheels will be put into motion. by Ian Wood, Vice President , Save Our Suburbs (June 2006)

References

Birrell B, O’Connor K, Rapson V & Healy E, 2005 Melbourne 2030 – Planning Rhetoric versus Urban Reality , Monash University epress, March 2005 Budge T, 2005, “ Stronger Leadership in Planning is Essential”, in Residents Voice – Save Our Suburbs Inc. newsletter No.20, January 2005 Buxton M & Tieman G, 2005 ‘Patterns of Urban Consolidation in Melbourne : Planning Policy and the Growth of Medium Density Housing’ in Urban Policy and Research , Vol 23 (2) pp 137-157 City of Yarra 2003 Submission on Melbourne 2030, 28 February 2003 Delahunty M (Minister for Planning), 2002 Direction No. 9 Metropolitan Strategy, 8 October 2002 Delahunty M (Minister for Planning), 2004 Interim Planning Controls Offered to Councils , Media Release, 8 September 2004 Department of Infrastructure (Vic), 2002 Metropolitan Strategy: Melbourne 2030 – Planning for Sustainable Growth, October 2002 Goodman R & Moloney S 2004 ‘Activity Centre Planning In Melbourne Revisited’ Australian Planner Vol 41 (2), pp 47-54 Mees P 2004 ‘ Paterson ‘s Curse: the Attempt to Revive Metropolitan Planning in Melbourne ‘, Urban Policy and Research, Vol 21 (3) pp 287-299 Melbourne 2030 Implementation Reference Group, 2003 Priority Implementation Issues (recommendations to Planning Minister Hulls) Priority Development Panel – Report of the Advisory Committee, 2005a, VCAT Application for Review P2333/2004 , ‘The Peak’ Wheeler’s Hill , 25 January 2005   Priority Development Panel – Report of the Advisory Committee, 2005b, VCAT Application for Review P2076/2004, Glenroy Major Activity Centre, 28 February 2005 Quick I & Wood I, 2005 “ Mitcham Towers decision highlights need for reform of VCAT and the Planning Act” in Residents Voice – Save Our Suburbs Inc. newsletter No.22, October 2005 Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal 2003a, VCAT 349 – Application for Review no. P2710/2002, 31 March 2003 Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal 2003b, VCAT 448 Application for Review no. P2678/2002 , 30 April 2003 Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal 2004, VCAT 1706 – Application for Review no. P359/2004, 7 September 2004 Wood 1 2005 “The Implications for Residents of new Planning Legislation” in Residents Voice – Save Our Suburbs Inc. newsletter No.21, May 2005 Wood I 2006 “ VCAT undermining state ESD policy ” in Residents Voice – Save Our Suburbs Inc. newsletter No.23, May 2006

Bibliography

Daly M (1998) “Reshaping Sydney: the Inner City Revival” and Reynolds J & Porter L, (1998) “ Melbourne ‘s Inner City Revival” in Urban Policy and Research ,16 (1) pp 63-68 Department of Infrastructure, (2002), Melbourne 2030 – Implementation Plan 4 – Activity Centres , DOI Melbourne Department of Sustainability and Environment (Vic), 2002 ‘ Appendix 3 – Activity Centre Design Guidelines’
( www.dse.vic.gov.au/melbourne2030online/content/ implementationplans/05c_appendix3.html ) Logan T (1986) “A Critical Examination of Melbourne’s District Centre Policy”, Urban Policy and Research , 4 (2) pp 2-14 Low N (2002) “Melbourne 2030: from MOTLUC to Active City ”; George B “Melbourne 2030”; and Sutherland E “Melbourne 2030 – Delivering a Healthy Future?”, Planning News Vol.28 (11) 4-8 Mees P 2005. Alternatives to Victoria’s Planning System presentation to Save Our Suburbs Planning Forum, RMIT Casey Theatre , 12 November 2005 O’Connor K 1998 “Understanding Metropolitan Melbourne – Without being Confused by Coffee and Doughnuts”, Urban Policy and Research ,16 (2) pp 139-145 Peter McNabb & Associates and University of Melbourne Research Team (2001) “Interstate and Overseas Experience and ‘Best Practice’”, Activity Centres Review – Technical Report 8 , Department of Infrastructure, Melbourne

Paul Mees – “Victoria’s planning system in perspective”.

SOS Planning Forum, RMIT Casey Theatre, 12 November 2005

Download the mp3 audio file.          Download the pdf transcript

I've been asked not to talk about transport at all and I'll do my best there but, at least for any of you who know me, that may be a little difficult.

