• Hastings District Council approves $1.99m for residential planning work

Hastings District Council approves $1.99m for residential planning work

Hastings District Council has approved $1.99m to ensure preparatory work can begin on planning for potential locations for new housing in the district.

The funds have been redeployed from the Landfill Development Reserve, created from the 2020/21 Landfill operating surplus to contribute to future landfill development costs.

Hastings mayor Sandra Hazlehurst said this was a prudent approach to start the planning for the future locations of new housing.

"Given the more immediate housing pressures, however, this fund will be transferred to a new Growth and Urban Planning reserve, with the aim of minimising the financial impact of this growth and spatial
planning work on ratepayers into the next year." 

Funding for the work was approved at a full Hastings District Council meeting today. 

A recent assessment of housing capacity in the Hastings district has shown that while Hastings District Council’s planning should be sufficient to meet the demand over the next 10 years, it may need some
flexibility regarding the timing of future greenfield development.

Currently, the Heretaunga Plains Urban Development Strategy (HPUDS) guides Council’s forward planning for housing development until such time as it is replaced by a Regional Spatial Plan, potentially in two to three years’ time.

In the face of the current housing shortage and projected population growth, this preliminary planning aims to equip future councils with information and the ability to be responsive and agile with future
decision making.

This structure planning would not involve any re-zoning of land, the aim was to identify and enable sufficient capacity to meet expected demand for housing at the same time as assessing what impact any
decisions would have.

Hazlehurst also acknowledged the deputation from the Save Our Fertile Soils group that made a short presentation at the start of today’s meeting.

“This group is passionate about protecting Heretaunga’s fertile soils, and we share that passion.

“We are not creating new areas for residential development, we are looking at what the most practical and feasible options are for potentially progressing the residential zones that already exist within HPUDs.

“Our spatial planning that we will embark on over the next couple of years is going to be crucial. Since HPUDs was created 10 years ago things have moved on – we need to seriously consider how we balance protecting our valuable soils with the best locations for housing, and the associated essential infrastructure services that come with it.

“For current and future decision making it is about the right home in the right place at the right time”

Any decisions as to the staging and advancement of capital works would be taken to Council and ratified with full public consultation through future Annual Plan and Long Term Planning processes.

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