I also thought I ought to talk about plagiarism since I notice it's one of the sponsors of today's conference along with the Victorian Local Governance Association. Plagiarism might be a good place to start because around the time that some of you were here at the equivalent gig to this two years ago, I just was in the process of getting published a paper on Melbourne 2030 in which I set out my own view, which was that essentially it was the same as the Kennett government's "Living Suburbs" strategy. The only substantive difference was the binding and compulsory and parliamentarily-approved nature of the urban growth boundary, which was something that the Green Wedges Coalition had managed to have inserted in the policy.

 

Lindsay Neilson, the then secretary, and still the secretary, of the Department of Sustainability and Environment, subsequently wrote a response to my article in which he inter alia suggested that the urban growth boundary wasn't part of 2030 and I thought, "Oh well, there you go, I rest my case".

 

As far as the rest of it's concerned, you can get my article on the Save Our Suburbs website – very technologically literate people have put it there and I actually called it "Paterson's Curse" as a kind of backhanded tribute to the secretary of the Department of Infrastructure under the late and lamented Kennett Government.

 

But it does seem to me that there's much more in common between Melbourne 2030 and what went before it than people have generally understood. And I think the reason for that is essentially because it reflects in its underlying sense the same underlying planning philosophy. And it's a planning philosophy that was introduced by the Kennett Government, although in some respects aspects of it predate the Kennett Government as well. And it's really that underlying philosophy and alternatives to it that I wanted to talk to you about.

 

I thought perhaps a nice lead-in was provided by the question that the challenge, if you like, that the minister posed to us and that Miles Lewis then re-posed to the opposition spokesman – whether you feel that he answered it or not is up to you, I suppose – is "If you're not going to propose the kind of approach to dealing with urban growth that Melbourne 2030 proposes, what are you going to propose?"

 

Well it seems to me that that's not as difficult a question to answer as you would think. A couple of years ago, the Planning Institute shipped over here the former mayor of the City of Vancouver. He was also the former chair of the Metropolitan Council (yes, they do have a metropolitan council there) and it is in fact comprised of elected people (and the world hasn't come to an end!). And he was subsequently a premier of the Province of British Columbia, as they call it over there.

 

And he was invited over here basically by the Planning Institute to bash up Save Our Suburbs and people that thought like it. He was going to do this, of course, because Vancouver has a reputation for being a place where what we call "urban consolidation" has been pursued apace.

 

Well, they must be doing alright with it because, as those of you that follow these rather shallow things will have noticed, it was also awarded by one of the 386 organisations that hand out this accolade the title of "The World's Most Liveable City" recently, beating Melbourne into second place. And given that one of the 5 things you got points for was the weather (I don't know whether there are any of you who've followed the weather in Canada), as you can imagine, they must have really creamed us on all the things that were within the control of human policy in order to make up for our advantage relative to them on the weather.

 

Anyway, this Premier of British Columbia gave his initial speech at the Melbourne Town Hall about urban consolidation and why it was good for you and we were then walking up to some booze-up that I got to go to because the more important person from my faculty who was supposed to represent us was unavailable and I was the last person to get out of the room when a replacement was called for. And I think Michael Buxton who's here and speaking this afternoon might be partly to blame for this.

 

We had about five minutes walking up Bourke Street to explain to this chap how our planning system actually worked and by the time he got to the piss-up (which was the kind of private thing just for what I think we will now call, using the Baillieu-ised Lathamism, "insiders" and in fact I was sitting very close to Helen Gibson, who at that stage was the head of Planning Panels Victoria and is now Stewart Morris's deputy and in charge of the planning bit of VCAT) – he was a bit naughty, our guest speaker, and said "Oh, I've just heard some things that have explained to me how your planning system really works. I understand that under your current planning system it isn't possible to zone residential land exclusively for single-family homes".

 

"Well, in the City of Vancouver, the majority of our residential land is zoned for single-family homes and all forms of higher density housing are illegal. And throughout the metropolitan area it's probably 80 or 90 %. We do all our urban consolidation in a very small part of the city and on sites that are selected through an open and democratic process after lots of research has been done to establish that they can accommodate it".

 

Well, that kind of upset the dinner party quite a bit so I was a bit unkind and then asked him a Dorothy Dixer about appeal bodies that hear appeals from discretionary planning decisions made by local councils. The important thing to understand is that this fellow, in a previous life, like me, was a lawyer so he's not legalophobic and he said:

 

"Oh, you've got one of them too! My goodness, yes, we know all about that in Vancouver because they have one in Toronto called The Ontario Municipal Board and everyone in Ontario except the lawyers has been trying to get rid of it for years because it's a disaster and the lawyers tried to get us to introduce one over here (in Vancouver) but fortunately we were able to stop them because it would completely wreck everything if a democratically-elected body could have its decisions overturned by an non-elected body about matters that are essentially questions of subjective opinion, like residential amenity".

 

Well, as you can imagine, Mr Harcourt has never been invited back to Victoria since that time, although I've scammed a small a mount of money from Melbourne University with which I hope to ship him back here again next year.

 

But it's worth thinking, you see, perhaps there is an alternative to the way we do things here. And perhaps it isn't as simple as, "Well, you're either a supporter of Melbourne 2030 and therefore you support urban consolidation, an end to urban sprawl, public transport, sustainability and blah blah blah – as some people, including I think even someone that asked a question here seemed to think you must be – to which my response is always:

 

"Ah, right yes, sustainable public transport-oriented development of activity centres! I guess that's why Chadstone is nominated as a Principal Activity Centre in Melbourne 2030 and the Nunawading Mega Mile is also nominated as a Major Activity Centre!"

 

That, for those of you who aren't familiar with it, is a mile-long strip of Bunnings stores and such things along the Maroondah Highway. And I guess that would be why the Tally Ho drive-in office park and the East Burwood K Mart are also nominated as Major Activity Centres!

 

Nevertheless, there's a bit of a tendency to fall into a trap of thinking that you either support all of that, because that's sustainable development (God forbid) or alternatively, you're one of the "bad" people like Bob Birrell who reckons that we should allow for growth to continue and we shouldn't consolidate our city and that even though urban planning is a complex area, those are in fact the only two possible positions on offer and therefore if you don't support one of them, you must support the other.

 

Of course, one of the things that tells you is that Vancouver must be an imaginary place because they don't in fact support either of those positions! Funnily enough, they're a bit old fashioned about all this stuff. They reckon that ultimately local decisions should be made by elected bodies and the appeal mechanism is "vote for someone else" if they do it badly – that's called an election.

 

And that's basically the way in which you conduct appeals against elected bodies. It doesn't work very well if they're higher-up bodies like state or federal governments or bureaucrats, that's why you need appeal systems in that case, but if they're local councils which are supposed to be close to the people, it's much easier to turf them out if they start doing the wrong thing than it is to set up an elaborate administrative legal bureaucracy to oversee them.

 

Now the funny thing about Vancouver, which in addition to all these other things, thinks you shouldn't expand the freeway system at all because that'll encourage people to travel more by car and instead you should put all the investment into fixing public transport. And they don't just publish aspirational statements to that effect in planning documents, they actually do it.

 

Strangely enough, it's worth recording that this "Liveable City" award that they won was handed out by the Economist Intelligence Unit, which is a subsidiary of the Economist Journal which provides information for businesses seeking to invest internationally. It's not handed out by the "organic food sub-collective" of Friends of the Earth, it's actually handed out by the hardest of hard-nosed business types you could possibly imagine.

 

So I'm not suggesting that Vancouver is the only model but I'm suggesting that the moment you start to look around, you realise there are other models. In fact, if you look around far enough you find that there is nowhere else anywhere in the world that attempts to run planning in the way that we do here in Melbourne.

 

I'll come back in a moment to explain to you what I mean by that, but the way that we deal with planning disputes is unique in the entire world. As it turns out, everywhere else in the world planning systems tend to follow one of about three or four models – and then there's the Melbourne model!

 

Now, it's possible of course that we know something that they don't. However, it's also possible that they know something that we don't! And some of the problems that seem to be arising in our planning system result from the fact that we've adopted a very, very unusual and weird way of dealing with planning disputes.

 

Now you don't tend to hear this very much because most of us have spent all our lives (or at least all those portions of our lives with which we've had to deal with the planning system) in this city and therefore we assume that the way we do things must be natural. But in fact, it's not true at all.

 

Let me give you a couple of quick examples to illustrate the point about how there might be alternatives. Let's talk about our dear friend the Mitcham towers development. Now, Mitcham was not nominated as a Principal or Major Activity Centre in Melbourne 2030 and therefore I think it was probably reasonable for people to assume that 14 storey apartment towers wouldn't be on the agenda there.

 

When the plans for those apartment towers were put in, most of the people who objected were in fact parishioners from the local Catholic church because the towers overshadowed the parish primary school.

 

It's alright, however, said Justice Morris and his associates at VCAT, it'll only overshadow it during the morning so they'll be able to be in the sunlight during the afternoon, particularly if they play down the far end of the playground! So that was in fact the primary objection. There were other people who objected to density on this scale but the majority of people who objected simply thought that it was the wrong site within the station precinct.

 

I don't know if any of you have ever been to Mitcham station but if you haven't, you can look it up in the Melways and one of the things you'll see next to it (apart from the St John's Parish primary school) is a little square with the number 700 inside it. That's the number of car parking spaces provided at the station for rail commuters. It's the biggest rail commuter car park anywhere in Melbourne.

 

Now, how about that? Somebody has decided that this should be a location for a transit-oriented urban village which will co-share it with the largest rail commuter car park anywhere in Melbourne.

 

Now does this strike you as a particularly wise way of organising things? How about this for a radical idea? If the community did decide that this was an appropriate place for high-rise development, how about putting it where the station car park is now where it wouldn't overshadow anything, rather than next to the parish primary school? Is that an impossibly radical thought?

 

What would you do with the car park? Well, you could move it down to Heatherdale, the next station further out in the same zone, which is in the middle of an industrial wasteland where the land might as well be used for car parking. See, you don't need to have commuter car parks at every single station because people don't walk to them, you see, they're car parks – they drive to them! It's a kind of a definitional thing.

 

So there may well have been things that we could have done there. As I say, another outcome might be that it was decided that this was an unsuitable site. But in fact what happened instead was a developer fortuitously acquired the worst possible site for this development, then went off to VCAT and the council and the objectors said, "it's not nominated as an activity centre and therefore they shouldn't get a permit".

 

What Justice Morris and his associates at VCAT actually said was, "Well, it should have been nominated. Because if you look at the things that were nominated as activity centres in this former city of Nunawading, they are the Nunawading Mega Mile" (which we've discussed already), "the East Burwood K Mart, the Tally Ho drive-in office park, and the Forest Hill drive-in shopping centre". And you know what? Not one of them is a suitable location for transit-oriented development of any kind at all.

 

So in fact what they said was (this is the VCAT people), "what we will do is take the rhetoric of Melbourne 2030" (and that's the thing that by and large people agree with) "and ignore the actual content of Melbourne 2030 and use the rhetoric to override the content".

 

Now they say at one point, "People will accuse us of exceeding our role as an interpreter of planning policy and arrogating to ourselves the role of setting policy". To which my response is, as old Bill Shakespeare says, "Methinks he doth protest too much" because, of course, that's exactly what they were doing.

 

And Stewart can't help himself. Stewart's a very bright fellow and he's really interested in planning. That's part of the problem we have in our planning system – all the lawyers want to be planners and all the planners want to be lawyers! And no one wants to do their own job. Stewart really wants to be a politician. He ran for the upper house in 1996 and missed out by a very small margin and frankly I think he would have been a very good politician.

 

The problem down at VCAT is – and this is a difficult thing and it's not just him, I'm just using him as an example because he's tough and can stand up for himself – but the real problem is that there are no restraints at all on his behaviour. He thinks he's an expert on everything by virtue of having been appointed to VCAT so when he came to talk to my students this year (my planning law students, for which I am very grateful), he spent 5 minutes talking about how VCAT works and the rest of the time lecturing them about transport policy, a subject about which he knows nothing at all. But it doesn't matter. He's the president of VCAT so automatically he's an expert! On that, on heritage, on neighbourhood character, on urban design, on engineering, on everything you could possibly imagine!

 

It doesn't work! In Vancouver, they would have sorted things out in a proactive way through the democratic process and no lawyers would have been involved at all. Except possibly to do the property conveyancing. So we had an alternative there but we didn't go for it.

 

Go down the road to Camberwell. Who was the great celebrity who joined forces with the Camberwell station development objectors? I don't mean Geoffrey Rush, I mean the funny one, Barry Humphries.

 

Now, of course, Barry has become something of a defender of iconic Melbourne suburbia such as the Golf Links Estate in Riversdale where he grew up. Why do you reckon it's called the Golf Links Estate? Yes, it used to be the Riversdale Golf Club! Where is Riversdale? Well, it's on the Alamein line. When the Alamein line was electrified in the 1920s, the Riversdale Golf Club packed up and moved further out because they thought that this was no longer the highest and best use of the land so they subdivided this development – very attractive – around what's now called Willison station (that used to be Golf Links station).

 

So Barry actually grew up on a piece of urban infill development, a piece of urban consolidation! A kind that is now represented as the model, for many people, of the kind of development we should want, I think it's classified by the National Trust.

 

Where did the Riversdale Golf Club move to, by the way? They moved next to Jordanville station on the Glen Waverley line, which of course in the 1930s was a paddock. It's now surrounded by housing developments and you know what? I'm not quite sure that that fenced-off private golf club with barbed wire on the top of the fence to stop the hoi polloi getting in really counts as open space.

 

Now I know Ted Baillieu's quite keen on preserving golf clubs but I reckon this is one that might perhaps be about ready to do again what it did in the 1920s and get out there to somewhere like the back of Scoresby where there's acres of land suitable for golf courses. We could house 5000 people on that site and have them all within walking distance of the station and do the whole thing in a way that not one local resident would object to.

 

You might even have people say,"Where's the form to say I want this? Where's the form to applaud rather than object? Are we doing that? Good God no! Are we talking about doing that? Good God no! That's what they do in properly functioning planning systems. And in planning systems that then are more effective at getting urban consolidation than we are as well, and I'm a supporter of urban consolidation but I'm not a supporter of Melbourne 2030.

 

Well, what's standing in the way? Why can't we do this kind of stuff? (Paul then showed an overhead projection) You can hardly read that but I'm taking you back to that hippy commune, that paradise of environmental sustainability and liveability but yet business-like as well – that place called Vancouver, and I thought I'd bore you to tears by showing you a bit of the City of Vancouver Planning Ordinance. It deals with an area called "First Shaughnessy".

 

I was trying to find an area that was perhaps as leafy and Glen Iris-like as possible. For those of you that know the area, it's actually about 4 kilometres from the central business district so in locational terms, it's probably like Kew or South Yarra or something like that. But it's leafy Melbourne suburbia equivalence of the kind that Barry Humphries would have grown up in if he'd lived in Vancouver.

 

Now, have a look at this. Height limits; site coverage requirements; everyone has to have a front yard of 9 metres; everyone has to have side yards and set-backs. And what happens if you don't? Well, you don't get a permit. You'll notice that there are some discretionary things – on occasion the director of planning can certify whether you are entitled to an exemption or not.

 

And if you don't like that, you can ask the council to overturn the director's decision and if the council refuses to overturn the director's decision, what do you do? Well, vote for someone else next time!

 

There is a thing called the Board of Variance, which enables you to complain about by-laws that cause personal hardship to you, and Stewart Morris rather dishonestly attempted to pretend that that was an equivalent of VCAT. You can't go to the Board of Variance on any of this, it's a technical boring thing you don't want to get into. So, very old fashioned you see, the kind of thing we're not allowed to do in Melbourne anymore.

 

Now, in Melbourne of course, if you recall, we once had something like this in terms of the regulatory side of our planning system but we replaced it with policy-led planning. You remember that? That's one of the things that's supposed to be good about the current system.

 

Michael Buxton and Trevor Budge and Robyn Goodman from RMIT have done this really fantastic report that assesses the Kennett reforms to the planning system. The title as you can see is "A Failed Experiment" so I guess I've given the punch line away already. Basically, everything it was supposed to do to make things simpler, it produced the opposite effect. It was supposed to reduce the volume of paper, the volume of paper has exploded. It was supposed to simplify things, it complexified them, blah blah.

 

But some of the planners they talked to actually thought the one good thing about it was that it was policy-led. Now, we used to have all these bad things called rules and people didn't know why they were applying the rules and so it's much better if you've got, instead of rules – a statement of policies! Instead of saying there should be a front yard with 9 metres, there should be a long vague collection of wafty, woolly words about how nice it would be if people had front yards! Problem, you see?

 

Planning schemes are laws, legislation. This is actually called the Planning By-Law in the City of Vancouver. And our planning schemes are in fact bylaws as well, although you wouldn't know.

 

And nobody else in any other area of the law drafts policy-based laws. Here's one from Victoria – it's called "The Crimes Act". It's a law, right? It tells you what you can and can't do and what the consequences are if you do the wrong thing, you see? "Armed robbery: a person is guilty of armed robbery if they commit a robbery and at the same time have blardy blardy blah". If they do it, they're guilty of an indictable offence and they can be imprisoned for up to 25 years!

 

But where's the policy? Where's the bit at the front saying "We really think armed robbery is bad"? Actually, "bad" might be a bit specific because we've got to balance the needs of the armed robbers against the armed robberies!

 

You see, no one tries to do this anywhere else except planning! So what have we got? Well, apparently the answer to all our problems, according to the minister, was that councils should stop writing such vague and hopeless planning documentation. It's all their fault and if they just wrote their policies more strictly then we'd all live happily ever after.

 

Well, here's one from the part of the planning scheme that comes from the State government. This is part of the neighbourhood character objectives. You know, there's about 500 standards you have to satisfy under the Rescode thing, in addition to the hundreds and hundreds of other pages of platitudes that you apparently have to take into account.

 

And just look at how it's written! You'll never find legislation on any subject anywhere in the world that is written in this fashion, not even in Victoria on nonplanning things: "Neighbourhood character objectives: to enure that the design respects the existing neighbourhood character or contributes to blah, blah blah. Objective: to ensure that the design response must be appropriate. Standard: the design response must be appropriate to the neighbourhood and site."

 

Well, I'm sorry – what does that mean? Does that mean we should have a 9 metre front yard or not? You see the difference? With the Vancouver scheme you know whether you comply or you don't.

 

But is the Vancouver scheme policy led? Well, of course it's policy led!. What the [Melbourne] people who've drafted this stuff have got together and done is they've completely forgotten what planning actually is and what it isn't.

 

By-laws are part of the last stage of planning, they're part of the implementation mechanisms, they're development controls. If you run your planning system properly, you do decide on your policies and if you run it in a rational way, you decide on them in a logical hierarchy starting at the regional level and working down to the local level.

 

Once you've decided what they are, you then develop legal regulations to implement them, such as in Vancouver. What we seem to have decided in Victoria is to try and collapse all those processes and put them all inside a legal document like a by-law. The net result is that they're all 20 times as long as they need to be, they are completely and utterly content free and meaningless, by and large, except there's the occasional standard that floats in there. And nobody knows whether they're Arthur or Martha.

 

And to suggest that drivel like that actually means that urban planners are more likely to take policy into account when they're deciding development applications, is, it seems to me, a pie in the sky notion.

 

The converse is, in the case of Vancouver, most planning applications don't need to go near a planner because a building surveyor can immediately tell whether they comply or not. The policy part of the system isn't played out every single time someone asks for a permit to do something. The policy part of the system is played out in advance of you designing the legal controls because the legal controls implement the policy and if they are to implement the policy, they should be as clear as possible.

 

But how on earth are you supposed to do that when policies like Melbourne 2030 are put in the planning schemes, 3 years after it was enacted. But the main issue here is what does it mean? It's just all bullshit, isn't it? It doesn't mean anything. My personal favourite, however – this is clause 12 (shows 20-page excerpt from the Victoria Planning Provisions titled "12 METROPOLITAN DEVELOPMENT").

 

There is one clause of the State Planning Policy Framework that does actually mean something and that's clause 13 – there it is. (shows clause 13 accompanied by much laughter: "13 [no content]"). That's the open and honest bit of the State Planning Policy Framework but I think in fact it represents an accurate description of the rest of them as well!

 

Time to give you a boring little run down on how planning is organised everywhere in the world except Melbourne and I promise it won't take too long because there aren't that many models on offer.

 

Basically, you've got a challenge. You've got to try and balance two competing objectives. You're trying to provide certainty on the one hand and flexibility on the other hand. Certainty, why do you want certainty? So everyone knows where they stand, so you don't need appeal bodies making themselves unpopular, to reduce costs, you all know why we need certainty.

 

And funnily enough, developers want certainty as well. Everyone wants certainty except lawyers and planning consultants who make their money out of uncertainties. The other 99.9% of the community want certainty.

 

We also want some measure of flexibility because cities change, societies change. I live in a house in Fitzroy that was a non-conforming use for 30 years under the Melbourne Metropolitan Planning Scheme because the Board of Works decided we were all going to be turfed out because industry was going to take over.

 

So you have to have some capacity to change that as well. And fairness as well. So how do you ensure all of those things? Well, you've basically got two parts of the system. You've got the regulatory side of things, the by-law side of the system, and then you've got the question of review of decisions. And the issue of how you put those together is the issue that most planning jurisdictions face and it seems to me the particular way we've put those two parts of the system together is primarily responsible for all the disasters that we've had here in Victoria.

 

What we've done you see, is we've gone to the by-law part that says everything will be discretionary and policy based and nothing will be certain. And in fact, you're not allowed to be certain because all the guidelines about how to prepare planning schemes and things restrict councils – they can't for example introduce a zone that says no higher density housing here. Which is of course is what most of them want to do and what, as you can see, Vancouver not only does but can then specify whether you'll have a front yard or not.

 

So the councils don't have flexibility there. We instead are forced inflexibly to have a vague policy-based system in which there are no clear open and shut rules.

 

Now that wouldn't be a problem if we didn't combine that with an unlimited right to review decisions on their merits and go off to a separate body which acts as if the council was never there and makes the decision all over again!

 

The first part of the mixture in Melbourne maximizes the uncertainty and the number of things people can fight about. We then create a system in which everything is up for grabs in the second stage. If you were trying to design a system to maximise incomes for lawyers and planning consultants and maximise as much as possible the amount of litigation, the uncertainty in the system and the amount of public dissatisfaction and fighting, it's hard to think of one that would be better than that.

 

Because as it turns out, no one anywhere in the world has tried to combine these two things – the absolute apogee of vagueness and lack of precision in the legislative controls, coupled with an unlimited right of review!

 

Let's do the planning controls first. Basically, if you go to the United States or Canada, essentially municipalities are free to write their own planning by-laws. They can write it any way they like, it's just a piece of legislation governing what people can and can't do.

 

In the United States there are no constraints imposed on them by and large from higher governments at all, except in one or two jurisdictions where they've established metropolitan authorities.

 

The only constraint imposed on them in the US is the funny old American Supreme Court decided there was something in the Constitution which restricted how you could do zoning. They talk about Euclidian zoning in the US and I got very confused about that, I thought it was something to do with maths, you know, like non-Euclidian zoning but actually Euclid was the name of a municipality involved in a court case in which they decided that zoning was constitutional, so it took me a while to work that out.

 

So in the US they have to be a bit careful with how they draft their zoning requirements but basically they can do whatever they like. And there are no appeal systems because local government is constitutionally entrenched in most states and therefore higher-level governments can go to the devil.

 

You go across the border into Canada and by and large the system is that there are regional plans prepared and local plans have to be consistent with them. On the whole though, there's a lot of room for negotiation and argy bargy.

 

Vancouver, as I've said, has a regional council. Until recently they weren't able to compel local councils to make their plans consistent with their regional ones but they became very good at negotiation and they run the public transport system and basically if you want your train extension, well, you'd better design the land use in a helpful way that will accommodate it.

 

Very recently the province has made the regional planning schemes binding but there's still lots of negotiation and dispute resolution and so on. But once you get down to the lower level they can do what they like in terms of zoning controls and they can tell you how big the front yard should be.

 

Or conversely, in the urban consolidation areas of Vancouver they specify things like the floors have to be made out of materials that make it safe for children to fall over on them. Seriously – they're very, very specific, because they don't want to create ghettos for childless yuppies. So they've got lots and lots of rules on new highdensity developments designed to make them family-friendly, so everyone's got lots of rules in Vancouver.

 

If you go to Europe, what you tend to find is that rather than zoning, it tends to be a slightly more design-based system and again, particularly in the German-speaking world (I include Scandinavia and all those other places, they're all dialects of German but don't tell the Danes that, okay, or the Dutch!), in those areas essentially it's a hierarchical process – regional plan, municipal plan, local area plan. And the local area plans are designed for the local neighbourhood.

 

And you talk to Europeans about statutory planning, deciding whether something is consistent with the local plan or not, they've never heard of it because the local plan is so detailed that everyone knows. It's like a little urban design for the area.

 

In the European context, particularly in well-organised systems, there's a constant cycle of review. The flexibility of the system is brought in by requiring the whole thing to be regularly reviewed. So by the time you've got down to your local area plans and they've all been implemented, the time has come to start reviewing the regional plan with the view to it filtering down to the local area, so it's a continuous cycle. So certainty is provided by very specific plans with no appeal rights. Flexibility is provided by a regular requirement for review.

 

The United Kingdom in many respects does urban planning more poorly than any of its counterparts on the continent so naturally we've chosen them as our inspiration here in Australia! The UK deliberately went the other way and said, "no, our system will be discretionary", and fact in many respects they don't have zoning at all in the UK.

 

Planning documents consist of policy statements like this, which, for what it's worth, bears some resemblance to the kind of things you see in Melbourne but with two principal objectives: one, there's less weasel words and two, it doesn't go on for hundreds and hundreds of pages. Basically, councils assess development applications against these policies.

 

That's not quite right, because there are also zoning provisions that ban things and their Green Wedges, which are of course green belts, are protected by legislation there, so they have a very paramount form of protection.

 

Councils assess applications against these policies and there is a right of appeal. This in fact brings me to rights of appeal because the interaction in England is actually interesting.

 

In the UK, their appeal system at first glance looks like ours. It's said to be a "hearing de novo", a new hearing, it's not just an appeal on questions of law or process – the appeal body has another look at the whole question – but they do it slightly differently from us.

 

First of all, it's on the whole something that lawyers aren't involved in. On the whole, they don't have hearings, it's done on the documents. In fact, the appeal body is the minister and these people who review appeals who are called inspectors are delegates of the minister.

 

Now in fact what they do – and I have never been able to work out whether this is really by legislation or just the practice – is that they look at the council's decision to see whether it was reasonable. They don't do the whole thing again. They look at it, they look at the material, they look at the policy and say, "Oh right, yes. They considered all those things". I might subjectively have a different view about whether something was the right height or not, but providing they went through the whole job properly, considered all the policies and their decision wasn't unreasonable, it stands, and so most appeals fail.

 

As a result, on the whole, most council planning decisions stand. So even the UK system, which looks like ours, isn't quite like ours.

 

In Europe and the US there are no appeal rights at all, unless the council does something illegal – you can always go to court to stop a public body exceeding it's powers but that's the only appeal system you have.

 

The closest thing we have anywhere in the world outside Australia to our VCAT system is in Ontario. They have this funny thing called the Ontario Municipal Board, set up in the 1890s to wipe out corruption in local councils as part of something called the Progressive Era, for historians of North American politics. Councils were corrupt so we needed someone to keep an eye on them. They've kind of lost all their other powers and evolved into the Ontario equivalent of VCAT and everyone hates them and everyone else in Canada says, "thank God we don't have one of them!"

 

There was an interesting article in a journal called "Progress In Planning" (April 2005 edition) where an Australian lawyer actually did a survey of planning appeals in different jurisdictions and concluded that the Vancouver system really worked quite well. He interviewed a senior planner there and they said "I hope there is no consideration being given to the establishment of a province-run appeal board in British Columbia. If you look at the Ontario Municipal Board as a case in point, the appeal process has overwhelmed all the other processes and that's had a disastrous effect". So everyone in Vancouver says, "thank God we haven't got one of them".

 

But even in Toronto, things aren't as bad as they are here because they can still enact their own by-laws and prohibit things. So they're probably as close to the Melbourne experience as you'll get and probably analogous to the other Australian states and New Zealand. But nobody except us has done the combination of, "You can't have clear planning by-laws that say what's in and what's out, coupled with an unlimited right of appeal in which the decision of the original council counts for nothing".

 

So it seems to me therefore if you're looking at ways for us to go – and I'm now talking about the machinery rather than the policy – it seems to me that we should move in the direction of the rest of the world. We should have less emphasis on statutory planning, development and regulation.

 

In fact, in most parts of the world it doesn't exist. Nobody knows what you're talking about when you use words like that. We should put our planning resources into strategic planning, deciding what we want. The task of writing the by-laws then becomes a relatively simple technical legal task of translating what we've agreed into words that as tightly as possible make sure that what happens on the ground will reflect what we've agreed.

 

And if we're worried about things becoming inflexible then let's have regular cycles of review, preferably starting with the regional plans and working down to the municipal plans, and then (if we're going to have them) the neighbourhood plans as well. 

 

Basically, it seems to me that we can go in one of two directions or a combination of both of them. We can eliminate all of the State Government imposed fetters on local government zoning by-law powers so they can do what they like, so they can have zoning by-laws like the one from Vancouver that I showed you. If you did that, you might actually be able to keep something like the current appeal system.

 

Or alternatively, we could move to something like the English model which retains a greater emphasis on the policy but if we did that we'd have to severely limit appeal rights.

 

It would seem to me that the options for appeals are either they should be purely confined to legal and process questions, such as whether the council gave people a fair hearing, whether they actually took the policies into account, whether they did their homework.

 

Or alternatively, the slightly broader kind of appeal process that you get in the UK where they can go a little bit further than that but basically they don't upset the council decision unless there's something wrong with it.

 

See, that's the key difference here. VCAT aren't interested in whether the council did anything wrong. It's just a matter of, "Oh well, if it had been me, I'd have done something differently". That kind of appeal has to go, no matter what you do.

 

So there, it seems to me, is your template, your menu, your basic building blocks of a planning regulatory system. And it seems to me that the objective ought to be to get some certainty into it. Because God knows, we've had flexibility to death here in Victoria over the last 15 or 20 years. And the only people that it's really providing flexibility for are lawyers, planning consultants and members of VCAT who even though in many respects they're fine and perfectly wonderful people, in other respects have basically got completely out of control and acted as if they are (in spite of all the protestations to the contrary and in fact the protestations to the contrary are what makes you realise that even they're a bit worried that we might be catching on) acting as if they're planning authorities.

 

So the idea of this is about returning responsibility to elected bodies but lastly also, it seems to me, about doing something for planners because I'm not quite sure whether people who work as planners are "insiders" or not in Ted Baillieu's categorisation. But trust me, the ones I know, my current and ex students, they all hate it.

 

That's the reason why, for example, the majority of my best students who graduated two years ago have all left Victoria. There's a shortage of planners in other parts of the world and they'd much rather work in a place where planners plan things rather than get involved in all the nonsense that goes on here.

 

So I reckon we'd all be better off but we'd have to make some fundamental changes. But I think the starting point ought to be not to say, "How can we tinker with what we've got?" because I think what we've got is so corrupt and so dysfunctional that we should put it to one side for the moment and say, "If we were starting again, what would we do and what lessons can we learn from the way other people do it?"

 

And I think the first lesson we'd learn is that whatever you do, if you're attempting to follow best practice, it would be very, very different indeed from the way planning is currently run in Melbourne.